Gene Schnar

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Gene Schnar

Gene Schnar

@GeneSchnar

Dad, History/Journalism Teacher, Basketball Coach, Photographer, Writer, Transplanted Chicagoan, Proud grad of Indiana University

Anaheim Hills, CA 参加日 Mayıs 2009
1.8K フォロー中471 フォロワー
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Nathan 😀👍
Nathan 😀👍@KensethFan17_20·
Helio finishing 2nd after this still blows my mind
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Hoosier Review
Hoosier Review@Hoosier_Review·
What if this happened? Oh yeah, it did #iufb
Omar345@otmar345

@BStew4110 IU was up 10 at the half because Miami missed an automatic chip shot fg. Miami then scored 3tds. If IU doesn’t get the blocked punt. You lose the game

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Football Classics
Football Classics@ClassicsNFL·
Indiana vs Ohio State 2025 Big Ten Football Championship.
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Team Katie
Team Katie@TeamKatiePorter·
"This is worse than my teenagers at dinner." —Katie, and all of us #CAGovDebate
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Gene Schnar
Gene Schnar@GeneSchnar·
@alexpotato @TheHistoryOfTh2 Did you memorize Ken Burns “The Civil War”? Jk. I have a ton of those quotes myself. Grant’s memoirs are a must read, and also highly quotable.
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TheHistoryOfTheAmericans
TheHistoryOfTheAmericans@TheHistoryOfTh2·
I learned only today how wildly popular Ulysses S. Grant is on this hellscape of a website. Very redemptive.
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Alex Elliott
Alex Elliott@alexpotato·
“Grant stood by me when I was crazy. I stood by him when he was drunk. Now, we stand by each other always” - William Tecumseh Sherman
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Gene Schnar
Gene Schnar@GeneSchnar·
@cdrsalamander Absolutely! It’s extremely well-written and the opening paragraph draws the reader in immediately.
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cdrsalamander
cdrsalamander@cdrsalamander·
He should be near the top. His memoir should be required reading in high school. A great American.
Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT

He won the Civil War, broke the Klan, went bankrupt at 62, got terminal throat cancer, and wrote one of the greatest books in American literature in the final year of his life. He finished it 5 days before he died. Ulysses S. Grant was born 204 years ago today. His name wasn't even Ulysses S. Grant. He was born Hiram Ulysses Grant in Point Pleasant, Ohio on April 27, 1822. The congressman who nominated him to West Point wrote down the wrong name. Grant kept it. The "S." stands for nothing. He hated his father's tannery and loved horses. Graduated 21st of 39 at West Point. Fought in the Mexican-American War, then came home convinced it was an unjust war designed to expand slavery. He later said he believed the Civil War was divine punishment for it. He married Julia Dent in 1848, into a slave-owning Missouri family. His abolitionist father refused to attend the wedding. In 1859, broke and desperate, Grant freed the one enslaved man he'd briefly owned instead of selling him. He could have gotten a year's wages. In the Civil War he became what no other Union general was: relentless. Vicksburg (July 4, 1863) split the Confederacy in half. Lincoln then gave him every Union army. His Appomattox surrender terms: officers kept sidearms, men kept horses for spring planting, no one prosecuted. As president (1869 to 1877) he did something no president would do again until LBJ: used federal troops to crush the Ku Klux Klan. He suspended habeas corpus in 9 South Carolina counties, prosecuted Klansmen before predominantly Black juries, and broke the first Klan. His presidency was also rocked by scandal: Black Friday 1869. Crédit Mobilier. The Whiskey Ring. Belknap. Grant himself never took a dime. He was just disastrously loyal to corrupt friends. The pattern damaged his reputation for a century. After the White House, he toured the world for 2 years. Dined with Queen Victoria. Met the emperor of Japan. Then in 1884, a Wall Street partner named Ferdinand Ward ran what we'd now call a Ponzi scheme. Grant was wiped out. 62 years old. Penniless. Weeks later he was diagnosed with terminal throat cancer. Mark Twain offered to publish his memoirs. Grant wrote in agony, sometimes 50 pages a day, racing the disease to leave Julia an inheritance. He finished the manuscript July 18, 1885. He died July 23. The book made Julia $450,000, about $14M today. It's now considered one of the finest memoirs in the English language. For decades historians ranked Grant a failure. Since 2000 he's jumped 13 spots in the C-SPAN survey, the biggest rise of any president. Happy birthday, General 🇺🇸

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Big Ten Men's Basketball
Happy 3️⃣5️⃣th, Christian Watford! 🥳 We're celebrating with the former #iubb star's iconic buzzer-beater to down No. 1 Kentucky. @IndianaMBB x @Cwat205
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Gene Schnar@GeneSchnar·
@dandarling The Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant should be required reading. Not only is it great insight into Grant and his hardscrabble beginnings, overcoming much adversity to become Union Commander, it demonstrates his overall strategy to win the war. It also is extremely well-written.
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Daniel Darling
Daniel Darling@dandarling·
Grant is one of the most underrated Americans of all time. He's the Christian general from the Civil War we should all celebrate. After all, he won the war and saved the Union! In the early 20th century, the narrative of his life was told in a biased and sometimes downright false way. He overcame alcoholism and refused to drink while in the White House. His treatment and advocacy for African Americans were courageous. He is one of the greatest Americans.
Echoes of War@EchoesofWarYT

He won the Civil War, broke the Klan, went bankrupt at 62, got terminal throat cancer, and wrote one of the greatest books in American literature in the final year of his life. He finished it 5 days before he died. Ulysses S. Grant was born 204 years ago today. His name wasn't even Ulysses S. Grant. He was born Hiram Ulysses Grant in Point Pleasant, Ohio on April 27, 1822. The congressman who nominated him to West Point wrote down the wrong name. Grant kept it. The "S." stands for nothing. He hated his father's tannery and loved horses. Graduated 21st of 39 at West Point. Fought in the Mexican-American War, then came home convinced it was an unjust war designed to expand slavery. He later said he believed the Civil War was divine punishment for it. He married Julia Dent in 1848, into a slave-owning Missouri family. His abolitionist father refused to attend the wedding. In 1859, broke and desperate, Grant freed the one enslaved man he'd briefly owned instead of selling him. He could have gotten a year's wages. In the Civil War he became what no other Union general was: relentless. Vicksburg (July 4, 1863) split the Confederacy in half. Lincoln then gave him every Union army. His Appomattox surrender terms: officers kept sidearms, men kept horses for spring planting, no one prosecuted. As president (1869 to 1877) he did something no president would do again until LBJ: used federal troops to crush the Ku Klux Klan. He suspended habeas corpus in 9 South Carolina counties, prosecuted Klansmen before predominantly Black juries, and broke the first Klan. His presidency was also rocked by scandal: Black Friday 1869. Crédit Mobilier. The Whiskey Ring. Belknap. Grant himself never took a dime. He was just disastrously loyal to corrupt friends. The pattern damaged his reputation for a century. After the White House, he toured the world for 2 years. Dined with Queen Victoria. Met the emperor of Japan. Then in 1884, a Wall Street partner named Ferdinand Ward ran what we'd now call a Ponzi scheme. Grant was wiped out. 62 years old. Penniless. Weeks later he was diagnosed with terminal throat cancer. Mark Twain offered to publish his memoirs. Grant wrote in agony, sometimes 50 pages a day, racing the disease to leave Julia an inheritance. He finished the manuscript July 18, 1885. He died July 23. The book made Julia $450,000, about $14M today. It's now considered one of the finest memoirs in the English language. For decades historians ranked Grant a failure. Since 2000 he's jumped 13 spots in the C-SPAN survey, the biggest rise of any president. Happy birthday, General 🇺🇸

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Arie Luyendyk
Arie Luyendyk@ArieLuyendyk·
40 years ago, thanks for posting @Thomsen419
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Gene Schnar@GeneSchnar·
@B89Adam Well, I’m not giving up 3 to that school from West Lafayette, so 💯
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Weggie Rayne
Weggie Rayne@weggie_rayne·
Back at the home of the 16-0 Undefeated 2026 National Champion Indiana Football Hoosiers.
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History Defined
History Defined@historydefined·
When former president Theodore Roosevelt died in his sleep in 1919, sitting vice president Thomas R. Marshall famously remarked, “Death had to take Roosevelt sleeping, for if he had been awake, there would have been a fight.”
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