With the primaries just a month away, I was visited at the front door by a politician for the first time. A local candidate who has run once before. He's been to the door before, and didn't recall it.
Lex Anteinternet
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Saturday, July 18, 2026
A visit by a candidate.
Sunday, July 18, 1976. A perfect 10.
Romanian gymnast Nadia Comăneci became the first gymnast to receive a perfect score in Olympic history.
Last edition
Wednesday, July 14, 1976. Carter and Mondale nominated.
Thursday, July 18, 1946. The murder of Maceo Snipes.
African American World War Two veteran Maceo Snipes was murdered after voting in the Taylor County Georgia Democratic Party primary. He was the only Black person to vote in the entire county. Four men were involved in the killing, two were later identified as Edward Williamson and Lynwood Harvey, also WWII veterans. The KKK had been particularly active in the county. Williamson claimed self defense, asserting that Snipes had pulled a knife on him in a confrontation about a debt. In 1985 he committed suicide, overcome by guilt.
Snipes and his mother were both sharecroppers on Homer Chapman's land in Butler, Georgia.
Last edition:
Wednesday, July 17, 1946. African Americans were allowed to vote in Georgia's primary election for the first time.
Tuesday, July 18, 1911. Premier game of the Wyoming State Penitentiary All Stars
New warden Felix Alston organized the team following his appointment to the position in 1911. He chose George Saban, convicted murderer from the Spring Creek raid, to be head coach and team captain due to their friendship. The only team they played against was the Rawlins Juniors, which they played four times in 1911. They won all four games.
The team was comprised for the following members:
Coach: Saban, George. Convicted of murder, he escaped and disappeared from history in December, 1913.
Cameron, Thomas Convicted of Sexual assault, his sentence expired in June 1912.
Pendergraft, Harry A. Convicted of Larceny , he was granted parole in Jan 1912
C, RF: Powell, James. He had been convicted of rape. Powell was black. This was an integrated team.
1B: Rowan, Eugene. He had been convicted of rape, and breaking and entering. He was granted parole in Nov 1913. Rowan was also an African American.
2B: Fitzgerald, Frank. Breaking and entering. His sentence expired in Dec 1911
SS: Guzzardo, Joe. Manslaughter. He was pardoned in July 1912. Guzzardo had killed a woman in 1908 while shooting at a man who was threatening his life.
3B: Crottie, John. Grand larceny. He was released in Nov 1911
LF: Carman, Ora. Grand larceny. He completed his sentence in Sept 1911.
LF: Stone, Earl. Breaking and entering. He completed his sentence in Sept 1911.
CF: Potter, Sidney. Forgery. He completed his sentence in June 1912.
RF, C, SS: Seng, Joseph. First-degree murder. He was hanged in May 1912
Their August 29, 1911 game was their last.
Contrary to a myth about the team, they were not all on "death row", and indeed only one of the men, Joseph Seng, was. Seng had killed his supervisor after he was fired from his job as a watchman in Evanston. He was the first man to be executed at the Wyoming State Penitentiary.
Russian backed and equipped deposed Shah of Persia Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar landed at the Caspian Sea port of Astarabad with an army in an attempt to regain the throne that he had lost in 1909.
Last edition:
Saturday, July 15, 1911. Unreasonable demands.
Thursday July 18, 1901. Tom Horn murdered Willie Nickell.
Today In Wyoming's History: July 18: 1901. Tom Horn murders Willie Nickell, for which he is later hung. In part, Horn is relatively rapidly identified due to leaving an expended .30-30 cartridge at the site, that being a rifle cartridge he was associated with. At the time, the .30-30 was regarded as a long range high velocity cartridge and it was a relatively new cartridge as well. The murder was almost certainly a mistake, as Horn was very likely waiting for Willie's father. Willie was a big kid, albeit only age 14, and was wearing his father's coat on the day of the murder.It's interesting to note that Horn was born in Missouri and grew up on a large family farm, although he left home as an early teen. His 1860 birth date would have caused him to grow up in the Missouri of the 1860s and 1870s, which were particularly lawless, and produced a variety of notorious gunmen. He served as a civilian scout in the Army under the legendary Al Sieber and saw service on both sides of the border. He picked up a knowledge of the Apache language during this period..In the period leading up to this infamous act, he seems to have been employed as an enforcer for certain cattle interests that were continuing to contest along the lines of the Johnson County War as well as the ongoing sheep war. He first took up hiring out as a gunman in the Southwest, after his service to the Army. His role in Wyoming was often as a "stock detective", which gave a degree of legality to some of his activities.His arrest and conviction is one of two instances in the first decade of the 20th Century in Wyoming in which the gunman was rapidly identified due to a cartridge preference, the other being the 1909 Spring Creek Raid, which was the last raid of Wyoming's long running sheep wars. In that event, one of the assailants was armed with a semi automatic Remington 1908 in .25 Remington, his rifle being the only one of that type in the region.Horn has remained an oddly popular and well known figure in Wyoming's history and has his apologists. The reasons for this are not entirely clear. There are those who claim even to the present day that he was not guilty of the murder and was framed by those who had formerly employed him, citing to the efforts of Joe Lefors, who was critical in tracking him down and supplying testimony against him. But the apologists arguments do not stand up to scrutiny. Looked at objectively, Horn was a late Frontier era figure who became ensnared in the violence of the period at the same time at which it was winding down. The same decade of his arrest would see Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid conclude their criminal activities in the state (also with Lefors playing a part in that) and the end of the Sheep Wars due to the arrival of effective law enforcement and unbiased juries. Perhaps Horns role as a fin de siecle play a role in the ongoing fascination with him.
Tuesday, July 18, 1876. Vigilantes.
Ab Saunders, Charlie Bowdre, Doc Scurlock, Frank Coe, and George Coe stormed the Lincoln County, New Mexico jail, removed horse thief Jesus Largo, and hanged him. All of those men would be later part of the Lincoln County Regulators that famously included Billy the Kid, who was already associated with them.
Last edition:
Monday, July 17, 1876. "First scalp for Custer".
The 2026 Election, 16th Edition. The skeptical eye edition.
Horses, hats and political propaganda as Wyoming prepares to vote
Republicans who aren't Dixiecrats or Fascists:




