Robertson Investment Gallery

Robertson Investment Gallery RIG offers investment services through LPL Financial, Independent Broker Dealer, IRA's, Mutual Funds

1867First stock ticker debutsOn November 15, 1867, the first stock ticker is unveiled in New York City. The advent of th...
11/15/2023

1867
First stock ticker debuts
On November 15, 1867, the first stock ticker is unveiled in New York City. The advent of the ticker ultimately revolutionized the stock market by making up-to-the-minute prices available to investors around the country.

Great day in history for the state of Missouri 1965St. Louis's Gateway Arch is completedOn October 28, 1965, constructio...
10/28/2023

Great day in history for the state of Missouri

1965
St. Louis's Gateway Arch is completed
On October 28, 1965, construction is completed on the Gateway Arch, a spectacular 630-foot-high parabola of stainless steel marking the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial on the waterfront of St. Louis, Missouri.

I find this date especially important turning these times of such unrest.  Perhaps the country could pause for a moment ...
09/14/2023

I find this date especially important turning these times of such unrest. Perhaps the country could pause for a moment and remember what those before us sacrificed for our freedom. No matter how old you are or how many times you hear our national anthem it brings a sense of how great our nation is and can continue to be.
On September 14, 1814, Francis Scott Key pens a poem which is later set to music and in 1931 becomes America’s national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner.” The poem, originally titled “The Defence of Fort M'Henry,” was written after Key witnessed the Maryland fort being bombarded by the British during the War of 1812. Key was inspired by the sight of a lone U.S. flag still flying over Fort McHenry at daybreak, as reflected in the now-famous words of the “Star-Spangled Banner”: “And the rocket’s red glare, the bombs bursting in air, Gave proof through the night that our flag was still there.”

Francis Scott Key was born on August 1, 1779, at Terra Rubra, his family’s estate in Frederick County (now Carroll County), Maryland. He became a successful lawyer in Maryland and Washington, D.C., and was later appointed U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.

Interesting piece of history of an iconic figure!On September 7, 1813, the United States gets its nickname, Uncle Sam. T...
09/07/2023

Interesting piece of history of an iconic figure!

On September 7, 1813, the United States gets its nickname, Uncle Sam. The name is linked to Samuel Wilson, a meat packer from Troy, New York, who supplied barrels of beef to the United States Army during the War of 1812. Wilson (1766-1854) stamped the barrels with “U.S.” for United States, but soldiers began referring to the grub as “Uncle Sam’s.” The local newspaper picked up on the story and Uncle Sam eventually gained widespread acceptance as the nickname for—and personification of—the U.S. federal government.

In the late 1860s and 1870s, political cartoonist Thomas Nast (1840-1902) began popularizing the image of Uncle Sam. Nast continued to evolve the image, eventually giving Sam the white beard and stars-and-stripes suit that are associated with the character today. The German-born Nast was also credited with creating the modern image of Santa Claus as well as coming up with the donkey as a symbol for the Democratic Party and the elephant as a symbol for the Republicans. Nast also famously lampooned the corruption of New York City’s Tammany Hall in his editorial cartoons and was, in part, responsible for the downfall of Tammany leader William Tweed, alongside former New York City mayor Fiorello La Guardia who ran his platform on ending Tammany Hall and its corrupt practices.

Perhaps the most famous image of Uncle Sam was created by artist James Montgomery Flagg (1877-1960). In Flagg’s version, Uncle Sam wears a tall top hat and blue jacket and is pointing straight ahead at the viewer. During World War I, this portrait of Sam with the words “I Want You For The U.S. Army” was used as a recruiting poster. The image, which became immensely popular, was first used on the cover of Leslie’s Weekly in July 1916 with the title “What Are You Doing for Preparedness?” The poster was widely distributed and has subsequently been re-used numerous times with different captions.

In September 1961, the U.S. Congress recognized Samuel Wilson as “the progenitor of America’s national symbol of Uncle Sam.” Wilson died at age 87 in 1854, and was buried next to his wife Betsey Mann in the Oakwood Cemetery in Troy, New York, the town that calls itself “The Home of Uncle Sam.”

Music is a very important part of our lives. If you listen the words to many songs truly speak to you and can change our...
08/30/2023

Music is a very important part of our lives. If you listen the words to many songs truly speak to you and can change our mood!
On this day in 1980 Sailing hit number one on the billboard chart

Released in January 1980, Cross’s self-titled debut album was one of the biggest soft-rock hits of all time. The first single was “Ride Like The Wind,” which featured a memorable backup vocal by Doobie Brothers singer Michael McDonald and rose to #2 on the pop charts the following summer. “Sailing” was the follow-up single, and it rose even faster and higher, hitting #1 on this day in 1980. It also transformed Christopher Cross from a complete unknown to the biggest name in pop almost overnight, propelling him to a still-unmatched sweep at the 1981 Grammy Awards, where “Sailing” won Grammys for Best Record and Best Song, Christopher Cross won for Best Album and Cross himself won for Best New Artist. Cross would have another #1 pop hit later that year with “Arthur’s Theme (The Best That You Can Do),” co-written with Burt Bacharach and Carol Bayer Sager and winner of the 1982 Oscar for Best Song. But Cross’s next top-10 hit, “Think Of Laura” (1983), would be his last.

History repeats itself perhaps in various forms but we must study the past in order to create a better futureAfter more ...
08/25/2023

History repeats itself perhaps in various forms but we must study the past in order to create a better future

After more than four years of N**i occupation, Paris is liberated by the French 2nd Armored Division and the U.S. 4th Infantry Division. German resistance was light, and General Dietrich von Choltitz, commander of the German garrison, defied an order by Adolf Hi**er to blow up Paris’ landmarks and burn the city to the ground before its liberation. Choltitz signed a formal surrender that afternoon, and on August 26, Free French General Charles de Gaulle led a joyous liberation march down the Champs d’Elysees.

08/23/2023

Whether you are a proponent of the idea of global warming or not it is certainly not something new

1856
Eunice Foote’s research on global warming is presented publicly
Eunice Foot was a scientist, inventor, women's rights campaigner, wife and mother. Her 1856 paper, "Circumstances affecting the heat of the sun's rays", argued that carbon dioxide and water v***r absorbed and held heat from the sun more readily than other gases. Foote's experiment used an air pump and cylindrical jars to measure changes in the air temperature of various gases in the sun and in the shade.

Her work was presented at a meeting of the AAAS, but she did not present it herself—a friend, Joseph Henry, presented her paper for her. As an amateur scientist and as a woman, Foote likely would not have been taken seriously had she presented her research herself. At the time, no one who read Foote's findings seems to have appreciated their importance. Joseph Henry admitted that he had difficulty in "interpret[ing] their significance."

John Tyndall, a renowned Irish physicist, was originally credited with the discovery of carbon dioxide's ability to absorb radiation. His first paper on the subject was published in 1859, three years after Foote's. (There is no direct evidence that Tyndall ever read Foote's work.) Tyndall's experiment was more sophisticated and accurate than Foote's, and accounted for the role of infrared radiation from Earth, as well as solar radiation from the sun.

Tyndall was a respected member of prestigious European scientific circles; his work was widely appreciated, and laid the foundation for the modern understanding of the greenhouse effect. The work of Foote, an amateur and a woman, was largely forgotten. Her contribution to climate science was only rediscovered by scholars in 2011. However, both Tyndall and Foote reached the same fundamental conclusion: that increased CO2 in the atmosphere would increase Earth's temperature.

We follow the price of gold on a daily basis but do we know where gold is found and who discovered it in areas in the Un...
08/16/2023

We follow the price of gold on a daily basis but do we know where gold is found and who discovered it in areas in the United States

While salmon fishing near the Klondike River in Canada’s Yukon Territory on August 16, 1896, George Carmack reportedly spots nuggets of gold in a creek bed. His lucky discovery sparks the last great gold rush in the American West.

Hoping to cash in on reported gold strikes in Alaska, Carmack had traveled there from California in 1881. After running into a dead end, he headed north into the isolated Yukon Territory, just across the Canadian border. In 1896, another prospector, Robert Henderson, told Carmack of finding gold in a tributary of the Klondike River. Carmack headed to the region with two Native American companions, known as Skookum Jim and Tagish Charlie. On August 16, while camping near Rabbit Creek, Carmack reportedly spotted a nugget of gold jutting out from the creek bank. His two companions later agreed that Skookum Jim–Carmack’s brother-in-law—actually made the discovery.

Regardless of who spotted the gold first, the three men soon found that the rock near the creek bed was thick with gold deposits. They staked their claim the following day. News of the gold strike spread fast across Canada and the United States, and over the next two years, as many as 50,000 would-be miners arrived in the region. Rabbit Creek was renamed Bonanza, and even more gold was discovered in another Klondike tributary, dubbed Eldorado.

“Klondike Fever” reached its height in the United States in mid-July 1897 when two steamships arrived from the Yukon in San Francisco and Seattle, bringing a total of more than two tons of gold. Thousands of eager young men bought elaborate “Yukon outfits” (kits assembled by clever marketers containing food, clothing, tools and other necessary equipment) and set out on their way north. Few of these would find what they were looking for, as most of the land in the region had already been claimed. One of the unsuccessful gold-seekers was 21-year-old Jack London, whose short stories based on his Klondike experience became his first book, The Son of the Wolf (1900).

For his part, Carmack became rich off his discovery, leaving the Yukon with $1 million worth of gold. Many individual gold miners in the Klondike eventually sold their stakes to mining companies, who had the resources and machinery to access more gold. Large-scale gold mining in the Yukon Territory didn’t end until 1966, and by that time the region had yielded some $250 million in gold. Today, some 200 small gold mines still operate in the region.

Today political issues are part of the news 24/7 but in the 70’s this certainly was not the case August 9 1974In accorda...
08/09/2023

Today political issues are part of the news 24/7 but in the 70’s this certainly was not the case

August 9 1974

In accordance with his statement of resignation the previous evening, Richard M. Nixon officially ends his term as the 37th president of the United States at noon on August 9, 1974. Before departing with his family in a helicopter from the White House lawn, he smiled farewell and enigmatically raised his arms in a victory or peace salute. The helicopter door was then closed, and the Nixon family began their journey home to San Clemente, California. Richard Nixon was the first U.S. president to resign from office.

Minutes later, Vice President Gerald R. Ford was sworn in as the 38th president of the United States in the East Room of the White House. After taking the oath of office, President Ford spoke to the nation in a television address, declaring, “My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over.”

Ford, the first president who came to the office through appointment rather than election, had replaced Spiro Agnew as vice president only eight months before. In a political scandal independent of the Nixon administration’s wrongdoings in the Watergate affair, Agnew had been forced to resign in disgrace after he was charged with income tax evasion and political corruption. In September 1974, Ford pardoned Nixon for any crimes he may have committed while in office, explaining that he wanted to end the national divisions created by the Watergate scandal.

Perfect timing with the Wall just being in Chillicothe On August 7, 1782, in Newburgh, New York, General George Washingt...
08/07/2023

Perfect timing with the Wall just being in Chillicothe

On August 7, 1782, in Newburgh, New York, General George Washington, the commander in chief of the Continental Army, creates the “Badge for Military Merit,” a decoration consisting of a purple, heart-shaped piece of silk, edged with a narrow binding of silver, with the word Merit stitched across the face in silver.

The badge was to be presented to soldiers for “any singularly meritorious action” and permitted its wearer to pass guards and sentinels without challenge. The honoree’s name and regiment were also to be inscribed in a “Book of Merit.”

We have learned from her writings and may we forever remember this young girl who shared her story so we might have an i...
08/04/2023

We have learned from her writings and may we forever remember this young girl who shared her story so we might have an insight of the Holocaust
August 4 1944
Acting on tip from an informer, the N**i Gestapo captures 15-year-old Jewish diarist Anne Frank and her family in a sealed-off area of an Amsterdam warehouse. The Franks had taken shelter there in 1942 out of fear of deportation to a N**i concentration camp. They occupied the small space with another Jewish family and a single Jewish man and were aided by Christian friends, who brought them food and supplies. Anne spent much of her time in the so-called “secret annex” working on her diary. The diary survived the war, overlooked by the Gestapo that discovered the hiding place, but Anne and nearly all of the others perished in the N**i death camps.

When we think of invasions of past conflicts we think of large amounts of land being overtaken but on this day in histor...
08/02/2023

When we think of invasions of past conflicts we think of large amounts of land being overtaken but on this day in history it was not the land but what the land contained

On August 2, 1990, at about 2 a.m. local time, Iraqi forces invade Kuwait, Iraq’s tiny, oil-rich neighbor. Kuwait’s defense forces were rapidly overwhelmed, and those that were not destroyed retreated to Saudi Arabia. The emir of Kuwait, his family, and other government leaders fled to Saudi Arabia, and within hours Kuwait City had been captured and the Iraqis had established a provincial government. By annexing Kuwait, Iraq gained control of 20 percent of the world’s oil reserves and, for the first time, a substantial coastline on the Persian Gulf. The same day, the United Nations Security Council unanimously denounced the invasion and demanded Iraq’s immediate withdrawal from Kuwait. On August 6, the Security Council imposed a worldwide ban on trade with Iraq.

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