Lex Anteinternet

Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.

Friday, November 30, 2018

Stupid Headline of the Week: "Donald Trump Is Destroying My Marriage"

From the New Yorker:

IN MY EXPERIENCE NOV. 27, 2018

Donald Trump Is Destroying My Marriage


Seriously?

For this to be the case, you'd have to be the shallowest married couple ever.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/30/2018 11:53:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 2010s, Commentary, Daily Living, Politics, Sic transit Gloria Mundi

November 30, 1918. Americans enter Germany for the first time, Villa threatens Juarez, Wyomingites get Reserve Plates, Teenage Bride Mildred Harris Chaplin rumored to be planning a visit home, No beer for New Years.

The first Americans to cross into Germany, November 30, 1918.  1st Division.  Wormeldauge Luxembourg to Winchrenger Germany.

On this date in 1918 the U.S. Army entered Germany from Luxembourg.
Gen. Campbell King, left, in Luxembourg on this date in 1918.  King was Harvard educated before attending becoming a lawyer in Georgia.  He entered  the Army in 1897 as a private and was commissioned an officer in 1898.  He was a Major entereing World War One and was breveted the rank of Brigadier General and served as Chief of Staff of the Third Army.  He retired as a Major General in 1932 and lived until 1953.  The officer on the right is an unidentified Marine Corps officer.  Note the much darker uniform and the different pattern of overseas cap, with that type being the type that would later become the service wide pattern after the war.

Headquarters for the occupation force remained, on this day, in Luxembourg itself.


Cheyenne residents read Gen. Pershing's address to his troops and the Governor was demobilizing the Home Guard.

And Wyoming was introducing its coveted "reserve plates" for motor vehicles, in which you could get the same license plate number every year (at a time in which you received new plates every year. . . which was the case at least into the 1970s).


In the other Cheyenne paper readers learned that yes, Villa was threatening Juarez again. So he'd returned from near defeat back to threatening and was back on the very top of the front page yet again. . . just as he had been prior to World War One.

Mildred Harris Chaplain at approximately this time. Her stardom was in ascendancy at the time but her life was is in turmoil.  She's married much older Charlie Chaplain at only age 16, something that would have wrecked both of their careers in and of itself in the present age, under the false belief that she was pregnant.

Cheyenne was hoping for a visit, we also learned, from Mildred Harris, now Mrs. Mildred Chaplin, who had turned 17 years old only the day prior.


In Casper the headline, like on many other papers, dealt with Woodrow Wilson's decision to lead the American peace delegation, something that was not a popular decision with Congress.  Casperites also read of the terrible massacre of the Jews in Lemberg (Lvov) by the Poles.

Casperites also were reading of the disbandment of UW's military training unit.


Casperites also read, in the other paper, Pereshing's Thanksgiving day address.

They also read that the Kaiser was that no longer.

And suds for New Years would be no longer as well. The committee that had suspended brewing as of the first of the year declined to rescind its order now that there was peace.

Boxing match in Archangel Russia between enlisted U.S. and French servicemen, November 30, 1918.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/30/2018 05:42:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, actors and actresses, Allied Intervention In Russia, Army, Automobiles, Germany, Juarez Mexico, Luxembourg, Mexican Revolution, Mexico, Personalities, Prohibition, Transportation, World War One

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Thanksgiving Day, 1918

The first Thanksgiving of the peace (keeping in mind that the United States only went through one wartime Thanksgiving in which it was a combatant), occurred on this day, in 1918.


I posted an item on this yesterday in that one of the Cheyenne newspapers ran an article about things being closed in Cheyenne today, and there having been late shopping last night, a century ago. Sounds a lot like today, eh?  In today's Casper Daily Press you can tell that they sent the employees home (keeping in mind that newspapers are put together the prior evening, if they're morning papers) so there'd be no paper on Friday.

That was so that people could enjoy the holidays on an American holiday that has remained much like it has always been, which is a refreshing thing to realize.

One of the things about Thanksgiving, which we've also already posted on, is a big gathering.  I've also posted on that here as well, in this entry:

Blog Mirror: Hundred-year-old Thanksgiving Menus

From A Hundred Years Ago:
Hundred-year-old Thanksgiving Menus

It's interesting to note what's on the menu not only for what's on it, but what isn't.  The authors of these menus didn't necessarily think that you had to have turkey.  Indeed, turkey is only on one of the menus.  "Roast fowl" is on two of them. But what sort of fowl were they thinking of? Any fowl?  Pheasant?

And wine isn't on the menu at all.  I note that as if you spend any time watching the endless Thanksgiving shows that will now be appearing on the Food Channel, or whatever, they're all going to have a part, or at least some surely will, where somebody talks about pairing wine with turkey (as they're all going to feature turkey. . . which is okay as I like turkey).

They're all going to have pumpkin pie as well. . . which only one of these does.  One of these, for that matter, has Maple Parfait. What's that?

Interesting stuff.

One of the things I didn't note in that entry, but which I should have, is that there was no "local food movement" at the time as all food was local.  Indeed, the most recent comment on this blog made me realize there's an element of that I'm not aware of, and as that's the purpose of this blog, exploring such topics, I'll be posting a query thread on that soon.  Anyhow, when I noted that some of these menus had "fowl" on them, it should have occurred to me that obtaining a fresh turkey probably presented greater or lesser difficulties (especially in 1918) for the cook depending upon where you lived.  Most folks probably could go to the butcher and obtain a turkey, and almost certainly some local farmer, even in Wyoming localities, raised them for the Holidays specifically.  Still, some hosts probably had menus that featured freshly obtained game, such as pheasant or, in Wyoming, ducks, geese or even sage chickens, all of which I find pretty darned tasty.

Of course, a lot of Americans were eating Thanksgiving Day dinners overseas in a mess hall of some sort in 1918.  What sort of menu did they find in the offering?  The authors of the excellent Roads to the Great War blog have that one covered:
Roads to the Great War: Thanksgiving Day 1918: Happy Thanksgiving from the Roads Editorial Team Much of the American Expeditionary Force found itself stuck in France after the Armis...
I don't know what "Dardanelle Turkey" is, unless that was the menu author's play on words Turkey keeping in mind that the recently defeated Ottoman Empire controlled the Dardanelles.  Perhaps.  But "White Fish" also on the menu. . .?  That one surprised me.

As it probably surprised some folks that Thanksgiving Day in 1918 was on November 28.  But as readers here will recall, the current calendar position of the holiday is a recent one, as this holiday used to move a fair bit around the month of November.

Any way you look at it, for most people this was likely a happier holiday than the one in 1917 had been. . . although for thousands of others, it was likely a profoundly sad one.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/28/2018 06:43:00 AM 1 comment:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, Blog Mirror, Food, Holidays, hunting, Newspapers, Thanksgiving, The Press, World War One

Vae victis

Woe to the Vanquished

Brennus

Brennus statement, made as a Gallic conqueror, is true in more sense than one, not as a brazen command upon the defeated, but as an existential fact.

Of course, in keeping with the nature of fate, which we've had some quotes on recently, while Brennus sacked Roman and generally acted like a bady, his troops came down with the trots in the city and the Romans ended up tossing him and followers out rather effectively somewhat later.  That may say about as much on this topic as the quote itself.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/28/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 380s, 390s, Defeated people, Disease, Health, Personalities, Random snippets, Roman Empire, War

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Some Gave All: British Empire Memorial, Cathedral de Notre Dame d...

Some Gave All: British Empire Memorial, Cathedral de Notre Dame d...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/27/2018 06:42:00 AM No comments:
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November 27, 1918. The Consumer Economy appears and the Nation resumes a Peacetime Economy.


The Laramie Boomerang reported that the country was resuming a peacetime economy and cutting appropriations, which in fact was done very rapidly, and with a somewhat disastrous impact on the national economy and individual businesses. At the same time, the paper was reporting that a giant military commitment of 1,200,000 men would remain in Europe for the time being.

At UW, the campus military training detachment was standing down.  Mass military training at UW came to an end.


The Casper newspaper, however, was focused on Thanksgiving, which in 1918 occurred on November 28.

To my surprise, Thanksgiving was clearly already associated with shopping, giving evidence to that phenomenon having existed much earlier than I would have supposed.  Indeed, an occasional topic of historical focus in some areas of historical focus is when the consumer economy first appeared.  Whenever that was (and its generally regarded as having its origins prior to World War One, it was clearly before 1918 as the stores in Cheyenne were going to be open to 9:00 this evening.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/27/2018 06:38:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, Army, Consumerism, Economics, German Revolution of 1918-1919, Germany, Newspapers, Retail, Thanksgiving, The Press, U.S. Navy, University of Wyoming, World War One, Yeoman's First Law of History

In war there is no substitute for victory.

In war there is no substitute for victory.

Douglas MacArthur.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/27/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Personalities, Random snippets, War

Monday, November 26, 2018

Thanksgiving and Black Friday, Small Business Saturday, Cyber Monday, oh my!

Today is Cyber Monday, originally so named as this was the day when workers returning to their offices, work stations, cubicles etc., chose to shop on company time, rather than dive right back in.

Not surprising really.  Those with a long weekend tend to return for the most part with the post holiday blahs.

Retailers, however, picked up this pretty quickly and started offering Cyber Monday deals, making it a real thing.

How about you, have you participated in the Consumer Culture Bacchanalia?  It's sort of hard not to, although I support Small Business Saturday.

Which doesn't mean I participated in it.  I don't like shopping much anyhow.  And my land line phone has broken so that the message light hasn't been going off.  Given that, I missed an invitation to a book signing, but truth be known as I was very much looking forwards to four days in a row with now work, perhaps that was to my benefit in another sense.  Book signings make me really tense as I'm highly introverted by nature, something that people who know me only in a professional sense would be surprised to learn.

Anyhow, I guess it isn't true that I didn't participate entirely. That Saturday I did run out and stop by a sporting goods store to get something I required anyhow.  Things were marked way, way down and it wasn't until I got home that I realized that it must have been a Small Business Saturday sale.

My daughter and wife did participate, however. They went to a collection of small local businesses on Saturday to shop for Christmas.  Good for them.

Thanksgiving was otherwise low key but odd. As already noted on these pages, we went to our in laws where an elderly hunter died in a field while we were out there.  Strange melancholy experience. The next day I had a message from one of my employees about a medical emergency of epic proportions in their family, very distressing indeed.  All that caste a sort of tense gloom over things.  I didn't work, however, and did go hunting a couple of times.

Cyber Monday?  Who knows, perhaps even I'll participate a bit.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/26/2018 07:10:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Black Friday, Black Monday, Cyber Monday, Distributism, Green Monday, Internet, Localism, Retail, Small Business Saturday, Thanksgiving

Some Gave All: St. Joan D'Arc, Notre Dame de Paris

Some Gave All: St. Joan D'Arc, Notre Dame de Paris: Memorial to St. Joan D'Arc, the patron saint of France, at the Cathedral de Notre Dame de Paris.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/26/2018 06:05:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 100 Years War, 1420s, 1430s, Blog Mirror, Catholic, Christianity, Churches, France, In Memoriam, religion
Location: Paris, France

November 26, 1918. Letters home with scruffy photos. News photographs with polish appearance. Wyoming for Pershing? The murder of the Jews of Lvov, Rumors of War between Peru and Chile.

Post card home of Harold A. Stivers, 311th Infantry, 78th Division.  Stivers refers to his dress, which he regarded as a little rough.  It is interesting.  He's wearing the by then standard overseas cap and a leather jerkin.  American troops wore the jerkin much less often than the British, with whom it had become standard late in the war.  He notes that his puttees aren't wrapped correctly.  Puttees, used by the British and the French during the war, were adopted by the Americans but they didn't completely replace leggings.  After the war, the American Army quickly went back to leggings.

The contrasting photograph of Gen. Leroy S. Upton, commander of the 57th Bde, 29th Division, who presents a much more polished appearance. Gen. Upton is wearing private purchase lace up, and thick soled, riding boots with speed laces. . . a much preferable piece of footgear for actual field conditions than the standard field boots of the time.


One of the Cheyenne newspapers was declaring that Wyoming would support drafting Pershing for a 1920 Presidential run, or otherwise supporting him in that effort.

No doubt, the news was not in error.  Pershing was the son in law of Francis E. Warren, Wyoming's Senator, and very well remembered there.

And the tax on automobiles was coming off.


The other Cheyenne paper was reporting about the looming war between Chile and Peru, and on the horror of ethnic genocide in Lvov.  And there was fighting, of a different type, in the streets of New York City.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/26/2018 05:53:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, 1920 Presidential Election, Army, Clothing, Communism, Ethnicities, Germany, Judaism, Newspapers, Personalities, Poland, Polish Ukrainian War, Taxes, The Press, Ukraine

Roads to the Great War: Silent Landscape at Gallipoli Reviewed

Roads to the Great War: Silent Landscape at Gallipoli Reviewed by Mike Han...: Silent Landscape at Gallipoli: The Battlefields of the Dardanelles, One Hundred Years On by Simon Doughty (Author), James Kerr ...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/26/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, Blog Mirror, Ottoman Empire, World War One

Quod differtur, non aufertur

That which is postponed is not dropped. Inevitable is yet to happen.

St. Sir Thomas More
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/26/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Monday at the bar, Random snippets, St. Sir Thomas More

Sunday, November 25, 2018

Pershing and Villa share headlines again. November 25, 1918.

Probably not since the Punitive Expedition wrapped up had John J. Pershing and Francisco "Pancho" Villa appeared on the front page in headlines.



Pershing, still in command of the American Expeditionary Force in Europe, which was going into occupation duty in Germany, showed up as Ohio Republicans were imagining him as a candidate for the 1920 Presidential Election.

The speculation would not prove to be idle. While Pershing would see a major promotion on the horizon elevating him in 1919 to the rank of General of the Armies of the United States, a rank higher than that occupied by any other U.S. officer during his own lifetime, Pershing did somewhat entertain the move.  He later announced that he would not campaign for the office, but he wouldn't decline it if offered either, sort of splitting the Shermanesque position that is so famously quoted. As luck would have it, however, Gen. Leonard Wood, well regarded in Republican circles, and not beholden for career success to a Democratic President, as Pershing was, would be the martial early favorite before his campaigned flamed out in favor of Warren G. Harding.

The presence of Villa on the front page should give the reader now, and should have then, some pause in regard to the Pershing boosterism.  How successful of a general was he really?  He's come down in history as a major American military success but the record is frankly rather thin on that.  Prior to the Great War he had been a very successful combat officer in the Philippines, but he wasn't the only one and that was, after all, an ongoing, embarrassing, low grade guerrilla war.  That doesn't mean that Pershing was bad at it, but guerrilla wars aren't usually major conflicts, and the Philippine Insurrection, while it started off as one from the American prospective, really wasn't by the end.

That wasn't Pershing's first combat command, indeed he saw service in the late stages of the Indian Wars and he'd commended troops in the field in Cuba during the Spanish American War.  But none of those events had really raised him to prominence.  It would take the Punitive Expedition to do that.  But how well did he do, really?

Well, a person can debate it.  He kept the American effort going and it didn't cost a lot of American lives.  It also did not capture Villa, or put him out of commission, which had been its singular goal.  Late in the expedition he made recommendations that would have undoubtedly have caused a major escalation of the war which would have almost certainly converted it from a border conflict into a full blown war with Mexico.  We could have won that, surely, but it would have put us in the position of occupying a hostile revolutionary Mexico which was proving difficult for its own successive governments to manage.  That effort would have likely have been so taxing on the United States that our later participation in World War One may very well not have occurred, which in turn may very well have meant that Germany's 1917 and 1918 efforts would have paid off and Imperial Germany emerged the victor.

Pershing can't be faulted for not seeing that far forward, but he can be for not realizing that a small police action shouldn't risk being expanded into a full blown war.  And in regard to his suitability for national leadership, that's important.

Of course those boosting Pershing were thinking of his hero status that came about due to the Great War.  But here too, real questions can be raised.  Americans have believed since the very onset that Pershing was absolutely correct in keeping the U.S. Army out of action until it could be committed as a singular large command, but the evidence shows that this is somewhat of a myth and, moreover, the AEF was not really well commanded in some regards.  In reality American troops started to go into action under French and British control both in order to get combat experience and because the German 1918 Spring Offensive required the deployment of American troops in defense actions. They did well but when counterattacks began American troops took horrendous casualties in part because they were so green but in part because the American military steadfastly refused to accept lessons from the French and the British regarding the circumstances of 1918 European combat.  American military efforts were successful, but at huge and at least partially unnecessary cost and at least one American offensive, the St. Mihel Offensive, was unnecessary yet conducted at American insistence.  When the Germans began to break in 1918 they were impressed with the recklessness of American operations and the individual American fighting man, but at the same time its notable that the French and the British were advancing with less loss.  Moreover, Pershing was one of the generals, although certainly not the only one, who insisted that combat continue right up until the last minute of the war, something which at least now appears to be not only a miscalculation but perhaps a bit more than that.

All in all, retrospectively, Pershing's record is pretty mixed and open to question.  Nothing really existed to suggest that he would have been a good President.  In the end, the GOP didn't decide to run him.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/25/2018 10:24:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, 1920 Presidential Election, 1920s, Army, Mexican Border War, Mexican Revolution, Mexico, Personalities, The Punitive Expedition, World War One

Some Gave All: Parisian Railway Workers Memorial, Paris France

Some Gave All: Parisian Railway Workers Memorial, Paris France: A memorial to Parisian railway workers for World War One.  Photo by MKTH.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/25/2018 05:29:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, Blog Mirror, France, French Army, French Navy, Paris France, Railroads, Some Gave All, Transportation, World War One
Location: Paris, France

Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the West: Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, Santa Fe, New Mexico

Churches of the West: Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, Santa...:

Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, Santa Fe, New Mexico


















This is the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi in Santa Fe, New Mexico. This Catholic Cathedral was built from 1869 through 1886  in the Romanesque style, although the style is not completely obvious as the spires planned for the church, a prominent feature of that style, were never installed.

The cathedral was built on the location of an earlier church, La Parroquia, which had been built in 1714 through 1717, and which itself stood on the location of a church built in 1626 that had been destroyed in the Pueblo Revolt.  A small portion of the earlier church was incorporated in the construction of the cathedral.

An interesting feature of this church is that it is located only two blocks away from San Miguel church.  This tends to show the Catholic concentration of the community at the time these various churches were built, as they were being built in close proximity to each other.  Santa Fe retains at least one more downtown Catholic church today.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/25/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1620s, 1710s, 1860s, Architecture, Catholic, Christianity, Churches, Churches of the West, Colonial North America, New Mexico, religion, Santa Fe New Mexico, Sunday Morning Scene, The Frontier West
Location: Santa Fe, NM, USA

Saturday, November 24, 2018

Best Post of the Week of Novembver 18, 2018.

The best posts of the week of November 18, 2018.

Some weeks we have very little that fits the "best" category.  Some weeks a lot. This week we have an unusually large number.  But then, there was a lot to pass on this week.

"‘Great War’ brought Catholics, bishops into mainstream of US society"? Not so much.

Crappy but predictable career advice

Crossing borders, November 20, 1918.'

The American Veterans of the Great War. Who were they?

Le Grande Tombe de Villaroy, Île-de-France, France.

Monument to 13 Executed from Choisy Le Roi, Seine. August 13, 1944

Hommage aux combattants parisiens de la Grande Guerre. Paris France

Traveling after the victory.

A Thanksgiving Passing

By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 05:30:00 PM No comments:
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Labels: Best Posts of the Week

A Thanksgiving Passing

I didn't know him.

He was an old man, upper 70s, at an age when some men are older than others.

I'd heard of him first in October.  We were at the farm for dinner with the in-laws and his truck was parked in a field.  My father in law related that he'd been coming out white tail deer hunting, but it seemed that what he mostly loved to do was just to watch the deer. 

He was in very poor condition, my father in law related.  That is, he was in very bad health.

On Thanksgiving his truck went by again.  We never heard a shot.  Some time later his son drove in and didn't stop. And then he drove back out. When he returned, the sheriff was right behind him and they again drove through the farm yard and out to the field.  By the time my father in law and I were in the yard getting ready to drive out to see what was gong on, an ambulance was driving in.

When we arrived, the sheriff, county fire, an ambulance, his son and his grandson were all there. But he'd passed.  He had finally shot a deer, a nice white tail buck, but his heart started failing in the effort to drag him in.  He'd called his son for help, but it was too late. He was gone by the time his son arrived and I'm certain that he was gone soon after that call.

His son was in his fifties and related that he wished he'd come to their Thanksgiving gathering nearby, but the paused to note that it could have happened at any time.  The adult grandson noted "better here than in the office".  I think that grandson was right.  The sheriff deputy stated "he went doing something he loved".

And indeed he had.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 06:29:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Death, In Memoriam, Thanksgiving

November 24, 1918. Cheyenne closes again, Horses being eaten in Russia, Revolution in Germany and Gasoline Alley


The papers were starting to report that the Spanish Flu Pandemic was easing, but in truth November was one of its peak years (and in other parts of the globe it'd rage on for the entire next year).  Reality hit as things were closed back up.


As bad as that was, the horrors of the Russian Civil War were pushing their way onto the front page of the local papers.  And there was legitimate reason to fear that the result of the Great War in Germany might be communist revolution throughout the defeated empires of Europe, a disaster that was being appreciated, if not perhaps in its full potential extent.


Elsewhere, in Chicago, the very first issue of Gasoline Alley made its appearance in the newspaper.

Gasoline Alley was, at first, only a Sunday paper in the black and white Sunday cartoons of the Chicago Tribune.  It soon became a daily.

The cartoon strip was one that appeared regularly, and maybe still does, in the Denver Post and occasionally in the Rocky Mountain News and I used to read it there.  It's a cartoon I like, but as it's a serial, its never one that I'm current on the story line so I was never up on what was going on in it.  The interesting thing about it for years and years, beside the content of the cartoon in general, is that it was a celebration of American garage culture.  In that context, it's pretty significant that it appeared in 1918 when automobiles, if not wholly new, were sill very much a new things.  They'd become common enough to be the subject of a cartoon at this point, which says something.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 06:12:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, 1918-1919 Flu Pandemic, Cartoons, Disaster, German Revolution of 1918-1919, Newspapers, Russian Civil War, The Press, trends, World War One

Traveling after the victory.


A French poster urging people to travel to the liberated areas of France and help.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 05:41:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, 1919, France, Poster Saturday, Posters
Location: France

Some Gave All: Hommage aux combattants parisiens de la Grande Gue...

Some Gave All: Hommage aux combattants parisiens de la Grande Gue...: 94,415 flowers planted in honor of the 94,415 Parisians killed in combat in World War One.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 05:34:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, Blog Mirror, France, In Memoriam, Paris France, World War One
Location: Paris, France

Some Gave All: Monument to 13 Executed from Choisy Le Roi, Seine....

Some Gave All: Monument to 13 Executed from Choisy Le Roi, Seine....: This monument is dedicated to 13 residents ("Fusilles", which means shooters, so presumably partisans) of Choisy Le Roi (a tow...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 05:31:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1940s, Blog Mirror, In Memoriam, Some Gave All, World War Two
Location: Choisy-le-Roi, France

Today Is Small Business Saturday for 2018

Granted, it's sponsored by American Express, but that's a reflection of our time.  People seemingly operate extensively on credit cards and it isn't like there are any local ones.

But there are a lot of local outfits of all kind no matter where you are.  Give them a chance. Some deserve it, and some don't, but you won't know if all you do is click on Amazon.

Healthy local businesses in the end help support us all.  And there's simply something about them.  The healthier the small business economy of your area is, the healthier the economy in general is, right there where you live.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Agrarianism, Distributism, Economics, Localism, Small Business Saturday

Roads to the Great War: Remembering the Tommies

Roads to the Great War: Remembering the Tommies: The 1914 Original BEF Shortly After Arriving Unlike France, Russia, Germany, and Austria-Hungary, Great Britain entered the First ...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, Blog Mirror, British Army, World War One

Roads to the Great War: The AEF Keeps Fighting After the Armistice—in Northern Russia

Roads to the Great War: The AEF Keeps Fighting After the Armistice—in Nort...: An Eyewitness Account of the Battle of Toulgas From: The History of the American Expedition Fighting the Bolsheviki Campaigning in North ...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/24/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, Blog Mirror, Russian Civil War, World War One

Friday, November 23, 2018

November 23, 1918. Marching into turmoil

American troops entering Metz by truck.

American troops marching into Thionville on foot.

Opening of  an American Red Cross canteen in Paris.

Army Air Service School, Rockwell Field, San Diego.  Trained pilots who wouldn't be going to Europe.



By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/23/2018 06:30:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, Army, France, German Revolution of 1918-1919, Germany, World War One

Some Gave All: Le Grande Tombe de Villaroy, Île-de-France, France...

Some Gave All: Le Grande Tombe de Villaroy, Île-de-France, France...: This monument in the Île-de-France region of France marks an ossuary which contains the remains of, among others, French poet Charles Peg...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/23/2018 12:30:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1914, 1930s, 1932, Blog Mirror, Death, France, French Army, In Memoriam, MKTH Photographs, Personalities, World War One
Location: Île-de-France, France

Roads to the Great War: Canada's Golgotha

Roads to the Great War: Canada's Golgotha: "Canada's Golgotha" is a 32-inch-high  bronze sculpture by the British sculptor Francis Derwent Wood, produced in 191...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/23/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1918, Art, Blog Mirror, Canada, Canadian Army, World War One

Roads to the Great War: 100 Years Ago: Whither Alsace and Lorraine?

Roads to the Great War: 100 Years Ago: Whither Alsace and Lorraine?: French Troops Occupy Strasbourg Alsace, except the Belfort district, and Lorraine had been annexed by the German Empire on 14 Augu...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/23/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1870s, 1910s, 1918, Blog Mirror, Franco-Prussian War, World War One

Roads to the Great War: President Trump's Armistice Day Speech: 11 Novembe...

Roads to the Great War: President Trump's Armistice Day Speech: 11 Novembe...: Suresnes American Cemetery, France 11 November 2018 President Trump on Behalf of the American People Presents a Flag to Major General ...
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/23/2018 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: the spoken word, Veterans Day, World War One

Thursday, November 22, 2018

The American Veterans of the Great War. Who were they?


A platoon of infantrymen from the 18th Infantry, 1st Division, marches across the border of France into Luxembourg on their path into Germany and occupation duty, November 1918.

I'm starting this post on Monday, November 12, which of course is Veteran's Day (for 2018) in the United States and Remembrance Day in Canada.  I've never been in Canada for this day, so I don't know how well remembered it is there.  Better than in the U.S., I suspect, as World War One in Canada, as in Australia, is part of the country's foundational myth much like the Civil War is for the United States.

This 1918 photograph speaks for itself.  Taken at Walter Reed Hospital.

Perhaps excluding the Revolution, the Civil War, World War Two and Vietnam, every American war is claimed to be a "forgotten war", or even "the forgotten war", by somebody.  And some are darned near forgotten, except by historians.  Americans are, overall, fairly ignorant of their own history anyhow for some inexplicable reason.  Some will blame our education system for that, but then from personal knowledge I know that the schools do at least touch on even the events which Americans somehow forget.  In an era when a large percentage of Americans do attend college or university, some of that can definitely be attributed to post high school education which, in my view, has declined in universality of education and even quality of education considerably since the 1960s.  Indeed, as I noted in my recent post that pretty heavily dissed Reddit (probably unfairly, as I was wishing that I could still post on the 100 Years Ago subreddit and some others and therefore re-subscribed), history departments themselves have to some degree surrendered to a degree of absurdity.  I know that a friend of mine had a college aged daughter who majored in history at a really substantial university and was basically forced to convert her thesis, which was on a 19th Century military topic, to one about women's roles in the same conflict, thereby converting legitimate research that she wanted to do into social research she didn't want to do.   And, and here's where the Reddit comment came in, one of the Reddit moderators on the Ask Historians subreddit which is well done but which features extremely heavy handed moderation is a grad student working on the historiography of the history of sex, a completely and utterly worthless topic that won't every be looked at seriously by anyone outside of his thesis committee and which renders a person unfit to moderate anything.

Caissons pulled by truck, Camp Meade (later Ft. Meade), Washington, 1918.  Only about half of the 4,000,000 Americans drafted during World War One made it overseas. . . but 2,000,000 men is still a lot.  Some of the late draftees served as occupation troops in Germany in 1919.

Anyhow, one of the things that can be a bit irritating, but really shouldn't be, about American Veterans Day, at least on the centennial of the ending of the war that featured the bloodiest American battle of all time, is its absolute focus on World War Two.  It's unrelenting, but understandable.

U.S. troops in eastern Russia, 1918.  The American military commitment, and the dangers associated with it, in Russia carried on after November 11, 1918 even though they never had any clear mission.  Americans have almost completely forgotten about their two deployments to Russia during the Russian Civil War, just as they've also forgotten about their two major interventions in Mexico in the two years leading up to our entry in World War One.  Neither the Russians nor the Mexicans have forgotten them.

We still have a lot of World War Two veterans with us, although we will not for much longer.  Starting in the 1980s the generation that came of age in the 1960s started to engage massively in a lot of hagiography about that generation, which was the generation of their parents.  It's been odd, as they were heavily at odd with their parents generation all through the 1960s and 1970s and into the mid 1980s, when it suddenly changed and they rose their parents up on pedestals from which they still support. them. We'll take a look at that earlier, but one of the effects of that is to have converted Veterans Day into "Remember World War Two and Vietnam Day", followed by December 7 every year which has turned into "Remember World War Two Veterans Day", followed by Memorial Day, which is "Remember World War Two Veterans Day".

American soldier Pvt. Frank Sovicki, a Polish immigrant who was captured by the Germans in France and then escaped to Switzerland.

Now, WWII was horrific and the American focus on it is understandable.  But it actually has caused a shadow so large that World War One can't be seen from hardly at all, even when a really significant historical anniversary comes by regarding it.  And just flat out forget the Korean War.  Even the half century mark on the war in Korea was hardly noticed at all.  It would take a second Korean War for Americans to remember the first one, assuming that a second one wouldn't cause them to forget the first completely.

Okay, enough whining, I guess.

One of the things that has come up due to the focus on World War Two is that every year we tend to hear a lot of Tom Brokaw type "the greatest generation" type commentary, which in some ways tends to point out, not terribly accurately, that "they were better than us", while at the same time suggest that, as the generation that coined that term were the children of those to whom it has been given, that they are just like us. They aren't.  But what about earlier generations?

American soldiers in a trench in France, 1918.

With the exception of World War Two, I don't think we look at earlier generations all that much anymore and try to draw parallels with ourselves. But we should, as that's really worthy research (a lot more useful than a thesis on the historiography of the history of sex, which will gather dust on some shelf until a library cleaning fifteen years from now tosses it in the circular file).

In other words who were those people who came from the U.S. and fought in World War One?  Are we still them, even partially?  Should we wish that we were. . . as we tend to view the past as universally better than the present if we dwell on the past, or should be be glad that we're not. . . or both?

Well, something like that would go from a thesis to a book (take note history departments and students. . . something that people might actually refer to and not be regarded as a joke outside of the history department) but we'll try to take a brief look at it here.

Some of these troops who marched through Luxembourg on their way into Germany would fight their way through the first and into the second about twenty-five years later.  Many would have sons and daughters in the service in World War Two.

There were only twenty-three years between the end of the fighting in World War One and the beginning of the American involvement in World War Two.  That's not much time at all.  Our current war in Afghanistan shows ever sign of running that long in and of itself, or at least crowding it.  Given that, you'd think that there wouldn't be much difference between the solders that are universally praised and admired for World War Two and the ones that fought in World War One.

But there are.

The period between 1918 and 1941 was one of change at a rate that's hard for us to even grasp now.  We like to imagine that our own lives have been turned upside down by the computer, and they in fact stand to be going forward, but no living person born after 1950 has experienced a rate of change in day to day living like those who lived before 1950 did.  Indeed, my time period is really unfair as the type of really blistering change that I've noted here really started around 1903, more or less, and roared on until around 1950, more or less.  Nearly a full have century of constant change.  For the generation that fought World War One, and to a degree World War Two, that was a fact of life to which they became acclimated to, but it's one that we need to appreciate in order to grasp what the American soldier of World War One was like.

African American infantrymen of the 25th Infantry, Ft. Keogh Montana, 1890.  The younger career soldiers in this photograph could still have been in the Army in 1917-18 and its certain that at least some of their junior officers were.  Not one thing depicted in this photograph, from uniforms to weapons, remained current issue when the U.S. entered World War One.

Americans old enough to fight in World War One were born for the most part no later than 1900.  As 4,000,000 men were drafted, and that's a lot of men, it's actually the case that the overwhelming bulk of conscripts were born in the 1890s but some had been born in the 1880s.  Career officers in the U.S. Army who were senior officers in World War One were all born in the 19th Century and the oldest of them had entered the Army during the Frontier period and quite a few had seen service in late Frontier campaigns.  Most of them (MacArthur was the exception) had seen field service in the Spanish American War.  Nearly all of them had seen service in the Philippine Insurrection.

Gen. Pershing on a balcony watching, with the Grand Duchess of Luxembourg, American troops passing by on their way into Germany, November 1918.  Pershing was 58 years old at the time and had entered the U.S. Army, following his graduation from West Point, in 1886.  At this point, he had commanded troops in the Indian Wars, the Philippine Insurrection, and in the Punitive Expedition.  The big war, in terms of societal memories, of his youth would have been the Civil War, which ended when he was a young child.  The Indian Wars would have been an ongoing national fact for over the first thirty years of his life.

There are some really significant aspects of that which we often tend not to note.

The United States was already an industrial nation by 1917, when we entered the war, but it was also much, much more rural than it is now.  The pace of urbanization had been dramatically accelerating in the early 20th Century, something that Theodore Roosevelt was both noting as inevitable and lamenting, privately, in his two terms as President.

But, while the urban population was increasing nearly daily, the fact is that the United States, through the Great War, was heavily urban in most places, but with some great cities and industrial areas.  Nearly any city, however, had a rural area very closely associated with it.

By 1918 farming had even entered Alaska, as evidenced by this photograph of the same.

Agriculture at the time remained horse powered almost exclusively.   Tractors were coming in, along with machines that tractors could pull, by World War One but the overwhelming majority of farms did not own them  Horses dominated farms and were hugely dominant in regards to ranches, where automobiles of any kind really had not made an appearance.  Farming in 1917-18 was closer to farming in 1817-18 than it is to farming today.

Harrowing on a Maryland farm, 1936.  The Great Depression seriously retarded the mechanization of agriculture, setting it back about twenty years.

And that meant a lot of small farms that were family owned, and a lot of small farm towns to serve them.  This in turn meant that a lot of Americans lived on small farms, or that they lived in small towns.  Commuting fifty or more miles to work was not a thing, so when I say live there, they lived and worked there.  And this meant those little towns were much more viable than they are today.  They weren't bedroom communities for anything, save for farms themselves in regions of the country that had been settled by Irish or German rural immigrants, from whom land was too valuable to build a house on where they came from, so they lived in little towns and traveled out to their fields.

People did live and work in towns and cities of course, so it isn't as if the United States was one giant agrarian paradise (or a paradise at all) prior to 1920 or something.  And a lot of that work was much different than now by a long shot.  In order to consider that, we likely have to take a look at classes of workers, those being industrial workers, shopkeepers, office workers, and the wealthy.

Even as late as the 1960s 1/3 of all Americans were employed in industry.  This isn't close to being true anymore.  And industrial conditions aren't even remotely similar to what they once were.

Ford Motors employees, 1916.

Heavy industrial labor was dirty and dangerous and everybody who was employed in it knew that.  A struggle was going on between labor and capital, as its classically put, over those conditions and had been for some time.  Perhaps barely noted in our accounts of the Great War here, labor wasn't wholly supportive of the government during World War One and strikes were common.  This was height of a real divide between labor and capital and the same forces that were playing themselves out violently in Russia and Germany were present in the United States and the United Kingdom, but as it would turn out in a much less revolutionary fashion.  Nonetheless, the governments of most democratic nations feared labor and for really solid reasons.  That fear would prove to be misplaced in the case of the US and the UK, as well as France, but it would prove not to be misplaced in Russia, Germany, Spain, Italy and other regions.  It would take the Great Depression to really play that all out, but in truth it was the Great Depression, a decade away when World War One ended, that would sort much of these difficulties out in the liberal democracies in a permanent fashion.

Wheelwrights, 1903.

At this time, these things had not been sorted out which  meant that working conditions were often very rough for laborers even if they were in fact changing and, moreover, had changed in part due to sympathetic Federal legislation started in the Theodore Roosevelt administration and which had spread to states, including Wyoming, which was on the verge of adopting one of the country's first Workers Compensation laws, ironically based on the German workers compensation laws that had come in under Bismarck.  Still, there was a long ways to go, particularly when we consider that employer supplied insurance was not the national norm until World War Two (although company hospitals were already a thing).

In additional to industrial laborers, of course, and laborers of all types there were many many people who worked in small offices and businesses of all types.
Teenage office worker, 1918

Of course many people still do. The majority of American businesses today are small businesses.  But working for small businesses worked differently than it does today.

To give a couple of examples of this, a couple of years ago I heard an interview of an author who had written a book on World War One veterans.  One he interviewed, then over 100 years old, had graduated from high school (more than that in a moment), gone to work in a very near by town as a clerk in an insurance brokerage office, and worked their his entire life, but for his service in World War One.  He went from clerk to agent.
Teenage office worker, ironically doing manual entries in a "talking machine" company.

That sort of thing was common.  My paternal grandfather, for example, left his home in Dyersville Iowa at age 13 (1915) and traveled to San Francisco, where he went to work as an office boy for the Cunard Ship Line, moving from that to the meat packing industry, and ended up owning his own plant in Wyoming.  My maternal great grandfather started as an office boy for the Anglo Canadian Insurance Company and ended up owning it.  Andrew Carnegie, the super rich philanthropist, started off as a railroad telegrapher in one of the companies he'd ultimately own.

Dyersville Iowa, 1912.

The point isn't that rags to riches stories were the rule, but rather that starting off as office workers and making it a viable career was pretty common.

Of course you can't have offices without having people who own small businesses, and rather obviously I've blended the two here because people went from the telegrapher room to the front office, or from the grocery stocker to the owner.* Not everyone did, of course, but quite a few did. But the point here is that the number of small businesses of all types was much higher than it is today, even if today most businesses remain small businesses.

One of the most popular entries here is the about the 1916 founding of Piggly Wiggly.  But what makes that even relevant to anything?  Well, Piggly Wiggly was the first modern grocery store, and that illustrates a point.

In the decade we're talking about and those before that the large conglomerated retail outlets we're all so familiar with today simply didn't exist. . . very much. There were some, but they were fairly small and not all that old.  Entities like J. C. Penney's for example were up and running.  And ordering stuff from catalogs, the big late 19th Century and 20th Century equivalent of ordering from Amazon, was already a thing.

Block of ice in front of grocery store, 1912.

But by and large, if you were going to buy something, you bought local, and you didn't have to try to be making some Localist or Distributist point by doing that.  You had to.

That meant that there were a lot of small retail outlets of all types, literally all types. And in the economics of the day, those small businesses all supported families.  It was the era of family businesses and many middle class Americans owned such outlets.  Indeed, while it was prior to their generation, my grandparents on my father's side hailed from families which, prior to their generation, had owned small businesses.  Indeed, my grandfathers on both sides of my family did as well.  In at least one of the industries they were employed in, local businesses of the type he owned are a thing of the past and no longer exist.

Fourteen year old store clerk working in a cigar store, 1917.

Into the mix of small businessmen were professionals, which at that time more strictly were defined by the traditional definitions.**  By professionals in this context we mean lawyers and medical men,including in that latter category dentists.

In more recent times these have all come to be associated with wealth, and indeed were at the time.  The association has never actually been accurate and all of these professions are middle class professions and were at the time. . . only more so.

Woman doctor, very unusual at the time, Margaret Farwell serving during World War One in the Red Cross.

There were, to be sure, "rich" lawyers and "rich doctors" (probably not "rich dentists") but all of these professions were much, much less lucrative at the time than they would later come to be.***Indeed, all of them have always had not only a strong middle class basis, but also they were unusual in that they had roots in minority populations (which they still do).

These professions, however, are unique in that unlike business professions, they generally were starting to become strongly associated with a professional education, and indeed in the case of medicine, including dentistry, they already completely were.  This was not true of any other occupation in the United States. That is, unlike every other occupation, medicine and dentistry had no other path into the occupation except through obtaining an advanced degree and passing a state test for licensure.  Law had not reached the point where this was universally true, but it was starting to become the case that more and more lawyers were graduates of law schools.  Wyoming did not have its own law school yet. . . the only professional college it would ever form (assuming no formations of new ones in the future), but even it soon would when the University of Wyoming would establish its College of Law in 1920.  The fact that even highly rural Wyoming would feel compelled in this era to establish a law school says something about the status of the field.

Lawyer and Wilson cabinet member, G. W. Wickersham in typical lawyer attire for the era.  Wickersham had been the U.S. Attorney under Taft and had accepted a wartime appointment to the War Trade board to Cuba during World War One.  After WWI he went on to chair the Wickersham Commission under Hoover to study the U.S. criminal justice system which would unfortunately come to employ Communist spy Alger Hiss.  His son served as a distinguished officer in the New York National Guard in the Punitive Expedition, World War One, and World War Two.

That status caused the occupation of the profession of law to be a near absolute guaranty that a soldier serving in World War One would receive officer status, keeping in mind that you did not need a college degree to be an officer in World War One.  This gives us the reason that a unit like the "Lost Battalion" would have at least three Harvard Law graduates in its officer ranks.

New York lawyer Charles White Wittlesey, commander of the "Lost Battalion". Whittlesey had worked as a logger before attending college and was a member of the Harvard Law School class of 1908.  He was always a constitutionally nervous person and is believed to have walked off the deck of a ship at night in 1921.

George G. McMurtry of the "Lost Battalion", Harvard law graduate of 1899.

Doctors and dentists of course went into the medical corps during the Great War.  As we've already seen, the medical branch of the U.S. Army was so poorly established during this time period that the Red Cross hospital units were basically taken into the Army wholesale.  The contrast may be demonstrated, in part, by the fact that late in World War Two to hold a law or medical degree no longer meant automatic commissioning.

This latter topic brings up the nature of societal economic status, which is also important for us to consider, as well as education. That latter topic brings up ethnicity, so we'll turn to all of those now.

Americans living at the present time live in a really odd time in American history as it's possible to argue, although not very well, that this is the first time in American history that the majority of the American population is not in the middle class.

I've posted on the "declining middle class" and the middle class in general, quite a bit on this blog and I don't intend to repeat that in this post.  I think the general assumption that the majority of Americans are not in the middle class is an error any way its looked at, but what definitely is different about the period of a century ago is that the middle class as a group lived much, much closer to slipping into poverty than it does now. Supposedly, although I'd question it, its' nearly impossible for a member of the middle class to slip into poverty today, without some effort to it, but a century ago, this was not true as they weren't far from it to start from.  Conversely, while some people were hugely rich, they were a tiny minority.  Every town, of course, had its rich people, but even a lot of those people lived closure to slipping back down to the middle class than generally imagined.****

An aspect of this is that there was no "safety net" a century ago of any kind.

Children of the poor gleaning coal, 1913.

There was no Social Security, no Medicaid, no Medicare and no unemployment insurance in the decade of the 1910s in the United States.  If you lost your job, there was no state or Federal agency to fall back on.  Falling back, if you could, had to be falling back to your family and whatever other networks you personally had.  For some people, falling back meant falling out and west, as the Homestead Acts were still up and running. Again, the decade we're speaking of would be the one which would feature peak homesteading, not a decade in the 19th Century.  Even that was very dicey, however, as successful homesteading actually involved the use of quite a bit of cash as a rule.  Not that everyone was successful, most were not.  Indeed, a farming boom which featured many inexperienced farmers during World War One would result in devastating post war economic and environmental consequences in the many Western states.

There was also, as a rule, no health insurance if you became ill.

Operation being conducted in open for medical students at a medical college, December 10, 1902.

Now, health insurance of various types did exist, but most Americans didn't purchase it and really couldn't afford to.  It didn't really take off in the U.S. until the 1920s and didn't exactly take off at rocket pace then. It would take World War Two to make that transition, when employers were able to start offering as a benefit to attempt to offset caps is wages designed to keep a labor shortage induced inflation from taking off.  So for the most part, if you were sick and injured, it was up to you.  Exceptions did exist for some occupations, however, which had banded together, such as firemen and even farmers, to form insurance associations.  And some large companies had established their own medical systems staffed by their own doctors and nurses and even featuring their own hospitals.  Most Americans, however, didn't work in that environment.

That also meant, of course, that the way medical care was provided was quite a bit different.  Being a doctor, we've already noted, was not an occupation that was guaranteed to take you up out of the middle class (it still isn't, but that's more the case today than it was a century ago).  Doctors provided more general care and commonly did things like house calls as a rule.

Retirement was also generally non existent, although pensions were beginning to become more common for people who worked for large companies, so they weren't wholly non existent.  Employees of the Federal government, including soldiers, could earn a pension for years of service. . . thirty years was required for military retirement at the time, which truly made government service, including service for local governments, quite attractive.  We're sort of oddly returning to that era or that status in a way, although, very importantly, Social Security did not exist at the time.^

Of course one thing that should be obvious to readers of this blog or students of this era in general is that education was considerably different at the time.

Home economics in high school, 1911. This was right at the start of a huge boom in public education.  Many now would look at this photograph and regard it as quaint or even sexist, but the girls in this photograph were actually learning a skill that was practically necessitated by their status in life and which they no doubt all employed to some degree.  1911 was still in the era in which not all clothing was mass produced by any means.

People like to look back, not without some justification, to education of the past and lament about how it was better "back then".  This is generally untrue at the public school level, but you can find individual areas of study that were tougher in the past than now.  Depending upon where a person went to school. . . or rather if, as we shall see, a person might have been expected to memorize certain historical dates that aren't touched on now, or to learn the basics of a foreign language, to include Latin, which many schools don't offer now at all.

Student machining an artillery shell in a technical high school, 1917.  While this is more than a bit shocking, lathe operation varies little based on what is being produced and is a technical skill.  This student was graduating into an era when these skills would have remained fully employable his entire life.  Indeed, currently there is a shortage of skilled machinist.  Technical classes remained common in high schools well into the 1980s when they seem to have really dropped off.

What's missed, however, is that a huge percentage of people didn't complete public school, or I should say, given that certain demographics were strongly associated with private schools, school at at all.

In fact World War One came at the onset of what is known as the High School Movement, a movement that emphasized and developed high school education which historians date back to 1910 and is regarded as running to 1940.  During that period of time the modern high school really developed.

Burning high school German textbooks, 1917. This kind of behavior during World War One was both incredibly common and really stupid.  Perhaps balancing it out slightly, but only slightly, is the fact that the residents of this town in Wisconsin probably had a lot of native German speakers to start with so the act didn't quite mean what it would now.

This can be seen in a lot of places simply because that's the period their high schools date back to.  And that would mean that we really start to see high school graduates from what we'd regard as modern high schools. That can't be emphasized enough as high schools were, in a way, sort of precursors to junior colleges, and indeed, while  now forgotten, in the West there were Land Grant high schools, not just Land Grant universities.

Hughes High School in the 1910s.  This Cincinnati high school features the Gothic architecture which was highly common for high schools of the era which sought to resemble universities and English public schools in appearance.

The existence of high schools and the emphasis put on them boosted the interest in University and college education. As early as 1914 50% of graduates from public high schools indicated that their goal was to go on to university or other institutions.  The figure was lower for graduates of public and private high schools, which probably reflects the existence of Catholic high schools in the mix. Such schools had a good reputation, but very few Catholics continued on to higher education at the time.  From private schools the rate intending to go on was 35% overall, but 45% for males, which was quite high at the time and frankly really impressive.  A real education boom as on.

Be that as it may, while there was suddenly a great interest in education, it was still the case that high school degrees were the exception rather than the rule.  In 1910 only about 15% of Americans graduated from high school.  By 1918, interestingly enough, about 25% of high school aged Americans graduated from high school, an impressive leap, but that still means that 75% of Americans left school prior to that point.  It wouldn't be until the early 1930s that over half of Americans graduated from high school, although that reflected a steep increase in the number of students that did just that.

"Old Main" at the University of Wyoming in 1908. The structure dates to 1886.  UW is a Land Grant college and reflects the very early stages in the boom in education that would commence at the university level in the late 19th Century and greatly expand in the 20th Century.

At the same time enrollment in universities was rapidly accelerating.  The college population about doubled between 1910 and 1920, reflecting the same trend as noted above.  Still, with the  majority of Americans not attending high school to completion, fairly obviously most didn't go on to obtain university degrees. The real boom in college attendance came after World War Two when colleges opened up to new demographics.

Which brings us back around to something hinted at above and which is addressed elsewhere in this blog.  While many lament, with some cause, that the American "melting pot" seems to be breaking, American society in the decade of the First World War was much more segregated in all ways than it is now, something which others ironically lament the passing of as well.

St. Joseph's Polish Catholic Church, Denver Colorado.  Built in 1902, the church existed in a neighborhood which already had a Catholic church within eyesight which had been built for a South Slavic population.  This Polish Catholic church still has a school which still teaches Polish, presumably as a second language.  Schools such as the one that was supported by this church were extremely common at one time as very large percentages of Catholic attended Catholic schools.  Almost none of the graduates from Catholic schools went on to university until after World War Two in spite of the high quality of their education.

When I say "segregated",  I don't refer to legal segregation, but cultural segregation, which is a considerably broader use of the term.  Americans of a century ago were much more likely than now to live and work with people who were of the same race, culture and religion than they are now, although mixing of all certainly occurred.

In the 1910s, the founding demographic of the country, those of English protestant background, were the dominant demographic in the country.  It was already the case that members of other demographics had done well in the country, but even a cursory glance at who held power in the country in one way or another reveals that to be the case.  People now commonly refer to "whites, blacks and Hispanics", but at the time people were very comfortable with breaking ethnic classifications down much further.

The way that this worked at the time would tend to surprise most current Americans and shock more than a few.  While there was diversity, to be sure, the level of diversity was not what it is now and this made real differences in people's daily lives in all sorts of ways. 

The term "Anglo Saxon" was in common use by the educated class to describe the founding demographic of the nation and when used it was implicit that the demographic was superior to others.  In many parts of the country this reflected itself in a variety of ways, indulging that membership in the Episcopal Church was often a move that people made from other faiths in order to essentially announce or attempt to secure their social and economic status.  Other Christian churches were certainly strong, although its an error to believe, as people tend to do, that there was 100% church attendance at the time or anything approaching it, but the Episcopal Church had status that other churches lacked in these regards.  Indeed, a long time co-worker of mine related that his father, who was a later generation, had moved from the Presbyterian Church to the Episcopal Church at the insistence of his bride, with that being a precondition of the marriage.  We still see things like that, but it tends to be back and forth between members of Protestant churches and the Apostolic Churches today, which have huge doctrinal differences. 

The impressive Gothic style Episcopal Church, St. Mark's, in Cheyenne Wyoming. This church was built in 1888 and is patterned after a church in England.

Membership in certain secret fraternal organizations, most particularly the Masons, also reflected itself in this fashion, as that barred Catholics.  And as already noted in other entries here, most Catholics not only did not seek higher education, but they couldn't seek it at Ivy League schools and schools like them which had a chapel requirement, reflecting their origin as essentially Protestant seminaries.

All of this meant Americans of the day were much more likely to draw distinctions about being somebody being Irish, German, English or Scots, etc., than they are today.  Many people lived in neighborhoods, particularly in the cities of the East, but even in towns of the East and Mid West (this was much less common in the West) that strongly reflected an ethnic heritage.  An Irish American growing up in Chicago or New York was likely to live in an Irish neighborhood where Irish immigrants were common along with second or third generation Irish Americans, meaning that the Irishness of the group was reinforced.^^ This is just an example and was not unique to the Irish by any means. Entire regions of the country were dominated by one or another ethnic groups in a way that is not very common now except among new immigrants.  Many big cities had such things as Polish neighborhoods, Latvian neighborhoods, Italian neighborhoods, Chinese neighborhoods, etc,. in a way that is much less common than it is now.^^^

Lt. Col. "Wild Bill" Donovan and Father Francis P. Duffy. Both men are emblematic of the ethnicity in the United States in this period to a degree.  Both Catholic men entered the U.S. Army through the legendary "Irish" New York National Guard unit, the "Fighting 69th" and achieved legendary status in it.  Donovan went on to lead the OSS during World War Two.  The Canadian born Duffy had already been a chaplain in the Spanish American War.

One final thing I should note is that when I'm referring to work, as I have done above, I'm mostly referring to men.  Indeed, when I'm referring to soldiers, I mostly am too.

I've discussed the recent trend towards incorporating female service women into combat roles, which I frankly do not approve of, but when we're looking at this era, not only are we not discussing that, it wasn't though of.  And for the most part, most work was male.

Women's Mounted Emergency Corps.  At the start of World War One, and indeed as early as the Platsburg movement, women began to look for various roles to serve the country during the conflict.  Various unofficial reserve units such as this formed, but it would be in clerical, driving and nursing roles that women would find wartime employment in the service and semi official service units.

This has also been a topic that's been heavily discussed here and I don't mean to go back over.  For those interested in it, our earlier entry remains the one to go to.  As that entry relates, women did go to work during the Great War, and in every domestic occupation and some military ones.  But after the war they largely returned to their prior roles for reasons that have everything to do with the burdens that of daily living in the pre domestic machinery age.  That wouldn't really change until after World War Two.  But what that means for us here should be touched upon.

There was a large scale effort during the Great War to replace male labor with female labor for the period of the war. That's what ended up occurring. That is, it was for the duration of the war only, for the most part.

Most women, as we've already discussed, worked at home in domestic roles.  Those women who did work outside of their own homes tended to work in domestic maintenance roles in the homes of others, heavy work indeed.  For the most part, women who worked outside of the homes did so due to financial need as it also meant that they were doing the same roles, usually, in their own homes (unless they were resident servants).  In other words, working as a domestic for women was nearly always a byproduct of poverty.  Otherwise women worked in their own homes.

This goes to the point that a century ago most males were at some point able to occupy jobs, often manual labor jobs, that provided for an entire family, and usually a family that was at least somewhat larger than families are now.  We addressed this the other day but a real factor arguing for a decline in the economic power of average Americans is that whereas the workforce has nearly doubled by percentage of available workers, now that women commonly work, earning power has dramatically declined so that for most families, they now have to. That wasn't the case a century ago.

Of course, as this implies, the overwhelming majority of Americans lived in families that comprised of a married couple and their children, although this may be slightly deceptive.  Having children out of wedlock was absolutely scandalous and extremely frowned upon, so almost all people were brought up largely in married families.  Those who were not tended to be an exception due to death of one of the parents although almost all widowed people remarried, although not all did.  Death due to accident, however, was so common that nearly as many Americans spent some time in a "single parent" home as they do now.^*  On the other side of things, young unmarried people lived at home for a long time. The perception that this is a new thing is wholly incorrect.  Unmarried men that did not travel away from their homes to find employment nearly always lived in their parents homes until married. Unmarried women were very unlikely to leave home and start their own.^**  In the unusual instance in which a person never married they were likely to never leave home. There are certainly numerous exceptions, however.

Okay, so this entry is becoming endless. What does all of this mean?

Well this, I think.

The American soldier of 1917-1918 was much more likely to be of rural or near rural origin than the average American today (although oddly not necessarily the modern American volunteer solider of today).  They were generally very healthy and fit, a fact which impressed and somewhat stunned our Allies who were actually cheered by the arrival of Americans simply because of their mere physicality.  They were much less likely to be as educated as most Americans today, which is interesting in numerous ways as having left school was not, in any fashion, a reflection on their intelligence, motivation or drive so much as it was their social status and career plans.

On careers, they tend to resemble, as I have already noted, Generation X much more than any generation after them as they were flexible in occupation as they had to be.  Changing jobs was common for them.  In an era in which pensions and the like were mostly nonexistent, the incentive for moving jobs, if a better job was in the offering, was high.  They were much more likely to work in a local jobs.  They were more likely to own their own enterprises, and those enterprises were likely to be small.  Many more of them worked with their hands and nearly all of them knew how to. 

They were also highly accustomed to the concept that work was dangerous or could be, and early death by accident and disease was common and expected.

They were much more likely to be like those they had grown up with, not only in race, but in religion and ethnicity.  They were also much more likely to be prejudiced against those not like themselves and to be the victims of prejudice.

As average people, they were often much like those who lived in the lands that they were being sent to in order to fight in.  American soldiers of 1917-1918 were impressed with the French and horrified by their suffering at the hands of the Germans.  They married French women in large numbers, showing that the ethnic differences were fairly rapidly overcome, in no small part because French civilians did not live very differently than they did at home.  American soldiers on occupation duty in Germany started to do the same with the Germans and had to be cautioned that the Germans had lately been their enemy.  Even American soldiers in rural Russia started to marry Russian brides. 

All of this would be true, of course, for Americans serving around the globe in World War Two, but impressions were quite different.  Americans tended to find rural France to be quite backwards in the Second World War, which they did not in World War One.  The conditions Italians lived in during World War Two shocked Americans who came to regard them as hopelessly backwards (until Italian film noire, Claudia Cardinale, and Sophia Loren changed their minds in the late 50s and 60s) where as during World War One the Italians had really been celebrated.  It was the Americans who had changed, not the Italians or rural French.

And, by all measures, the American soldier of the Great War seems to have accepted suffering and death in a way that no Americans have since. The casualty rate for Americans during World War One was absolutely horrific.  If any American commander had suffered losses at the rate that Pershing did after World War One he would have been cashiered.  During the Great War it as widely circulated that the American Army had issued an order that men fleeting battle (of which there were few) should be shot on the spot, an order that was illegal but which may very well have been issued.  In contrast, Gen. Patton was nearly relieved for slapping two soldiers during World War Two (only one such instances is commonly remembered, but there were two). 

The acceptance of life being hard, in every level of society, seems to have been a given.  The generation has famously been called "The Lost Generation" due to the horror of World War One, but there's real reason to doubt the characterization.  They seem to have simply accepted that a hard life and early death was a feature of life, and if that hardship and death came in war, that too was part of the way things were.

Greatest generation?  I don't know which one that would be, if there is one. But they were certainly a pretty great generation.

_________________________________________________________________________________

*The film Marty, set in the 1950s, portrays this well in its later stages.

**The "Professions" were the Law, Medicine and the Clergy at Common Law, all occupations which "professed".

***Although at least in the case of the law the overall profession never became anywhere near as lucrative as imagined and that status peaked at least two decades ago before going into steep decline.

****That's actually true today as well.  The number of people who are statistically wealthy is higher than before, but many of those people slip back and forth between wealthy and the upper middle class without even knowing it and never actually regard themselves as wealthy.  Indeed a majority of theose in the bottom end of "wealth" regard themselves as solidly middle class.

^It had, however, already been mentioned by a Presidential candidate as a goal, that candidate being Theodore Roosevelt who brought up the idea in his final Presidential run.

The existence of Social Security is frankly a big deal and without it many Americans could never retire today. While its really popular for people to state "it' won't be there when I retire", it will be and people clearly act in expectation that it will be.  The program has expanded enormously since it was introduced during Franklin Roosevelt's administration and now forms part of a large social safety net.

^^As an example, my father's father was born in the Mid West; Iowa to be exact. He was from a town that was all Westphalian and spoke German as a second language as he had learned it at home, even though he was a third generation American.  He married, however, in Denver and when he did he married my grandmother, who was of 100% Irish extraction (her mother was from Ireland), which shows that things were a bit broader in the West.

My mother was born in a suburb of Montreal which was principally occupied by English speaking Irish Catholics, although that was already a big broader as her mother was of Irish, French and Scot's extraction.

^^^The passing of this has come to be oddly lamented in some quarters in recent times, particularly among traditionalist Catholics, some of whom view the passing of strongly ethnic Catholic neighborhoods in the 1960s to be nearly conspiratorial in nature.  Their passing was a fact and came about mostly due to inevitable social and economic trends following World War Two which accompanied the incorporation of American Catholics into the larger society, but the loss of these strongly ethnic and Catholic areas, while a feature of social and economic isolation, has come to be a matter of suspicion by some.

^*Economics played into this as well as social norms to some degree.  Women who were "shamed" by men, very often male employers of younger female domestics, were regarded with pity but it was practically impossible for them to afford to raise children that came about this way.  Very commonly this resulted in their being given up for adoption, but in a surprising number of cases a young woman compromised in this fashion actually found themselves the recipient of a proposal from a young unmarried man and the circumstances of birth were simply passed over.  A long time friend of mine knows, for example, that in this era a female ancestor of his was raped by a male employer where she worked as a domestic and she was soon the recipient of a proposal by the man she married, who raised the child as his own without question.

^**My mother had two aunts who never married, one of whom did in fact leave home and had for World War One, where she served as a Canadian nurse. The other lived with her father for the remainder of his life when she inherited the house and some money and lived there until her own death.
By Pat, Marcus & Alexis - 11/22/2018 10:21:00 AM No comments:
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Lex Anteinternet?

This blog has been around since 2009. In the very first post, we asked the question: "What the heck is this blog about?"

Our answer to the question was: "The intent of this blog is to try to explore and learn a few things about the practice of law prior to the current era. That is, prior to the internet, prior to easy roads, and the like. How did it work, how regional was it, how did lawyers perceive their roles, and how were they perceived?"

We also noted: "Part of the reason for this, quite frankly, has something to do with minor research for a very slow moving book."

All of this is still true, but the focus of the blog has changed somewhat. It now focuses on the era from 1890 to 1920 in general, rather than on the law and lawyers specifically, although that may be far from obvious. It's also become the location where we comment on anything we feel moved to comment on.

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Featured Topics and Trailing Posts

  • Friday Farming
  • Mid Week At Work
  • Monday At The Bar
  • Music set in or about Wyoming
  • National Museum of Military Vehicles
  • Persistent Myths
  • Poster Saturday
  • Sunday Morning Scene
  • The Best Post of the Week
  • The Big Picture
  • The Punitive Expedition of 1916
  • World War One
  • World War One Monuments
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Yeoman's Laws

  • Yeoman's Laws of Behavior
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Blogger and Blogging Related.

  • Too Clever By Half
    Blog backups get easier - [image: Two arrows in a circular pattern] - You can now use Google Takeout to back up every part of all your blogs at once. ¶ - Takeout lets y...
    13 hours ago

General Interest and Micellaneious Blogs

  • Towns and Nature
    Rittman, OH: Restaurant/Erie Depot and Morton Salt Plant - (Satellite) Street View, Jun 2024 Roger Smith posted three photos with the comment: 1913 Erie depot along the former NJ-CHI main. This is the third one in ...
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  • Robert Reich
    Why I'm Still So Short - A while back, NPR’s Scott Simon asked me to join him on NPR’s “Weekend Edition Saturday” to talk about why I’m so short.
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  • Uncle Mike's Musings: A Yankees Blog and More
    Second Place - If the team that finished 2nd (1901-1968) or lost the League Championship Series (1969-2024) won the Pennant instead, the American League's Pennant count ...
    5 hours ago
  • Interesting Times with Ross Douthat
    What Tony Gilroy Thinks Is “Liberating” TV and Movie | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat -
    7 hours ago
  • Silver Bulletin
    17 thoughts on the Trump-Elon feud - This was nothing if not predictable. But is it the world's funniest social media spat, or a seismic event for American politics?
    7 hours ago
  • Stories by Civic Ventures on Medium
    An Economic Slowdown from the Bottom Up? - The Pitch: Economic Update for June 5th, 2025 Friends, “Dollar General reported better-than-expected Q1 earnings yesterday and raised full-year estimates ...
    8 hours ago
  • THE deEP STATE : The political artwork of Michael de Adder
    Look! - Big beautiful distractions
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  • Adam Kinzinger
    Trump's Empire of Control Is Crumbling - Even his loyalists—Musk, Barrett, Powell—are breaking free. And he can't handle it.
    14 hours ago
  • Wyoming Legislature
    Joint Travel, Recreation, Wildlife & Cultural Resources, June 5, 2025 -
    14 hours ago
  • The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz
    Dear Jesus, You're Fired From MAGA Christianity - Dear Jesus,
    15 hours ago
  • Defence Blog
    Romanian elite troops to get Enok AB light strike vehicles - Romania has signed a contract for an undisclosed number of Enok AB (Airborne) vehicles, according to DefenseRomania. The announcement was made by German ...
    15 hours ago
  • The Laramie Reporter
    Albany County Sheriff’s Office not partnering with ICE - Albany County’s sheriff, like the majority of Wyoming sheriffs, is not pursuing a 287(g) agreement with ICE. The program would come with expectations but n...
    15 hours ago
  • Around Wyoming
    Around Wyoming, Thursday, June 5 - Here are some stories from around the state.
    17 hours ago
  • Blog - Adam Smith Institute
    The Laffer Curve is a fact, not a theory - The Laffer Curve is a concept in economics that illustrates a theoretical relationship between tax rates and tax revenue.
    18 hours ago
  • Public Notice
    Trump's war on cities - First he tells us they're hellholes, then he tries to make them worse.
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  • The Grey NATO
    The Grey NATO – 332 – The 2025 Summer Watch Draft - With the official start of summer just a couple of weeks away, Jason and James figured now was a great time for a refresh of the summer draft.
    19 hours ago
  • Michelle Cox Author
    The Unstoppable Boris Jankovic - Boris Jankovic was born on June 24, 1906 in Chicago to Andrej Jankovic and Dora Babic, both immigrants from Yugoslavia, though they grew up on neighborin...
    19 hours ago
  • Put This On
    Inside Track: June 1st – June 7th Edition - Here are our hand-selected favorites from eBay for this week, plus a heads-up on recommended sales. If you’re a member... The post Inside Track: June 1st...
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  • Stephen Bodio
    Badass Bear - The King of the Khutzeymateen – Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you Reacher, the single largest grizzly bear I have ever seen. Stay tuned for more photo...
    23 hours ago
  • Jimmy Akin
    The Weekly Leo – 4 June 2025 - This version of The Weekly Leo covers material released in the last week, from 23 May 2025 to 4 June 2025. General Audiences 4 June 2025 – General Audience...
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  • The Dean's Report by Dean Obeidallah
    Fascism expert Prof Jason Stanley on defeating Trumpism, Thom Hartmann, Sam Seder, Jocelyn Benson and more - Must watch interviews!
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  • Government Book Talk
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  • 100 Movies Every Catholic Should See
    Weekly Watches: June 4, 2025 - Sharing Our Team's Recent Discoveries: Weekly Watches with 100 Movies Every Catholic Should See
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  • I Could Be Wrong.
    - Trump is showing the world how to destroy a country through Executive Orders. He is using Executive Orders to weaken us in many areas that made Americ...
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  • The Catholic Gentleman
    The Holy Spirit is God - Who is the Holy Spirit? He is a friend who can help us be the men the world needs us to be. Let's look at the Holy Spirit as Counselor, Empowerer, and Fr...
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  • Fighting On Film
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  • The Ezra Klein Show
    The Emergent Trump Doctrine | The Ezra Klein Show -
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  • Die, Workwear!
    Excited to Wear This Spring - It is a grim feature of modern life that we treat downtime as a pit stop between bursts of usefulness. In the United States, where the Protestant work et...
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  • Wyoming Legislature
    Lawmakers revisit nuclear and pick up two bill drafts - One would allow nuclear reactor manufacturers to temporarily store used nuclear fuel in Wyoming, and the other would provide legal protections for private ...
    2 days ago
  • Garrison Keillor
    Let’s join together, people, and hold hands - The world is advancing at a rapid pace and it’s hard to keep up. Last weekend, I learned about a liquid hand soap that smells like fresh-cut grass, an Ea...
    2 days ago
  • Thinking about...
    Last Year's Move to Toronto - And This Year's Politics (video and commentary)
    3 days ago
  • Introvert, Dear
    Why I Decided to Homeschool My Introverted Child - I never planned to homeschool my introverted child — until I saw what school was doing to her. The post Why I Decided to Homeschool My Introverted Child ...
    3 days ago
  • ISW Blog
    Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, June 1, 2025 - *Olivia Gibson, Anna Harvey, Daria Novikov, Christina Harward, and Kateryna Stepanenko* *June 1, 2025, 10:30 pm ET * *Click **here** to see ISW’s inter...
    4 days ago
  • Dumbest Blog Ever
    983: Washington’s Dog’s - Upon George Washington’s retirement from public life he announced that he was looking forward to sitting under his own vine and fib tree. I’m sorry, did I ...
    5 days ago
  • Striking 13
    Trump vs Harvard: Why they hate universities - Exactly what is it about independent minds and free inquiry that these fascists don't like?
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  • Thoughts From The Orchard
    Why I Am Not Going To Mow My Orchards Until June - I was bouncing slowly along on the tractor beneath sun dappled shade on a May morning, killing weeds in a …
    1 week ago
  • Cellmate of Boethius
    Progressives Are Driving Themselves Into Extinction | Interesting Times ... -
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  • The Catholic Gentleman
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  • Suzzassippi
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    Wild neighbors: Discovering Lewiston’s unexpected wildlife - From backyard deer to riverside pelicans, Lewiston is full of wild neighbors — and we're fascinated by every unexpected encounter. The post Wild neighbor...
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  • Tribal News
    Report: In Wyoming, homicide rates of Indigenous people rise to 8 times that of white people - The analysis from the state’s Missing and Murdered Indigenous Persons Task Force also found 105 Native individuals were filed as missing in Wyoming last ye...
    2 weeks ago
  • Old Salt Blog
    Update: Retired Four-Star Navy Adm. Robert P. Burke Found Guilty of Bribery - Last June, we posted about the arrest of Robert P. Burke, a retired four-star Navy Admiral, on bribery charges. This week, a federal jury convicted the f...
    2 weeks ago
  • The Angry Staff Officer
    April is the Cruelest Month, but not for my Reading List - Reader, in an attempt to break out of my writer’s malaise (sounds far better than “writer’s block,” doesn’t it?), I am going to break one of my cardinal ru...
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  • The Fun Sized Life
    How to Not Drown Financially in 2025 - If you’re feeling the financial squeeze in 2025, you’re not alone. From soaring grocery prices to creeping interest rates, it’s become harder than ever f...
    2 weeks ago
  • James Proclaims!
    A Decennial Proclamation - Ten years ago today I wrote my first proclamation on this blog. Well, I sort of did anyway. I certainly published the first post on May 10th 2015, but the ...
    3 weeks ago
  • Language Lovers Archives - Collins Dictionary Language Blog
    The Gentle Art of Persuasion: Soft Power in Language and Culture - In a period of global political and financial upheaval, as well as many armed conflicts, there has been much recent … Continued
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  • The Road Chose Me
    Driving Up and ACTIVE VOLCANO in ICELAND! - Presented by Yokohama Tire -
    5 weeks ago
  • Inkslingers
    Jay Irving’s Willie Doodle, 1946 Promotional Book - A look at a 1946 "Willie Doodle" comic strip promotional book. The post Jay Irving’s Willie Doodle, 1946 Promotional Book appeared first on Inkslingers.
    1 month ago
  • University of Wyoming Trustees
    UW president remains following faculty no confidence vote - The campus was plunged into uncertainty last week following the abrupt ouster of a popular dean. There was little in the way of a public explanation for th...
    1 month ago
  • Slow Living LDN.
    Why the comforting hue of ‘butter yellow’ is everywhere this spring - The soft, muted hue of butter yellow suddenly feels like it’s dominating the design zeitgeist, both in fashion and interiors, but in reality, the trend h...
    2 months ago
  • Institute for the Study of War
    Russian Offensive Stalls in Pokrovsk Direction - ISW Briefing Room -
    2 months ago
  • Wyoming Breezes
    Revolutionary Knitting Needle - *Skacel Knitting Collection * Finally a needle you can count on! This new design features a Stitch Counting Sensor linked to your WiFi to help you stay o...
    2 months ago
  • Days Gone By
    Did you know the first breaking news event covered by helicopter was in Baldwin Hills, Ca. - The Baldwin Hills Dam disaster occurred on December 14, 1963, when the dam containing the Baldwin Hills Reservoir suffered a catastrophic failure and flood...
    2 months ago
  • Almost Iowa
    Poitin (Irish Moonshine) - I once spent a rainy summer walking through Ireland and stayed for a couple weeks at an inn so isolated that the nearest pub was three miles away. In Irela...
    2 months ago
  • Mr. Money Mustache
    Wow, have you seen the stock market lately? - And by lately, I mean the past several years or more. The value of the S&P 500 index of stocks, where most of us hopefully have a good chunk of our retire...
    3 months ago
  • Stories by Natali.S
    What about the Christians in Syria? - I don’t think any Syrian will forget what happened on 8 December 2024; A major offensive by rebels from terrorist groups led by a former Al-Qaeda terrori...
    3 months ago
  • The Rover Haven Blog - Rover Haven Straps
    Fab Four Redux: Week On The Wrist With the Hamilton Khaki Aviation Pilot Pioneer Mechanical Chrono, Ref H764090 - A week on the wrist with the brilliant Hamilton Fab Four re-issue. No ugly date window? Not too big? What’s going on here? Read on to find out more about t...
    4 months ago
  • Confessions of a Writer of Westerns
    Another Book Completed - and It's About Time - *Writing *- It has been a long time – too long, but I have ordered a proof copy of my newest book. Health problems set me back many times, but finally, ...
    4 months ago
  • The RAND Blog
    Syrian Rebels' Remarkable Call for International Help on Chemical Weapons - Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), the rebel group now in charge in Syria, has sought international help to dismantle Bashar al-Assad's chemical weapons program. ...
    4 months ago
  • Wyoming: My 307
    Christmas 2024: Episode 22 - ​Listen to the Christmas in Wyoming 2024 episode here, or search for Wyoming My 307 wherever you listen to podcasts. ​ Merry Christmas to you! I hope it’...
    5 months ago
  • McManus Index
    Silent but Deadly on YouTube - Well, another Thanksgiving has just passed, and in case there’s still any gravy left, let this be a warning of what NOT to do. In this story Gram feeds the...
    5 months ago
  • Omnia in Christo
    Lessons from the Woods - Trees will teach you that which you cannot learn from the masters
    8 months ago
  • Unboxing the Bizarre™
    August 26th – National Toilet Paper Day - National Toilet Paper Day on August 26th celebrates the essential bathroom item. Ancient Egyptians used papyrus and clay, not soft rolls. The first paper t...
    9 months ago
  • Flyover Country
    Tennessee coneflowers, on the rocks - Jessica and I grow four species of purple coneflowers in the prairie garden at Teach Éan: *Echinacea purpurea*, the purple coneflower proper; *E. angust...
    10 months ago
  • Journal - Field & Nest
    The Reality of ‘Slow Travel’ - I write about slow, mindful and more sustainable travel here, on my Substack and for my clients - but what is the reality of adopting a slower pace to yo...
    1 year ago
  • Ramblings of a teacher, Redskins fan, and scrapbooker
    Learning to Parent Differently - Over the course of our son’s time in school, we knew he was facing some challenges especially with transitions to the school environment from daycare and t...
    1 year ago
  • NO LONELY ROADS
    Shoot The Freak, Coney Island, NY 2008 - *Shoot The Freak, Coney Island, NY 2008*
    1 year ago
  • The Hoosier Reformer
    Diversity-Award Winning Chancellor's Racist Joke Sows Seeds of Doubt About DEI Initiatives - What's the Deal with PNW? And, more on Christian Privilege
    1 year ago
  • Institute for the Study of War
    Statement on ISW Methodology - *Statement on ISW Methodology* *May 4, 2023* The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) welcomes robust and rigorous debate on the issues ISW covers and i...
    2 years ago
  • Sharing the Wealth: Exploring Distributism
    Distributism - Imagine a third way - Watch now (4 mins) | Imagine a different future than we were ever told was possible...
    2 years ago
  • " FIFTY YEARS TOO LATE"
    Photo -
    2 years ago
  • Civics307
    Session Down, Interim to Go - The 2023 General Session was unique in many ways, not the least of which was the greatest number of new lawmakers in 30 years.
    2 years ago
  • The Lamp Magazine
    Weigh Station - On a ghost in the machine.
    2 years ago
  • Form Follows Function
    This farmer owned one acre of land and a small improvised... - This farmer owned one acre of land and a small improvised trailer in which he and his wife lived. The only place they could find to move to was a small f...
    2 years ago
  • Economic Policy Institute
    Number and share of workers without access to paid sick leave in Dallas, 2016 - White, Black, Asian, Other/More than one
    4 years ago
  • Stories by Natália Mazotte on Medium
    Como começar no jornalismo de dados? - Participar de uma comunidade, desenvolver projetos próprios e manter uma rotina de estudos com recursos gratuitos são boas maneiras de… Continue reading ...
    5 years ago
  • MeridethinWyoming
    Seriously? This is Comfort? - For quite some time I have longed for a pair of 'crocks' for my feet. When they first came out, the young chicks all told me they were soooooo comfortable...
    7 years ago
  • Dismuke's 78 RPM Blog
    “Red Wing” / “Rainbow” The Shannon Quartet 1926 - “Red Wing” Shannon Quartet June 24, 1926 (Victor 20173-B) Red Wing “Rainbow” Shannon Quartet June 24, 1926 (Victor 20173-A) Rainbow Here is a record that...
    9 years ago
Show 5 Show All

Agriculture, Agrarian, Ranching, and Gardening Blogs

  • The One-cow Revolution
    is the drought over? - It’s so good to see the potatoes doing well after four years of drought. Bioactive soil, kept cool and moist by a heavy mulch, has a lot to do with healthy...
    8 hours ago
  • NSAC’S Blog
    Apply Today: USDA LAMP Funding Window Is Open - Last month, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced $26.5 million in competitive grant funding available through the Local Agriculture Market P...
    12 hours ago
  • reddirtinmysoul.com/
    Wordless Wednesday: Green - For a jigsaw puzzle of these multiple shades of green, go HERE.
    1 day ago
  • Young Agrarians
    LAND OPPORTUNITY: 1 Acre of Land for Vegetables, Flowers or Bees – North Saanich, BC - We always have new land opportunities coming into our inventory, some of which aren’t on our blog yet! Get in touch with a Land Matcher at bclmp@youngagr...
    1 day ago
  • The Country Gentleman
    The Country Gentleman's Almanac For June 2025 - Author’s Note: Better late than never, eh?
    1 day ago
  • Western Horseman
    The Classic Equine Difference: Quality Saddle Pads Matter - Here’s something not everyone thinks about: the average horse can comfortably carry around 20% of its body weight. Keep in mind, that includes you and yo...
    1 day ago
  • Desert Canyon Farm Green Thoughts
    June 2, 2025 We’re Having a Heirloom Fruit Tree Close-Out Sale thru June 15th at the Farm! And…other news - June Greetings! For many years, Chris and I have been growing and selling Heirloom Fruit Trees in our Farm Stand store, along with some different kinds o...
    3 days ago
  • Wyoming Catholic Cowboys
    Wait Well - By moving forward. https://youtu.be/LH3ne0BjhYY
    4 days ago
  • Thoughts From The Orchard
    Why I Am Not Going To Mow My Orchards Until June - I was bouncing slowly along on the tractor beneath sun dappled shade on a May morning, killing weeds in a …
    1 week ago
  • The Agrarian's Lament
    Cellmate of Boethius: Progressives Are Driving Themselves Into Extinctio... -
    1 week ago
  • Over The Field
    When the Progressives Dispense with Nature - The callous attitude of the current British Labour government towards Nature needs calling out
    1 week ago
  • Agrarian Trust
    Lean In to Land Stewardship: New Roots Community Farm Needs Your Help - In the fall of 2020, a farm in Fayette County, West Virginia, sat on the edge of uncertainty. The land, home to rolling pastures and Appalachian soil ful...
    1 week ago
  • Foothills Agrarian
    Graduation and Grief - Last week, I drove to Idaho for the last time in Emma’s undergraduate career. Once again, I broke the trip into two days each way - I’m simply not able t...
    2 weeks ago
  • Because, Obviously
    Death on the Farm - RIP to a real one - the chicken that could not cheat death forever.
    3 weeks ago
  • The Short Rows - Agricultural History Society
    Lipsey, "Finding the Florida Cracker Horse" - *Humans are not the only animals who make history, but we are the only ones who write it. Agricultural and environmental historians are increasingly inte...
    3 weeks ago
  • Range Revolutions
    Regenerative farming <> Degenerative lifestyle - The paradox in the world of regenerative agriculture which has been glaring to me for some time, is the way so many of us working in this field are leading...
    1 month ago
  • Blog - The Transient Grazier - Clarion Farms
    Give the birds a wool blanket! - Here is a new and exciting product from the farm: Wool baskets! Here’s the quick rundown: What: Natural fiber dispenser for birds. How much: $10 each...
    2 months ago
  • Buzzard's Beat
    How the Beef Community Strives for Efficiency and Least-Waste Production - A lot goes into the production of your steak, burger or roast: grass, water, feed, hay, vitamins, minerals, vaccinations, medically necessary treatments an...
    2 months ago
  • Heavenstretch
    Apple Syrup in February - Here’s another short (and sweet) essay by Lyle Stout. It was sent to me last month (February) but I’m a little late getting it on here (“a little late” is ...
    2 months ago
  • Farm Where You Live
    Why You Should Be a Vendor at Farm Where You Live Festivals - If you love homesteading, DIY projects, and good old-fashioned community, then you need to be a vendor at a Farm Where You Live festival! This isn’t just a...
    3 months ago
  • Anonymous Appalachian Agrarian
    Black Locust Coppicing, Part 7 - Disclaimer: Outside of its native range (in and around the Appalachian Mountain range in Eastern North America) Black Locust – Robinia Pseudoacacia – can b...
    3 months ago
  • Just Another Day On The Prairie
    Busy Winter - Winter is a time of promise because there is so little to do — or because you can now and then permit yourself the luxury of thinking so. ~Stanley Crawford...
    4 months ago
  • The Prairie Homestead
    My Hard-Won Lessons of 2024 - Once upon a time I could speak my goals into existence… Or at least that’s what it felt like. I’d lock onto a target, take decisive action, and everyth...
    4 months ago
  • Voices Blog - Yale Sustainable Food Program
    Our Electric Future and Food Sovereignty | GFF '24 - Our Electric Future and Food Sovereignty *This post is part of **Allie Douma's** 2024 Global Food Fellowship.* As someone studying and working in the en...
    4 months ago
  • two branches homestead
    - The Story of the House Pig
    7 months ago
  • The South Roane Agrarian
    September Sketches - A joyful life A Cloudless Sulphur floats near my rocking chair, seeking last-of-the-season nectar in the blossoms of the weigela at the side of the front p...
    8 months ago
  • Ladder Ranch | Scenes, thoughts and poetry from our working ranch
    Pregnant! Late! Open! - It’s that time of year again.Our friendly local vet Warner McFarland showed up to determine which heifers are pregnant, after a summer of hanging out with ...
    8 months ago
  • USDA Blog
    1890s National Scholar Finds Purpose Through Science - Four years ago, Jordan McMahon wasn’t sure if he would go to college. Today, he is a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) 1890 National Scholar and publ...
    11 months ago
  • Plow in Hope
    Seasons on the Homestead - The Pressure of Interstice Between Winter & Spring
    1 year ago
  • St. Josephs Farm
    Announcing Camp Capable: Be Competent. Be Contemplative. - When we enter this world as infants we are amazingly incompetent. Being unable to feed or care for ourselves, we rely on others – appropriately enough. I...
    1 year ago
  • Journal - Our Lady's Ranch
    Raising Healthy Livestock - There are a lot of details when it comes to raising livestock, some as simple as knowing the difference between sustainably grown vs. organically grown, wi...
    1 year ago
  • Ag Ambassadors
    The Importance of Building Relationships - Attending college is an exciting time in any student’s life. It’s a time for new beginnings and allows people the opportunity to gain independence and find...
    1 year ago
  • Going Agrarian
    It's Pat(rick)! - Ah the days back when the world and SNL had a real sense of humor … but I digress. Our neighbor just down the road is a cattle breeder and has over 150 hea...
    3 years ago
  • Blog - This Farm Wife
    What Makes You YOU? - [image: _DSC3679.JPG] What makes you...you? I’ve been thinking a lot lately about what makes me, me. Sure, I wear a lot of hats and I’m not going to ta...
    3 years ago
  • Sarah's NoDak living
    Grow your Graditude - 2020 has been a YEAR. We could all focus on the negatives, the disappointments, the hardships that happened to the world this year. Thousands of deaths, la...
    4 years ago
  • Hunger Math
    The 3 Flavonoids likely to lower risk of Alzheimer’s - Fruits, vegetables, tea consumption linked with lower Alzheimer’s risk – People who had the most flavonols in their diet were about half as likely to devel...
    5 years ago
  • Cows and cheese
    TOWARDS ZERO CARBON AGRICULTURE - Last Friday I joined bosses Richard & Tom for a road trip to Fir Farm in Gloucestershire for the Sustainable Food Trust & NFU conference on how we might a...
    5 years ago
  • The Beginning Farmer
    TBF 151 :: Changing the Inventory of a Farm - Now that you know the large collection of things that we have on the farm I want to share some of my thoughts on what needs to head down the road, what nee...
    6 years ago
  • Musings of the Lunatic Farmer
    A BEEF WITH LIBERTARIANS - Many of you know I've taken the moniker Christian libertarian environmentalist capitalist lunatic farmer, and I'm sure that many folks chafe at my oft-li...
    6 years ago
  • Double H Photography
    Branding Day Photos, 2016 - On April 24 we raced the rain clock and branded, only to have the impending showers hold off a day. Then the clouds cut loose and blessed us with over an i...
    9 years ago
  • Watch Out For The Bull
    Better Late Than Never 2015 Garden Cover Crop Update - Back in early May, I planted some alternating hills of corn and pinto beans along with some alternating hills of squashes, watermelons, and beans as a cove...
    9 years ago
  • The Agrarian
    You’re Invited to a Super (Potpourri) Bowl Party! - Article moved to: https://www.agrariahome.com/youre-invited-to-a-super-potpourri-bowl-party/
    11 years ago
Show 5 Show All

Baseball

  • baseballmusings.com
    Throw Back - Chase Meidroth of the White Sox continued his good rookie season with a perfect day at the play, collecting two hits and three walks in a 3-2 win over the ...
    4 hours ago
  • Uncle Mike's Musings: A Yankees Blog and More
    Second Place - If the team that finished 2nd (1901-1968) or lost the League Championship Series (1969-2024) won the Pennant instead, the American League's Pennant count ...
    5 hours ago
  • A Manly Pastime - A Baseball History Blog
    "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad" - When I do presentations on early New Jersey baseball, I tell the audience there are three ways they can learn about the nineteenth-century game: the prog...
    1 day ago

Buildings and Architecture

  • Churches of the West
    Blog Mirror: FRENCH PRAIRIE – CATHOLISCISM COMES TO THE OREGON COUNTRY - FRENCH PRAIRIE – CATHOLISCISM COMES TO THE OREGON COUNTRY
    4 days ago
  • Courthouses of the West
    Committee Adopts Bill To Make Wyoming Senate Confirm Supreme Court Justices - Committee Adopts Bill To Make Wyoming Senate Confirm Supreme Court Justices
    2 weeks ago
  • Churches of the South
    Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council of Nicea. - Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council...: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council of Nicea. Well, at least probab...
    2 weeks ago
  • Churches of the East
    Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council of Nicea. - Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council...: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council of Nicea. Well, at least probabl...
    2 weeks ago
  • Painted Bricks
    Roads to the Great War: Some Dandy World War One British Pub Signs - Roads to the Great War: Some Dandy World War One British Pub Signs: Britain has a unique heritage in its signage: a record of its history and the people wh...
    3 weeks ago
  • Our Grandfathers' Grain Elevators
    Newly discovered photos emerge of a 1950 blowout at a Tillotson ‘clone’ elevator in Bird City, Kansas - Thanks to reader Steve Wilson, who sends two family photos, we have new views of the aftermath of that blowout, and these give a clue as to why the name Vi...
    9 months ago
  • Preservation in Pink
    Nebraska School House - Location: Highway 26A, right after Junction 385S before Scottsbluff County Click on the photos for full size images! Taken August 2006 as I traver...
    17 years ago
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Food and Cooking Blogs

  • Beer Et Seq
    The Yard of Ale, Bangkok, Ca. 1970. Part II. - In Old Bangkok… Well, not old old, but old enough, we’re back in the 1960s when British, Aussie, Yank and other expats roamed the larger Asian cities in se...
    10 hours ago
  • Cookin' with Congress
    Eating Like Martha Washington for an Entire Day -
    11 hours ago
  • The View from Great Island
    Honey Caramel Sauce - [image: Honey caramel Sauce dripping from a spoon in a small glass Weck jar.] OMG I turned honey into caramel sauce and the flavor is unreal!! If you've ...
    18 hours ago
  • The New Vintage Kitchen
    Let’s celebrate the amazing asparagus! We might have a party, or maybe brunch. - There is probably nothing we look forward to more in the spring at our house than asparagus! My mother would not have agreed. Asparagus was one of the few ...
    1 day ago
  • Mary and Tom's Kitchen | Our cooking, grilling, smoking, preserving and fermenting journal.
    Chef Billie’s Salads ToTry - From his email on 6/3/2025. I promise, they’re nothing but ease and energy so you have dinners that feel like momentum, not maintenance! ?Tuna Macaroni Sal...
    2 days ago
  • To The Bone
    My Sixth Rodeo - Borderlands is here, and my life is about to get crazy
    2 days ago
  • Musings Over a Barrel
    A Storm, A Smoke, and A Sip: Belgian Blue and Elijah Craig Barrel Proof - As I prepped to enjoy a cigar on the porch Friday evening, my phone alerted me that we were under a Storm Warning and a Tornado Watch. Undaunted, I grabbed...
    3 days ago
  • Hunter Angler Gardener Cook
    My Sixth Rodeo - [image: Hank Shaw holding a copy of his new book Borderlands.] It's finally here, my latest cookbook Borderlands! It's a culinary journey along the border ...
    3 days ago
  • Wild Game & Fish
    Easy Cheeseburger Pasta - This Easy Cheeseburger Pasta Recipe is made with hamburger and pasta in a creamy cheddar cheese sauce made with tomatoes and pickles for the ultimate fus...
    3 days ago
  • Wild Game & Fish
    Easy Cheeseburger Pasta - This Easy Cheeseburger Pasta Recipe is made with hamburger and pasta in a creamy cheddar cheese sauce made with tomatoes and pickles for the ultimate fus...
    3 days ago
  • Researching Food History - Cooking and Dining
    The Waring Blender and cocktails - Fred Waring (1900-1984) was a popular band and choral leader (The Pennsylvanians). He invested in Fred Osius's blender and changed the name to “Waring Ble...
    4 days ago
  • Homesick Texan
    Ramen noodle salad, North Texas style - ------------------------------------------------------ Thank you for reading! This is a premium post available to subscribers only. While most of the site ...
    1 week ago
  • TheFancyNavajo
    The Modern Navajo Kitchen Summer Schedule (Maricopa County Libraries) - Hi Friends! It’s been awhile since I’ve shared an update. I hope you are all doing well. Things have been quite busy since my last post. I’ve been doing ...
    1 week ago
  • ME AND MY BIG MOUTH
    A bushies' banquet - When it comes to outback food, things are often not what they seem. Thanks to rich local slang, many dishes have picked up names that are downright mislead...
    1 week ago
  • the cook & the writer
    Wild neighbors: Discovering Lewiston’s unexpected wildlife - From backyard deer to riverside pelicans, Lewiston is full of wild neighbors — and we're fascinated by every unexpected encounter. The post Wild neighbor...
    1 week ago
  • Peak To Plate
    Smoked Elk Jerky - This smoked elk jerky recipe is a delicious way to preserve elk meat with a bold, smoky flavor. Made with lean strips of elk, a savory marinade, and slow...
    2 weeks ago
  • dirndl kitchen
    White Asparagus with Fool-Proof Hollandaise, Ham & Potatoes - It’s Spargel season in Germany, and that means one thing: Germany is dropping everything to celebrate white asparagus. This isn't just any veggie trend, ...
    2 weeks ago
  • Recipes - Cookin' with Congress
    Governor John Evans’s “Slush” - We don’t do a lot of drinks here at *Cookin’ with Congress*, mostly because politicians have tended to steer clear of the hard stuff for fear of being la...
    2 weeks ago
  • Rate My Sausage
    Wilkinson's – Doncaster Market – Thick Traditional Sausage - It’s part two of our Doncaster Market series and this time we’re at the stall of Wilkinson's Butchers. You can’t miss this one, it’s straight in front o...
    2 weeks ago
  • Wild Harvest Table
    Grilled Teriyaki Wild Turkey Breast with a Twist of Citrus - Brining wild turkey breast meat and marinating before grilling, is the key to a moist, delicious meal! I defrosted a breast from last year directly in a br...
    3 weeks ago
  • Steve1989MRE
    2009 US MRE Pork Sausage Patty Maple Flavored Review First Generation Breakfast Ration Taste Testing -
    4 weeks ago
  • From Field To Plate
    Fried Whole Quail & Waffles with Fried Quail Eggs and Bacon-Infused Maple Syrup - Tired of the same old chicken and waffles? Take your brunch to the wild side with these Fried Whole Quail Waffles, topped with delicate crispy fried quai...
    1 month ago
  • Blog - Mariposa Food Co-op
    Tahini-Coffee Smoothie - *By: **Co+op**Recipe Information* *Total Time: *10 minutes *Servings: *2 Add a coffee boost to your morning smoothie! This creamy beverage has the flav...
    2 months ago
  • Food for Hunters
    Miso Glazed Duck - If you’re looking for a different, yet simple, recipe for waterfowl, try this miso marinade. The salty and sweet flavors go well with wild game and...
    3 months ago
  • Wild Game Cuisine – NevadaFoodies
    Elk Tenderloin with Prosciutto and Mushrooms - Sliced and served to perfection. Any day of the week is a good day to serve up a stuffed Elk Tenderloin with Prosciutto and... The post Elk Tenderloin wit...
    3 months ago
  • Rachel Laudan
    Three Cheers for Rollators, Oxygen Concentrators, the Internet, and Friends - Twelve hours was all it took for my cat, Mittens, to discover how much she loved being rolled from room to room on my rollator, her new favorite perch. A...
    4 months ago
  • ramblings on cast iron
    Cold Brew Coffee - I'm still trying to master "cool brew" coffee. It's coffee concentrate you buy in the refrigerated section, and it's VERY good coffee. First I tried...
    4 months ago
  • The War In My Kitchen
    Uncle Sam Wants Your Dogs Too! - As I sit writing this post, my two dogs wrestle playfully near my feet. It’s hard to imagine parting with them for any reason. But during World War II, dog...
    7 months ago
  • My German Recipes
    Pretzel Wreath for Oktoberfest Party - This recipe is a delicious bread wreath for a larger crowd and it pairs perfectly with a cool Oktoberfest beer! […] The post Pretzel Wreath for Oktoberfe...
    8 months ago
  • The 1940's Experiment
    A slow return - Everything went wrong and then everything went right. I’m back again but it will be a slow return. Thank you for popping by, thank you for your messages,...
    8 months ago
  • a 12 Gauge Girl Blog - a 12 gauge girl
    Grilled Pike Skewers - Meaty pike skewers are marinated in zesty lemon and aromatic fresh rosemary, resulting in a hearty and rustic grilled fish perfect for serving at the next ...
    8 months ago
  • Wife Of A Hunter
    Ground Venison Smoked Baked Beans - Hey there! If you’re looking to bring a show-stopper to your next family BBQ, you’ve got to try these Ground Venison Smoked Baked Beans. They’re not just...
    10 months ago
  • Vintage Recipe Blog
    The Baltimore Harley's Sandwich Shop Burger - I won't go through the history of the Harley's Sandwich Shop chain as I have it all laid out in the tuna salad article, just suffice it to say tha...
    1 year ago
  • Eat Wyoming
    Bountiful Wyoming - Good sauerkraut, in deed the finest, requires care and attention. Fred Groenke – known across Wyoming as “Farmer Fred” – has that sauerkraut touch, which h...
    1 year ago
  • Indigikitchen
    Shredded Chile Verde Bison - While bison is not the “typical” meat for making chile verde, it makes a phenemonal and rich dish that’s high…
    1 year ago
  • Ocean to Table
    The Complete Guide to Ike Jime - Here's how and why you should Ike Jime your next catch. From trout to tuna, this method will help you bring the highest-quality seafood to your dinner ta...
    1 year ago
  • Kitchen Feasts
    Broccoli Slaw - Ready to hit refresh and start something new? After eating this you will start (or…
    1 year ago
  • PBS Food
    Lisa and Andrea’s Sautéed Fiddleheads - Harvesting fiddleheads is a springtime tradition in Wabanaki culture. See more at PBS Food. Continue The post Lisa and Andrea’s Sautéed Fiddleheads appea...
    2 years ago
  • My German Table
    4 Food-Related Appliances That Are A Must For Every Student Dormitory - Student living can be stressful at the best of times. The thought of moving away from your home and having to fend for yourself can be pretty daunting. H...
    2 years ago
  • Anxious Hunter Food Blog
    Venison Heart Crostini Appetizers - For all you love-birds out there.
    4 years ago
  • Chef in the Wild
    Ode to Offal – Deer Kidney Pot Pie - “You really want to do this” asked Chef Mike Zeller – a friend, co-worker and fellow wild game butcher at this point. “Well, no, but I have always wanted ...
    4 years ago
  • Team Breakfast
    Strawberry Valentine’s Day Donuts - This year’s featured Valentine’s Day recipe is for heart-shaped, yeast-raised donuts with strawberry buttercream filling and vanilla icing. The secret ing...
    5 years ago
  • Cowgirl's Country Life
    Bacon Wrapped Shrimp.... With Home Canned Bacon - I've been using the bacon that I recently canned. So far, I like it. The canned bacon is not crisp, but either cooking it in a frying pan or zapping it in ...
    5 years ago
  • In an Irish Home
    Pumpkin Pecan Maple Granola - This easy to make and healthy Homemade Pumpkin Pecan Maple Granola makes a great fall breakfast or snack.
    5 years ago
  • Fat of the Land
    Creamy Polenta with Wild Mushrooms - THE BLACK TRUMPET (Craterellus sp.) is one my favorite wild mushrooms for the table. Like its cousins in the chanterelle family, it's earthy with a touch o...
    5 years ago
  • One Man's Meat
    All Ireland Marketing Award for Lidl CSR Campaign - Pictured: Deirdre Ryan, Head of CSR Lidl Ireland and Gavin Byrne, Deputy MD of Owens DDB. We were delighted when Lidl Ireland won Best Corporate Social R...
    7 years ago
  • Braising the Wild
    Fungi and Feathers Make for Great Cuisine: Woodcock and Hen of the Woods Teriyaki Stir-Fry - Several nicknames exist for the American Woodcock—timberdoodle, Labrador twister, mudsnipe, among others—though during my first few maiden hours chasing th...
    7 years ago
  • Lee Kalpakis
    Kalamata Massaged Kale Salad - Massage one large bunch of kale (chopped) with 1/2 cup kalamata olives and juice, s&p, and lemon juice. Add watermelon radish cucumber red pepper an...
    8 years ago
  • Crazy Cooking in Wyoming
    Western Breakfast Bake - Western Breakfast Bake *By* *Neil Waring* *Revered Wyoming Chef, outdoor cooking expert, admired woodsmen, writer, and honored citizen.* Well, no excus...
    9 years ago
  • Donal Skehan | EAT LIVE GO
    Appearance on The Today Show… - If you follow me on facebook, twitter or Instagram you probably know I spent St Patrick’s Day in NYC this year and what a way to celebrate all things Irish...
    10 years ago
  • Blog &amp; Bake
    King Arthur Flour Blog & Bake 2013 - King Arthur Flour Blog & Bake 2013 Anonymous (not verified) May 10, 2013 at 5:00am King Arthur Flour Blog & Bake 2013: Courage, creativity, and connections...
    12 years ago
  • The Irish Mother
    Butterscotch Haystacks, Ala My Great Grandmother - *"Grandmother - A wonderful mother with lots of practice."* ~Unknown When I was a child, there were a few things you could count on at my grandmother's hous...
    13 years ago
Show 5 Show All

History and History Related Blogs (General)

  • Industrial History
    1934,1989+2016 Spring Valley Bridges over Illinois River at Spring Valley, IL - 1934: (Archived Bridge Hunter; John A. Weeks III; Historic Bridges) 2016: (Satellite) Illinois Valley Veterans Memorial Bridge [Illinois] The 1934 bridge wa...
    2 hours ago
  • Past Daily: A Sound Archive of News, History, Music
    DeGaulle: Changing Minds – Flareups In Laos And The Congo – Tension In South Korea – June 5, 1964 - Busy news day for June 5, 1964. From France, Undersecretary of State George W. Ball’s meeting Friday with President DeGaulle is part of a desire […] The ...
    8 hours ago
  • Colonial Press
    This Day in History: Senator Robert F. Kennedy is shot - On this day in 1968, Senator Robert F. Kennedy is shot by an assassin. His death would strike the nation hard: Bobby’s older brother,...
    9 hours ago
  • Dispatches from the LP-OP
    100-year-old news headlines from June 1925 editions of The Wilcox Progressive Era - Today marks the first Thursday of the month, so it’s time to take another trip back down memory lane for a look at some of the interesting things that ha...
    9 hours ago
  • Photo of the Day
    Photo of the Day - Cheap T-shirts.
    9 hours ago
  • Home on the Range
    Can You Cook as Well as Grandma? - I was feeling peckish the other day, so I went down into The Vault and perused the cookbook section. I came across the 1915 edition of Bohemian – American...
    11 hours ago
  • The Text Message
    Pirates in Love, Walking Potatoes, and Barboncito; the Pageants and Plays of the Bureau of Indian Affairs - Hunger enters stage right wearing a tight fitting black costume, a skeleton painted on the front and back. Hunger walks to the edge of the stage purposeful...
    13 hours ago
  • This Day in Aviation
    5 June 1989 - 5 June 1989: The Antonov An-225 Мрия (Mriya—Dream in the Ukranian language) took off from Kiev with the space shuttle Buran, enroute to the Paris Air Show....
    13 hours ago
  • Today's Document
    Oath and Allegiance of James Hicks - Oath and Allegiance of James Hicks Record Group 105: Records of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned LandsSeries: Case Files Relating to Restor...
    16 hours ago
  • Today In Wyoming's History
    Wyoming Historical Society divorces, fights with fundraising partner - Wyoming Historical Society divorces, fights with fundraising partner: Sides level charges at one another as society seeks “diversified fundraising” and o...
    17 hours ago
  • A Hundred Years Ago
    Cake Ornamenting Syringe - A hundred years ago, American Cookery magazine encouraged readers to get their friends to subscribe to the magazine. The magazine offered premiums for secu...
    18 hours ago
  • Fort Ticonderoga Blog
    Connecticut’s Prisoner Problem: What to Do with Captured Noncombatants? - After the capture of Fort Ticonderoga, Fort Crown Point, and Skenesborough, NY, the American colonies faced new challenges. One of those challenges was c...
    19 hours ago
  • Emerging Revolutionary War Era
    Captain James Wallace’s Tumultuous June 1775 in Narragansett Bay - Since his brief visit in November 1774 and his longer term stay commencing in December, Captain James Wallace of the British ship Rose (20 guns), had patro...
    19 hours ago
  • Journal of the American Revolution
    A Curious Agreement Among Friends: Pennsylvania’s York County Militia, 1775 - In the year 1775, two days after the spring equinox, a meeting was held in Pennsylvania’s York County of over one hundred freemen and an agreement was wr...
    20 hours ago
  • ZEITGEIST
    Why people vote AfD - Conversations on the German-Polish border
    1 day ago
  • Germans from Russia Settlement Locations
    1829 South Russia Neighborhood - Land of the Settled Nogai Tatars on the Azov Sea with the neighboring countries and German colonies 1829 This map is from the book entitled *Bruchstücke a...
    1 day ago
  • History Nebraska
    1,733 Miles from Where? Kearney, Nebraska’s 1733 Identity - By David L. Bristow, Editor Kearney has long promoted itself as the “Midway City” located halfway between the coasts, exactly 1,733 miles from both Bosto...
    1 day ago
  • A Manly Pastime - A Baseball History Blog
    "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad" - When I do presentations on early New Jersey baseball, I tell the audience there are three ways they can learn about the nineteenth-century game: the prog...
    1 day ago
  • This Day In Automotive History
    June 3, 2013 – the Legacy of Infiniti Founder Bill Bruce - Twelve years ago today, the automotive world lost one of its quieter giants. Bill Bruce, the founding general manager of Infiniti, passed away on June 3,...
    2 days ago
  • Fishwrap
    Dirt Cheap: A Look Inside 19th Century Dugouts and Sod Homes - In 1862, the race for westward expansion moved into high gear when the federal government passed the Homestead Act. The Homestead Act wasn’t just a The p...
    3 days ago
  • Legal Legacy
    June 2, 1731 – Birth of Martha Dandridge Custis Washington, Wife of the First President - Martha Dandridge was born on her parents’ tobacco plantation in Virginia. She married Daniel Parke Custis on May 15, 1750. Custis was one of the wealthiest...
    4 days ago
  • wwiiafterwwii
    transplanting South Vietnam’s WWII warships to the Philippines 1975 - Fifty years ago this May, ships of the South Vietnamese navy fled to the Philippines as Saigon was overrun. Recently media outlets have covered this story,...
    4 days ago
  • Mark Holan's Irish-American Blog
    Reporting Matt Talbot’s life and death, then and now - Matt Talbot, a role model for many people battling alcoholism and addiction, died June 7, 1925, in a Dublin alleyway. He was on his way to Mass; an austere...
    4 days ago
  • Historical Digression
    Still Standing: A Reflection on the Massachusetts Civil War Monuments Project - Technically, at least by the calendar, it’s still Memorial Day week—a fitting time to reflect on remembrance and the stories we choose to preserve. It’s al...
    5 days ago
  • Meandering Through The Prologue
    FRENCH PRAIRIE – CATHOLISCISM COMES TO THE OREGON COUNTRY - Canadian trappers were among the first non-Native Americans to spend extended periods of time in the nascent Oregon Country during the early years of the...
    5 days ago
  • Western Mining History
    William Keys and the Desert Queen Ranch - William Keys was a notable prospector and miner in the Death Valley region during the early 1900s. He later settled on a ranch in Southern California that ...
    1 week ago
  • The Vintage Inn
    Vintage Views of Scotland: Travel Brochures from the 1930s to 1960s - This weekend, I’m off on a very quick—and I do mean quick—trip to Scotland! First stop: Edinburgh to see a friend’s band, Mark Malibu & The Wasagas, perf...
    1 week ago
  • Hoover Heads
    Hoover and the Two George Kennans: Part 2 - By Thomas F. Schwartz After relying on the detailed Siberian travelogue of George Kennan to determine the region’s mining potential, Hoover’s second Kennan...
    1 week ago
  • Canadian History Ehx
    The SS Noronic Fire - The great ship was docked for the night at Pier 9 in Toronto Harbour. On board were hundreds of people who had been enjoying a pleasure cruise through Lake...
    1 week ago
  • The Unwritten Record
    How to Search Still Photographs for Air Force Personalities - For an overview of Military Personnel Photographs, please see our website https://www.archives.gov/research/still-pictures/military-personnel-photographs. ...
    1 week ago
  • Lenathehyena's Blog
    The Woman in Red: a red menace - For a few short months back in 1921 in Aberdeen the city’s most notorious criminal was a diminutive twenty-five-year-old woman. Dressed in a brick-red coat...
    1 week ago
  • PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS PHOTO ARCHIVES
    View of Shelby Street looking North toward the Plaza, Santa Fe, New Mexico - View of Shelby Street looking North toward the Plaza, Santa Fe, New Mexico Photographer: T. Harmon Parkhurst Date: ca. 1915 - 1920 Negative Number: 013681
    1 week ago
  • Military History
    Book Rview: The Banknote that never was - Book Title: The Banknote that never was Publisher: Gulliver Books, Hong Kong Author: Francis Braun Date: 1982 ...
    2 weeks ago
  • Ghosts of DC
    The Duo Who Built D.C.’s First Freeway: Archie Alexander, Maurice Repass, and the Whitehurst Story - [image: Whitehurst Freeway / Rock Creek & Potomac Parkway, Washington, District of Columbia, DC] In 1949, Washington opened its first elevated freeway—but ...
    3 weeks ago
  • The History of English Podcast
    Episode 183: The Fabric of Our Lives - In the early 1600s, cotton fabrics made in India were in high demand throughout Asia and Africa. When the English and Dutch arrived in India and Japan, the...
    3 weeks ago
  • The Threads Of Our Game
    1858 Niagara, Buffalo - This rendering is based on visual documentation for uniform style only. Color information is unknown and the uniform is rendered in values of gray. Minor...
    3 weeks ago
  • Forward with Roosevelt
    FDR and V-E Day - Above, FDR 1944. Last night, the Library participated in a White House Historical Association program focused on FDR and V-E Day. Victory in Europe Day isn...
    3 weeks ago
  • The Cold War History Blog
    And Then There Were Three: The First British Nuclear Test - When we think about atomic weapons, the Manhattan Project comes to mind. However, the British were the first in establishing a nuclear weapons program.
    4 weeks ago
  • Pieces of History
    The Second Continental Congress Convenes - In celebration of the upcoming 250th anniversary of the United States, we’re focusing on key events in the history of independence. Today’s post looks at t...
    4 weeks ago
  • Pieces of History
    The Second Continental Congress Convenes - In celebration of the upcoming 250th anniversary of the United States, we’re focusing on key events in the history of independence. Today’s post looks at t...
    4 weeks ago
  • Base Hospital 50 - University of Washington
    Solving a Photo Mystery... - In mid-July, the nurses of Base Hospital 50 received their orders to travel to New York in preparation for their departure for France. The nurse...
    1 month ago
  • The NDC Blog
    New Records Released – 2025 Second Quarter Release List - On April 7, 2025, the National Declassification Center (NDC) released a listing of 38 declassification projects that consists of 304,179 pages that complet...
    1 month ago
  • Theresa Kaminski
    Jane Grant and Caroline Singer - Jane Grant, co-founder of The New Yorker, writer, and newspaperwoman, worked and/or crossed paths with many intelligent, ambitious career women. Like her, ...
    2 months ago
  • Reporting History
    PFC. Frank Harada Recently Awarded Distinguished Unit Badge - (From 1945 — pushing back against the erasure of history in America) Continue reading on Reporting History »
    2 months ago
  • Throughout History
    TWENTY PIECES OF SILVER – A Victorian-era Peranakan Silver-Coin Belt from the Straits Settlements (ca. 1898) - The solid silver sarong belt is one of the most common accessories of the Straits Chinese. They were most popular from at least the second half of the 19th...
    2 months ago
  • Veteran Voices Military Research
    Camp McKinley, Somerset, Pennsylvania - These unique photographs from 1908 depict the hospital tent at Camp McKinley in Somerset, Pennsylvania, and the First Regiment Junior Order of United Ame...
    3 months ago
  • TheAmericanMenu
    Early Hospitality in Lower Manhattan - [image: Early Hospitality in Lower Manhattan] *1842-1894* New York was already a rapidly growing city by 1800, with its 60,000 residents concentrated in ...
    4 months ago
  • Wyoming Fact and Fiction
    Time For A Comeback - It might be time for a comeback - not a 2025 resolution, a simple statement of fact. This blog started on December 29, 2006, to post some of my Wyoming a...
    5 months ago
  • Almost Chosen People
    The Lemon Drop Kid - Damon Runyon and Bob Hope make a terrific combination in The Lemon Drop Kid (1951). Based very loosely on a short story by Damon Runyon, the film is fille...
    5 months ago
  • Merle Massie A Place in History
    Building a Labyrinth - What’s the difference between a labyrinth and a maze? A maze is created to get people lost. A labryinth is created to help people find themselves. The dist...
    8 months ago
  • John Keess
    Guided Notes - If you're taking classes with me, you already know - or will soon learn - that I am not keen on releasing PowerPoint slides. Although I...
    9 months ago
  • Dispatches from the Stacks
    Retiring Account - We are no longer actively updating this account. For updates from the National Archives at Philadelphia, please visit https://www.archives.gov/philadelph...
    9 months ago
  • Cow Hampshire
    Civil War: Casualties in New Hampshire Regiments, May and June 1864 - Casualties of the American Civil War were great. This article is compiled from a listing printed 157 years ago, found in The Independent Democrat newspape...
    10 months ago
  • Behind Their Lines
    Wonderful, terrible days - Lindisfarne Castle on Holy Island Poetry of the Great War can turn up in the most unlikely of places. If you watch the tides of the Northumberland coas...
    11 months ago
  • Some Gave All
    Miners Memorial. Diamondville, Wyoming. -
    1 year ago
  • Old Radio
    April 10, 1943 The Falcon debut - On this day in 1943 The Falcon debut.
    1 year ago
  • Todays History
    6 March 1869 - Dmitri Mendeleev presents the first periodic table to the Russian Chemical Society. Mendeleev’s most significant contribution to science was the periodic t...
    1 year ago
  • The Reagan Library Education Blog
    Oh, by Gosh, by Golly: Christmas at the White House - Christmas at the White House as it is orchestrated today is a very modern notion – First Ladies flanked by an army of support staff who prepare the year’s ...
    1 year ago
  • Robert Bickers
    Old stories, new departures - As a historian, I dwell in the past in more ways than one. Unlike some of my peers, I remain curious about stories once told, and as new resources come onl...
    1 year ago
  • The Chaplain Kit
    A Prayer of Benediction for Chaplain Dale Goetz - Thirteen years ago today (3 September 2010) the students of the Chaplain Captain Career Course, in session at the U.S. Army Chaplain Center and School, hel...
    1 year ago
  • The Sherman Tank Site
    Takom 1/35 M103A2 Longstreet Build log (Updated) - The new M103A2 by Tacom is AMAZING! A friend purchased this kit and asked me to build it, and I was happy to do so. I had no idea the kit would be so great...
    1 year ago
  • Blog - Robert W. Mackay
    Rifle Wood, Two Days After Moreuil - The horrendous battle at Moreuil Wood on March 30th, 1918, was followed by an equally bloody battle a couple of miles away. See ARCHIVE #176. The post Ri...
    2 years ago
  • Rebel Streets of Cork 1919 - 1923
    31 Grand Parade - Shamrock Hotel - *The Shamrock Hotel at 31 Grand Parade was a favourite haunt for Republicans during the War of Independence. The proprietor Miss Mary O'Brien was a ...
    2 years ago
  • Wyoming Postscripts
    Welcome to Wyoming’s New Project Archivist! - The Wyoming State Records Advisory Board (SHRAB) is excited to announce the hiring of Jordan Meyerl as project archivist through funds from the National Hi...
    2 years ago
  • Women Marines Association
    Recruitment of women Marines in the ’70s - This recruitment film, produced for the U.S. Marine Corps by Dallas-based Bill Stokes Associates, portrays the recruitment and training process for women i...
    3 years ago
  • WyoHistory.org
    The University of Wyoming’s Afghan Project, 1953-1973 - The University of Wyoming’s Afghan Project, 1953-1973 WyoHistory.org Tuesday, November 2, 2021 During some of the frostiest years of the Cold War, faculty...
    3 years ago
  • Daily Centennial
    The Thumbed Collar - From the Omaha Daily Bee, October 20, 1913. By E. A. Guest. “Go up and change your collar,” mother often says to me.“For you can’t…
    3 years ago
  • Boston 1775
    “My Daughter, which she really is, tho’ but an adopted one” - This story came up (in my head at least) during yesterday’s online presentation from King’s Chapel about how the Revolution affected members of that Angli...
    3 years ago
  • The Old Guard
    Camp Eagle Pass, TX – May 15, 1916 - On this day 105 years ago, the 1st and 3d Battalions of The Old Guard arrived in Eagle Pass, TX. After three years in New York State–and a reunion with fam...
    4 years ago
  • E.J. Lavoie's Blog
    Little Long Lac Gold Area (Part 2 of 4) - A Brief Geological Resume of the Little Long Lac Gold AreaPrepared for “Gold” by Percy C.[sic] Hopkins, Consulting Geologist Part 2 of 4 from Gold magazine...
    4 years ago
  • Sarah Goek, PhD
    Voices of Irish Music & Migration - Between 1945 and 1970 over 600,000 men and women left Ireland for destinations across the globe. About three-quarters went to Great Britain and one-eighth ...
    4 years ago
  • Lone Sentry Blog
    B-17 Ditching Mockup for Training - Details of a unique B-17 Flying Fortress ditching mockup constructed for training by the 396th Bombardment Group RTU at Drew Field, Florida. (Source: Air S...
    4 years ago
  • Museum of Armor
    What is Hydrolock? - [image: What is Hydrolock?] Most volunteers in our museum recognize that the M18 Hellcat is preparing for movement when they see and hear a crewman crank...
    4 years ago
  • Four Bees
    M-1910, Model 1910 US T-Handle Shovel Cover, WW2, Chinese Copy Aged For Display, M1910 - I thought I'd do a quick posting to show everyone what can be done with a cheap, Chinese copy, of a US M-1910 Shovel Cover. This posting serves both as a...
    5 years ago
  • Old Industry of Southwestern Pennsylvania
    Dibble (Dible), Boxcartown, Irwin Gas Coal No. 2 Mine. Esler/Boxcartown, PA - It was a cold morning but a sunny day. I had recently gotten an email from a gentleman looking for information on the Dibble Mine. His Great Uncle died in...
    5 years ago
  • French North America
    A French Catholic State in North America? Rescuing Tardivel - *“La Vérité,” the organ of the Ultramontane Party, says that confederation is merely a half-way house for the French Canadians; their goal is “the compl...
    5 years ago
  • Everyday Lives in War
    Enniskillen Workshop - Contributed by Dr Ciara Meehan I’m off to Enniskillen later this week for a workshop about Irish memories of the First World War and attitudes towards comm...
    5 years ago
  • Across America by Motorcycle
    Intermission - From left: Lloyd Hill, Me, my wife Laura, Carolyn Shaw, Dr. Charles Shaw, and Andy Faust. I AM NOW BACK HOME IN OHIO: On the afternoon of Monday, July 29...
    5 years ago
  • Local Historian North & South
    Recollections of Old Smyrna: Charles Mays Hamby - An Interview with Charles Mayes Hamby, Mayor of Smyrna, 1942-44, conduced by Mary Rodgers , a Campbell High School Student in 1975 Transcribed and Edited b...
    6 years ago
  • Walk March
    DOMINION, Volume 12, Issue 211, 31 May 1919 - THE PAKEHA ARRIVES A RECORD DISEMBARKATION. Though the evening was wet and extremely cold and miserable, several thousand people assembled on the King’s Wh...
    6 years ago
  • The Java Gold's Blog
    USAAF B-17’s in Java – Part 10 – Balikpapan – Round One to the US Navy - The Battle of Balikpapan – Round One to the US Navy With the drive through Malaya toward Singapore – the western part of the Japanese pincer operation agai...
    6 years ago
  • Couvi's New Blog
    - November, 2018 *The LATEST* “My own twisted look at my visible part of the Universe!” Late summer in Oklahoma is usually punctuated by temperatures in the...
    6 years ago
  • Microsoft Today in Technology
    High-skilled immigration has long been controversial, but its benefits are clear - The post High-skilled immigration has long been controversial, but its benefits are clear appeared first on Microsoft Today in Technology.
    7 years ago
  • WHEELS THAT WON THE WEST®
    Recognizing the Right Kind of Different - Recognizing the rarest parts of our transportation past is not always easy. For me, the journey’s taken decades of research and discovery. It’s easy to ...
    7 years ago
  • Dismuke's 78 RPM Blog
    “Red Wing” / “Rainbow” The Shannon Quartet 1926 - “Red Wing” Shannon Quartet June 24, 1926 (Victor 20173-B) Red Wing “Rainbow” Shannon Quartet June 24, 1926 (Victor 20173-A) Rainbow Here is a record that...
    9 years ago
  • QM Fashion
    Ready for a MilFashion Comeback? - Sgt B Bailey and L/Cpl S Cooper of the British Indian Provost Company have their trousers repaired by an Indian member of the company, working with a s...
    10 years ago
  • Echoes of Elbert County
    80th Anniversary Remembrance of the 1935 Flood - "Here Comes The Flood, There Goes The Train" will be a special 80th anniversary remembrance of the May 30, 1935 flood though Elbert and Kiowa. The event is...
    10 years ago
  • Manitoba's Prisoners of War
    Following in their Footsteps - *Originally posted at www.powsincanada.wordpress.com* For my 50th post and my one-year anniversary on Wordpress, I'd like to share what I've been up to th...
    10 years ago
  • This Day in Tech History
    It Only Took 100 Years – From 39 MPH to 630 - October 23, 1970: Gabelich Sets LSR of 630 MPH The Blue Flame was the rocket-powered vehicle driven by Gary Gabelich that achieved the world land speed rec...
    11 years ago
  • Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation - News
    -
  • Comments on: David Chrisinger Wins 2022 George Orwell Award
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Show 5 Show All

History of World War One.

  • Roads To The Great War
    What Happened to Zita, the Last Empress of Austria-Hungary? - Happy Days: Zita with Emperor Franz Josef and Her Husband, Future Emperor KarlBy Martin MutschlechnerBorn on 9 May 1892, Zita was the daughter of Duke Robe...
    20 hours ago
  • Canada’s Army of Colonels: Battalion Commanders of the First and Second World Wars
    Maj-Gen. R.H. Keefler - Major-General Holley Keefler6th Infantry Brigade3rd Canadian Division Brigadier Keefler appreciating the need for quick and determined action and also appr...
    1 week ago
  • With the British Army In Flanders
    Westouter War Memorial, Churchyard & Extension - Every so often we find ourselves in an area that remained behind the British lines for the whole of the war, and Westoutre, now Westouter, is one such plac...
    1 week ago

History of World War Two

  • PT Boat Red
    Remembering D-Day, June 6, 1944 - On this day 81 years ago, the Allied Forces invaded Normandy, France, in one of the most important battles in military history. A pivotal part of the invas...
    4 hours ago
  • Today World War II
    Today in World War II History—June 5, 1940 & 1945 - 85 Years Ago—June 5, 1940: Battle of France begins: Germans launch offensive southward in France. Britain announces new emergency measures: strikes are b...
    21 hours ago
  • World War Two Today
    The Wehrmacht turns west - 5th June 1940: Not pausing after their crushing victories on the north coast, the Germans head for the heart of France
    23 hours ago
  • Pacific Paratrooper
    Artistic Moments from WWII: Year 1945 - I hope you all enjoy this pictorial post. 1945 was a pivotal year for the world. Resources – IHRA: for their blog and their books ...
    3 days ago
  • Canada’s Army of Colonels: Battalion Commanders of the First and Second World Wars
    Maj-Gen. R.H. Keefler - Major-General Holley Keefler6th Infantry Brigade3rd Canadian Division Brigadier Keefler appreciating the need for quick and determined action and also appr...
    1 week ago
  • POWs In Canada
    What Happened to the Survivors of the Bismarck? - Some eighty-four years ago, on May 27, 1941, British battleships and torpedo bombers engaged the Bismarck – Germany’s famed battleship – in its final battl...
    2 weeks ago
  • 1,000 Men, 1000 Stories
    Memoirs: The Roy Burt Collection, RCNVR and Combined Operations (4) - *Remembrance Day 2012 from the Osoyoos Times, B.C.* *"Roy Burt took part in Historic D-Day raid at Normandy..."* Roy Burt, World War II veteran (RCNVR, Com...
    2 months ago
  • At The Front
    About an Iconic WW2 German Helmet - The basic silhouette of the Stahlhelm is immediately recognizable as an imposing symbol of force, so recognizable in fact that it’s said that it even inf...
    6 months ago
  • Operation Meatball
    "I feel like I have saved part of history" - *2024 Bridge to History Ambassador Jett.* *"My interest in WW2 began when I was around six years old. My day came home from an antique store with an ori...
    6 months ago
  • Amateur Historian Leonard's WWII History Blog
    Review: “Camp Crowder” - I highly recommend Jeremey P. Amick’s “Camp Crowder” (Arcadia Press) for any members of the WWII Signal Corps and family of those trained at the Midwestern...
    5 years ago
Show 5 Show All

Outdoor Blogs

  • Wes Siler’s Newsletter
    Steve Daines Is Stealing Your Land - Here’s his phone number
    4 hours ago
  • Field Ethos
    Dive Fish Explore | A Panamanian Adventure - Dive Fish Explore | A Panamanian Adventure The Field Ethos Waterman team invades Panama with Neoprene, Spearguns and… The post Dive Fish Explore | A Pana...
    8 hours ago
  • Wide Open Spaces
    12 Fascinating Toucan Facts: See Why This Is My Favorite Bird In The World - Shutterstock Image by: Ondrej Prosicky[image: toucan facts] I absolutely adore toucans. They are easily my favorite bird, and I relish any opportunity tha...
    10 hours ago
  • BHA Media
    Ohio House Bill 96 Is Not Good For Hunters, Anglers, or Conservation - Ohio's hunters and anglers are facing a serious challenge in the form of *House Bill 96*, the proposed state operating budget for fiscal years 2026–2027. W...
    11 hours ago
  • Claretbumbler
    Premature end to my season - We were in behind Saints island when it happened, drifting fast in a lively south-easterly with me on the oars. Anyone who fishes the Mask knows this is a ...
    16 hours ago
  • Coyote Gulch
    Scanning the snow from the sky: Planes, lasers will provide critical data to water managers statewide — Jay Adams (DenverWater.org) #snowpack #runoff - Click the link to read the article on the Denver Water website (Jay Adams): May 28, 2025 If you want to know about the snow, the sky is the limit when it c...
    16 hours ago
  • The Land Desk
    MAGA intensifies its assault on public lands - 🌵 Public Lands 🌲
    1 day ago
  • Casting Across
    VIDEO: The Two Fly Fishing Books You’ve Seen Everywhere - Coffee table books have a reputation; so too do books that are ubiquitous. How could something so popular and so prevalent be that good? Well, the late C...
    1 day ago
  • bearded fisherman
    Good morning #pigs #piglets #pigsofyoutube #coffee #morningchores #homestead #pigfeed #nature -
    1 day ago
  • Project Upland
    Roasted Chukar with Ginger and Sweet Potato Puree - A deliciously memorable meal featuring crispy whole chukar and a smooth, flavorful puree Northeast of Wichita, Kansas, sits a small, farm-to-table restau...
    1 day ago
  • In Forest and Field
    Another Rainy Spring Morning - *Rain was falling as in the old rhyme – **April showers bring May flowers. **Even though there was “stuff” to do at home, there are times when there’s jus...
    1 day ago
  • Revivaler
    J.P. Sauer & Sohn Behordenmodell 1930 Pistol - [image: Sauer Behordenmodell M1930 Pistol] The Sauer pistol models 1913-1930 were Sauer’s first foray into the design and production of automatic pistols...
    2 days ago
  • Crest, Cliff & Canyon
    Old Views - Two moments of light from almost sixteen years ago: I was reminded of these recently and revisited them. They have too many flaws to be real portfolio shot...
    3 days ago
  • Troutrageous! Fly Fishing & Tenkara Blog
    Driftless 2025: Part 1 – An Unexpected Party - Back and finally recovered from my annual jaunt to the Driftless Area, it’s time to journal some of the goings on for posterity’s sake. Now, I could writ...
    3 days ago
  • Wyoming Game and Fish Department
    Boysen Sauger -
    4 days ago
  • Gun Dog Blog
    How to Steady a Pointing Dog Without Ecollars - Steadying a pointing dog can be challenging, but to steadying a pointing dog without using ecollars is another layer of challenge.
    4 days ago
  • Truttablog
    Storm dodging - A failed attempt to avoid the rain, and the serendipitous dry fly fishing which was our reward. The post Storm dodging first appeared on Truttablog. The...
    4 days ago
  • Going Feral
    Wyoming’s congressional delegation should follow neighbors’ lead on public lands - Wyoming’s congressional delegation should follow neighbors’ lead on public lands: Republican counterparts in Montana and Idaho are taking bold steps to pro...
    4 days ago
  • NOLS Blog
    Kickstart Your Summer: A NOLS-Inspired Guide to Outdoor Adventure - [image: Kickstart Your Summer: A NOLS-Inspired Guide to Outdoor Adventure] Summer is a season of possibility—new places to explore, skills to sharpen, an...
    1 week ago
  • NatureSound.it
    Garden Warbler Vs. Blackcap Warbler songs - Reading Time: < 1 minute This is a wonderful recording by Grégory Chamming’s.It is a perfect recording both from a sound and educational point of view, as ...
    1 week ago
  • Wanderings up North
    Sarek National Park Sept 2024.MLD Trailstar . Day 4 - Day 4,Overnight it had been windy and wet and the forecast we pulled in,gave more of the same for today The Trailstar once again proved its worth a...
    1 week ago
  • Paddle Making (and other canoe stuff)
    Historic Paddle Photo: Archive.org - A photo dated to 1902 showcasing some paddles and a very early style of canvas canoe in the New Brunswick area... Lake Nasahie, New Brunswick, 1902 Augus...
    2 weeks ago
  • AFTCO - Conservation
    AFTCO Bass Bus Live Release Boat - Since 2019, the AFTCO Bass Bus Live Release Boat — built in part with support from Yamaha and operated by the experienced release boat technicians at Ulr...
    2 weeks ago
  • Leland Fly Fishing Blog
    North Country Magic: Fly Fishing with the Starling & Olive Soft Hackle Spider - For centuries, anglers have whispered tales of the North Country Spiders – understated yet deadly flies that unlock the secrets of trout streams. These a...
    3 weeks ago
  • Chukar Culture
    Help Writing - I spent today updating another blog of mine, Writer’s Doctor: Writing, Editing, Tutoring. I made it when I had extra time after choosing my wife over my te...
    3 weeks ago
  • Sussex Trout Fishing
    Leconfield – 10 and 11 May - On Friday afternoon I wandered around the farm and found myself watching carp feeding in the margins of the pond. The temptation was too much. I returned t...
    3 weeks ago
  • Laramie Audubon
    Global Big Day Birding - The Global Big Day is an annual celebration of birds in your community. To celebrate, 13 birders met at Greenhill Cemetery on 10 May. Although we had gre...
    3 weeks ago
  • Southern Rockies Nature Blog
    Greeley Next to Embrace Its Prairie River - Urban river trail, Fort Collins, Colorado When I was a kid in Fort Collins, we enjoyed the Cache la Poudre River — upstream from the city. We fished in it...
    5 weeks ago
  • Van Cat Meow
    Not Goodbye, Just a Different Road - The evening is golden and still as the last light squints through the trees. Willow sits on the step of the sliding door, ears darting towards every sound ...
    1 month ago
  • Brooks and Becks
    First signs of summer and first on a dry - Last season this upland stream was new to me , it was great to fish during those first few weeks when the high waters everywhere meant that this little ...
    1 month ago
  • Athabascan Woman Blog
    Shondiin Mayo – Koyukon Athabascan and Diné Storyteller - Shondiin Mayo, a Koyukon Athabascan and Diné storyteller, uses journalism and filmmaking to amplify Indigenous voices. From documentary filmmaking to publi...
    2 months ago
  • AFTCO Films
    AFTCO & Kicker Present Untamed Shallows – LA VERDAD - Head south of the border with the Kicker boys in search of the truth, tackle-breaking grouper, and the raw beauty that keeps calling them back. Featuring...
    2 months ago
  • Call of the Stream
    STOCK BOX AND AUCTIONS - My stock box. A collection of my favourite and proven patterns for small stream fishing. For each outing I refill if needs be my single fly box depending o...
    2 months ago
  • Hike Pyrenees - walking holidays in the Spanish Pyrenees
    Bus timetable for Ordesa – summer 2025 - [image: Ordesa National Park]Nestled in the heart of the Spanish Pyrenees, Ordesa National Park is a true gem for nature enthusiasts and hikers alike. A UN...
    3 months ago
  • Trout On Dries
    down in a coulee - “Fish the way you love to and go find water that favors and honors that…” AS I DROVE DOWN INTO THE COULEE I could see grey smokey-like clouds hovering and ...
    3 months ago
  • Orvis News
    Meet the Nominees for the 2025 Orvis-Endorsed Awards! - 2025 marks the 40th year that the Orvis Company will recognize excellence in sporting experiences through its Endorsed Lodges, Outfitters, and Guides (EL...
    3 months ago
  • The Filson Journal
    Indy Officinalis: Forager + Urban Farmer - Indy Officinalis is a forager and urban farmer who has been growing food in underserved areas of Los Angeles since 2019. When things seem impossible, she...
    3 months ago
  • Birdhunter
    Mining for Quail - This season was my 26th year of bird hunting. I love it now as much as I did in 1999 when we hunted quail for the first time north of Phoenix. I was captiv...
    3 months ago
  • The Borealist
    “Your Fervent Nationalism is Making Me Nervous.” - “This Song is Called Your Fervent Nationalism is Making Me Nervous” for Gord My favourite words will forever be eh, touque and canoe. and grace. Grace, t...
    4 months ago
  • The Reigning Chukar Champions
    A little relief - The 2024 chukar season was quite a downer for me. Seems like I was always being a puss about something. The back thing really set me back but the surgeon s...
    4 months ago
  • Forest History Society
    Hollywood in Flames - Guest Contributor Stephen Pyne originally published this essay in December 2024, just weeks before wildfires devastated the cities of Altadena and Pacifi...
    4 months ago
  • Berkshire Outdoorsman
    It’s time to say goodbye - As noted in my column of August 24, 2024, I am stepping down as the Berkshire Woods and Waters columnist effective year end, which means this is my last ...
    5 months ago
  • Canadian Small Game Hunter's Blog
    In the Mist of Tradition - My drive took me about an hour to make it to one of my favorite hunting spots along the river. It is one of these spots that never freeze over during the w...
    5 months ago
  • The River Beat
    Spekboom River, South Africa - Nooitgedacht Trout Lodge nestled in the valley below It took longer than expected to drive from Swaziland to the trout belt in Mpumalanga, thanks in most ...
    7 months ago
  • Species Spotlight
    Freshwater Bass Guide - In freshwater, bass fishing is king. They bring the bite and a good fight, making anglers work for their catch. Whether you’re an angler targeting largemou...
    7 months ago
  • The Unaccomplished Angler
    A step back in time - As we reach a certain point (age) in our lives, I think many of us begin to look back over the decades with a heightened sense of nostalgia. Through the ...
    8 months ago
  • Mouthful of Feathers
    Cowboy Logic - Call me pretentious or a purist, or worse if you must, but some things are just inherently better than others. Dry-fly fishing and homemade bread, film pho...
    9 months ago
  • Pointing Dog Blog - Dog Willing
    The Glorious Twelfth - Today is perhaps the holiest of holy days among sportsmen and women in the UK. It is the Glorious Twelfth of August, the day the shooting season opens.
    9 months ago
  • The Ultralight Hiker
    Kam Snaps - Kam Snaps The Ultralight Hiker If you are into DIY (as you should be unless you want to be a perpetual victim/pauper) then it’s about time you discovered t...
    10 months ago
  • Our Stories
    Empty nests - Ripple Effect: Dillon Field Office Partners Help Riparian Areas Thrive Riparian areas in the BLM Dillon Field Office area are thriving thanks in part to pa...
    10 months ago
  • The Gourmet Sportsman
    Disappointing Return - * May 3, 2024* Luc has been recovering from a procedure and he is finally ready to go out. He fished the day prior by himself and did rather well for a s...
    1 year ago
  • Today in Conservation
    June 23 - Tero Mustonen, Finnish Environmentalist, Born (1976) Save the rainforest! That’s what we hear over and over—and for good cause. But at the other ends of ...
    1 year ago
  • Writers On The Range
    By: Nicki Marie - I see a similar changes while I am out conducting fieldwork. We observe many changes to the environment now. And water is never as important to us as it is...
    1 year ago
  • U.S. Department of the Interior
    Everything You Want to Know About Katmai National Park’s Fat Bears - Every fall, Katmai National Park and Preserve in Alaska hosts Fat Bear Week, an annual tournament celebrating the success of the bears at the park’s Broo...
    1 year ago
  • Hunting Dog Blog
    AKC HT prep fun fun fun - Check out the HDB YouTube Channel (see link in tab) for the latest training videos where I set up a great little practice session for our AKC Senior Hunt T...
    2 years ago
  • Diary of a Mad Natural Historian
    Godzilla vs. Gigan Rex (2003) - Last Wednesday, alerted by Toho Studios on my Instagram feed, I put aside my distaste for indoor crowds* and toddled off to Albuquerque to see a special sh...
    2 years ago
  • Hiking in Finland
    Impressions From Cyprus - Hiking with distant views to the sea, climbing sweet limestone cliffs and swimming in the 23°C warm Mediterranean in December - Cyprus has lots to offer ...
    2 years ago
  • Arizona Wanderings
    Wyoming Antelope - I drew a tag and was staring down a long lonely road trip by myself. So, I asked my four favorite people if they wanted to explore Wyoming together. We s...
    2 years ago
  • Beautiful Badlands ND
    A Delicious Twelve Course Ukrainian Christmas Dinner in the Beautiful Badlands - Twelve Course Ukrainian Christmas Christmas in the Beautiful Badlands brings friends and families together. Traditions are demonstrated in the most intens...
    2 years ago
  • Land Cruiser Of The Day!
    1989 Toyota Land Cruiser Bandeirante - Condition: Used Year: 1989 VIN (Vehicle Identification Number): 00000000000000000 Mileage: 91071 Interior Color: Black For Sale By: Private Seller Options:...
    3 years ago
  • TUCKERS CHUKARS
    Moving on. - With my limited ability to adjust to new rules and changes I have decided to start a new site. For over ten years I have enjoyed posting on the blogger ...
    4 years ago
  • Home is where the (H)eart(h) is......
    A weekend of learning by doing and sharing - Last weekend was one for the books! It was an all around pleasant weekend, with some hick ups, because some vitally important things were taught and lear...
    4 years ago
  • A Bird Hunter's Road
    Walking Your Way Into Birds...... - is the only practice I vouch for and is really the only part of the hunt we control. The adage isn't complex, but to what degree we take it, varies from ...
    5 years ago
  • Living with Birddogs
    News From Chukar Country - After the Thanksgiving snows, and successive subsequent storms provided much needed moisture to the eastside, birds began to disburse and the hunting imp...
    5 years ago
  • Blogging from the Pyrenees
    Summer 2020 Pyrenees walking holiday brochure - [image: Summer 2020 walking holiday brochure] Our summer 2020 walking holiday brochure is available to download as a pdf or to view online. Our brochure ha...
    5 years ago
  • Filson Life
    Filson x Danner Grouse Bottomland Boot - When two Pacific Northwest brands team up to create a hunting boot, the result is a rugged piece of craftsmanship. Constructed from full-grain leather an...
    5 years ago
  • Raised By Wolves
    What's That? - It's fun to mess with Our Friend Nancy. She's Minnesota Nice, a retired middle school teacher, and in the eighth grade I would have been the *end* of her....
    5 years ago
  • Tenkara Tracks
    Gear I Use: DRAGONtail Tenkara Komodo - The DRAGONtail Komodo comes with a handy rod sock and a sturdy rod tube. I know, I can almost hear your thoughts..."no...please...not another tenkara rod...
    5 years ago
  • Finnish Way of Hiking
    Millennium hike, part 1: Vätsäri - Welcome to follow a two month long backpacking expedition through the wilderness of Finnish Lapland. This hike took place in November and December 1999. Th...
    6 years ago
  • Like No Place On Earth
    June in Guernsey State Park - It has been a spell - my last post here was in March. But that does not mean we have not been active in the park. We are still walking, and hiking, as...
    6 years ago
  • Pointing Dog Blog
    Details - *In a previous post, I wrote about the different ways hunters **in different parts of the world **behave AFTER a dog goes on point. *Today, I'd like to loo...
    7 years ago
  • Backpackingbongos
    The Arctic Trail – Kautokeino to Kilpisjärvi pt3 (mist and misery) - The Arctic trail starts at Kautokeino in the far north of Norway and heads south for approximately 800 kilometres. It crosses into Finland and Sweden, fini...
    7 years ago
  • Hodgeman's Thoughts on The Great Outdoors
    .22 Aguila 60gr. Subsonic Sniper or....a Dry Treatise on Bullet Stabilization - I'll say right at the beginning, I am an unrepentant grouse junkie. Particularly, ruffed grouse. I'm sure some folks in the sporting dog/tweed jacket/ do...
    8 years ago
  • A Waterman's Woods
    El Nino - We wait Toiling in this drought Whirling like the dust on the horizon Trapped like smoke in a valley Blowing across the rising sun We wait for rain to se...
    9 years ago
  • From Housewife to Hunter . Adding A Rifle To My Apron
    What’s The Difference Between 556 & 223 round? My Husband Laughed - Last week we went to the gun show (read about it here) and saw a lot of over priced items. While we were there, ever time I heard my husband The Soldier ch...
    12 years ago
  • wyomingstateparks
    Reverend Leonard Robinson 3 of 3 -
    14 years ago
Show 5 Show All

Philosophy, Theology and related stuff

  • Canon Law Made Easy
    Addiction and Marriage Validity - Q: Can alcoholism, or some other addiction, invalidate a Catholic marriage? I’m asking this question because my divorced daughter is starting the annulme...
    17 hours ago
  • Joe In Black Ministries
    Wednesday of the Seventh Week of Easter | June 4, 2025 -
    1 day ago
  • City Father
    70 Years of Communion - When I was a parish pastor and used to celebrate with my parishioners' their First Communions, I always tried to stress in my homily that this was th...
    1 day ago
  • The Catholic Gentleman
    The Holy Spirit is God - Who is the Holy Spirit? He is a friend who can help us be the men the world needs us to be. Let's look at the Holy Spirit as Counselor, Empowerer, and Fr...
    1 day ago
  • Leila Miller
    Resources for abandoned spouses - Photo by Gianna B on Unsplash At least weekly I hear from heartbroken abandoned spouses*—both men and women—who don’t know where to turn for help and su...
    2 days ago
  • What We Need To Know
    Imagine Liturgical Peace - Mark Brumley offers a path toward fewer liturgical divisions
    2 days ago
  • On Religion
    Does the Anglican Church of Canada have a future? - In the year of our Lord 1967, the Anglican Church of Canada had 1,218,666 members and 272,400 worshippers on a typical Sunday. In a recent report, the chur...
    3 days ago
  • Wyoming Catholic Cowboys - raw and real
    Wait Well - By moving forward. https://youtu.be/LH3ne0BjhYY
    4 days ago
  • Churches of the West
    Blog Mirror: FRENCH PRAIRIE – CATHOLISCISM COMES TO THE OREGON COUNTRY - FRENCH PRAIRIE – CATHOLISCISM COMES TO THE OREGON COUNTRY
    4 days ago
  • Cellmate of Boethius
    Progressives Are Driving Themselves Into Extinction | Interesting Times ... -
    1 week ago
  • Churches of the South
    Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council of Nicea. - Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council...: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council of Nicea. Well, at least probab...
    2 weeks ago
  • Churches of the East
    Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council of Nicea. - Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council...: Thursday, May 20, 325. The opening of the Council of Nicea. Well, at least probabl...
    2 weeks ago
  • Letters from Fiddler's Greene
    The Cantos of Criticism - The Blessings of Babel, part 3
    1 month ago
  • About Catholics
    Good Friday - Good Friday is the first day of the Easter Triduum and the day that Catholics and other Christians throughout the world commemorate the crucifixion of Jesu...
    2 months ago
  • About Catholics
    Good Friday - Good Friday is the first day of the Easter Triduum and the day that Catholics and other Christians throughout the world commemorate the crucifixion of Jesu...
    2 months ago
  • Priesthood from the Inside Out
    Prodigal Son - If I were an artist, I would paint a portrait of the prodigal son.
    2 months ago
  • Advocates for Solidarity
    Stepping Stones - Nine states that will determine the Solidarity Party's future
    10 months ago
  • liturgy guy
    SSPX Chapel has Novena of Latin Masses Said for Local Bishop - 𝘐𝘯 𝘢 𝘣𝘦𝘢𝘶𝘵𝘪𝘧𝘶𝘭 𝘨𝘦𝘴𝘵𝘶𝘳𝘦 𝘰𝘧 𝘧𝘪𝘭𝘪𝘢𝘭 𝘭𝘰𝘷𝘦, 𝘢 𝘯𝘰𝘷𝘦𝘯𝘢 𝘰𝘧 𝘛𝘳𝘢𝘥𝘪𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯𝘢𝘭 𝘓𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘯 𝘔𝘢𝘴𝘴𝘦𝘴 𝘸𝘢𝘴 𝘰𝘧𝘧𝘦𝘳...
    1 year ago
  • Deacon Lawrence
    Illustration: Icon of the Transfiguration - The Transfiguration, the revelation of God in His glory strengthens His disciples for the difficult times they are about to face. For us it reminds us of...
    2 years ago
  • Eric Sammons
    Lessons From the Peace Emperor - What lessons can we learn today from the Peace Emperor? The post Lessons From the Peace Emperor appeared first on Eric Sammons.
    2 years ago
  • In the Light of the Law
    Ignoring law is not remedied by ignoring it even more - I have read with profit many columns by Dr. Adam DeVille but in his latest essay, “Relieving Rome’s burdens: A proposal for handling abuse cases” (CWR, 10 ...
    5 years ago
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Radio

  • OneTubeRadio.com
    Radio: The Perfect Wedding Gift - A hundred years ago, a radio would have made the perfect wedding present, and this June bride put out the word that she wanted one. Word spread, and it tur...
    5 hours ago
  • Buy Two Way Radios
    The Wouxun KG-805G now has a USB-C battery upgrade and sale price for June! - The KG-805G now ships with a high-capacity 2600mAh lithium-ion battery featuring a built-in USB-C charging port. To celebrate this upgrade, We're offerin...
    2 days ago
  • The KØNR Radio Site
    Activating Kaufman Ridge (W0C/SP-081) - Today, Joyce/K0JJW and I activated Kaufman Ridge (W0C/SP-081). This was my 10th activation of this summit and the 8th for Joyce. Kaufman is an easy summi...
    4 weeks ago
  • The Adventure Radio Society
    SCOREBOARD: RESULTS OF THE JANUARY 2024 SPARTAN SPRINT - *For an enlarged view, please click on the SCOREBOARD*
    1 year ago

Trains, Planes, Automobiles & Boats

  • Transportation History
    1905: The Inauguration of the Semiahmoo Lighthouse in the Evergreen State - June 5, 1905 In the northwestern part of Washington State, a lighthouse on Semiahmoo Bay first went into service. The Semiahmoo Lighthouse — located near t...
    12 hours ago
  • Stream Liner Memories
    Burlington 1900 Breakfast Menu - The New York Public Library’s Buttolph Menu Collection includes more than 25,000 menus collected by Frances (“Frank”) Buttolph (1850-1924). According to th...
    22 hours ago
  • Lost Rail
    Marching West in Time - Not far from Ravenna and MP1614 the transcon lofts itself over the Clark Fork River above. The river has been a frequent obstacle to the Resourceful ...
    1 day ago
  • This Day In Automotive History
    June 3, 2013 – the Legacy of Infiniti Founder Bill Bruce - Twelve years ago today, the automotive world lost one of its quieter giants. Bill Bruce, the founding general manager of Infiniti, passed away on June 3,...
    2 days ago
  • Great Northern Rwy's Mansfield Branch Line (1909-1985) and the Waterville Railway Co. (1910-1954)
    Douglas Creek Falls April 1981 - Train emerging out the the south tunnel portal near Douglas Creek Falls in the spring of 1981. Olaf Rasmussen photos.
    1 week ago
  • The Aerodrome
    Lex Anteinternet: Wednesday, May 25, 1910. Wilbur Wright and Orvill... - Lex Anteinternet: Wednesday, May 25, 1910. Wilbur Wright and Orvill...: Wednesday, May 25, 1910. Wilbur Wright and Orville Wright flew on the same plane f...
    1 week ago
  • The Work Truck Blog
    Lex Anteinternet: Aging and ignition. - Lex Anteinternet: Aging and ignition.: Aging and ignition. Recently I was in Denver and had to rent a car. I rented some sort of newer Toyota SUV. For...
    3 weeks ago
  • Kingston's Hanley Spur
    Brian TheCaptain Johnson - *Thy sea, O God, so great* *My boat so small.* *It cannot be that any happy fate* *Will me befall* *Save as Thy goodness opens paths for me* *Through the con...
    3 weeks ago
  • Frisco Archive
    MP15DC 361 - MP15DC 361 at Kansas City, Kansas on December 21, 1980 (Jame F. Primm II).
    5 weeks ago
  • Railhead
    Freight Containers Topple Off Train North Of Rock River - Freight Containers Topple Off Train North Of Rock River
    2 months ago
  • The Trolley Dodger
    Our 10th Anniversary - As of this January 21st, the Trolley Dodger blog is now ten years old. Each year since 1963, this date has commemorated the end of service on the North Sho...
    4 months ago
  • I'm Just Here For The Potty
    State of Wyoming Rest Stop, Diversion Dam Rest Area. - This much welcome and nicely maintained rest area is between Riverton and Dubois. It's large, in addition to having the regular WYDOT amenities.
    7 months ago
  • The Railroad in Detail
    Basil Casabona’s Mega Santa Fe consist running on the AGNR - This is an extract of an e-mail that Chuck sent out today …. “Today [Club Member] Basil [Casabona] got to run his beautiful SF {Santa Fe] consist on our AG...
    5 years ago
  • Building the Railroad
    Building a MOW (Maintenance of Way) Consist - This gallery shows Chuck Whitlock creating a MOW consist [Double click on any pic to see gallery/photos full size]:
    5 years ago
  • Renovation of CWR Caboose #11
    East side of Caboose #11 stripped - VP Lonnie Dickson aided and abetted by President Chuck Whitlock’s grandson Cadu have been hard at work stripping the east side of “our” caboose. They have ...
    6 years ago
  • Lionel Trains
    Freight Car Friday – PFE R-70-20 Reefers - Often our Freight Car Friday features focus on broader topics. This week we devote our blog to one specific class of car – the prototype for our Lionel and...
    10 years ago
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War Game Blogs

  • AJ's Wargaming Blog
    Dry-brush texture palette - I made this quick dry-brush texture palette for a friend who's starting their painting journey with the Slap-Chop method. I made myself a similar one abo...
    3 days ago
  • Grymauch's Solo Wargaming Blog
    Busaco 27th September 1810: Turns 17 - Conclusion - The situation at the end of turn 16. *JUNOT'S ASSAULT* *Turn 17* Junot's Corps begins to climb the ridge and several charges were made. I should add ...
    4 days ago
  • The Raft
    Porty gets the Short End – 6th Coastal Forces AAR - It was no secret that Porty and the base’s intelligence officer Lt. Reuben Atkinson couldn’t stand each other. The one a stuffy, ostentiously pious fusspot...
    5 days ago
  • JJ's Wargames
    JJ's on Tour - Portugal 2025, Part 4, Porto, and the Crossing of the Douro. - In the last post in this series covering Carolyn's and my visit to Portugal earlier this year, I concluded our stay in Lisbon with a look at the Museu ...
    5 days ago
  • The Mad Padre's Wargames Page
    Swan of the East: A Great War Naval PBEM Game - Players Needed - Hello friends: If you've been following this blog for a while, you'll know that I've been thinking about a Play By Email naval campaign loosely based ...
    6 days ago
  • Blog - Stuart Ellis-Gorman
    My First KBO Game - I didn’t really grow up with baseball, or at least watching baseball. I’m still American, so my dad taught me how to throw and how to (kind of) hit a baseb...
    6 days ago
  • KEITH'S WARGAMING BLOG
    Line of Departure is Dead - Long Live Startline! - The simple WW2 rules I have been developing under the working title *Line of Departure* seem to be working out, and I have decided to set aside the more ...
    4 weeks ago
  • War Blog - Modern Warfare 1946-2021
    War Blog Privacy Policy -
    2 years ago
Show 5 Show All

Blawgs I follow

  • Notice & Comment
    Fifth Circuit Review – Reviewed: Eight Years of Equity - In NLRB v. AllService Plumbing & Maintenance, Inc., a divided Fifth Circuit panel held that the NLRB could not revive a 2013 order that the Board had pre...
    2 hours ago
  • Above the Law
    Another Biglaw Firm Adopts 4-Day In-Person Requirement — See Also - *Add Another Day To Your Commute!*: Hogan Lovells moves to a 4-day policy. *Director Of Skadden's Fellowship Program Resigns Over Firm's Deal With Trump...
    6 hours ago
  • Texas Agriculture Law
    August 1, 2025 Weekly Round Up - The post August 1, 2025 Weekly Round Up appeared first on Texas Agriculture Law.
    11 hours ago
  • SCOTUSblog
    Justices reject Mexico’s suit against gun manufacturers - The Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that a lawsuit by the Mexican government against U.S. gun makers cannot go forward. In a unanimous decision by Justic...
    11 hours ago
  • Irish Liquor Lawyer
    Oregon’s Alcohol Enforcement Charade - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8X76NRiQLQ In early May the news came out that the Oregon Government Ethics Commission (Ethics Commission) rejected a ne...
    14 hours ago
  • Stories of the Four Courts
    Miler’s Sabbath Caresses of the Four Courts Railings, c. 1900 - From Robert Gahan’s wonderful article ‘Old Street Characters of Dublin,’ published in Vol 2 No 3 of the Dublin Historical Record (March 1940), this gentle ...
    19 hours ago
  • Mirror of Justice
    Garnett on the St. Isidore non-decision - Here is a short piece I did, for the Law & Liberty website, on the recent non-decision in the St. Isidore case. It's called "Educational Pluralism Delayed"...
    1 week ago
  • Hague Law Blog
    Exemplified Copies of Letters Rogatory - [This rant is designed to guide my clients in getting the right paperwork generated for service by diplomatic channels. If I’ve sent you a link to this, th...
    1 week ago
  • Courthouses of the West
    Committee Adopts Bill To Make Wyoming Senate Confirm Supreme Court Justices - Committee Adopts Bill To Make Wyoming Senate Confirm Supreme Court Justices
    2 weeks ago
  • S.J. Quinney College of Law
    From our senior director of development and alumni relations: Spring 2025 - I look forward to the spring semester each year because we welcome old friends to our Alumni Awards (which double as our class reunions) and our Golden Gav...
    2 weeks ago
  • Howe On The Court
    Court appears to back legality of HHS preventative care task force - The Supreme Court on Monday appeared to side with the federal government in a dispute over the constitutionality of the structure of a task force within ...
    1 month ago
  • Constitutional Law Prof Blog
    Response and Reply in the Alien Enemies Act Case - The plaintiffs filed their response to the Administration's application for Supreme Court review in the Alien Enemies Act Case, and the Administration file...
    2 months ago
  • Oil and Gas Lawyer Blog
    Iron Bar Holdings v. Cape – Tales of the Wild West - I ran across a fascinating opinion from the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals that provides a window into Wyoming history. Iron Bar Holdings v. Cape, No. 23-80...
    2 months ago
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Inactive Blogs

  • Today In World War One
    The End of Today in World War I (continued) - This half will cover what became of some of the foremost personalities of the Great War after the events previously covered. *United Kingdom* King *Geor...
    3 years ago
  • This Day in Water History
    May 20, 2021—Farewell - Well folks, it has been a long run, but the time has come to end my blog, This Day in Water History. I have been doing it since September 1, 2012—over eigh...
    4 years ago
  • Naval History Blog
    Thank You - Thank you for being a faithful reader of the Naval History Blog. As of June 1, the Naval Institute will be dedicating more resources to Naval History magaz...
    5 years ago
  • Old Army Records
    Latest News: Rest in Peace Old Army Records, LLC. - Old Army Records Followers The few but loyal followers of Old Army Records may have noticed, and missed, a lack of a post this last Monday, Sept. 23, ...
    5 years ago
  • Great War Lives Lost
    27 May 1919 We Lost 95 -
    6 years ago
  • The WWrite Blog
    The Debt of WWII French Resistance Writers to WWI Veterans, Post 1: Albert Camus (2) - *The Debt of WWII French Resistance Writers to WWI Veterans, Post 1: Albert Camus * [image: Camus2]Writer-Resister Albert Camus. Image source: salon-litt...
    6 years ago
  • Hunger and Thirst
    Wild Greens with Ham Hocks - This isn't new math. Wild greens plus delicious smoky pork bits add up to a dish most everyone will eat with gusto. My crowd aren't picky eaters, and t...
    7 years ago
  • The War in Italy 1943-45 and Environs…
    ITALIAN CAMPAIGN (1943–1945) - After serious tension and argument over Allied grand strategy at the Casablanca Conference (January 14–24, 1943), the Western Allies agreed to invade Sic...
    8 years ago
  • Hodgeman's Thoughts on The Great Outdoors
    .22 Aguila 60gr. Subsonic Sniper or....a Dry Treatise on Bullet Stabilization - I'll say right at the beginning, I am an unrepentant grouse junkie. Particularly, ruffed grouse. I'm sure some folks in the sporting dog/tweed jacket/ do...
    8 years ago
  • The Catholic Husband
    How Not to Degrade Women - We have all heard the excuse of “Locker Room Talk” given for some of the most inhuman and degrading commentary on women I have ever heard. More disturbingl...
    8 years ago
  • Finding the Forty-Seven: Canadian nurses of the First World War
    - It has been a long time since I've posted, but I wanted to let you know I'm alive and well and plan to start blogging regularly again soon. Until then, I'v...
    8 years ago
  • Trout Caviar
    Pheasant Back, Ramp & Wood Nettle Pâté - I’m usually pretty confident when I start to put together a new dish, because I’ve been cooking for a long time, and because, let’s face it, most “new” ...
    9 years ago
  • Montana Moments
    Disaster Averted - In 1898, a rooming house suddenly collapsed in Butte. Or, click here to listen on SoundCloud.
    9 years ago
  • Asylum Mobilitarium
    1st Cavalry Division, Korea 1951 -
    9 years ago
  • Dismuke's 78 RPM Blog
    “Red Wing” / “Rainbow” The Shannon Quartet 1926 - “Red Wing” Shannon Quartet June 24, 1926 (Victor 20173-B) Red Wing “Rainbow” Shannon Quartet June 24, 1926 (Victor 20173-A) Rainbow Here is a record that...
    9 years ago
  • Tovar Cerulli
    A buck in every Prius: Enviro-hunter hybrids and beyond - What if, at least once in their respective lifetimes, every Prius hauled a deer and every hunter drove a hybrid? The post A buck in every Prius: Enviro-hun...
    9 years ago
  • 1870 to 1918
    Memorial for Jenny Bennett - The Smoky Mountains Hiking club has announced the memorial hike for Jenny on September 13, 2015, on the Porters Creek Trail, with a potluck lunch time of f...
    9 years ago
  • 112 Letters Home
    Monday, February 19, 1945 - Happy Belated Valentine's Day! I've never gotten into Valentine's day as long as I've been with my boyfriend. I'd much rather worry about our anniversar...
    9 years ago
  • This Day in U.S. Military History
    December 31 - 31 December 1775 – George Washington ordered recruiting officers to accept free blacks into the army. 1775 – During the American Revolution, Patriot forces...
    10 years ago
  • HenriLeChatNoir
    Henri 6, "Cat Littérature" -
    12 years ago
  • Native American Recipes
    Native American Contemporary Recipes - Alaska Sockeye Salmon baked whole Flathead Syle North crow St. Ignatius MT. Salish Indian from Flathead Reservation Ingredients 1/2 cup real mayonnaise ...
    12 years ago
  • Southeast Native Food
    . Mvskoke History - Stephanie: Muscogee Creek are a Native American tribe of the Southeast. Traditionally the tribes were mound builders that lived in small towns with a dist...
    12 years ago
  • World War II Day-By-Day
    Day 1120 September 24, 1942 - In the North Atlantic 300-500 miles East of the tip of Greenland, U-432 sinks American SS Pennmar at 1.44 AM (1 man is crushed between a raft and the ship ...
    12 years ago
  • The Joy of Field Rations
    Vegetable Soup, Italian Army - *Classic Vegetable Soup, Italian Army, 1936-45* (La classica minestra di verdure) This recipe was adaptable to using whatever fresh vegetables were locally...
    12 years ago
  • A Family's Story - Horse Thieves and All
    Letters From A Son - WWII Letters from Jimmie A. Prime - December 10, 1943 - Link to a PDF of the original letter: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2444446/43-12-10.pdf Dear Mom We just found out today that our mail went out for the first t...
    13 years ago
  • Jimmie Prime's WWII Blog
    Jimmie's Letters Home - On this date sixty-eight years ago my father, Jimmie A. Prime, joined the Navy during World War II. He wrote home often during his time at war, and his mot...
    13 years ago
  • Ask a Ranger
    Fist Thing First! How do you tie your ranger hat (flat hat)? - The hat band should read USNPS. You want the "N" centered in the front of the hat and the knot you will be on your left. Wrap the band around the hat in ...
    13 years ago
  • Native American Food
    Contemporary Native American Recipes - [image: buffalo] * Native American Cuisine * ...
    13 years ago
  • Eat More Brook Trout
    My Kind of Guy - I just read John Corrigan’s piece in the Concord Monitor about Tim Savard and his talk to the Basil Wood Jr. Chapter of Trout Unlimited last month. Passion...
    15 years ago
  • Couvi's Blog
    Saddlers' Tools - These are scans from the Handbook for Quartermasters, 1930. Plate 148. – Saddlers’ tools, set Plate 148. – Saddlers’ tools, set list Plate 148. – Sa...
    17 years ago
Show 5 Show All

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