Story of the most precious and fascinating wedding dresses. A short thread. (1/n)
During World War II, fabric and silk were so expensive that a great number of women simply weren’t able to afford a decent wedding dress, and many of them had to improvise with materials before their big day. (2/n)
In many cases, their inventiveness went beyond expectations. A few of the to-be brides of young army pilots, who flew in dangerous missions to defeat Hitler in Europe, did something extraordinary and surreal to weave their wedding dresses. (3/n)
They collected the parachutes used by their to-be-grooms while surviving an aircraft crash those were often torn with bullet holes, took the parachute silk out and weaved their wedding gown using the same silk as a memoir of grateful times. (4/n)
This wedding dress in the Smithsonian museum was made from a nylon parachute that saved Maj. Claude Hensinger during World War II. (5/n)
The B-29 engine of Hensinger's aircraft caught fire while he was returning from a bombing raid over Yowata, Japan, in August 1944. He escaped unharmed. (6/n)
The parachute served as both a pillow and blanket for Hensinger as he waited for rescue even though he had only minor injuries. He kept the parachute he had used to stay alive. (7/n)
In 1947, he proposed to his girlfriend Ruth by providing the parachute with the fabric for a gown, that once saved his life. (8/n)
Source: Wisconsin State Journal newspaper. Via/ Newspaper Archive. Business Insider. Smithsonian Museum.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
On Albert Einstein’s birth anniversary, let's talk a little about a couple of towering figures of their time and their mutual admiration. Let’s talk about Einstein and Gandhi. (1/n)
In 1931 Gandhi, then a leading figure of India’s freedom movement had gone to London to attend the round table conference. Seeing the dhoti-clad man with his stick on the streets of Britain’s capital must have been some sight. (2/n)
Gandhi had admirers all over the place, one particularly being a well-known German scientist Albert Einstein who wrote a letter to him dated 27th September 1931. (3/n)
How the Indian curry and flatbread found their way into Trinidadian comfort food. A short thread on this delicious journey. 1/n #travellingsOftheIndianCurry
On a regular hot and humid day on the streets of Port of Spain, it is not unusual to find the sight of people eating Trinidadian wraps in restaurants and cafes. 2/n
The wrap, which is a combination of flatbread, and the traditional Trinidadian curry, is a unique mix of culture and heritage, and for the people of the Caribbean islands, it is comfort food. 3/n
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the pioneer of non-violent civil disobedience movement remained an uncharted figure worldwide until in 1930, a brave American journalist came to India in search of a story that ultimately unveiled one of the most revered global figures of all time.🧵1/
The British Raj’s resistance & censorship on print media made sure that India’s struggle for independence would not see the light of day on the international stage until Webb Miller from the United Press came to interview Gandhi during his famous Dandi march. 2/
The news of Gandhi’s 240-mile march to oppose the rule imposed by the British Empire that prohibited Indians to make salt in their own homeland brought special attention to Miller, so he decided to fly down to India to unravel the black box. 3/
In a world where incessant hate propaganda such as love-jihad often hogs the spotlight, a thread on Savitribai Phule’s second letter to her husband about an intriguing love story and a vicious plot of honour-killing. (1/n)
In the era, when native women of colonial India rarely wrote letters, Savitribai Phule’s three letters to her husband Jyotirao Phule, have been preserved as precious pieces of literature. (2/n)
Going beyond the domestic orbit of mundane conversation, the letters stand out as chronicles of humanitarian conditions and social taboos of the colonial era. The remarkable letters reflect a sense of hope and liberation. (3/n)
As the Batman fever is peaking, we look back on the Batmen of India who are serving the Indian army for decades. A thread on the fascinating history of the British Indian Army, curious word origins and a feudal system. (1/9)
In the British Indian army, the high ranked officers would be given a soldier as a personal valet who often acted as an officer’s servant, taking care of his horses, cleaning his quarter and performing other miscellaneous activities. (2/9)
Curiously, they were known as Batman (Batmen), or orderly in the future, who had nothing to do with bats or the ubiquitous superhero of Gotham City. The usage of Batman in the British army across their colonies predates the origin of the Superhero. (3/9)
Our final story to celebrate #WomensHistoryMonth, features the incredible Miss Tagore who was instrumental in Mohun Bagan’s historic IFA Shield win in 1911. A thread on the curious tale of Miss Tagore (1/n)
On 1st Aug, 1911, shortly after Mohun Bagan’s historic Shield win, The Manchester Guardian reported on a certain Miss Tagore being the happiest person after the win; she was the epicenter of Bengal’s athletic movement in the 19th/20th century, they said (2/n)
Manchester Guardian was convinced without Miss Tagore’s driving force, Bengali men wouldn’t have competed against the strong-built British men in the field. And they're not entirely wrong (3/n)