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Updated: Nov 21, 2025
Here you’ll find mostly scribbles born from my random chat sessions & real life shenanigans with some finished works peppered in.
teafinchdraws
May 9, 2025, 19:26
On this day, 9 May 1763, what became known as Pontiac's war began when warriors from several Indigenous nations under the Ottawa leader Pontiac attacked British colonial troops at Fort Detroit in present-day Michigan.
While Fort Detroit itself did not fall, Native American fighters captured several forts, with Seneca warriors seizing Venango and Le Boeuf.
Despite British forces massacring unarmed Native Americans, and attempting to spread smallpox among the Native population, fighting continued into the following year, causing around 450 British casualties. The eventual peace agreement reached ensured important concessions to Native Americans, including a ban on colonisation west of the Appalachian ridge, and the loss of several forts.
Learn more about Indigenous peoples' history in these books: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/collections/all/indigenous
Pictured: Painting of the Siege of Fort Detroit by Frederic Remington
teafinchdraws
May 9, 2025, 13:02
On this day, 9 May 1978, communist anti-Mafia campaigner Giuseppe ‘Peppino’ Impastato was murdered during an election campaign in which he was standing as a candidate for Democrazia Proletaria (Proletarian Democracy).
Badly beaten, his body was stretched over some railway lines with a charge of TNT placed under it.
Initially, police tried to paint Peppino as a left-wing terrorist, blown up by his own bomb; it would not be until 2001 that Peppino’s killers would be brought to justice.
His death was dramatised in the film "I cento passi".
More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/10936/giuseppe-impastato-murdered
teafinchdraws
May 9, 2025, 4:06
On this day, 9 May 1936 in Thessaloniki, Greece, police and soldiers attacked a workers' demonstration during a general strike against police repression, killing 12.
The funerals of the workers became mass demonstrations by over 200,000 people, and a further nationwide protest strike took place a few days later.
Just three months later General Metaxas declared a dictatorship to end the disorder, but was forced to introduce a maximum eight hour working day and introduce social protections like pensions and welfare payments.
More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/10934/thessaloniki-massacre
teafinchdraws
May 8, 2025, 12:51
On this day, 8 May 1928, Luisa Lallana, an 18 year old Argentinian anarchist factory worker was murdered by a strikebreaker during a dockers' strike.
The previous month, stevedores in Rosario walked out demanding their first pay increase in 5 years.
Luisa and some of her colleagues from the Mancini burlap bag factory were distributing leaflets from the Women's Port Committee in support of the dockworkers, when Juan Romero, a scab and member of the extreme right paramilitary Patriotic League of Argentina, shot her in the head. She died that afternoon.
The following day, local unions, including her union, the anarchist Argentine Regional Workers' Federation and the Communist Party called a general strike in protest. Thousands of people downed tools and marched, and her funeral procession of 10,000 workers was led by a column of 1,000 women.
Police violently attacked the mourners, while two warships arrived in the port to reinforce the police and paramilitaries.…
teafinchdraws
May 8, 2025, 4:06
On this day, 8 May 1974, in India, the national railway strike started, involving 1.7 million workers, demanding higher wages and shorter working hours.
The strike had begun spontaneously on May 2 and spread across the country.
The government of Indira Gandhi set about brutally repressing the strike. They arrested 50,000 workers, evicted 30,000 families from their homes, and fired 50,000 workers from their jobs.
The opposition leadership refused to call for solidarity strikes in solidarity with the rail workers, and eventually, by May 27, the workers were forced to call off the strike and return to work.
1 million strikers were then penalised by being treated as new recruits, and having their previous years of service, leave and pensions disregarded. Although this measure was later overturned after 1977 when the Indian National Congress was voted out of power.
More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/10841/Indian-national…
teafinchdraws
May 7, 2025, 20:11
On this day, 7 May 1919, Eva "Evita" Perón, actor and later wife of Argentinian president Juan Perón was born.
While commonly seen as a hero of workers and the poor, in reality, Evita and her husband were admirers of the fascism of Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini. In particular, they were influenced by some of their policies, particularly with regard to integrating the working class into the state machinery.
While some of their early reforms helped improve living standards, after the 1949 stock market collapse they slashed wages by a third and declared military rule to stop a rail workers' strike.
During World War II the government Perón took part in maintained relations both with Nazi Germany and fascist Italy until they were eventually pressured to drop them in 1944, although it maintained relations with fascist Spain from the time of general Francisco Franco's victory until his death, even sending aid to the country in the 1940s.
After the defeat of the Nazis…
teafinchdraws
May 7, 2025, 13:56
On this day, 7 May 1954, French colonial forces in Vietnam were effectively defeated by the pro-independence Viet Minh in the battle of Dien Bien Phu.
The French army, receiving significant aid from the US, had occupied the town of Dien Bien Phu the previous year in an attempt to cut supply lines for the anti-colonial forces. But the Viet Minh took them by surprise, surrounding the French base with 40,000 troops and eventually overrunning it on May 7.
By 5:30 PM, Vietnamese troops had overtaken the command post and captured the senior officers. Eventually, the last 2000 French soldiers at the base surrendered.
The battle ended with the Viet Minh capturing over 10,000 French prisoners of war.
In the wake of the defeat, France was forced to surrender and, following a peace agreement, retreat temporarily into South Vietnam pending an election to unify the country within two years. These elections were later blocked by the US as they predicted a communist victory…
teafinchdraws
October 23, 2024, 22:47
teafinchdraws
August 28, 2024, 17:54
📺 Vincenzo S01 Complete WEB-Rip [Org Korean AAC 2.0 + English AAC 2.0 + Hindi AAC 2.0] ESub
🚀 Telegram Files - https://t.me/Vincenzo_HinDi_Dubbed/352
teafinchdraws
May 6, 2025, 21:16