BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.41.71//
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
UID:33353264-3333-4539-a264-646237356437
X-WR-CALNAME:JCal Pro Calendar
X-WR-CALDESC:Your online events calendar
X-WR-TIMEZONE:America/Chicago
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Chicago
TZUNTIL:20271107T070000Z
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZNAME:CST
DTSTART:20251102T020000
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0600
RDATE:20261101T020000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZNAME:CDT
DTSTART:20260308T020000
TZOFFSETFROM:-0600
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
RDATE:20270314T020000
END:DAYLIGHT
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250501T000000UTC-2304HVdO9s@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 1\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders launched peak spring fur trade expediti
 ons with Native American tribes like the Osage\, driving Missouri’s early 
 economy\, though no specific event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style=
 'font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0
 00000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” escalated raids in
 to Kansas during “Bleeding Kansas\,” clashing with anti-slavery settlers t
 o shape the territory’s slavery future.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, reinforced
  federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri intensif
 ied spring raids\, fueling Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Ark
 ansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control and min
 imal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: aria
 l\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The
  Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking Cape Gir
 ardeau to markets\, boosted commerce\, with May freight traffic surging.</
 span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\;
  font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened M
 issouri’s economic crisis\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing unemploy
 ment\, while spring relief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post
 -Pearl Harbor\, ramped up World War II production\, with factories expandi
 ng military output and enlistment drives growing.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250501T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250501T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 1st This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2753-may-1st-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 1\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders launched peak spring f
 ur trade expeditions with Native American tribes like the Osage\, driving 
 Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is noted.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” 
 escalated raids into Kansas during “Bleeding Kansas\,” clashing with anti-
 slavery settlers to shape the territory’s slavery future.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. 
 Louis\, reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural
  Missouri intensified spring raids\, fueling Civil War divides.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Mis
 souri units in Arkansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Uni
 on control and minimal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style=
 'font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0
 00000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\
 , linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, boosted commerce\, with May freight 
 traffic surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Dep
 ression deepened Missouri’s economic crisis\, with Kansas City and St. Lou
 is facing unemployment\, while spring relief programs focused on job creat
 ion.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-s
 erif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and 
 Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, ramped up World War II production\, with
  factories expanding military output and enlistment drives growing.</span>
 </li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250502T000000UTC-9962euGwDz@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 2\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw active spring fur 
 trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is document
 ed.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Mis
 souri’s “Border Ruffians” continued violent raids on Kansas anti-slavery s
 ettlers\, escalating territorial conflict in early May.</span></li>\n<li><
 span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\
 ; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fort
 ified federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas launched sprin
 g attacks\, deepening Missouri’s Civil War tensions.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri force
 s in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself under 
 Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, serving C
 ape Girardeau\, drove economic growth\, with early May marking increased a
 gricultural shipments.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, 
 helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missour
 i’s Kansas City and St. Louis struggled with Great Depression job losses\,
  while spring public works projects aimed to provide temporary employment.
 </span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif
 \; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kans
 as City boosted wartime manufacturing\, with early May recruitment focusin
 g on military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250502T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250502T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 2nd This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2756-may-2nd-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 2\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw a
 ctive spring fur trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific 
 event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleed
 ing Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued violent raids on Kans
 as anti-slavery settlers\, escalating territorial conflict in early May.</
 span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\;
  font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck 
 in St. Louis fortified federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrill
 as launched spring attacks\, deepening Missouri’s Civil War tensions.</spa
 n></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fo
 nt-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price
 ’s Missouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Misso
 uri itself under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Rai
 lroad\, serving Cape Girardeau\, drove economic growth\, with early May ma
 rking increased agricultural shipments.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis struggled with Great Depres
 sion job losses\, while spring public works projects aimed to provide temp
 orary employment.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s S
 t. Louis and Kansas City boosted wartime manufacturing\, with early May re
 cruitment focusing on military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250503T000000UTC-7788R9l8lv@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 3\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions\,
  vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is noted.</s
 pan></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; 
 font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border R
 uffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” 
 intensifying violence as spring campaigns grew.</span></li>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\
 , maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrillas 
 escalated spring raids\, fueling strife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas
  focused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and littl
 e Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\,
  helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Mi
 ssouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, linking Cape Girardea
 u to markets\, supported commerce\, with early May freight traffic thrivin
 g.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-ser
 if\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Mi
 ssouri’s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing unempl
 oyment\, while spring relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>2023: The St. Louis Cardinals\, a storied MLB fran
 chise\, continued their season\, building on their legacy of 11 World Seri
 es titles\, though no specific game is noted for this date.</span></li>\n<
 /ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250503T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250503T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 3rd This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2759-may-3rd-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 3\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur tr
 ade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific e
 vent is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetic
 a\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-
 slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bl
 eeding Kansas\,” intensifying violence as spring campaigns grew.</span></l
 i>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, statio
 ned in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confed
 erate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, fueling strife.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri 
 units in Arkansas focused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union 
 control and little Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, link
 ing Cape Girardeau to markets\, supported commerce\, with early May freigh
 t traffic thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, hel
 vetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great 
 Depression hit Missouri’s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Lo
 uis facing unemployment\, while spring relief programs prioritized food ai
 d.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-ser
 if\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>2023: The St. Louis Cardinals\, a
  storied MLB franchise\, continued their season\, building on their legacy
  of 11 World Series titles\, though no specific game is noted for this dat
 e.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250504T000000UTC-3193C9LU59@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 4\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spring
  trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is recorded.
 </span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif
 \; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missou
 ri’s “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling terri
 torial clashes as spring progressed.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis reinforced federal cont
 rol\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring offen
 sives\, heightening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: a
 rial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: 
 Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up
  for spring operations\, with Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominan
 ce.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Misso
 uri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove 
 economic activity\, with early May rail operations robust.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis faced Gr
 eat Depression hardships\, with spring relief initiatives creating jobs th
 rough infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: 
 arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941:
  Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World 
 War II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and recruitment 
 drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250504T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250504T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 4th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2762-may-4th-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 4\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\,
  supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific e
 vent is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding
  Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settler
 s\, fueling territorial clashes as spring progressed.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis reinfo
 rced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri laun
 ched spring offensives\, heightening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in A
 rkansas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remaining quiet un
 der Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast
  Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to national
  markets\, drove economic activity\, with early May rail operations robust
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and S
 t. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief initiatives
  creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor
 \, boosted World War II efforts\, with factories expanding military output
  and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250505T000000UTC-1667W8HA3V@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 5\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur trade expeditions\
 , a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific event is documented.
 </span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif
 \; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Borde
 r Ruffians” intensified raids into Kansas during “Bleeding Kansas\,” clash
 ing with anti-slavery settlers in early May.</span></li>\n<li><span style=
 'font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0
 00000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, stren
 gthened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated sp
 ring raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fo
 nt-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0000
 00\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansa
 s planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control and minimal
  Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, 
 helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Mis
 souri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, serving Cape Girarde
 au\, boosted trade\, with early May freight traffic surging.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s ec
 onomic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring rel
 ief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City ramped up wartime production\
 , with early May enlistment campaigns targeting skilled defense workers.</
 span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250505T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250505T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 5th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2765-may-5th-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 5\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur t
 rade expeditions\, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific eve
 nt is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s p
 ro-slavery “Border Ruffians” intensified raids into Kansas during “Bleedin
 g Kansas\,” clashing with anti-slavery settlers in early May.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in
  St. Louis\, strengthened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerr
 illas escalated spring raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missour
 i units in Arkansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union c
 ontrol and minimal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, se
 rving Cape Girardeau\, boosted trade\, with early May freight traffic surg
 ing.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-s
 erif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deep
 ened Missouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\
 , while spring relief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n<li><
 span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\
 ; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City ramped up w
 artime production\, with early May enlistment campaigns targeting skilled 
 defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250506T000000UTC-1736oac8p3@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 6\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw peak spring fur tr
 ading with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is noted.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1820: President James Monroe signed the
  Missouri Compromise\, allowing Missouri to enter the Union as a slave sta
 te alongside Maine as a free state\, balancing congressional power.</span>
 </li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans
 -serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. 
 Halleck in St. Louis fortified federal control\, while Confederate guerril
 las in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.<
 /span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\
 ; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling P
 rice’s Missouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with M
 issouri itself under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span><
 /li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific
  Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\, wi
 th mid-May freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis reeled from Great Depressio
 n unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing temporary rel
 ief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-s
 erif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and 
 Kansas City boosted World War II manufacturing\, with mid-May recruitment 
 focusing on military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250506T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250506T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 6th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2768-may-6th-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 6\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw p
 eak spring fur trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific ev
 ent is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1820: President James 
 Monroe signed the Missouri Compromise\, allowing Missouri to enter the Uni
 on as a slave state alongside Maine as a free state\, balancing congressio
 nal power.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\,
  helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union 
 General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fortified federal control\, while Co
 nfederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling C
 ivil War strife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate G
 eneral Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring op
 erations\, with Missouri itself under Union control and minimal Confederat
 e action.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s
  Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove eco
 nomic growth\, with mid-May freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis reeled fro
 m Great Depression unemployment\, with spring public works projects provid
 ing temporary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, h
 elvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri
 ’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II manufacturing\, with mid
 -May recruitment focusing on military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250507T000000UTC-6119v4N8nk@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 7\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions\,
  vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is recorded.
 </span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif
 \; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missou
 ri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, escalat
 ing territorial violence in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maintaine
 d Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrillas planned spr
 ing raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family:
  arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864
 : Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused 
 on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confede
 rate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetic
 a\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pa
 cific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, suppo
 rted commerce\, with mid-May freight traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s urban centers h
 ard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, while spring reli
 ef programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-famil
 y: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>19
 41: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, increased W
 orld War II production\, with mid-May enlistment drives expanding to meet 
 wartime demands.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250507T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250507T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 7th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2771-may-7th-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 7\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur tr
 ade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific e
 vent is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding
  Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery s
 ettlers\, escalating territorial violence in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. 
 Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerr
 illas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in 
 Arkansas focused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control a
 nd little Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family:
  arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888
 : The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape 
 Girardeau\, supported commerce\, with mid-May freight traffic robust.</spa
 n></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fo
 nt-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’
 s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, 
 while spring relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><span 
 style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; col
 or: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Har
 bor\, increased World War II production\, with mid-May enlistment drives e
 xpanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250508T000000UTC-7422MCTLT0@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 8\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spring
  trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is documente
 d.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-ser
 if\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Bor
 der Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” i
 ntensifying territorial clashes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis reinforced feder
 al control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched sprin
 g offensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arka
 nsas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remaining quiet under
  Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1869: The Missouri
  Woman’s Suffrage Club organized in St. Louis\, the first U.S. organizatio
 n dedicated to women’s political enfranchisement.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis face
 d Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief initiatives creating job
 s through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II efforts\, w
 ith factories expanding military output and mid-May recruitment drives gai
 ning traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250508T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250508T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 8th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2774-may-8th-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 8\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\,
  supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific e
 vent is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, hel
 vetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s
  pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Ble
 eding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes in mid-May.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis
  reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missou
 ri launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missou
 ri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri rema
 ining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 869: The Missouri Woman’s Suffrage Club organized in St. Louis\, the first
  U.S. organization dedicated to women’s political enfranchisement.</span><
 /li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-
 serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City a
 nd St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief initiat
 ives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li><span
  style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; co
 lor: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World W
 ar II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and mid-May recru
 itment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250509T000000UTC-5420j1tWvU@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 9\, the following notable histor
 ical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur trade expeditions\
 , a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific event is noted.</spa
 n></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fo
 nt-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s 
 “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling viol
 ent territorial disputes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened 
 federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring rai
 ds\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-famil
 y: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>18
 64: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas planne
 d spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control and minimal Confede
 rate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetic
 a\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pa
 cific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking Cape Girardeau to ma
 rkets\, boosted trade\, with mid-May freight traffic surging.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s 
 economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring r
 elief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>2019: The St. Louis Blues\, an NHL team\, continued their playoff run 
 toward their first Stanley Cup victory\, a landmark moment in Missouri’s s
 ports history.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250509T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250509T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 9th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2777-may-9th-this-day-in-m
 issouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 9\, the followi
 ng notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur t
 rade expeditions\, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific eve
 nt is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\
 , sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kans
 as\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settle
 rs\, fueling violent territorial disputes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Loui
 s\, strengthened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas esc
 alated spring raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span 
 style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; col
 or: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units i
 n Arkansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control an
 d minimal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family:
  arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888
 : The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking Cap
 e Girardeau to markets\, boosted trade\, with mid-May freight traffic surg
 ing.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-s
 erif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deep
 ened Missouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\
 , while spring relief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n<li><
 span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\
 ; color: #000000\;'>2019: The St. Louis Blues\, an NHL team\, continued th
 eir playoff run toward their first Stanley Cup victory\, a landmark moment
  in Missouri’s sports history.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250510T000000UTC-5809uNDfRo@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 10\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw active spring fur
  trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is recorde
 d.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-ser
 if\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Bor
 der Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” d
 riving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fortified f
 ederal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched s
 pring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fo
 nt-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0000
 00\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkans
 as prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself under Union contr
 ol and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girarde
 au to markets\, drove economic growth\, with mid-May freight operations th
 riving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban cente
 rs\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depression unemployment
 \, with spring public works projects providing temporary relief.</span></l
 i>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City bo
 osted World War II manufacturing\, with mid-May recruitment focusing on mi
 litary production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250510T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250510T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 10th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2780-may-10th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 10\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw 
 active spring fur trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific
  event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, hel
 vetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s
  pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Ble
 eding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></
 li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. 
 Louis fortified federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Mi
 ssouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri
  forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself 
 under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span
  style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; co
 lor: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, lin
 king Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with mid-May frei
 ght operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\
 , helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Misso
 uri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depres
 sion unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing temporary 
 relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis a
 nd Kansas City boosted World War II manufacturing\, with mid-May recruitme
 nt focusing on military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250511T000000UTC-2652JVecSI@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 11\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions\
 , vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is document
 ed.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1823: St. Regis Seminary opened 
 in Florissant\, Missouri\, as the first Roman Catholic institution in the 
 U.S. for the higher education of Native Americans.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Borde
 r Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, escalating territo
 rial violence in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial
 \, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Unio
 n General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’
 s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrillas planned spring raids\,
  deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confedera
 te General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on spring l
 ogistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate activi
 ty.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railr
 oad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported commer
 ce\, with mid-May freight traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fo
 nt-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0000
 00\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s urban centers hard\, with 
 Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, while spring relief programs
  prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250511T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250511T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 11th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2783-may-11th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 11\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur t
 rade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific 
 event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1823: St. Regis
  Seminary opened in Florissant\, Missouri\, as the first Roman Catholic in
 stitution in the U.S. for the higher education of Native Americans.</span>
 </li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans
 -serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” 
 Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, e
 scalating territorial violence in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, mai
 ntained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrillas plann
 ed spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas fo
 cused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little C
 onfederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Misso
 uri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\,
  supported commerce\, with mid-May freight traffic robust.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s urban cen
 ters hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, while sprin
 g relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250512T000000UTC-6257jUpPWl@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 12\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported sprin
 g trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is noted.</
 span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\;
  font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border 
 Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” inten
 sifying territorial clashes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis reinforced federal c
 ontrol\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring of
 fensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas
  geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remaining quiet under Uni
 on dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missou
 ri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to national market
 s\, drove economic activity\, with mid-May rail traffic surging.</span></l
 i>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis fa
 ced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief initiatives creating j
 obs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II efforts\,
  with factories expanding military output and mid-May recruitment drives g
 aining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250512T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250512T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 12th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2786-may-12th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 12\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\
 , supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific 
 event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helveti
 ca\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro
 -slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleedin
 g Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis rei
 nforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri l
 aunched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri f
 orces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remainin
 g quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: 
 arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888:
  Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau t
 o national markets\, drove economic activity\, with mid-May rail traffic s
 urging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City
  and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief initi
 atives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World
  War II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and mid-May rec
 ruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250513T000000UTC-2628VJBCjV@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 13\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur trade expeditions
 \, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific event is recorded.<
 /span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\
 ; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missour
 i’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling 
 violent territorial disputes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthe
 ned federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring
  raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas pl
 anned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control and minimal Con
 federate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missour
 i Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking Cape Girardeau t
 o markets\, boosted trade\, with mid-May freight traffic thriving.</span><
 /li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missour
 i’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spri
 ng relief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City ramped up wartime produ
 ction\, with mid-May enlistment campaigns targeting skilled defense worker
 s.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250513T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250513T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 13th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2789-may-13th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 13\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur 
 trade expeditions\, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific ev
 ent is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding 
 Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery se
 ttlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. 
 Louis\, strengthened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas
  escalated spring raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><s
 pan style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\;
  color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri uni
 ts in Arkansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union contro
 l and minimal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking
  Cape Girardeau to markets\, boosted trade\, with mid-May freight traffic 
 thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression
  deepened Missouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis strugg
 ling\, while spring relief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City ramped
  up wartime production\, with mid-May enlistment campaigns targeting skill
 ed defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250514T000000UTC-8173IO1Alv@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 14\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw active spring fur
  trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is documen
 ted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-s
 erif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “B
 order Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,”
  driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></li>\n<li><span 
 style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; col
 or: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fortified
  federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched
  spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arka
 nsas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself under Union con
 trol and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girar
 deau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with mid-May freight operations 
 surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sa
 ns-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban cent
 ers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depression unemploymen
 t\, with spring public works projects providing temporary relief.</span></
 li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City b
 oosted World War II manufacturing\, with mid-May recruitment focusing on m
 ilitary production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250514T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250514T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 14th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2792-may-14th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 14\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw 
 active spring fur trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific
  event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, h
 elvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri
 ’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “B
 leeding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span>
 </li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font
 -size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St
 . Louis fortified federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural 
 Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missou
 ri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itsel
 f under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, l
 inking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with mid-May fr
 eight operations surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial
 \, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Miss
 ouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depre
 ssion unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing temporary
  relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sa
 ns-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis 
 and Kansas City boosted World War II manufacturing\, with mid-May recruitm
 ent focusing on military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250515T000000UTC-70423UaG6V@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 15\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions\
 , vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is noted.</
 span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\;
  font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1841: The first emigrant wagon train 
 to reach California left Independence\, Missouri\, embarking on a 1\,730-m
 ile journey over the Sierra Nevada\, marking Missouri’s role as the “Gatew
 ay to the West.”</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: a
 rial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: 
 In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas an
 ti-slavery settlers\, escalating territorial violence in mid-May.</span></
 li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stati
 oned in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confe
 derate guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missou
 ri units in Arkansas focused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Uni
 on control and little Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, s
 erving Cape Girardeau\, supported commerce\, with mid-May freight traffic 
 robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression h
 it Missouri’s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing j
 ob losses\, while spring relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>
 \n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250515T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250515T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 15th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2795-may-15th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 15\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur t
 rade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific 
 event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helveti
 ca\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1841: The first emig
 rant wagon train to reach California left Independence\, Missouri\, embark
 ing on a 1\,730-mile journey over the Sierra Nevada\, marking Missouri’s r
 ole as the “Gateway to the West.”</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clash
 ed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, escalating territorial violence in 
 mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sa
 ns-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W
 . Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, 
 while rural Confederate guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensio
 ns.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterli
 ng Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on spring logistics\, with M
 issouri under Union control and little Confederate activity.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast M
 issouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported commerce\, with mid-May
  freight traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\
 , helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The G
 reat Depression hit Missouri’s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and S
 t. Louis facing job losses\, while spring relief programs prioritized food
  aid.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250516T000000UTC-6894gaDTvl@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 16\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported sprin
 g trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is recorded
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Bord
 er Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” in
 tensifying territorial clashes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis reinforced federa
 l control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring
  offensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkan
 sas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remaining quiet under 
 Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Mis
 souri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to national mar
 kets\, drove economic activity\, with mid-May rail traffic surging.</span>
 </li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font
 -size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis
  faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief initiatives creatin
 g jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II effort
 s\, with factories expanding military output and mid-May recruitment drive
 s gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250516T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250516T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 16th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2798-may-16th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 16\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\
 , supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific 
 event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s 
 pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Blee
 ding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis 
 reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missour
 i launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missour
 i forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remai
 ning quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-famil
 y: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>18
 88: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardea
 u to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with mid-May rail traffi
 c surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, 
 sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas C
 ity and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief in
 itiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted Wo
 rld War II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and mid-May 
 recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250517T000000UTC-3091Muc2PS@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 17\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur trade expeditions
 \, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific event is documented
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1849: A massive fire destroyed muc
 h of St. Louis’s central business district\, highlighting the city’s vulne
 rability as a growing commercial hub.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span 
 style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; col
 or: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” c
 lashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial dis
 putes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union Genera
 l Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened federal defenses\, 
 while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, deepening Civi
 l War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetic
 a\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate Gen
 eral Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas planned spring campaigns\
 , with Missouri under Union control and minimal Confederate activity.</spa
 n></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fo
 nt-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s so
 utheast Missouri network\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, boosted tra
 de\, with mid-May freight traffic thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s economic woes\, wit
 h Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring relief programs focu
 sed on job creation.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250517T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250517T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 17th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2801-may-17th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 17\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur 
 trade expeditions\, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific ev
 ent is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1849: A massive f
 ire destroyed much of St. Louis’s central business district\, highlighting
  the city’s vulnerability as a growing commercial hub.</span></li>\n</ul>
 \n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fon
 t-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “
 Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling viole
 nt territorial disputes in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened f
 ederal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raid
 s\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family
 : arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>186
 4: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas planned
  spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control and minimal Confeder
 ate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pac
 ific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking Cape Girardeau to mar
 kets\, boosted trade\, with mid-May freight traffic thriving.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s 
 economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring r
 elief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250518T000000UTC-3588uiT6rb@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 18\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw active spring fur
  trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is noted.<
 /span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\
 ; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border
  Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” driv
 ing violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fortified fede
 ral control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched spri
 ng attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-
 family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\
 ;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas 
 prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself under Union control 
 and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family:
  arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888
 : Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau 
 to markets\, drove economic growth\, with mid-May freight operations surgi
 ng.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban centers\,
  Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depression unemployment\, w
 ith spring public works projects providing temporary relief.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1985: The Kansas City Royals\, an MLB team\, cont
 inued their season\, building toward their World Series victory later that
  year\, a defining moment in Missouri sports.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250518T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250518T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 18th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2804-may-18th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 18\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw 
 active spring fur trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific
  event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pr
 o-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleedi
 ng Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Lou
 is fortified federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Misso
 uri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<li><
 span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\
 ; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri fo
 rces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself und
 er Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linkin
 g Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with mid-May freight
  operations surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’
 s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depression
  unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing temporary reli
 ef.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1985: The Kansas City Royals\, a
 n MLB team\, continued their season\, building toward their World Series v
 ictory later that year\, a defining moment in Missouri sports.</span></li>
 \n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250519T000000UTC-1023WmnhSE@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 19\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions\
 , vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is recorded
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Misso
 uri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, escala
 ting territorial violence in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maintain
 ed Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrillas planned sp
 ring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family
 : arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>186
 4: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused
  on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confed
 erate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helveti
 ca\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri P
 acific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supp
 orted commerce\, with mid-May freight traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s urban centers 
 hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, while spring rel
 ief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II efforts\, w
 ith factories expanding military output and mid-May recruitment drives gai
 ning traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250519T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250519T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 19th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2807-may-19th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 19\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur t
 rade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific 
 event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleedin
 g Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery 
 settlers\, escalating territorial violence in mid-May.</span></li>\n<li><s
 pan style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\;
  color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St.
  Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guer
 rillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in
  Arkansas focused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control 
 and little Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family
 : arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>188
 8: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape
  Girardeau\, supported commerce\, with mid-May freight traffic robust.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri
 ’s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\,
  while spring relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><span
  style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; co
 lor: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World W
 ar II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and mid-May recru
 itment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250520T000000UTC-98742FXnBD@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 20\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported sprin
 g trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is document
 ed.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Bo
 rder Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” 
 intensifying territorial clashes in late May.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1861: Union General Nathaniel Lyon received permission to act ag
 ainst pro-Confederate forces in Missouri\, while Sterling Price negotiated
  with General Harney to limit troop movements\, though tensions persisted.
 </span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate Gene
 ral Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring oper
 ations\, with Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Rai
 lroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activi
 ty\, with late May rail traffic surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1927: Charles Lindbergh began his historic nonstop solo transatlantic
  flight in the “Spirit of St. Louis\,” funded by St. Louis businessmen\, c
 ementing Missouri’s aviation legacy.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War
  II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and late May recrui
 tment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250520T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250520T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 20th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2810-may-20th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 20\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\
 , supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific 
 event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’
 s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bl
 eeding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes in late May.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Nathaniel Lyon received per
 mission to act against pro-Confederate forces in Missouri\, while Sterling
  Price negotiated with General Harney to limit troop movements\, though te
 nsions persisted.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: 
 arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864:
  Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared u
 p for spring operations\, with Missouri remaining quiet under Union domina
 nce.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-s
 erif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Miss
 ouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove
  economic activity\, with late May rail traffic surging.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1927: Charles Lindbergh began his historic nonstop so
 lo transatlantic flight in the “Spirit of St. Louis\,” funded by St. Louis
  businessmen\, cementing Missouri’s aviation legacy.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City b
 oosted World War II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and
  late May recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250521T000000UTC-5503F8rbbv@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 21\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur trade expeditions
 \, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific event is noted.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s
  “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling vio
 lent territorial disputes in late May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-
 family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\
 ;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthene
 d federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring r
 aids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas plan
 ned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control and minimal Confe
 derate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri 
 Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking Cape Girardeau to 
 markets\, boosted trade\, with late May freight traffic thriving.</span></
 li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1927: Charles Lindbergh landed the “Spirit o
 f St. Louis” in Paris\, completing the first nonstop solo transatlantic fl
 ight\, a landmark event tied to Missouri’s St. Louis.</span></li>\n</ul>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City 
 ramped up wartime production\, with late May enlistment campaigns targetin
 g skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250521T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250521T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 21st This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2813-may-21st-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 21\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur 
 trade expeditions\, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific ev
 ent is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kan
 sas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settl
 ers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in late May.</span></li>\n<li><
 span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\
 ; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Lo
 uis\, strengthened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas e
 scalated spring raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units
  in Arkansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control 
 and minimal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-famil
 y: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>18
 88: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking C
 ape Girardeau to markets\, boosted trade\, with late May freight traffic t
 hriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sa
 ns-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1927: Charles Lindbergh lan
 ded the “Spirit of St. Louis” in Paris\, completing the first nonstop solo
  transatlantic flight\, a landmark event tied to Missouri’s St. Louis.</sp
 an></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis
  and Kansas City ramped up wartime production\, with late May enlistment c
 ampaigns targeting skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250522T000000UTC-5345U7raMX@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 22\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw active spring fur
  trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is recorde
 d.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-ser
 if\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1843: The first wagon train depar
 ted Independence\, Missouri\, for Oregon with 700–1\,000 migrants\, solidi
 fying Missouri’s role as the “Gateway to the West.”</span></li>\n</ul>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians
 ” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” driving viole
 nce as spring campaigns intensified.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fortified federal contr
 ol\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring attack
 s\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: a
 rial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: 
 Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas prepared 
 for spring operations\, with Missouri itself under Union control and minim
 al Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, 
 helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southea
 st Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to market
 s\, drove economic growth\, with late May freight operations surging.</spa
 n></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fo
 nt-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1939: Kansas City “Boss” Tom Pendergast 
 was sentenced to 15 months in federal prison for income tax evasion\, mark
 ing a shift in Missouri’s political landscape.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250522T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250522T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 22nd This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2816-may-22nd-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 22\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw 
 active spring fur trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific
  event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, hel
 vetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1843: The first 
 wagon train departed Independence\, Missouri\, for Oregon with 700–1\,000 
 migrants\, solidifying Missouri’s role as the “Gateway to the West.”</span
 ></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery
  “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas
 \,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fortif
 ied federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launc
 hed spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in A
 rkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself under Union 
 control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Gi
 rardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with late May freight operati
 ons surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\
 , sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1939: Kansas City “Boss
 ” Tom Pendergast was sentenced to 15 months in federal prison for income t
 ax evasion\, marking a shift in Missouri’s political landscape.</span></li
 >\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250523T000000UTC-7933VtHLVZ@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 23\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions\
 , vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is document
 ed.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Mis
 souri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, esca
 lating territorial violence in late May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maint
 ained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrillas planned
  spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focu
 sed on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Con
 federate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missour
 i Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, s
 upported commerce\, with late May freight traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s urban cent
 ers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, while spring
  relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-
 family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\
 ;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II efforts
 \, with factories expanding military output and late May recruitment drive
 s gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250523T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250523T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 23rd This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2819-may-23rd-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 23\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur t
 rade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific 
 event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleed
 ing Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slaver
 y settlers\, escalating territorial violence in late May.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in 
 St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate g
 uerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units
  in Arkansas focused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union contr
 ol and little Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving C
 ape Girardeau\, supported commerce\, with late May freight traffic robust.
 </span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif
 \; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Miss
 ouri’s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job loss
 es\, while spring relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><
 span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\
 ; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted Wor
 ld War II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and late May 
 recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250524T000000UTC-56976mXUDi@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 24\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported sprin
 g trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is noted.</
 span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\;
  font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1815: The Battle of the Sink Hole nea
 r Old Monroe\, Missouri\, one of the last skirmishes of the War of 1812\, 
 saw Missouri Rangers and Native American forces clash\, marking a minor bu
 t notable conflict.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family
 : arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>185
 6: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery set
 tlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes in late May.
 </span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif
 \; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Hallec
 k in St. Louis reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas i
 n rural Missouri launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.
 </span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif
 \; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling 
 Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with
  Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linkin
 g Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with late
  May rail traffic surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: aria
 l\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Mis
 souri’s Kansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with 
 spring relief initiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects</s
 pan></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250524T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250524T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 24th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2822-may-24th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 24\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\
 , supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific 
 event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helveti
 ca\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1815: The Battle of 
 the Sink Hole near Old Monroe\, Missouri\, one of the last skirmishes of t
 he War of 1812\, saw Missouri Rangers and Native American forces clash\, m
 arking a minor but notable conflict.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas
  anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial cla
 shes in late May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union Genera
 l Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis reinforced federal control\, while Confede
 rate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring offensives\, heightening
  state divisions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate 
 General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring 
 operations\, with Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></
 li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific 
 Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic act
 ivity\, with late May rail traffic surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression 
 hardships\, with spring relief initiatives creating jobs through infrastru
 cture projects</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250525T000000UTC-3229i9MDxW@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 25\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur trade expeditions
 \, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific event is recorded.<
 /span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\
 ; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missour
 i’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling 
 violent territorial disputes in late May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fo
 nt-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0000
 00\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strength
 ened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated sprin
 g raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-
 family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\
 ;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas p
 lanned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control and minimal Co
 nfederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, hel
 vetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missou
 ri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking Cape Girardeau 
 to markets\, boosted trade\, with late May freight traffic thriving.</span
 ></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fon
 t-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Misso
 uri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while sp
 ring relief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>2015: The Kansas City Royals\, an MLB team\, continued their sea
 son\, building toward their second World Series title\, a significant achi
 evement in Missouri sports.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250525T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250525T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 25th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2825-may-25th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 25\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur 
 trade expeditions\, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific ev
 ent is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding 
 Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery se
 ttlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in late May.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St.
  Louis\, strengthened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrilla
 s escalated spring raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><
 span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\
 ; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri un
 its in Arkansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union contr
 ol and minimal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linkin
 g Cape Girardeau to markets\, boosted trade\, with late May freight traffi
 c thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\,
  sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depressi
 on deepened Missouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis stru
 ggling\, while spring relief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>2015: The Kansas City Royals\, an MLB team\, co
 ntinued their season\, building toward their second World Series title\, a
  significant achievement in Missouri sports.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250526T000000UTC-0806HUFarv@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 26\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw active spring fur
  trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is documen
 ted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-s
 erif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “B
 order Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,”
  driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></li>\n<li><span 
 style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; col
 or: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fortified
  federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched
  spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arka
 nsas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself under Union con
 trol and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girar
 deau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with late May freight operations
  surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban cen
 ters\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depression unemployme
 nt\, with spring public works projects providing temporary relief.</span><
 /li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City 
 boosted World War II manufacturing\, with late May recruitment focusing on
  military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250526T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250526T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 26th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2828-may-26th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 26\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw 
 active spring fur trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific
  event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, h
 elvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri
 ’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “B
 leeding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span>
 </li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font
 -size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St
 . Louis fortified federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural 
 Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missou
 ri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itsel
 f under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, l
 inking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with late May f
 reight operations surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: aria
 l\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Mis
 souri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depr
 ession unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing temporar
 y relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis
  and Kansas City boosted World War II manufacturing\, with late May recrui
 tment focusing on military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250527T000000UTC-7979UkwmVK@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 27\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions\
 , vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is noted.</
 span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\;
  font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri
 ’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, escalatin
 g territorial violence in late May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maintained
  Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrillas planned spri
 ng raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: 
 arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864:
  Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused o
 n spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confeder
 ate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pac
 ific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, suppor
 ted commerce\, with late May freight traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s urban centers h
 ard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, while spring reli
 ef programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-famil
 y: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>19
 41: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II efforts\, wi
 th factories expanding military output and late May recruitment drives gai
 ning traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250527T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250527T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 27th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2831-may-27th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 27\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur t
 rade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific 
 event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helveti
 ca\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding K
 ansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery set
 tlers\, escalating territorial violence in late May.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. L
 ouis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerri
 llas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in A
 rkansas focused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control an
 d little Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: 
 arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888:
  The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape G
 irardeau\, supported commerce\, with late May freight traffic robust.</spa
 n></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fo
 nt-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’
 s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, 
 while spring relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><span 
 style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; col
 or: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World Wa
 r II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and late May recru
 itment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250528T000000UTC-8557Vh5XsP@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 28\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported sprin
 g trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is recorded
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Bord
 er Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” in
 tensifying territorial clashes in late May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis reinforced feder
 al control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri launched sprin
 g offensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arka
 nsas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remaining quiet under
  Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Mi
 ssouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to national ma
 rkets\, drove economic activity\, with late May rail traffic surging.</spa
 n></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fo
 nt-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Lou
 is faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief initiatives creat
 ing jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fo
 nt-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0000
 00\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II effo
 rts\, with factories expanding military output and late May recruitment dr
 ives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250528T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250528T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 28th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2834-may-28th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 28\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\
 , supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific 
 event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s 
 pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Blee
 ding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes in late May.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis
  reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missou
 ri launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missou
 ri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri rema
 ining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girarde
 au to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with late May rail traf
 fic surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\
 , sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas
  City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief 
 initiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted 
 World War II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and late M
 ay recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250529T000000UTC-9778fWSaUI@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 29\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur trade expeditions
 \, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific event is documented
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Misso
 uri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fuelin
 g violent territorial disputes in late May.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, streng
 thened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spr
 ing raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas
  planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union control and minimal 
 Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, h
 elvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Miss
 ouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, linking Cape Girardea
 u to markets\, boosted trade\, with late May freight traffic thriving.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Mis
 souri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while 
 spring relief programs focused on job creation.</span></li>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City ramped up wartime p
 roduction\, with late May enlistment campaigns targeting skilled defense w
 orkers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250529T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250529T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 29th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2837-may-29th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 29\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders continued spring fur 
 trade expeditions\, a key Missouri economic driver\, though no specific ev
 ent is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleedin
 g Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery 
 settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in late May.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in S
 t. Louis\, strengthened federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerril
 las escalated spring raids\, deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri 
 units in Arkansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri under Union con
 trol and minimal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-
 family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\
 ;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri network\, link
 ing Cape Girardeau to markets\, boosted trade\, with late May freight traf
 fic thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depres
 sion deepened Missouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis st
 ruggling\, while spring relief programs focused on job creation.</span></l
 i>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City ra
 mped up wartime production\, with late May enlistment campaigns targeting 
 skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250530T000000UTC-6943BaWhVk@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 30\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw active spring fur
  trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is noted.<
 /span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\
 ; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1854: The Kansas-Nebraska Act\, repe
 aling the Missouri Compromise\, created the territories of Kansas and Nebr
 aska\, intensifying national slavery debates tied to Missouri’s border con
 flicts.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’
 s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bl
 eeding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span><
 /li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in St.
  Louis fortified federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural M
 issouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missour
 i forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri itself
  under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, li
 nking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with late May fr
 eight operations surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial
 \, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Miss
 ouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great Depre
 ssion unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing temporary
  relief.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250530T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250530T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 30th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2840-may-30th-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 30\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw 
 active spring fur trading with Native American tribes\, though no specific
  event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1854: The Kansas-Ne
 braska Act\, repealing the Missouri Compromise\, created the territories o
 f Kansas and Nebraska\, intensifying national slavery debates tied to Miss
 ouri’s border conflicts.</span></li>\n</ul>\n<ul>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slaver
 y settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns int
 ensified.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry 
 W. Halleck in St. Louis fortified federal control\, while Confederate guer
 rillas in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strif
 e.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-ser
 if\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterlin
 g Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, wit
 h Missouri itself under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</spa
 n></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fo
 nt-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Paci
 fic Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\,
  with late May freight operations surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled
  from Great Depression unemployment\, with spring public works projects pr
 oviding temporary relief.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250531T000000UTC-6286RLBrtr@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260417T141743Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 31\, the following notable histo
 rical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions\
 , vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is recorded
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Misso
 uri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, escala
 ting territorial violence as May ended.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, mainta
 ined Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrillas planned 
 spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focus
 ed on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Conf
 ederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri
  Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, su
 pported commerce\, with late May freight traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s urban cente
 rs hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losses\, while spring 
 relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted World War II efforts\
 , with factories expanding military output and late May recruitment drives
  gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250531T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250531T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:May 31st This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org.patriotsaroundthelake.com/odds-n-end
 s/this-week-in-missouri/24-this-day-in-missouri/2843-may-31st-this-day-in-
 missouri.html
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=TEXT/HTML:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On May 31\, the follow
 ing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<u
 l>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur t
 rade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific 
 event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleedin
 g Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery 
 settlers\, escalating territorial violence as May ended.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in S
 t. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate gu
 errillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span
  style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; co
 lor: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units 
 in Arkansas focused on spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union contro
 l and little Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, serving Ca
 pe Girardeau\, supported commerce\, with late May freight traffic robust.<
 /span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\
 ; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Misso
 uri’s urban centers hard\, with Kansas City and St. Louis facing job losse
 s\, while spring relief programs prioritized food aid.</span></li>\n<li><s
 pan style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\;
  color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City boosted Worl
 d War II efforts\, with factories expanding military output and late May r
 ecruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
