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TZID:America/Chicago
TZUNTIL:20271107T070000Z
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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DTSTART:20260308T020000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250401T000000UTC-2080m2evAF@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 1\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders launched spring fur trade expeditions
  with Native American tribes\, a cornerstone of Missouri’s early economy\,
  though no specific event is noted for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” intensified r
 aids into Kansas during “Bleeding Kansas\,” clashing with anti-slavery set
 tlers to control the territory’s slavery future.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, s
 trengthened federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missou
 ri began spring raids\, escalating Civil War tensions.</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 early April freight traf
 fic surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\
 , sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depress
 ion deepened Missouri’s economic crisis\, with Kansas City and St. Louis f
 acing unemployment\, 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: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’
 s St. Louis and Kansas City ramped up World War II production\, with early
  April enlistment drives targeting defense industry workers.</span></li>\n
 </ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250401T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250401T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 1st This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2663-april-1st-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 April 1\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders launched spring fur 
 trade expeditions with Native American tribes\, a cornerstone of Missouri’
 s early economy\, though no specific event is noted for this date.</span><
 /li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffia
 ns” intensified raids into Kansas during “Bleeding Kansas\,” clashing with
  anti-slavery settlers to control the territory’s slavery future.</span></
 li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, based
  in St. Louis\, strengthened federal control\, while Confederate guerrilla
 s in rural Missouri began spring raids\, escalating Civil War tensions.</s
 pan></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; 
 font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Pri
 ce’s Missouri units in Arkansas planned spring campaigns\, with Missouri u
 nder Union control and minimal Confederate activity.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri 
 network\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, boosted trade\, with early A
 pril freight traffic surging.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: a
 rial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: 
 The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s economic crisis\, with Kansas Cit
 y and St. Louis facing unemployment\, while spring relief programs focused
  on job creation.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl H
 arbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City ramped up World War II produc
 tion\, with early April enlistment drives targeting defense industry worke
 rs.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250402T000000UTC-1838DIBI2u@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 2\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw active spring fu
 r trading with tribes like the Osage\, though no specific event is documen
 ted for this date.</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” continued violent raids on Kansas
  anti-slavery settlers\, fueling territorial conflict as spring progressed
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halle
 ck in St. Louis fortified federal defenses\, while rural Confederate guerr
 illas launched early spring attacks\, deepening Missouri’s Civil War divid
 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 seeing little Confederate activity under Union control.<
 /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 Cape Girardeau\, drove economic growth\, with e
 arly April marking increased agricultural shipments.</span></li>\n<li><spa
 n style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; c
 olor: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’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 Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted wartim
 e manufacturing\, with early April recruitment focusing on military produc
 tion roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250402T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250402T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 2nd This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2666-april-2nd-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 April 2\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw
  active spring fur trading with tribes like the Osage\, though no specific
  event is documented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued violen
 t raids on Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling territorial conflict as 
 spring progressed.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union Gener
 al Henry W. Halleck in St. Louis fortified federal defenses\, while rural 
 Confederate guerrillas launched early spring attacks\, deepening Missouri’
 s Civil War divide.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, hel
 vetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederat
 e General Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring
  operations\, with Missouri itself seeing little Confederate activity unde
 r Union control.</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\, serving Cape Girardeau\, drove economi
 c growth\, with early April marking increased agricultural shipments.</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 struggled with Great Depression job losses\, while spring public works 
 projects aimed to provide temporary employment.</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 wartime manufacturing\, with early April recruitment focusing o
 n military production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250403T000000UTC-3458ZJWume@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 3\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='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 recorde
 d for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: During “Bleed
 ing Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas
  anti-slavery settlers\, escalating violence as spring campaigns intensifi
 ed.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Hal
 leck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while
  Confederate guerrillas in rural areas ramped up spring raids\, fueling st
 rife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-
 serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederat
 e General Sterling Price’s Missouri units focused on spring logistics\, wi
 th Missouri under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeas
 t Missouri lines\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, supported commerce\
 , with early April freight traffic thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style=
 'font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0
 00000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas 
 City and St. Louis\, hard\, with spring relief efforts prioritizing food d
 istribution and job aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\
 , helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-
 Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City increased World War II
  production\, with early April enlistment drives targeting skilled labor f
 or defense industries.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250403T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250403T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 3rd This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2669-april-3rd-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 April 3\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur 
 trade expeditions\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific
  event is recorded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-famil
 y: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>18
 56: During “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” cl
 ashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, escalating violence as spring ca
 mpaigns intensified.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union Gen
 eral Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s fed
 eral hold\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural areas ramped up spring r
 aids\, fueling strife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, 
 helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arka
 nsas\, Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units focused on spri
 ng logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and minimal Confederate a
 ction.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans
 -serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Ra
 ilroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, su
 pported commerce\, with early April freight traffic thriving.</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
  centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, hard\, with spring relief efforts p
 rioritizing food distribution and job aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City incr
 eased World War II production\, with early April enlistment drives targeti
 ng skilled labor for defense industries.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250404T000000UTC-0078LGl8gO@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 4\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spri
 ng trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is noted f
 or this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s “Bord
 er Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” in
 tensifying territorial clashes as spring brought renewed conflict.</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 
 Missouri launched spring offensives\, heightening tensions.</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 campaigns\, with Missouri remain
 ing quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family
 : arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>188
 8: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, connecting Cape Girard
 eau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with early April rail 
 operations robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s 
 Kansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring r
 elief initiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</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\, 
 post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factories expandin
 g military output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</
 ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250404T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250404T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 4th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2672-april-4th-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 April 4\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost
 \, supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific
  event is noted for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: 
 arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856:
  Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Blee
 ding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes as spring brought renewed 
 conflict.</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 reinforced federal control\, while Confederate gue
 rrillas in rural Missouri launched spring offensives\, heightening tension
 s.</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 geared up for spring campaigns\, wit
 h Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, conne
 cting Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with 
 early April rail operations robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardship
 s\, with spring relief initiatives creating jobs through infrastructure pr
 ojects.</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\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with f
 actories expanding military output and recruitment drives gaining traction
 .</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250405T000000UTC-6255PiiKDr@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 5\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missouri’s fur trade\, c
 ontinued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, though no specifi
 c event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, 
 helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Ble
 eding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kans
 as anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in early A
 pril.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-
 serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. H
 alleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s federal grip\, while
  rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, deepening Civil War
  divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General 
 Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on spring planning\, w
 ith Missouri under Union control and little Confederate activity noted.</s
 pan></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\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported trade grow
 th\, with early April seeing steady freight shipments.</span></li>\n<li><s
 pan 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 relief pr
 ograms aimed at job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City intensifi
 ed wartime production\, with early April enlistment campaigns targeting de
 fense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250405T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250405T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 5th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2675-april-5th-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 April 5\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missour
 i’s fur trade\, continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, 
 though no specific event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” 
 clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial di
 sputes in early April.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, 
 helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union G
 eneral Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s fed
 eral grip\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, de
 epening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: aria
 l\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Con
 federate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on sp
 ring planning\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate a
 ctivity noted.</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\, serving Cape Girardeau\, sup
 ported trade growth\, with early April seeing steady freight shipments.</s
 pan></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; 
 font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Mi
 ssouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while
  spring relief programs aimed at job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><s
 pan style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\;
  color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kans
 as City intensified wartime production\, with early April enlistment campa
 igns targeting defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250406T000000UTC-8776U3sulV@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 6\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw spring fur trade
  activity with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is record
 ed for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: During “Blee
 ding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on Kansas anti
 -slavery settlers\, driving violence as spring campaigns gained momentum.<
 /span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\
 ; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: In St. Louis\, Union General H
 enry W. Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate guerrillas 
 in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War strife.</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\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\, with e
 arly April freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font
 -family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1929: Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled fr
 om Great Depression unemployment\, with spring public works projects provi
 ding temporary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, 
 helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missour
 i’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II m
 anufacturing\, with early April recruitment focusing on military productio
 n roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250406T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250406T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 6th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2678-april-6th-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 April 6\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw
  spring fur trade activity with Native American tribes\, though no specifi
 c event is recorded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 856: During “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued rai
 ds on Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, driving violence as spring campaigns 
 gained momentum.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvet
 ica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: In St. Louis\
 , Union General Henry W. Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confed
 erate 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 Gener
 al Sterling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operat
 ions\, with Missouri itself under Union control and minimal Confederate ac
 tion.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-
 serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Mis
 souri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economi
 c growth\, with early April freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, 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 wor
 ks 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\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boost
 ed World War II manufacturing\, with early April recruitment focusing on m
 ilitary production roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250407T000000UTC-0518wIS39H@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 7\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expeditions
 \, a vital Missouri economic activity\, though no specific event is noted 
 for this date.</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” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding
  Kansas\,” escalating territorial violence in early April.</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\, stationed in
  St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate 
 guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterling Price’s
  Missouri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Missouri seeing
  little Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lin
 es\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with early Apr
 il marking increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis hard\
 , with spring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creation.</span
 ></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fon
 t-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. 
 Louis and Kansas City increased World War II production\, with early April
  enlistment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250407T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250407T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 7th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2681-april-7th-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 April 7\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur 
 trade expeditions\, a vital Missouri economic activity\, though no specifi
 c event is noted for this date.</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 sett
 lers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” escalating territorial violence in early April
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halle
 ck\, stationed in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while r
 ural Confederate guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General
  Sterling Price’s Missouri units focused on spring campaign planning\, wit
 h Missouri seeing little Confederate activity under Union control.</span><
 /li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s south
 east Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce
 \, with early April marking increased trade activity.</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 Kansas City an
 d St. Louis hard\, with spring relief programs focusing on food aid and jo
 b creation.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\,
  sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\
 , Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City increased World War II production\,
  with early April enlistment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</sp
 an></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250408T000000UTC-5170x6ua0U@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 8\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spri
 ng trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is documen
 ted for this date.</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\, intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed.</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 reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural M
 issouri launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.</span></
 li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s M
 issouri 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-size: 12pt\; color: #000000
 \;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Gi
 rardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with mid-April rai
 l traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s K
 ansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring re
 lief initiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, p
 ost-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factories expanding
  military output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</u
 l>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250408T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250408T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 8th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2684-april-8th-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 April 8\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost
 \, supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific
  event is documented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kan
 sas anti-slavery settlers\, intensifying territorial clashes as spring pro
 gressed.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sa
 ns-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W
 . Halleck in St. Louis reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guer
 rillas in rural Missouri launched spring offensives\, heightening state di
 visions.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sa
 ns-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General S
 terling Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operation
 s\, 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 Railroad\
 , linking Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, w
 ith mid-April rail traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 929: Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships
 \, with spring relief initiatives creating jobs through infrastructure pro
 jects.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans
 -serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis an
 d Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with fa
 ctories expanding military output and recruitment drives gaining traction.
 </span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250409T000000UTC-8500idwfNS@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 9\, the following notable hist
 orical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missouri’s fur trade\, c
 ontinued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, though no specifi
 c event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: During “Blee
 ding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti
 -slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in mid-April.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, 
 based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s federal grip\, while rural Co
 nfederate guerrillas 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 units in Arkansas focused on spring logistics\, with Miss
 ouri under Union control and little Confederate activity noted.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeas
 t Missouri network\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported trade growth\, wit
 h mid-April seeing steady freight shipments.</span></li>\n<li><span style=
 'font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0
 00000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s economic woes\, wi
 th Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring relief programs pri
 oritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: 
 arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941:
  Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City intensified wart
 ime production\, with mid-April enlistment campaigns targeting skilled def
 ense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250409T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250409T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 9th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2687-april-9th-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 April 9\, the follo
 wing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<
 ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-s
 ize: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missour
 i’s fur trade\, continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, 
 though no specific event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 856: During “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” r
 aided Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes 
 in mid-April.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General He
 nry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s federal grip
 \, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, deepening C
 ivil War divides.</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 units in Arkansas focused on spring logi
 stics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate activity 
 noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans
 -serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Ra
 ilroad’s southeast Missouri network\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported t
 rade growth\, with mid-April seeing steady freight shipments.</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 prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas Cit
 y intensified wartime production\, with mid-April enlistment campaigns tar
 geting skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250410T000000UTC-6336lNjLRU@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 10\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw spring fur trad
 e activity with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is recor
 ded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s 
 “Border Ruffians” continued raids on Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Blee
 ding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></l
 i>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: In St. Louis\, Union General Henry W. H
 alleck fortified federal defenses\, 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-April 
 freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: M
 issouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great De
 pression unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing tempor
 ary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\,
  sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Lou
 is and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II manufacturin
 g\, with mid-April recruitment focusing on military production roles.</spa
 n></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250410T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250410T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 10th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2690-april-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 April 10\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, sa
 w spring fur trade activity with Native American tribes\, though no specif
 ic event is recorded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on Kansas anti-slavery 
 settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns inten
 sified.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: In St. Louis\, Union G
 eneral Henry W. Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate gue
 rrillas in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War stri
 fe.</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 forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, wi
 th Missouri itself under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pac
 ific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\
 , with mid-April freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, ree
 led from Great Depression unemployment\, with spring public works projects
  providing temporary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: M
 issouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World Wa
 r II manufacturing\, with mid-April recruitment focusing on military produ
 ction roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250411T000000UTC-0579DHu1jo@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 11\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expedition
 s\, vital to Missouri’s early economy\, though no specific event is docume
 nted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-
 serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding Kansas\,” M
 issouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery s
 ettlers\, escalating territorial violence in mid-April.</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\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate gue
 rrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span 
 style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; col
 or: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterling Price’s Mi
 ssouri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Missouri seeing li
 ttle Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\
 , serving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with mid-April ma
 rking increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family:
  arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929
 : The Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis hard\, wit
 h spring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creation.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis
  and Kansas City increased World War II production\, with mid-April enlist
 ment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250411T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250411T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 11th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2693-april-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 April 11\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='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 specifi
 c event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, 
 helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Ble
 eding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kans
 as anti-slavery settlers\, escalating territorial violence in mid-April.</
 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\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rura
 l Confederate guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span>
 </li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font
 -size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General St
 erling Price’s Missouri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with M
 issouri seeing little Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeas
 t Missouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, 
 with mid-April marking increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color
 : #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St.
  Louis hard\, with spring relief programs focusing on food aid and job cre
 ation.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans
 -serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Mis
 souri’s St. Louis and Kansas City increased World War II production\, with
  mid-April enlistment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li
 >\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250412T000000UTC-5556T0HrxE@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 12\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spr
 ing trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is noted 
 for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetic
 a\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s “Bor
 der Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” i
 ntensifying 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 state divisions.</span></li>\n<li><sp
 an style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; 
 color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri forc
 es in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remaining q
 uiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ari
 al\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: So
 utheast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to n
 ational markets\, drove economic activity\, with mid-April rail traffic ro
 bust.</span></li>\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\, post-Pearl Ha
 rbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factories expanding military ou
 tput and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250412T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250412T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 12th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2696-april-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 April 12\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpos
 t\, supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specifi
 c event is noted for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family:
  arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856
 : Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Ble
 eding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck in
  St. Louis reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in ru
 ral Missouri launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling Pric
 e’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with Mis
 souri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style=
 'font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0
 00000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Ca
 pe Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with mid-Apri
 l rail traffic robust.</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 faced Great Depression hardships\, with spri
 ng relief initiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span
 ></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fon
 t-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas Cit
 y\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factories expa
 nding military output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>
 \n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250413T000000UTC-1324MVRiV3@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 13\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missouri’s fur trade\, 
 continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, though no specif
 ic event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, h
 elvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: During “
 Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with K
 ansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in mid-
 April.</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 Missouri’s federal grip\, whil
 e rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, deepening Civil Wa
 r 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 focused on spring logistics\,
  with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate activity noted.<
 /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\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported trade gr
 owth\, with mid-April seeing steady freight shipments.</span></li>\n<li><s
 pan 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 relief pr
 ograms prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City intens
 ified wartime production\, with mid-April enlistment campaigns targeting s
 killed defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250413T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250413T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 13th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2699-april-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 April 13\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missou
 ri’s fur trade\, continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\,
  though no specific event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-
 family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\
 ;'>1856: During “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffian
 s” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial
  disputes in mid-April.</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 Missouri’s fe
 deral grip\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, d
 eepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ari
 al\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Co
 nfederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on s
 pring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate
  activity noted.</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\, serving Cape Girardeau\, s
 upported trade growth\, with mid-April seeing steady freight shipments.</s
 pan></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; 
 font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Mi
 ssouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while
  spring relief programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and K
 ansas City intensified wartime production\, with mid-April enlistment camp
 aigns targeting skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250414T000000UTC-0093tO60sz@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 14\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw spring fur trad
 e activity with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is docum
 ented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’
 s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on 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: In St. Louis\, Union General Henry W.
  Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate guerrillas in rura
 l 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 Miss
 ouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri its
 elf 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-Apri
 l freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: 
 arial\, helvetica\, 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 temp
 orary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica
 \, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. L
 ouis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II manufactur
 ing\, with mid-April recruitment focusing on military production roles.</s
 pan></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250414T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250414T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 14th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2702-april-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 April 14\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, sa
 w spring fur trade activity with Native American tribes\, though no specif
 ic event is documented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on 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: In St. Louis\, Union
  General Henry W. Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate g
 uerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War st
 rife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-
 serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Ster
 ling 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 P
 acific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growt
 h\, with mid-April freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, r
 eeled from Great Depression unemployment\, with spring public works projec
 ts 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\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World 
 War II manufacturing\, with mid-April recruitment focusing on military pro
 duction roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250415T000000UTC-7831LUTGuW@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 15\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expedition
 s\, 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\,” Missou
 ri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settle
 rs\, escalating territorial violence in mid-April.</span></li>\n<li><span 
 style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; col
 or: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Lou
 is\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerrill
 as planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missour
 i units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Missouri seeing little 
 Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fo
 nt-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0000
 00\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, ser
 ving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with mid-April marking
  increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: aria
 l\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The
  Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis hard\, with spr
 ing relief programs focusing on food aid and job creation.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and 
 Kansas City increased World War II production\, with mid-April enlistment 
 drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250415T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250415T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 15th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2705-april-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 April 15\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='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 specifi
 c event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding
  Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas an
 ti-slavery settlers\, escalating territorial violence in mid-April.</span>
 </li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font
 -size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, sta
 tioned in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Con
 federate guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterlin
 g Price’s Missouri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Missou
 ri seeing little Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Mis
 souri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with 
 mid-April marking increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='
 font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00
 0000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Loui
 s hard\, with spring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creation
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri
 ’s St. Louis and Kansas City increased World War II production\, with mid-
 April enlistment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>\n</
 ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250416T000000UTC-4685TULvof@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 16\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spr
 ing trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is record
 ed for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s “
 Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,
 ” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed.</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-April rail traffic
  robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sa
 ns-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas Cit
 y and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief init
 iatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</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\, 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:20250416T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250416T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 16th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2708-april-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 April 16\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpos
 t\, supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specifi
 c event is recorded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “
 Bleeding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed.<
 /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 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 P
 rice’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with 
 Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking
  Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with mid-A
 pril rail traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial
 \, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Miss
 ouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with s
 pring relief initiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</s
 pan></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 e
 xpanding military output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></
 li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250417T000000UTC-3163rO9sxI@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 17\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missouri’s fur trade\, 
 continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, though no specif
 ic event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\,
  helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: During
  “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with
  Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in la
 te April.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry 
 W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s federal grip\, w
 hile rural Confederate guerrillas 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 Gene
 ral Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on spring logistic
 s\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate activity note
 d.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-ser
 if\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railro
 ad’s southeast Missouri network\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported trade
  growth\, with late April seeing steady freight shipments.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s econ
 omic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring relie
 f programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style=
 'font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0
 00000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City in
 tensified wartime production\, with late April enlistment campaigns target
 ing skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250417T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250417T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 17th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2711-april-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 April 17\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missou
 ri’s fur trade\, continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\,
  though no specific event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1856: During “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffi
 ans” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territori
 al disputes in late April.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: aria
 l\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Uni
 on General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s
  federal grip\, while rural Confederate guerrillas 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 units in Arkansas focused o
 n spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confeder
 ate activity noted.</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\, serving Cape Girardeau\
 , supported trade growth\, with late April seeing steady freight shipments
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepene
 d Missouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, w
 hile spring relief programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis 
 and Kansas City intensified wartime production\, with late April enlistmen
 t campaigns targeting skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250418T000000UTC-2345MJ8ot8@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 18\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw spring fur trad
 e activity with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is recor
 ded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s 
 “Border Ruffians” continued raids on Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Blee
 ding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></l
 i>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: In St. Louis\, Union General Henry W. H
 alleck fortified federal defenses\, 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 April
  freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: a
 rial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: 
 Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great D
 epression unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing tempo
 rary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\
 , sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Lo
 uis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II manufacturi
 ng\, with late April recruitment focusing on military production roles.</s
 pan></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250418T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250418T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 18th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2714-april-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 April 18\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, sa
 w spring fur trade activity with Native American tribes\, though no specif
 ic event is recorded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on Kansas anti-slavery 
 settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns inten
 sified.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: In St. Louis\, Union G
 eneral Henry W. Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate gue
 rrillas in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War stri
 fe.</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 forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, wi
 th Missouri itself under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pac
 ific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\
 , with late April freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, re
 eled from Great Depression unemployment\, with spring public works project
 s providing temporary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: a
 rial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: 
 Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World W
 ar II manufacturing\, with late April recruitment focusing on military pro
 duction roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250419T000000UTC-0598z0H9eR@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 19\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expedition
 s\, 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\,” Missou
 ri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settle
 rs\, escalating territorial violence in late April.</span></li>\n<li><span
  style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; co
 lor: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Lo
 uis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerril
 las planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missou
 ri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Missouri seeing little
  Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, se
 rving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with late April marki
 ng increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: T
 he Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis hard\, with s
 pring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creation.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis an
 d Kansas City increased World War II production\, with late April enlistme
 nt drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250419T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250419T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 19th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2717-april-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 April 19\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='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 specifi
 c event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding
  Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas an
 ti-slavery settlers\, escalating territorial violence in late April.</span
 ></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fon
 t-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, st
 ationed in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Co
 nfederate guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterli
 ng Price’s Missouri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Misso
 uri seeing little Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Mi
 ssouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with
  late April marking increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Lo
 uis hard\, with spring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creati
 on.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missou
 ri’s St. Louis and Kansas City increased World War II production\, with la
 te April enlistment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>
 \n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250420T000000UTC-5966ddMIT3@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 20\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spr
 ing trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is docume
 nted for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, hel
 vetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s
  “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas
 \,” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed.</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 in St. Louis r
 einforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri
  launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.</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 geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remain
 ing quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family
 : arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>188
 8: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau
  to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with late April rail traf
 fic robust.</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 i
 nitiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pe
 arl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factories expanding milit
 ary output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250420T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250420T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 20th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2720-april-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 April 20\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpos
 t\, supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specifi
 c event is documented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in
  “Bleeding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halle
 ck in St. Louis reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas 
 in rural Missouri launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling
  Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, wit
 h Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linki
 ng Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with lat
 e April rail traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: M
 issouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, wit
 h spring relief initiatives 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 Kans
 as City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factorie
 s expanding military output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span
 ></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250421T000000UTC-7232j5jgWZ@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 21\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missouri’s fur trade\, 
 continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, though no specif
 ic event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, h
 elvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: During “
 Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with K
 ansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in late
  April.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W.
  Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s federal grip\, whi
 le rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, deepening Civil W
 ar divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\,
  sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate Genera
 l Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on spring logistics\
 , with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate activity noted.
 </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\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported trade g
 rowth\, with late April seeing steady freight shipments.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s econom
 ic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring relief 
 programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City inte
 nsified wartime production\, with late April enlistment campaigns targetin
 g skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250421T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250421T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 21st This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2723-april-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 April 21\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missou
 ri’s fur trade\, continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\,
  though no specific event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-
 family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\
 ;'>1856: During “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffian
 s” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial
  disputes in late April.</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 Missouri’s f
 ederal grip\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, 
 deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: C
 onfederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on 
 spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confederat
 e activity noted.</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 network\, serving Cape Girardeau\, 
 supported trade growth\, with late April seeing steady freight shipments.<
 /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\, whi
 le spring relief programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and
  Kansas City intensified wartime production\, with late April enlistment c
 ampaigns targeting skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250422T000000UTC-6972BVr4uW@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 22\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw spring fur trad
 e activity with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is docum
 ented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’
 s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on 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: In St. Louis\, Union General Henry W.
  Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate guerrillas in rura
 l 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 Miss
 ouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri its
 elf 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 late Apr
 il freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family:
  arial\, helvetica\, 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 tem
 porary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetic
 a\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. 
 Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II manufactu
 ring\, with late April recruitment focusing on military production roles.<
 /span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250422T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250422T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 22nd This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2726-april-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 April 22\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, sa
 w spring fur trade activity with Native American tribes\, though no specif
 ic event is documented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on 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: In St. Louis\, Union
  General Henry W. Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate g
 uerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War st
 rife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-
 serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Ster
 ling 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 P
 acific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growt
 h\, with late April freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, 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 proje
 cts 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\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World
  War II manufacturing\, with late April recruitment focusing on military p
 roduction roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250423T000000UTC-6471XFADlE@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 23\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expedition
 s\, 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\,” Missou
 ri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settle
 rs\, escalating territorial violence in late April.</span></li>\n<li><span
  style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; co
 lor: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Lo
 uis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerril
 las planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missou
 ri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Missouri seeing little
  Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, se
 rving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with late April marki
 ng increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: T
 he Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis hard\, with s
 pring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creation.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis an
 d Kansas City increased World War II production\, with late April enlistme
 nt drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250423T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250423T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 23rd This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2729-april-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 April 23\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='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 specifi
 c event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding
  Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas an
 ti-slavery settlers\, escalating territorial violence in late April.</span
 ></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fon
 t-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, st
 ationed in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Co
 nfederate guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterli
 ng Price’s Missouri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Misso
 uri seeing little Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Mi
 ssouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with
  late April marking increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Lo
 uis hard\, with spring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creati
 on.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missou
 ri’s St. Louis and Kansas City increased World War II production\, with la
 te April enlistment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>
 \n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250424T000000UTC-5926kaVa26@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 24\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spr
 ing trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is record
 ed for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s “
 Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,
 ” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed.</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 late April rail traffi
 c robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s Kansas Ci
 ty and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, with spring relief ini
 tiatives 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\, post-Pear
 l Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factories expanding militar
 y output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250424T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250424T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 24th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2732-april-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 April 24\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpos
 t\, supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specifi
 c event is recorded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fami
 ly: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1
 856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “
 Bleeding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed.<
 /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 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 P
 rice’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, with 
 Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span sty
 le='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color:
  #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking
  Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with late 
 April rail traffic robust.</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.</
 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>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250425T000000UTC-6959r0zkUr@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 25\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missouri’s fur trade\, 
 continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, though no specif
 ic event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\,
  helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: During
  “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with
  Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in la
 te April.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, s
 ans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry 
 W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s federal grip\, w
 hile rural Confederate guerrillas 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 Gene
 ral Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on spring logistic
 s\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate activity note
 d.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-ser
 if\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railro
 ad’s southeast Missouri network\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported trade
  growth\, with late April seeing steady freight shipments.</span></li>\n<l
 i><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12
 pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s econ
 omic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring relie
 f programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style=
 'font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #0
 00000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City in
 tensified wartime production\, with late April enlistment campaigns target
 ing skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250425T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250425T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 25th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2735-april-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 April 25\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missou
 ri’s fur trade\, continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\,
  though no specific event is documented.</span></li>\n<li><span style='fon
 t-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #00000
 0\;'>1856: During “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffi
 ans” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territori
 al disputes in late April.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: aria
 l\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Uni
 on General Henry W. Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s
  federal grip\, while rural Confederate guerrillas 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 units in Arkansas focused o
 n spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confeder
 ate activity noted.</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\, serving Cape Girardeau\
 , supported trade growth\, with late April seeing steady freight shipments
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepene
 d Missouri’s economic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, w
 hile spring relief programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>
 \n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size
 : 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis 
 and Kansas City intensified wartime production\, with late April enlistmen
 t campaigns targeting skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250426T000000UTC-8369w83dP6@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 26\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw spring fur trad
 e activity with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is recor
 ded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helv
 etica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s 
 “Border Ruffians” continued raids on Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Blee
 ding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns intensified.</span></l
 i>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-si
 ze: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: In St. Louis\, Union General Henry W. H
 alleck fortified federal defenses\, 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 April
  freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: a
 rial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: 
 Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, reeled from Great D
 epression unemployment\, with spring public works projects providing tempo
 rary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\
 , sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Lo
 uis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II manufacturi
 ng\, with late April recruitment focusing on military production roles.</s
 pan></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250426T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250426T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 26th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2738-april-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 April 26\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, sa
 w spring fur trade activity with Native American tribes\, though no specif
 ic event is recorded for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fam
 ily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>
 1856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on Kansas anti-slavery 
 settlers in “Bleeding Kansas\,” driving violence as spring campaigns inten
 sified.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: In St. Louis\, Union G
 eneral Henry W. Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate gue
 rrillas in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War stri
 fe.</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 forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, wi
 th Missouri itself under Union control and minimal Confederate action.</sp
 an></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pac
 ific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growth\
 , with late April freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1929: Missouri’s urban centers\, Kansas City and St. Louis\, re
 eled from Great Depression unemployment\, with spring public works project
 s providing temporary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: a
 rial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: 
 Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World W
 ar II manufacturing\, with late April recruitment focusing on military pro
 duction roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250427T000000UTC-3297sN8XwI@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 27\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders expanded spring fur trade expedition
 s\, 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\,” Missou
 ri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settle
 rs\, escalating territorial violence in late April.</span></li>\n<li><span
  style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; co
 lor: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, stationed in St. Lo
 uis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Confederate guerril
 las planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li>\n<li><span styl
 e='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: 
 #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterling Price’s Missou
 ri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Missouri seeing little
  Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Missouri lines\, se
 rving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with late April marki
 ng increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: T
 he Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis hard\, with s
 pring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creation.</span></li>\n
 <li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 
 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis an
 d Kansas City increased World War II production\, with late April enlistme
 nt drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250427T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250427T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 27th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2741-april-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 April 27\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='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 specifi
 c event is noted.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helve
 tica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: In “Bleeding
  Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with Kansas an
 ti-slavery settlers\, escalating territorial violence in late April.</span
 ></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; fon
 t-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halleck\, st
 ationed in St. Louis\, maintained Missouri’s federal hold\, while rural Co
 nfederate guerrillas planned spring raids\, deepening tensions.</span></li
 >\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-siz
 e: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: In Arkansas\, Confederate General Sterli
 ng Price’s Missouri units focused on spring campaign planning\, with Misso
 uri seeing little Confederate activity under Union control.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1888: The Missouri Pacific Railroad’s southeast Mi
 ssouri lines\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported regional commerce\, with
  late April marking increased trade activity.</span></li>\n<li><span style
 ='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #
 000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression hit Missouri’s Kansas City and St. Lo
 uis hard\, with spring relief programs focusing on food aid and job creati
 on.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-se
 rif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missou
 ri’s St. Louis and Kansas City increased World War II production\, with la
 te April enlistment drives expanding to meet wartime demands.</span></li>
 \n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250428T000000UTC-7930IKnAew@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 28\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpost\, supported spr
 ing trade with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is docume
 nted for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, hel
 vetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’s
  “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in “Bleeding Kansas
 \,” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed.</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 in St. Louis r
 einforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas in rural Missouri
  launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions.</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 geared up for spring operations\, with Missouri remain
 ing quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family
 : arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>188
 8: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau
  to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with late April rail traf
 fic robust.</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 i
 nitiatives creating jobs through infrastructure projects.</span></li>\n<li
 ><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12p
 t\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pe
 arl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factories expanding milit
 ary output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250428T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250428T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April  28th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2744-april-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 April 28\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a growing Missouri outpos
 t\, supported spring trade with Native American tribes\, though no specifi
 c event is documented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-fa
 mily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'
 >1856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” raided Kansas anti-slavery settlers in
  “Bleeding Kansas\,” intensifying territorial clashes as spring progressed
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W. Halle
 ck in St. Louis reinforced federal control\, while Confederate guerrillas 
 in rural Missouri launched spring offensives\, heightening state divisions
 .</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-seri
 f\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Sterling
  Price’s Missouri forces in Arkansas geared up for spring operations\, wit
 h Missouri remaining quiet under Union dominance.</span></li>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1888: Southeast Missouri’s Missouri Pacific Railroad\, linki
 ng Cape Girardeau to national markets\, drove economic activity\, with lat
 e April rail traffic robust.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1929: M
 issouri’s Kansas City and St. Louis faced Great Depression hardships\, wit
 h spring relief initiatives 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 Kans
 as City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II efforts\, with factorie
 s expanding military output and recruitment drives gaining traction.</span
 ></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250429T000000UTC-3017wcPZ3p@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 29\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missouri’s fur trade\, 
 continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\, though no specif
 ic event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, h
 elvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: During “
 Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffians” clashed with K
 ansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial disputes in late
  April.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, san
 s-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1861: Union General Henry W.
  Halleck\, based in St. Louis\, strengthened Missouri’s federal grip\, whi
 le rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, deepening Civil W
 ar divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\,
  sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate Genera
 l Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on spring logistics\
 , with Missouri under Union control and little Confederate activity noted.
 </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\, serving Cape Girardeau\, supported trade g
 rowth\, with late April seeing steady freight shipments.</span></li>\n<li>
 <span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt
 \; color: #000000\;'>1929: The Great Depression deepened Missouri’s econom
 ic woes\, with Kansas City and St. Louis struggling\, while spring relief 
 programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<li><span style='f
 ont-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000
 000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and Kansas City inte
 nsified wartime production\, with late April enlistment campaigns targetin
 g skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250429T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250429T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April  29th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2747-april-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 April 29\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis traders\, central to Missou
 ri’s fur trade\, continued spring expeditions with tribes like the Osage\,
  though no specific event is recorded.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-
 family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\
 ;'>1856: During “Bleeding Kansas\,” Missouri’s pro-slavery “Border Ruffian
 s” clashed with Kansas anti-slavery settlers\, fueling violent territorial
  disputes in late April.</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 Missouri’s f
 ederal grip\, while rural Confederate guerrillas escalated spring raids\, 
 deepening Civil War divides.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: ar
 ial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: C
 onfederate General Sterling Price’s Missouri units in Arkansas focused on 
 spring logistics\, with Missouri under Union control and little Confederat
 e activity noted.</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 network\, serving Cape Girardeau\, 
 supported trade growth\, with late April seeing steady freight shipments.<
 /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\, whi
 le spring relief programs prioritized job creation and aid.</span></li>\n<
 li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 1
 2pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Post-Pearl Harbor\, Missouri’s St. Louis and
  Kansas City intensified wartime production\, with late April enlistment c
 ampaigns targeting skilled defense workers.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20250430T000000UTC-3560SDwU5I@https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/
DTSTAMP:20260405T065552Z
CATEGORIES:This Day in Missouri
DESCRIPTION:<p><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; f
 ont-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>On April 30\, the following notable his
 torical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n<ul>\n<li><span s
 tyle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; colo
 r: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, saw spring fur trad
 e activity with Native American tribes\, though no specific event is docum
 ented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, he
 lvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1856: Missouri’
 s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on 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: In St. Louis\, Union General Henry W.
  Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate guerrillas in rura
 l 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 Miss
 ouri forces in Arkansas prepared for spring operations\, with Missouri its
 elf 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 late Apr
 il freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family:
  arial\, helvetica\, 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 tem
 porary relief.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetic
 a\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1941: Missouri’s St. 
 Louis and Kansas City\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World War II manufactu
 ring\, with late April recruitment focusing on military production roles.<
 /span></li>\n</ul>
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250430T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250430T235959
RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;COUNT=3;INTERVAL=1
SUMMARY:April 30th This Day in Missouri
URL:https://taneycountyrepublicans.org/odds-n-ends/this-week-in-missouri/24
 -this-day-in-missouri/2750-april-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 April 30\, the foll
 owing notable historical events related to Missouri occurred:</span></p>\n
 <ul>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-
 size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1806: St. Louis\, a Missouri trade hub\, sa
 w spring fur trade activity with Native American tribes\, though no specif
 ic event is documented for this date.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-f
 amily: arial\, helvetica\, sans-serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;
 '>1856: Missouri’s “Border Ruffians” continued raids on 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: In St. Louis\, Union
  General Henry W. Halleck fortified federal defenses\, while Confederate g
 uerrillas in rural Missouri launched spring attacks\, fueling Civil War st
 rife.</span></li>\n<li><span style='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, sans-
 serif\; font-size: 12pt\; color: #000000\;'>1864: Confederate General Ster
 ling 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 P
 acific Railroad\, linking Cape Girardeau to markets\, drove economic growt
 h\, with late April freight operations thriving.</span></li>\n<li><span st
 yle='font-family: arial\, helvetica\, 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 proje
 cts 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\, post-Pearl Harbor\, boosted World
  War II manufacturing\, with late April recruitment focusing on military p
 roduction roles.</span></li>\n</ul>
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
