logo
How Utah reacted to Lincoln's assassination

How Utah reacted to Lincoln's assassination

Axios14-04-2025

A wave of mourning swept over Utah 160 years ago this week as news of President Lincoln's assassination reached the territory.
This is Old News, our weekly procession through the past.
The timeline: John Wilkes Booth shot Abraham Lincoln in Ford's Theatre on April 14; he died the next morning.
Western newspapers learned of the shooting via telegraph soon thereafter, and at least one paper mentioned printing an "extra" that is now lost to the archives. But the news didn't hit the regular presses here until April 16.
The Salt Lake Daily Telegraph had the story first — and they described the shock as word spread through the city.
What they said:"From the moment of the reception of this news on East Temple St. the throbbing of busy life on that lovely spring morn began to subside," the Telegraph wrote.
"Business was at once and simultaneously suspended, and such charnel stillness cast its shadows down this broad avenue of merchandise and trade as Utah, in her darkest hour, never felt before. No untutored voice, nor even sound of rushing car disturbed the seemingly sacred stillness of the hour."
"Every person we saw appeared wrapped in the solitude of his own reflections. Grouped here and there upon the pavement or store step, sat breathless listeners, impulsive to catch ... the dispatched accounts of the most fearfully daring tragedy that ever wrested from a nation its rulers."
Between the lines: Just days earlier, Utahns were celebrating Gen. Robert E. Lee's surrender in Virginia, which signaled the denouement of the Civil War.
"The stars and stripes so recently flung to the breezes on occasions of successive and glorious triumphs over armed resistance to the constitutional authority now hang gloomily at half mast, draped and folded by the insignia of a nation's grief," the Telegraph wrote.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Exclusive-Ukraine hits out at Europe's payout from frozen Russian cash
Exclusive-Ukraine hits out at Europe's payout from frozen Russian cash

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Exclusive-Ukraine hits out at Europe's payout from frozen Russian cash

By Tom Balmforth and John O'Donnell KYIV/BRUSSELS (Reuters) -Ukraine's government has criticised a decision to take billions of euros of Russian wealth frozen in Europe and hand it to Western investors, warning that it weakened Europe's stand against Moscow. The criticism follows a move last month by Belgium's Euroclear to take 3 billion euros ($3.4 billion) of Russian investor cash held at the clearing firm to pay Westerners who lost out when Moscow seized their money held in Russia. Now Ukraine has warned that it sends a wrong signal and threatens to weaken Europe's hand when dealing with Russia, while it debates using the entire $300 billion of Russian wealth stranded in Europe to rebuild and defend the battered country. "If private investors are compensated before the victims of war, it won't be justice," said Iryna Mudra, a senior official in Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's office, in Kyiv's first public comments on the move. "It creates a perception of inconsistency, of Europe wavering in its resolve," Mudra, a deputy head of Ukraine's presidential administration, told Reuters. "International law requires that the aggressor is to make full reparation to the victim and not to investors who ... entered a high-risk jurisdiction," said Mudra, who is in charge of legal affairs in Zelenskiy's administration. The criticism comes at a critical time for the Western alliance backing Kyiv, with U.S. President Donald Trump's administration distancing itself from Europe and casting doubt over its commitment to Ukraine's defence and Russian sanctions. Mudra, one of a small circle of officials that set policy, also stressed the importance of maintaining control of the frozen Russian assets, which chiefly belong to its central bank with the majority held at Euroclear. The central bank assets were frozen at the outset of war in the single most powerful sanction directed at Russia over its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, a penalty that is deeply resented in Moscow. Euroclear in March gained clearance from Belgium, its principal legal authority, to make the payout, people familiar with the matter have told Reuters, after the European Union changed its sanctions regime last year to make this possible. A spokesperson for the Belgian government said: "This is not a Belgian decision but the application of a European regulation decided unanimously by the member states." Euroclear has emphasised that it only implements sanctions and does not take decisions about lifting them. 'MIND BOGGLING' Three Russian sources recently told Reuters that Russian President Vladimir Putin's conditions for ending the war include the resolution of the frozen assets issue. Ukraine, meanwhile, is campaigning fiercely against any return of the money to Moscow. Euroclear alone held 195 billion euros of cash in March - mainly Russian central bank funds, with some belonging to Russian investors. "If it is returned to Russia, it will be converted into tanks, missiles, drones, training of new troops," said Ukraine's Mudra. "The world ... must demonstrate that unlawful war brings irreversible financial consequences." Some see the frozen Russian wealth as a lifeline for Kyiv. In the past, the West has engineered loans and payments to Ukraine from the interest on the stranded Russian stockpile, which Putin denounced as theft. Ukrainian officials fear the Euroclear payout, even though it does not affect the central bank money, could undermine their efforts to secure an agreement on using the wider pool of Russian assets to help their country. Mykola Yurlov, an official at Ukraine's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the payout set a bad precedent, while Kira Rudik, a Ukrainian parliamentarian, was also critical. "Western companies were operating in Russia at their own risk. Why are these companies basically asking their societies to compensate for this risk?" Rudik told Reuters. "We need this money to rebuild and defend Ukraine." Last month's move also drew criticism abroad. "It is mind boggling that the priority is to reimburse corporate interests rather than spend the money defending Ukraine," said Jacob Kirkegaard, a sanctions expert with the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a Washington-based think tank. While the payout to investors left frozen Russian central bank reserves untouched, it made a dent in the stockpile of Russian wealth that gives the EU leverage over Moscow. More importantly for critics, it sets a worrying precedent. European Union leaders are expected to renew sanctions, including a freeze of Russian assets, at a summit meeting in June, although they could yet face an attempt by Hungary to derail those efforts. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

The Leverage Against China That the US Hasn't Used Yet
The Leverage Against China That the US Hasn't Used Yet

Epoch Times

timean hour ago

  • Epoch Times

The Leverage Against China That the US Hasn't Used Yet

News Analysis The United States and China are locked in a war, experts are saying. It's not a war of bullets, but rather an 'unrestricted war' in almost every other strategic domain, including the economy, cyberspace, culture, and information. In many ways, the information war is key. It determines what people know, which then sets what they think. That, in turn, determines their actions in all other areas of the conflict. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) wages its information war on many levels, from seeding grand overarching narratives to tarring individual critics. In some areas, however, the regime lacks a counterargument. Some of its actions are so gruesome, the only option is to suppress the information, experts say. It's exactly these areas where the United States could mount severe, potentially fatal pressure on the regime—if willing to pursue them, several China experts told The Epoch Times. 'The darkest crime they're doing right now is organ harvesting,' said Sean Lin, former U.S. Army microbiologist and Epoch Times contributor. He is also a member of the independent group, Committee on the Present Danger: China. 'Maybe there are even darker crimes, more vicious, darker than organ harvesting. We don't know. And so the CCP is very afraid of this being further exposed, further recognized by the international community,' he added. The fact that the CCP was killing prisoners of conscience for their organs was first reported in 2006 by The Epoch Times based on whistleblower testimony. Since then, evidence of the crime has snowballed, resulting in an independent tribunal in the United Kingdom Related Stories 5/22/2025 5/14/2025 Still, to this day, no government has published the results of a formal investigation into the issue. 'Western governments did not take all this information seriously. They were still wishfully thinking that if we bring economic freedom to China, then eventually China will change its political system,' said Nan Su, a China commentator and senior editor with the Chinese edition of The Epoch Times. Three factors have changed that situation, he said. The COVID-19 pandemic showed China as irresponsible and malicious, blocking critical information that would have aided other countries in facing the disease. The undercutting of Hong Kong's independence in 2022 showed that China wouldn't honor its promise to preserve the island's separate political and legal system for 50 years. And finally, the CCP's support for Russia in the Ukraine war shows China siding with adversaries of the United States and Europe. In recent years, Congress passed several resolutions condemning forced organ harvesting in China, but 'none of them really had teeth,' Nan said. 'If the U.S. government was to really take this issue seriously, invest time and money into the investigation, that's something Beijing's leaders have always been afraid of happening.' The issue is, in fact, a 'key point' in the international confrontation with China as it allows the West to hold the CCP's feet to the fire, said Heng He, an expert on Chinese politics and Epoch Times contributor. (L-R) Robert Destro, former assistant secretary of state for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, Cheng Peiming, a Falun Gong practitioner who had his organs forcibly removed in China, and Dr. Charles Lee, forced organ investigator, speak during a press conference in Washington on Aug. 9, 2024. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times For issues such as unfair trade practices and military expansion, the CCP can just ignore the criticism. Even if the CCP invaded Taiwan or started a war with the Philippines, 'somebody can still defend China, find excuses for China,' he said. 'But for organ harvesting, nobody can,' he added. Rarely is there a matter so clear-cut as to allow one side to assume the unequivocal moral high ground, the experts suggested. 'The issue is whether the U.S. government has a strong will to do it, to expose it, to take action,' Lin said. 'The CCP now realizes that they are at a critical junction … because the current Trump administration has one of the strongest teams, you can say the most hawkish team against the CCP,' he added. The wheels are already in motion; last month the House The CCP is well aware of the historical precedent of the Holocaust, Lin noted. 'The CCP is really worried that their persecution of Falun Gong will become something like that,' he said. Shoot the Messenger Unable to explain the organ harvesting issue away, the CCP is trying to suppress the information by discrediting its victims, the experts said. As The Epoch Times previously 'They want to take down Falun Gong's reputation in the United States so the U.S. government would hesitate to collaborate with the Falun Gong group to expose CCP crimes,' Lin said. The CCP sees this issue as particularly urgent because it strikes at its constant source of insecurity—a lack of legitimacy, Heng He said. Dr. Sean Lin, former lab director of the viral disease branch at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. (Courtesy of The Epoch Times In the past, Chinese dynasties drew legitimacy from a divine mandate. In modern times, legitimacy usually stems from elections, said Heng. However, the CCP rejects both. With its revolutionary promises depleted after Mao Zedong's catastrophic Cultural Revolution in the '60s and '70s, the Party now uses economic growth as a source of pseudo-legitimacy. With the Chinese economy teetering from a massive real estate crash, insolvency in its off-the-books local government financing vehicles, a lack of foreign investment, and the trade war with the United States, the CCP is already facing significant challenges. Thorough exposure of its crimes could very well push the regime over the edge, Lin suggested. 'Even though the Chinese economy has a hard landing and crashes, as long as the CCP leadership is there, they may try to survive this harsh time. And the critical issue is that they still need to be somewhat legitimate to the world, to the Chinese people,' Lin said. 'If their crime against innocent Falun Gong practitioners inside China is fully exposed, nobody can accept such a government, and the CCP may even be disintegrated from inside.'

Ukrainian rescue worker finds wife, daughter and baby grandson dead after Russian drone strikes home
Ukrainian rescue worker finds wife, daughter and baby grandson dead after Russian drone strikes home

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Ukrainian rescue worker finds wife, daughter and baby grandson dead after Russian drone strikes home

A Ukrainian rescue worker who rushed to the scene of a Russian drone strike overnight found his wife, daughter and baby grandson all dead in the rubble of their home. The three relatives — including mom Daryna Shyhyda, a police officer, and her 1-year-old baby — were among five killed in the drone strike in the northern city of Pryluky, which also injured six others, Ukrainian officials said. 'One of the rescuers arrived to respond to the aftermath right at his own home,' Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a social media post. 4 Policewoman Daryna Shyhyda and her son were killed in a Russian drone strike. Obtained by the NY Post The murdered baby 'is already the 632nd child lost since the full-scale war began,' the president said. 'Russia constantly tries to buy time to continue its killings,' he said of counterpart Vladimir Putin allowing deadly strikes even during efforts to reach a peace deal. A heartbreaking photo shows Shyhyda smiling and holding the infant close to her chest sometime before the attack. 'Today our hearts are scorched by pain,' Ukraine's National Police force said, according to the Telegraph. 'This is not just a loss — it is three generations of life uprooted.' 4 Zelensky said the strike took the life of a 1-year-old child — the 632nd child killed by Russia in the conflict. AP Six drones hit a residential area in Pryluky, which had a prewar population of around 50,000 people and lies about 60 miles east of Kyiv, shortly before dawn, according to authorities. More than 100 drones and one ballistic missile blasted Ukrainian targets overnight in the Donetsk, Kharkiv, Odesa, Sumy, Chernihiv, Dnipro and Kherson regions, Zelensky said. 'This is yet another reason to impose maximum sanctions and apply pressure together. We expect action from the United States, Europe, and everyone in the world who can really help change these terrible circumstances,' Zelensky posted on X. 4 The strike came hours after President Trump had a phone call with Vladimir Putin. @Gerashchenko_en/X 4 Daryna Shyhyda, her infant son and mother died in the Russian drone strike in northern Ukraine. Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine / National Police of Ukraine The barrage came hours after President Trump spoke on the phone with Russian President Vladimir Putin, which Trump admitted was 'not a conversation that will lead to immediate Peace' between the warring countries. Zelensky, who has accepted a US ceasefire proposal to stop the bloodshed, wants more international sanctions on Russia to force it to accept a deal. Last weekend Ukraine launched a secret, crippling attack across the border in Russia over the weekend by sneaking a truck full of drones across the border and unleashing the aircraft to target 40 Russian strategic bombers. The attack decimated roughly 36% of Russia's nuclear-capable fleet — in attacks that reached into Siberia and the Arctic. On Tuesday, Kyiv then bombed the Kerch bridge connecting Crimea with the Russian mainland, in another blow to Putin's military prestige. With Post Wires

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store