Just hours away from America’s biggest game of the year, the Cincinnati Bengals and Los Angeles Rams will square off in Super Bowl LVI. A thread on its exquisite Indian connection. (1/9)
When Paul Brown, an American football coach from Ohio, was fired by his previous employer, he founded his new franchise Cincinnati Bengals. (2/9)
Brown, named the franchise after another Cincinnati football team named Cincinnati Bengals who played between 1937 and 1942 and was forced to close down due to World War II. (3/9)
Benzoo, the Royal Bengal Tiger from West Bengal, a unique specimen of Cincinnati Zoo, was chosen as the mascot for the Bengals. Benzoo proudly enjoyed her Sunday outings to the stadium in front of 50,000 fans in the 70s. (4/9)
Now, the original Bengal team that played in the 1930s had a fascinating story behind their naming. When Hal Pennington, the founder of the newly formed Cincinnati Bengal, sat in his mother’s kitchen one late summer day in 1937, he observed a stove. (5/9)
The logo of the stove caught his attention - it was a mighty roaring Bengal Tiger. The stove line, manufactured between 1870 and 1940 by Floyd-Wells, was named Bengal Stoves. (6/9)
It is this Bengal Stove line that influenced the name of the franchise playing the Super Bowl LVI today. While why ‘Bengal Stove’ was named after a Bengal Tiger is not clearly understood, many believe it was due to the owner’s fascination with safaris. (7/9)
It is rumoured that the president once went on a safari to hunt the Bengal tigers, and he was enchanted with the beast leading to the name of his stove line. Note to remember: it was common for Americans in that era to visit India for Tiger ‘shikar’. (8/9)
This Government-issued advertisement in the "Field & Stream" magazine, USA in 1956 luring Americans to contact the local office (at NYC & SFO) for Tiger hunting information, is a testimony to the above. (9/9)
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On 16th Dec, 1971, as the Pakistani forces in East Pakistan surrendered to the Indian Army, tragedy befell an Indian family. 2nd Lt. Arun Khetarpal, 17 Poona Horse, fought valiantly in a tank battle on the western front but succumbed to his wounds (1/n)
2nd Lt. Arun Khetarpal was honored with the Param Vir Chakra, India's highest military honor. Just 21 at the time of his death, he remains the youngest recipient of the honor (2/n)
Arun Khetarpal's father, M.L. Khetarpal was also with the Indian Army and would retire as a brigadier. Brig Khetarpal hailed from Sargodha which was in Pakistan. He cherished a long life dream to visit his place of birth (3/n)
As we witness the quality of journalism sinking deep into the bottom bit by bit, on this International Journalism Day we remember the fearless Nellie Bly. A thread on the origin of investigative journalism. (1/7)
New York, 1887. When 23-years-old Nellie was stuck with fashion reporting, one fine morning, she stormed into the office of New York World, a newspaper owned by eminent Joseph Pulitzer, with an outrageous idea. (2/7)
She wanted to report on the inhuman brutality conducted at the Women’s Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell’s Island. But there was no way to report from the outside. What Nellie did was nothing short of fiction. (3/7)
Today is the day that led to the inception of an iconic Bengali dish and also a day that tells a story of a tragic Indian mother buried in Paris. A short thread on a fabled concourse of history. (1/10)
Back in 1856, on this day, Lord Dalhousie, the Governor-General of British India, annexed the kingdom of Awadh with the allegation of misadministration and exiled the Last Nawab Wajid Ali Shah to Calcutta. (2/10)
Wajid Ali Shah arrived in Calcutta, started living in the Metiabruz area with the aid of a pension, built a mini Lucknow around him, inspired the art scene heavily and introduced Thumri and Kathak to Calcutta. (3/10)
Education is the only effective medicine for these trying times. We urge our readers to take a pause & read the excerpts from The Proudest Blue, a children's picture book and NYT bestseller,written by Olympic medalist Ibtihaj Muhammad and S.K. Ali,illustrated by Hatem Aly. (1/10)
This powerful and vividly illustrated story revolves around two sisters, Asiya and Faizah, and their first day of school and one of them having the first day wearing a hijab, a blue one. (2/10)
It is Asiya's younger sister Faizah who is the narrator of our little story. During the school day, Faizah's classmates ask about her sister's hijab in a whispering tone, and she honestly explains why. (3/10)
Telephone Operators at work in the New Delhi Telephone Exchange. 1950.
The early telephones required the use of a switchboard and a human operator to physically connect the phone lines so that people could talk to each other.
The new profession has given way to a wave of women-led jobs, in male-dominated society. Women were seen as a better choice not only because of their supposedly caring nature and soft voice, but also because they’re paid significantly less than their male counterparts.
Vocational qualifications involve taking height,weight & arm length tests to ensure they are fit enough in the cramped quarters of a telephone switchboard.The job is to answer an incoming call,ask for a number, & then connect a wired outlet to the appropriate switchboard circuit.
Although it is not widely known, the Nightingale of India was also an avid photographer. She had quite a collection of state-of-the-art photography equipment, including cameras and lenses. (1/11)
Her fascination with photography may have begun with her love for painting during her childhood days. She once drew a wound on her face, and pretended to be hurt. She bought a Rolleiflex camera in 1946 for Rs 2000, which became her inseparable companion. (2/11)
Lataji had a fascination for people and their faces. Most of her photos demonstrate her keen understanding of how to use natural light and shadow. This photograph of her nephew Adinath, taken by her, is a prime example of her brilliant expertise in portraiture. (3/11)