Yes, Muhammad Ali and his dad were named after him.
cmdsystemreset on
Yeah, it was either 7.2m or nothing
KylePersi on
Look out, Russia incoming to take back their native lands ala Ukraine.
ThatNiceLifeguard on
Not even enough to buy a brownstone in Brooklyn and they got a whole state.
heyknauw on
best real estate transaction EVER.
LupusDeusMagnus on
If they hadn’t sold it it would hjave been taken by the British and would be part of Canada and that would’ve made a lot more sense.
diggi923diggi on
And it was financed by Rothschilds.
uno_novaterra on
Did Alaska get magically transported into the Caribbean? What are these sparkling blue waters? The Bering Strait is distinctly lacking in foreboding doom.
wagadugo on
…Or less than the Dodgers are paying reliever Tanner Sott this season
Geekenstein on
ITT: stuff costs more than it used to 159 years ago.
Mundane-Alfalfa-8979 on
Where map? Where porn?
ThomasArad on
In the 1860 Convention of Peking China yielded large swathes of land to Imperial Russia (Outer Manchuria, (today: Primorsky Krai, etc.) Just as Peter the Great had sought a „Window to the West“ via St. Petersburg, Alexander II desired a gateway to the Pacific. He his brother Grand Duke Konstantin realized that Russia could not defend both the newly acquired Primorsky Krai and overseas Alaska. So they went for the money, which they used to built Vladivostok.
torklugnutz on
The term „Seward’s folly“ refers to the United States‘ Secretary of State William Seward’s decision to purchase the Alaskan territory from Russia in 1867. At the time, Seward’s decision to buy the land was regarded as a terrible one by many critics in the US.
In 1867, Czar Alexander II of Russia decided to sell the country’s territory in Alaska, because Russia was having economic troubles and would not be able to sufficiently defend the territory from invaders. The czar reasoned that they would be better off selling the territory than waiting for it to be annexed by another country. He offered to sell the land to the United States, and sent a Russian diplomat to enter negotiations with William Seward.
Those negotiations resulted in the purchase of 6,000,000 square miles (15,539,928.66 square km) for $7,200,000 US Dollars (USD) — only a few cents per acre. Though public opinion of the purchase was generally positive, it was the words of several critics that gave „Seward’s Folly“ its name — most notably, The New York Tribune’s Horace Greely, who claimed that Alaska „contained nothing of value but furbearing animals, and these had been hunted until they were nearly extinct. Except for the Aleutian Islands and a narrow strip of land extending along the southern coast the country would be not worth taking as a gift.“
In the 1890s, however, large quantities of gold were discovered in the Alaskan territory, which made critics change their tune and praise Seward for his foresight. Unfortunately, he never got to see his decision acknowledged for the great accomplishment it was, as he passed away in 1872, before the gold reserves had been found.
Today, „Seward’s Day“ is celebrated in Alaska on the last Monday of March each year, in honor of Seward’s purchasing the Alaskan territory from Russia. Though it was established as an organized territory in 1912, it did not ultimately become a state until 1959. Alaska is now by far the largest of the states in the United States.
Alaska has turned into a tourist destination for people who love the outdoors. Oil was also found in the state, though ongoing controversy remains as to whether it is right to drill for it in a wildlife refuge, where much of the oil is located. As of 2005, Alaska had a population of around 663,000, making it the least densely populated state in the nation.
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elon would probably buy the entire continent of africa if there werent like laws about it or whatever
Thanks to [this guy](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassius_Marcellus_Clay)
Yes, Muhammad Ali and his dad were named after him.
Yeah, it was either 7.2m or nothing
Look out, Russia incoming to take back their native lands ala Ukraine.
Not even enough to buy a brownstone in Brooklyn and they got a whole state.
best real estate transaction EVER.
If they hadn’t sold it it would hjave been taken by the British and would be part of Canada and that would’ve made a lot more sense.
And it was financed by Rothschilds.
Did Alaska get magically transported into the Caribbean? What are these sparkling blue waters? The Bering Strait is distinctly lacking in foreboding doom.
…Or less than the Dodgers are paying reliever Tanner Sott this season
ITT: stuff costs more than it used to 159 years ago.
Where map? Where porn?
In the 1860 Convention of Peking China yielded large swathes of land to Imperial Russia (Outer Manchuria, (today: Primorsky Krai, etc.) Just as Peter the Great had sought a „Window to the West“ via St. Petersburg, Alexander II desired a gateway to the Pacific. He his brother Grand Duke Konstantin realized that Russia could not defend both the newly acquired Primorsky Krai and overseas Alaska. So they went for the money, which they used to built Vladivostok.
The term „Seward’s folly“ refers to the United States‘ Secretary of State William Seward’s decision to purchase the Alaskan territory from Russia in 1867. At the time, Seward’s decision to buy the land was regarded as a terrible one by many critics in the US.
In 1867, Czar Alexander II of Russia decided to sell the country’s territory in Alaska, because Russia was having economic troubles and would not be able to sufficiently defend the territory from invaders. The czar reasoned that they would be better off selling the territory than waiting for it to be annexed by another country. He offered to sell the land to the United States, and sent a Russian diplomat to enter negotiations with William Seward.
Those negotiations resulted in the purchase of 6,000,000 square miles (15,539,928.66 square km) for $7,200,000 US Dollars (USD) — only a few cents per acre. Though public opinion of the purchase was generally positive, it was the words of several critics that gave „Seward’s Folly“ its name — most notably, The New York Tribune’s Horace Greely, who claimed that Alaska „contained nothing of value but furbearing animals, and these had been hunted until they were nearly extinct. Except for the Aleutian Islands and a narrow strip of land extending along the southern coast the country would be not worth taking as a gift.“
In the 1890s, however, large quantities of gold were discovered in the Alaskan territory, which made critics change their tune and praise Seward for his foresight. Unfortunately, he never got to see his decision acknowledged for the great accomplishment it was, as he passed away in 1872, before the gold reserves had been found.
Today, „Seward’s Day“ is celebrated in Alaska on the last Monday of March each year, in honor of Seward’s purchasing the Alaskan territory from Russia. Though it was established as an organized territory in 1912, it did not ultimately become a state until 1959. Alaska is now by far the largest of the states in the United States.
Alaska has turned into a tourist destination for people who love the outdoors. Oil was also found in the state, though ongoing controversy remains as to whether it is right to drill for it in a wildlife refuge, where much of the oil is located. As of 2005, Alaska had a population of around 663,000, making it the least densely populated state in the nation.