Lex Anteinternet

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

Saturday, November 23, 2019

Hunting (and fishing), Stateside, during World War Two.


A note.  And one that I'll note here more than I might otherwise when I'd otherwise note it.  This post engages in a lot of speculation.

That's because the details on this one are really hard to get.


A year ago I posted this item, which dealt with putting game meat on the table during World War One:

So you're living in Wyoming (or the West in general) during the Great War and there's talk of food conservation, and you are a hunter. . .

what would that have been like?

At the same time I posted that, I was going to follow up with one on the same topic, but for stateside during World War Two.  I'm finally getting back around to it.

And in getting back to it, I'm finding that I know a whole lot less about it than I thought I would, and its hard to find information on it.

Before I go on, however, I should note that, in fact, I actually did touch on this topic just a bit, and in a way that's relevant to our topic here. So to show I'm not completely remiss, I'll incorporate that old text back in, right below.  You'll note that we're not only repeating that post, but repeating the photo that we linked in above.

Today In Wyoming's History: October 14, 1943. Material shortages in World War Two and the Hunting Camp.

Deer season opens in much of Wyoming today, and apparently has for awhile, which brings us to this interesting item from 1943.

Today In Wyoming's History: October 14:

October 14


1943  Hunters were asked to donate animal skins to the war effort.  Attribution: Wyoming State Historical Society.

A Wisconsin deer camp in 1943.  I couldn't find a Wyoming example and this one was available for use. The rifle on the wall appears to be a nice Mauser with a set trigger, perhaps a rebuild of a World War One prize rifle.  Photograph courtesy of the Wisconsin Department of Fish and Game, which retains all rights to the same.

If this seems like an unusual request, we have to keep in mind that the leather requirements for the service during World War Two were quite high, and moreover various uniform items used different types of leather.  Cowhide was the most common leather in use, of course, but elk hide was specifically required for mounted service boots, which were used by cavalrymen, horse artillerymen and other mounted soldiers.  While its common to believe that mounted soldiers did not exist in the U.S. Army during the Second World War, this is in fact incorrect and only horse artillery was actually phased out during the war.  Mounted service boots continued to be made for service use as late as the late 1940s.

As noted in the entry above, leather was a serious war material during World War Two.  Indeed, I could have gone into more detail than I did.  As noted, cowhide was to be found in regular Army combat boots, service shoes (an ankle high boot) and shoes, but also in such things as tanker's helmets.  Horsehide formed the original leather for the famous A2 flight jacket, but apparently due to shortages that was changed to goat hide fairly early on. Those who received the early A2 jackets were lucky as horse hide is incredibly tough, although the goat hide jackets were loved by those who were issued them.  Most of those soldier were airmen, but not all of them were, as they were also a semi dress item for paratroopers, showing in part how many were made.

Sheepskin was the material for an early series of high altitude flight jackets mistakenly remembered today as "bomber jackets".  Like A2s, they were general issue for pilots in Europe until mid war when a synthetic flight jacket began to replace it.  They remain a popular item today, as does the A2, on the civilian market.

So I can see where deer and elk hides would have been in demand.

What's a little more puzzling, actually, in this photograph, is the presence of the young men in the photo. We tend to think of every available man of service age being in the service during World War Two, and as the war went on those eligible for conscription definitely increased as service standards decreased, strained by the war as they were.  But here we see at least a couple of men of service age in the photo.  Of course any number of explanations could explain what we're seeing. They could have been service men on leave, or who had been discharged for wounds.  Or ineligible due to health.  Or in war vital jobs where they were exempt from conscription, or otherwise so exempt.  

Hunting in World War Two, I recall my father telling me (who was in his early to mid teens at the time) was made a bit difficult because of cartridge shortages.  Of course, reloading already existed so some may have had prewar stocks of supplies.  Otherwise, shells were hard to get.  Gasoline to get to the game fields was as well, which might have increased the need to have a camp like these folks (who obviously had one before the war, however, as we can see the years that they've occupied it written on the wall).

Of course meat and other foods were also rationed during the war, which would have made a camp like this all the more attractive for other reasons as well.

Lots to ponder and consider in this one.

Which takes us back to our topic.

For those who may not have read it, the first post dealt with hunting in every sense during the World War One time frame, including conditions and technology.  Like a lot of topics we can and have addressed that contrast World War One with World War Two, the topic is a lot different for the Second World War in every sense. 

So first, take a gander at the first post, so you'll have a grasp, if you can't already, of the general conditions in the 1910s, and more specifically in the 1914-18 time frame.

We'll touch upon the lot of the same topics, and when we do we'll related back so that we've tied in what we've already written on. 

Okay with all of that in the works, let's start off with some basics.  First of all, there were a lot of good reason to go hunting in 1918.


Now, there are always a lot of good reasons to go hunting.  It's a good way to really connect with real nature, not some sort of sanitized look at me in my high tech gear pretending to be in nature.  And its a good way to get the protein you are actually evolved to eat.  It's good to be out in nature in general.  But in 1918, it would have also been a good way to get meat without being subject to the public harassment the government was engaging in at the time.

Easy to do, right?

Well, oddly not so much.

This is one of those topics I should know a lot more about than I do, as I already noted.  After all, my father was in his early teens during this period and he was a hunter and fisherman, so I surely know a lot first hand about this, right?

Well, not as much as you might think, although I can recall broaching the topic with my father.

Part of the reason, in retrospect, that I don't know that much about this in that second hand fashion is that my father really never said that much about his early life.  He did some, and in some areas, but on a lot of topics he was pretty quiet.  My grandfather died just after my father graduated from high school and that was such a painful event that he was just silent on a lot of things that involved my grandfather.  This is likely one of them.

I know that my grandfather was a hunter and fisherman from my father.  In terms of being a hunter, he was a bird hunter.  As far as  I know he was not a big game hunter at any point in his life.  At least in his married years he didn't own a rifle.  He did own a shotgun, and according to my uncle, was so good with a shotgun that he'd hunt pheasants with a single shot .410 and only take the small number of shells needed to fill his limit, and come back with that.  I.e., if the limit was three, he took three shells.

He hunted waterfowl as well, and indeed he used a double barrel, exposed hammer, Damascus twist  12 gauge shotgun for that.  Indeed, I have a letter he wrote to my father, early in my father's college career, noting that he had been invited to Thermopolis to hunt ducks.  I don't think of Thermopolis as a waterfowl destination today, but it does have year around open water and farm fields.  It probably does have good waterfowl hunting.

More than anything else that letter, I'd note, counseled my father not to worry so much.  I don't think of my father as somebody who worried a lot, but he may have.  I do.  But I digress.

Rationing

In my first post dealing with the Great War I noted the following as a good reason to get out in the game fields in 1917 and 1918.

Okay with all of that in the works, let's start off with some basics.  First of all, there were a lot of good reason to go hunting in 1918.

Now, there are always a lot of good reasons to go hunting.  It's a good way to really connect with real nature, not some sort of sanitized look at me in my high tech gear pretending to be in nature.  And its a good way to get the protein you are actually evolved to eat.  It's good to be out in nature in general.  But in 1918, it would have also been a good way to get meat without being subject to the public harassment the government was engaging in at the time.

World War One era poster, one of a series, on various "less" days.  As I've posted here before, for the nation's Catholic and Orthodox minority, the social pressure that applied to such things must have been a particular nightmare during World War One as they already had days in which they abstained from various foods and the government's actions, perhaps intentionally, didn't jive with what they were already doing. So they were getting days added to their already "meatless" days.

There was no rationing in the United States during World War One.  Or not of the type we'd see in World War Two. About the biggest thing that the government did was to deprive brewers and distillers of grain, which started them off to the temporary extension of those industries that would follow the war with the passage of the Volstead Act in 1919.  But meat wasn't rationed, for example.

The government urged consumers to save wheat by switching to other grains, such as corn and oats, for their recipes. It then restricted brewers supplies, and then cut them off, from corn and barley.

Which did not keep the government from engaging in an ongoing campaign of harassment which included all sorts of meatless and porkless days. There were no "deerless" days, or antelopeless days, or the like, so getting one would have involved getting some meat that some annoying campaign wasn't involved with.

In 1941 through 45 there was an additional reason.

Rationing

Grocery store customer presenting ration coupons.

During the Great War the government didn't ration food, or anything else, in the United States. It resorted instead to campaigns, including just outright shaming you if you didn't get with the program.  During World War Two, it outright controlled access to many commodities, including lots of foods.

This was a huge change from the First World War and was no doubt for a variety of reason, including an appreciation that the war wasn't going to be over quickly.  Indeed, World War Two ended more quickly than anticipated (so did World War One, after we reassessed what we'd gotten into).


The Office of Price Control, a wartime agency, was given authority to impose rationing on January 30, 1942, mere days after our entry into the war.  By the spring of 1942 sugar was rationed.  By November, coffee rationed.  The following March of 1943 meat, cheese, fats, canned fish, canned milk and various other processed foods were rationed.  Late war the limits started to come off, save for sugar which was rationed into 1947.


Added to that massive meat purchases by the government impacted supplies in any event.  Military disruptions of regular food supplies and transportation were an enormous feature of the war.  So even if you had enough in the way of ration tickets to buy a leg of lamb at the grocers, there was really no guaranty that it was going to be there.


Contrary to the way a lot of Americans chose to remember it later, rationing was very unpopular.  Black markets and cheating were endemic.  The government always knew that it wasn't popular but in an effort to reduce its impact promoted gardening to alleviate shortages.  Victory Gardens, as in World War One, were common in World War Two.


With that being the case, Victory Hunting, if you will, made sense.  If you couldn't buy meat downtown, shoot it out in the field.  If you couldn't buy fish, catch it.

Big Game

The best way to put quite a bit of meat on the table would logically be to get an animal that's pretty big. So logically, we'd expect big game hunting to have increased. But there were a lot of factors going into that, including of course that a lot of hunters were serving in the military.

Western ammunition advertisement from World War Two.  These are posted here using the educational and commentary exceptions for copyrights.  This advertisement gives a good example of how ammunition companies used their wartime manufacturing in the form of patriotic advertising while also providing the reason for the absence of their product from store shelves.


On that, however, let's note that there was never an era in which every single American male was in the service, as sometimes we also like to hear suggested. A huge number were, but quite a few were exempt from service also. Additionally, a lot of North American men never left our shores.  Stateside service is service, and that should not be noted.  But not everyone's service was like being in Saving Private Ryan.



Anyhow, it occurs to me now that what my grandfather hunted is what we'd expect a Mid Westerner to hunt in the first half of the 20th Century, which is what he was.  Bird hunting was good from where he was from, and it wasn't bad here.  So that's what he'd grown up doing and that's what he did.

By his early years deer hunting had likely declined in the Mid West and all big game hunting had very much declined here.  Indeed, Antelope, which outnumber people in Wyoming, was closed to hunting at some point point in the 1890s and the first hunting season wasn't reopened for antelope until 1943.  This is hard for modern Wyomingites to imagine, as antelope are now so numerous they're a road hazard in town.

For that matter, deer are also.  Both of these events, however, developed in my own lifetime. There were no antelope in town until I was in my twenties.  Now there are deer, antelope and turkeys in town.  Deer appear in a lot of towns all over the United States, and for that matter elk show up in towns like Estes Park, Colorado. That's all quite new.

In 1943, when antelope was reopened, antelope hunting had been illegal in the state for fifty years.  However, anemic law enforcement meant that it likely continued to occur until around World War One.  It was in that decade that the Game and Fish really began to become effective and have the real ability to actually enforce the state's game laws.  Indeed, we've already seen an instance here in which a Game Warden lost his life in 1919 trying to enforce the law, something that is in fact exceedingly rare, thankfully.*

Men my father's age who had grown up here always remarked how much more big game there was in the state in their later years than when they were young.  They attributed it to the solid work of the Wyoming Game and Fish Department and also to ranchers, who began to police illegal hunting on their own lands and who put in a lot of water improvements.  People don't think much about that now, but men of that generation frequently remarked how water improvements had created big game populations were they'd never, and we do mean never, been before.  They were well aware of the changes.

This is true for Wyoming but it's also true for lots of the West.  The huge elk, deer and antelope populations today are a produce of those early 20th Century efforts by hunters and fish and game departments.

What that does mean, however, is that in a lot of the country there wasn't nearly the big game there is now.  There were deer camps in the Midwest and deer hunting in the South and East.  In the West it occurred as well. But the huge populations we see today, well that's new and post war.

And all of that is a pretty significant factor.

So, just to start with, for family's like ours, in much of the country, there wasn't a really high chance that you were going to rely on deer or elk for the year simply because the numbers weren't there.  In some parts of the country, this wasn't the case and you could.

Which takes us to the next big game factor which had really changed, and then also hadn't changed to the present level.   Before we do that, however, we'll look at small game and birds, which are actually hunted more than big game.

Other Game


Another example of wartime advertising, this time for Remington ammunition and shotguns.  The dress shown for the duck hunter is correct for this period.  Note the lack of camouflage.

We've spoken mostly about big game so far.  Frankly much of what we've noted would apply to other types of hunting as well (and fishing to some extent), but as big game hunting is more of a dedicated enterprise, and as small game populations were very high in this period, with bird populations recovering from market hunting earlier in the century, the situation was truly different as to hunting these categories.  You could plan, however, to pretty easily supplement the table with game birds of all types as well as rabbits, as long as you could secure ammunition, and by and large, while it was very much limited, it was at least somewhat available.

In fact something odd about mid century not only made rabbits available for hunting, but had risen them to a threatening pest.  Rabbit populations exploded to such a level during the 1920s and 1930s that a lot of communities had "rabbit drives" to try to knock the population of them down. In spite of repeated annual efforts, it was only partially successful, and rabbits remained easily available.

Rabbits, in fact, had established themselves as a category of poverty food during the Depression, when their vast populations coincided with desperation.  Lots of people in various parts of the nation supplemented their tables with rabbit, and sending out a younger member of the family to hunt rabbits as a serious endeavor was extremely common.

Waterfowl was also in good supply during the 1940s and large numbers of men hunted ducks and geese on a dedicated regulated basis.  Indeed, waterfowl hunters fell victim to one of the great stateside disasters of the World War Two period, the 1940 Armistice Day Blizzard, that hit the Midwest.  Forty nine duck hunters in Minnesota alone were killed in the blizzard.  That was the year prior to the U.S. entering the war, of course, but it provides an example of how waterfowl hunting was doing well during the 1940s.

Indeed, one of the things if you look at ammunition posters and the covers of sporting magazines of this era that strikes you is how often they depict scenes of small game and waterfowl hunting. That's what was on hunter's minds, as that's what they were doing.

Of course, if you were going hunting during the war, for whatever you were hunting, you had to get there. . . .

Motor transportation.

In our earlier post on this topic, we noted that in the 1917-1919 time frame, motor transportation isn't what it was today.


So good to go, right?  Just pack up and drive out and go hunting.  After all, there were no "deerless" or elkless days.

Well, that's where the difficulties really begin when we look at this topic.

Col.. Billy Mitchell after hunting boars in France. This photo was taken during World War One under obviously different conditions than we'd see in the states, but the draped over the front fender method of carrying game was really common as long as cars had this general configuration.

Maybe, maybe not.

Now, by 1918 cars weren't brand new in the US by any means.  Scenes like that in The Wild Bunch in which a person is amazed by the presence of a car in the Teens are baloney, where as a scene like that in The Professionals in which a Model T is already old would have been common.  The Ford Model T was by far the most common automobile in the United States at the time, but the car had not achieved the universal ownership standard it would soon.  Lots of people didn't own a car at the time, even though a lot did.  People living in larger metropolitan areas, particularly did not. Surprisingly a lot of rural people also did not; they did not need them.

So things had changed by 1939-1945, right?

Well yes and no.

Motor vehicles came on rapidly after the Model T was introduced, and indeed it didn't take very long for the Model T to have substantial competition.  In fact, we've been running, in a different context, Gasoline Alley cartoons from 1919, in which the use of, repair of, and the buying of selling of, automobiles was a common and repetitive theme.  And that cartoon started in 1919.

By 1939, a mere twenty years later, the early automobiles had yielded to the next generation of automobiles, which are more recognizable to us.  As they came in, as another thread will shortly explore, so did the pickup truck.

Having noted that, a lot of early cars were in fact pretty truck like, or at least SUV like, if we don't require a SUV to be a four wheel drive.  They had good clearance and relatively low gearing, both of which were features of the fairly primitive roads they were expected to have to be driven on, at least on occasion.  As the other thread will note, even the 1954 Chevrolet Sedan I once owned had surprisingly good clearance and I'd use it to go fishing in the summer.  Lots of people did just the same with their 1920s and 30s vintage vehicles, which are the ones that would have been in use in the 1939 to 1945 time frame.**

Also in this time frame the pickup truck came in, with the first examples of production models come in during the 1920s.  The pickup truck rapidly became a highly common vehicle in the West.

Just like today, right?

Well. . . no.

What didn't exist in average hands were four wheel drives.

Four wheel drive as introduced mechanically very early, and it actually predates World War One. But it was also extremely primitive and heavy duty.  The details of how to make an effective four wheel drive vehicle on a less than industrial vehicle level really weren't worked out, with some odd ball exceptions, just prior to World War Two and frankly because of it.  Four wheel drives made their appearance in various armies between the wars and in the American Army and the British Army in particular there was a lot of emphasis put on developing them.  Indeed, in the U.S. Army the push was such that a dissatisfied artillery branch developed its own 6x6 vehicles between the wars and the Army manufactured them itself until the cost was simply to high to rationalize.  By that time, however, they'd advanced the technology sufficiently that by the late 1930s civilian manufacturers were ready to take over.

Just prior to the U.S. entering the war civilian manufacturers were at the point where they were ready to make 4x4s for the military in the light vehicle roll.  The Army adopted 1/4 ton  and 1/2 ton trucks, and spinoffs of the same, just prior to the war  Fairly early in the war these had been supplemented by 3/4 ton trucks.  In the light category, 1/4 ton, Willys was the leader with its Jeep, although the light vehicle manufacturer Bantam had taken a serious run at the field, and Ford was in it as well. At the 1/2 ton and 3/4 ton truck level, Dodge was the leader in the U.S. but Chevrolet was in the mix as well (and oddly the leader for Commonwealth 4x4s, which were heavier) and International was also making 4x4 trucks.

All that set the stage for post war, but it didn't mean anything in terms of civilian vehicles.  Civilian vehicles were 2x4.

And 2x4 vehicles, including trucks, are limited in the winter and in rough country.

Indeed, while it comes well after this, this enters into the area of my personal experience.

My father, who was an outdoorsman, only ever owned one 4x4 pickup, and it was one that he bought from me.  Otherwise, he didn't ever own one.  He acknowledged the rough country merits of 4x4s, but like a lot of drivers of his generation he never owned one as he believed that the increased number of moving parts they had meant they had to be maintained more and wore out quicker.  This belief was common.

Indeed, this belief was so common that area ranchers held it as well.  Quite a few ranchers in this region, well into the 1960s, relied upon 2x4s for daily ranch duties. They often, but not always, had a 4x4 but it was often a really heavy duty one like the flat fender style Power Wagon and they used it only for rough use and feeding.  They typically didn't use it as a daily driver, with there being some exceptions.

As an example of this, my father in laws father, who was a rancher and farmer his entire life, didn't drive 4x4s, just 2x4s.

For men of that generation, if conditions were really bad, they'd used tire chains to remedy it.  Everyone who had a 2x4 pickup had tire chains.  Now, a lot of people who have 4x4s do not have chains, although people who traverse the really nasty country in really nasty conditions do.  I do.  Even more amazingly, however, it was fairly common for men, and they were mostly all men, to just chain one tire.  In an era prior to positrac, all rear axles were "lockers" and that would usually work.

The point of all of this is this.  The same generation that relied on 2x4 pickups didn't go out in really horrible conditions when they could avoid it.  So, once winter really hit, and in a lot of areas it hits early, a lot of the country was just shut off.  There were no ATVs (I wish there wasn't now) and most urban dwellers didn't have horses, so the seasons in the really remote areas shut down at that point, whether they were open or not.

Added to that, the pickups of the day had surprisingly short range.

Up until at least the late 1960s pickup trucks had "saddle tanks", which were gasoline tanks that were in the cab of the truck.  The bench seat, and they were all bench seats, was right in front of the gasoline tank in the cab.  Off hand, the only exceptions I can think of were military trucks in the pickup truck class, which did have gasoline tanks that were located under the box.  Why this wasn't universally done I have no idea of.

Anyhow, the tanks usually only held around 13 gallons of gasoline.  As trucks of this era all got bad mileage, the far edge of your range was really only around 140 miles at the most.  Indeed, when I drive a 1960s vintage truck from Casper and Laramie, and vice versa, as a student, I stopped off in Medicine Bow to top off the truck.  Laramie is 145 miles from Casper.

Given this, it was the universal practice of outdoorsmen to take cans of gasoline with them if they were going way out into the hills.  My father, for example, would take a Jeep can with five extra gallons of gasoline if he was going up into areas that today I would never think of doing that for.    Not too surprisingly, therefore, most people stuck  much closer to town that a person might otherwise suspect.

Added to that, during World War Two gasoline was rationed in the United States.

The story of gasoline rationing is a little more complicated than generally portrayed.  For one thing, it didn't come into effect in all states at the same time.  Originally seventeen states on the East Coast were subject to it starting in May, 1942.  In order to make the pain of the effort universal, the Administration brought it to the remaining states by the end of the year.

Oddly, the effort didn't exist in order to conserve gasoline, but rubber. The logic was that with less gas there would be less driving, and that would save rubber.  Rubber was in short supply during the war and there were constant concerns about rubber.  In order to even get a ration stamp you had to demonstrate that you didn't have more than five rubber tires.  For the same reason, the speed limit was made to be a maximum 35 mph nationwide, half of that which applies on many of the state's highways today.

Stamps were affixed to car windows indicating their gasoline acquisition priority.  A stickers limited a car to 4 gallons of gasoline per week.  B stickers could get 8 gallons per week, and were issued to those who worked for a military industry.  C stickers were issued to those who were essential to the war effort, such as physicians, and X were priority stickers which allowed for unlimited gasoline purchases.

For most people, therefore, you weren't going to get much gasoline in the first place and therefore your ability to go very far was constricted.  You weren't going very far.  And if you saved up so  you could, you were only going to do so maybe once.  That would certainly impact how you did things, at a bare minimum.

But people did indeed go out.  Saving up gas rations, traveling with companions, there were ways to get it done, but with an economy of resources.

Shortages of other things

Among that economy of resources, we'd note, were cartridges.

Wartime advertisement explaining part of the reasons that shotgun shells were in short supply. . . they were going to the military.

Every manufacturer that could be pressed into making war materials was, and those that basically made something that was a war material was naturally pressed into service.  Such items as washing machines, for example were not made during the war as their makers were making other things for the military.  Cars weren't precluded from being manufactured for civilians after a date in 1942 and therefore 1942 was actually the last model of civilian vehicle until the war was over.

Ammunition manufacturers obviously had a specific wartime role to do.

While most civilians probably don't appreciate it, the military has made its own ammunition for a very, very long time.  Those familiar with cartridge cases can identify which government arsenal ammunition came from simply by reading the information stamped into the cartridge's base.

Be that as it may, the military never makes enough ammunition during war time or times of crisis to supply its own needs, so companies that made ammunition were busy during the war making it for the military.  That means, for civilians, ammunition was hard to get.  People did get it, but at least based on what I've been told, the supply of ammunition really curtailed a lot of hunting during the war. Even hand loaders would likely have found supplies of components very hard to get after a certain point, although I suspect that those who were dedicated shooters probably started stocking up in 1939.

Indeed, they would have had reason to as American ammunition manufacturers also supplied ammunition to Allied powers.  I don't know how extensive this was during WWII, but I know that at least the British purchased U.S. manufactured ammunition. As during the war certain U.S. weapons spread to our Allies, U.S. ammunition no doubt did as well.

Yet another example, this time from Savage. The Savage Model 99 was the most modern and unique lever action of the time and in fact had been purchased in small numbers during World War One by at least one Canadian militia unit.  The hunter is again shown in correct clothing for the era, note the red hat.

Suffice it to say, arms manufacturers also were busy with wartime production. However, while the war lasted for the U.S. from December 1941 until August 1945, there was no shortage of civilian arms and therefore this would have had very little impact on civilians during this time frame.

On those arms, quite a bit had happened since World War One, because of World War One.

Prior to World War One, the great American hunting rifle was a lever action and the great cartridge in most hunter's minds was the .30-30 Winchester.  We dealt with that, somewhat, in a footnote in the post on this topic in relation to the Great War.

The First World War exposed millions of American men to bolt action rifles for the first time, and by the same token to the U.S. .30-06 cartridge.  The combined impact didn't cause the lever action .30-30 to disappear, but it did make huge dents in its occupation of this field.  Soon after the war hunters took up hunting with bolt actions in greater numbers, some of those rifles being 98 Mausers that were brought home as war prizes.  More than a few of those rifles are still in use today.  Surplus M1903 Springfields and M1917 Enfields soon became available as well.  Winchester introduced its Model 54 bolt action, a rifle based on the M1903, in 1925 and a real evolution in this era began.

The Model 54 never achieved the legendary status that its successor the Model 70 did, which was introduced in 1936.  It went on to be a legend and achieved that status nearly from the onset of its introduction.

Remington actually beat Winchester to the punch, introducing the Model 30 in 1921.  In doing that, Remington was making a virtue out of necessity, as the Model 30 was a civilian version of the M1917, a rifle that Remington had made over 1,000,000 of for the Army during World War One, but which had seen an abrupt and financially devastating contract termination for as soon as the war was over.  Left with a large number of M1917 parts in process, in 1921 it took to using them for a civilian bolt action rifle.

In some ways the Remington rifle was better than the Model 54 and Model 70.  For one thing, it's "dog leg" bolt handle was so law that it would accept any scope without modification.  This was not true of the pre World War Two Model 70s.  As it was, however, this hardly mattered as few American hunters of the time used scopes.  Indeed, the Lyman Alaskan, with a mere 2.5X magnification, was introduced just prior to war and was about as popular of scope as there was, which says something as its a marginal product at best.  Target shooters were using the expensive 8X Unertl by this time, which is a super scope for the range.  The inadequacy of American scopes of the period is shown by the fact that the Marine Corps chose to use this scope, rather than the anemic Alaskan, in spite of it  featuring fragile mounts and being rather complicated to use.

Shotgun wise, the years between the wars made the Winchester Model 12, which had been introduced in 1912, absolutely dominant.  Other designs existed but the years between the war were the years of the Model 12, when it achieved absolute dominance.

That it achieved dominance is remarkable for another reason.  Up until extremely recently, and even to a fair extent now for that matter, most men who hunted big game tended to own one rifle, or perhaps two.  Multiple gun batteries were uncommon.

Frankly, they are now as well. And it would be totally untrue to suggest that there were not men who owned multiple rifles.  There very much were. But the rule tended to be that a man acquired a rifle, often as a gift, when he was of hunting age and that rifle, if it was new, tended to be the one he used the rest of his life.

That was very much the case for men that I knew who had grown up in the 40s, and for that matter it was also generally the case for men my age as well.  My own father had first gone big game hunting in the late 1940s with a borrowed .30-40 Krag lever action.  As he wanted his own rifle, and had limited funds, he ordered a surplus M1903 from the government soon thereafter but the onset of the Korean War precluded it from arriving.  At some point, his mother bought him a Remington 721 .30-06 and he used it for the rest of his life.  Two friends of his had Winchester Model 70s they had acquired when they were young and they never owned another rifle even though they were dedicated hunters.  All of these rifles were fitted with scopes from the period when they were new, and those scopes were never replaced.

For boys here, when you were old enough to big game hunt, which is somewhat older than it is now, the topic of rifles was an intense one.  Types and calibers were debated, and hit was hoped that whatever was given to you as a gift fitted your hopes as it was assumed you'd use it forever.  Quite frankly, that assumption was largely correct and undoubtedly many big game rifles given to boys here in their teens remain in use by their owners today exactly as anticipated.

This is noted here for a couple of reasons.  One is that it means that a lot of hunters in the 1940s were using rifles that were from much earlier decades and always would.  Bolt actions may have been the acknowledged cutting edge, but for men who had been shooting lever actions since their teens, that wouldn't have been persuasive enough as a rule to cause them to acquire something else.

Something about shotguns, however, was different.  It always has been to an extent as seemingly shotgun shooters are a lot more likely to change guns as time moves on.  Even in industry history this has had an impact as Browning's Auto 5 design became a gigantic success as hunters in North American and Europe adopted it, but the same design in the Remington Model 8 sold hardly at all.  Bird hunters were willing to give up the guns they were using in favor of the new automatic, rifle hunters weren't.

Before moving from the topic, hunting with pistols didn't exist, even though advertisements of an earlier era often shows a handgun carrying hunter defending himself against a bear.  Only one magnum cartridge existed for handguns at the time, the .357, and it was carried mostly by law enforcement officers.  Indeed, it was favored by highway patrolmen.

Bow hunting, that is hunting with a bow and arrow, made its reappearance in North American in this time frame.



A host of early bowhunters made their appearance after World War One, with the best remembered one today being Fred Bear, who was a bow manufacturer as well.  Dr. Saxton Pope and Arthur Young, however, were also quite active and today the records on bow hunting are kept in a periodic journal named after Pope and Young.

I'll confess that like a lot of topics in this thread, I'm fairly ignorant on the early history of bowhunting as, in part, I'm not a bowhunter.  I'm actually surprised to see how early its 20th Century reappearance was.

In my state bow hunting became legal, I think, in the 1970s.  Most, probably all, states have cartridge regulations that provide how large a cartridge must be, and by implication bow hunting was illegal.  That's really changed and now there's "bow season" and "rifle season".  In the 1940s, there was only rifle season most places, or simply the season.  Being not sure when cartridge requirements came in, I can't say exactly how that worked at the time.

Fishing

I haven't touched much on fishing, and I didn't in our post on World War One as well. That's really a significant omission.

One really notable development in the past few decades has been the development of "catch and release" fishing.  This really didn't exist when I was a kid and I frankly find it odd now.

Almost all of the men I at least somewhat knew when I was a kid fished, and frankly a huge number of them do now as well.  But the fishing when I was young implied fishing for the table.  People did let fish go, but if they were really too small to eat.  Going out and fishing for a day and letting everything go would not have occurred and frankly it's an odd thing to do from my prospective now.  I get why its done, but living a bit closer to nature than most, I still find it odd.

One thing that was notable to me even when I was young was that the men who grew up here who came of age in the 1940s tended to be fishermen first and hunters second. They did both, but they were inclined somewhat more strongly towards fishing.  Men who grew up after that, and now women, tend to be hunters first and fishermen second.  Men who grew up in neighboring Nebraska in the 40s, however, tended to be bird hunters overall.  Men who came from neighboring Montana were almost always big game hunters.

Why this was never occurred to me but in retrospect I suspect it had to do with available game populations.  People hunted (and fishing is hunting) what was available.  In Wyoming, the fishing was good but the big game hunting really wasn't.  This must have been the case for Colorado as well, as Coloradans were heavily fishermen.  Elsewhere, other game animals were more available and that reflected in men's primary focus.  People did everything, but there was, and tends to remain, a focus.

Anyhow, around here I know the fishing was good and all the men who grew up in the 40s had lots of stories about fishing.  They did a lot of it.  The fishing was for the table.  For men who came from Catholic or Orthodox families, moreover, fishing for the table meant fresh fish on Fridays, something that really mattered during a time when all Friday's were meatless.  That rule had become so habituated with my family that, as my father fished at least twice a week during the warm months, that we routinely had fish on Fridays long after it ceased to be a requirement.***

One thing about fishing that is different from hunting is that in some places you can do it basically in town, or very close to town.  In my area a major river runs through town, for example.  Having said that, it's also the case that it wasn't until the Clean Water Act of the 1970s that a lot of water in and around towns was safe to really take much out of, at least near town.  Here too, in my area three refineries bordered the river, and that may be perhaps why I was in my 50s before I saw anyone fishing in town.

Also, in the West, the summertime control of rivers was extensive.  This simply isn't done now, but rivers wtih dams were often choked down to nothing.  In Wyoming this is only done now in the are of Guernsey for some reason, but it was widely done in the 1940s.

An example of a pre war manufacturer showing its much different wartime production, again providing a reason that its products were not readily available.

World War Two came before the cost of fishing equipment became insane following the film A River Runs Through It, so it was additionally affordable.  But here too the war impacted things.  Companies that were capable of making rods and reels were capable of making other things, and they were.  Moreover, one thing that was used by fisherman as a matter of routine,  lead, used a critical war material that was being heavily used for war production.  So, here too, there were shortages.

On materials as we've noted changes in various things over time, one thing to note here is that the modern Spinning Reel didn't exist.

Ancestors of the Spinning Reel did, but at this point in time fishermen were usually using fly reels or Bait Casting Reels.  Spinning Reels of the modern type would be introduced by the French company Mitchell in 1948 and they've dominated in their application ever since.  But in the 40s, if a person was fishing a lake, he was using a Bait Casting Reel. For that matter, he might be using one if he was fishing a large enough river.

I have a Bait Casting Reel that dates back this far as it was my father's.  I have no idea whatsoever how to use it.  I also have a fairly old Mitchel Spinning Reel.  Until doing this post, it never occurred to me how old it might be.

Fly Reels haven't changed that much since the 40s and indeed well before that, except that this period saw the height of the popularity of the spring loaded fly reel.  I have one of these and when my daughter was young I pressed it back into service.

Pemco automatic reel






This is a Pemco fly fishing reel that's rather old, which I recently pressed back into service.  I'm pretty sure I have it mounted backwards here, but I rather absentmindedly did this as the line was feeding out from the other direction.  I rather obviously could have fixed that, but I just took it for granted that it was feeding out from the correct direction.

The action of this reel is rather odd, and I wouldn't buy one if it were offered now.  It's an automatic reel.  That is, the line retracts when the trigger is pressed.  Having said that, I'm rather surprised by how well it works.

Anybody know anything about these?

Epilog

I had the occasion to take this apart the other day, as I had to add line to it.  In the process, I stripped it down to clean it. Turns out it works much like a wind up clock.


Here's what keep the whole thing running. A long steel spring that is set to an axle, which is set by tightening the base.

This is another item that was my fathers' and it likely dates back to the 1940s.

Refrigeration

One thing that had definitely changed between the wars was the advance of refrigeration.

In our post about hunting during the Great War we noted:

Here too we have to consider something that came in during the last century but hadn't really arrived yet. .. refrigeration.  And more particularly freezers.

Now, this had changed and was changing.



The first home freezers were introduced just prior to the United States entering the war.  It's estimated that somewhere between 45% and 55% of American homes had home refrigerators, rather than "ice boxes" by the very early years of World War Two.  That's a pretty rapid transition, but of course it also means that roughly half the homes in the United States were still relying on ice boxes.




The first really successful widely used home refrigerator was General Electric's "Motor Top" refrigerator, which was introduced in 1927.  A separate freezer compartment was added to home refrigerators in 1940 for the very first time.  Some time after that giant freezers came about, but exactly when I don't know.  That may not have been until after World War Two, but I don't know  that.  What I do know is that it's not uncommon to find freezers even today in some households that likely date back to the 1950s, or at least the 1960s.  While the GE Motor Top refrigerator contains some dangerous constituents, they were so well built that apparently its not uncommon for them to still work today, although there are dangers to that.



The first large home freezer, or "deep freeze" as they used to be called, was introduced in 1945, too late to be common for homes during World War Two.  Today, big freezer units are really widespread and in fact they became so very quickly.  In fact, by the 1970s the number of homes that had a freezer was statistically 50% in electrified homes.  I don't know what it is today, but if it was 50% in the 1970s, it has to be at least that today.


Our home acquired one in the 1970s and big game hunting was the reason why.  It gave us the ability to freeze antelope and deer and keep them for long periods of time.

Now, while I have addressed this in the earlier thread, there's obviously something I'm missing here and I'm not sure what it is.  There was a lot of deer hunting across the country prior to the 1940s and people were keeping the meet somehow, but how?

One suspicion I have is that I think you may have been able to rent space in meat lockers, but I frankly just don't know that.  And I doubt every hunter would have done that. Something was done, but what?

One other thing to note is that in the cold parts of the country, and not all of the country is cold, meat was likely kept for a long time just by hanging it.  This is done in Alaska and the Canadian far north today, but I suspect it was also done in the more northerly regions of the country earlier on. Indeed, I also suspect that some people simply hung meat in cool places, if they had some sort of cellar in wich to to that.

You wouldn't do that now, as there'd be the fear that you'd get something awful, bacteriological infection wise.

Of course, fairly recently in this blog we looked at meat preservation.  I've never heard of anyone speak of meat preservation in terms of wild game, but there's probably some of that which occurs.  Indeed, in thinking on it, I know that people smoke fish now.  If you follow the links on this site you'll find that people even now do in fact smoke wild meat, including deer, and some salt it. There's plenty of recipes for corned deer, or corned bear, for example.  So maybe a lot was going on like this in earlier eras and I just don't know about it.  That's highly likely, in fact.

A note on equipment

I thought about adding a comment on this here, determined not to, and then changed my mind.

One thing I thought I'd note is that frankly equipment hasn't changed as much as people might suppose it has, either from 1914-1918 to 1939-1945, or from 1939-1945 to the present.  If you look through a hunting catalog and you aren't a hunter, or even if you are, you might naturally leap to the opposite conclusion about the present.  With one basic assumption, or maybe two, modern hunting equipment is very close to what it was in the 1940s, or frankly to what it was in the 1910s.

One thing that changed somewhere after World War One, and I'm not sure exactly when, is that regulations came in requiring visible clothing  for big game hunting and that clothing was red.  Now its blaze orange, although in Wyoming it also includes florescent pink.  Around World War One there were no such regulations, although it was already the case that in much of the country hunters were wearing red coats. By the 1970s the laws had changed from red to orange.  I'm not sure when the change itself actually came about.

A lot of people would note that outdoor clothing has certainly changed since 1945, and that would be true.  For one thing, warm coats in the 40s were almost always wool.That's true, but I'm not going to really get into the history of outerwear here.  I would note, however, that recently I've been seeing a lot of winter wool coats show up being worn by ranchers, so the wool mackinaw is coming back in some heavy outdoor uses. Wool vests certainly have.

At any rate, the 1940s remained very much in the wool era, although cotton had started to come on strongly due to the washing machine becoming common. During the Great War the modern washing machine was just coming on and it was still, quite frankly, more than a little bit frightening.  By the 1940s washing machines were arriving, their universal onset, as we've already discussed, only retarded by the Great Depression.  It was the modern washing machine that made cotton the clothing of choice for everything as it is so easily washable.  Lots of cotton clothing was becoming quite common for everyday wear and rough wear by 1939 and so we'd expect to see this in the game fields as well. We do, but not as much as you might suspect.  The durability of wool really caused it to keep on, keeping on.

One thing a person would note about hunting clothing of the 10s, or the 40s, or for that matter the 50s and 60s, is that it was likely a uniform color or checked, assuming that it was purpose bought.  Red "buffalo checked" shirts, for example, were common for hunters of the 40s.  Checked coats were as well.  Otherwise, a person might expect to see dark green or the like, a color associated with hunters since Medieval times.  Duck hunters commonly wore cotton duck coats, as cotton duck, the heavy canvas, is nearly water impervious and in fact can be water impervious if waxed.  Camouflage wasn't seen in game fields.

Camouflage has come in, and in strength since World War Two but it was not a feature of hunter's clothing at the time, something that modern hunters may well wish to ponder.  Duck hunters brought it in after World War Two and probably because of World War Two, as the "frog pattern" introduced by the US during the war was adapted to duck hunting clothing.  Indeed, this was so much the case that by the early 1960s Cuban counterrevolutionaries deployed in the disastrous Bay of Pigs Invasion and U.S. Special Forces troops sent to Vietnam who are seen wearing what appears to be WWII frog pattern uniforms are usually in fact wearing civilian "duck hunter" pattern clothing.  When bow hunting became big, however, and as bow hunters are exempt from the blaze orange regulations in most places and they increasing adopted it.  At first, camouflage in big game hunting indicated either that the hunter was a bow hunter or had served in the Cold War military.  Now its extremely common irrespective of the fact that most big game animals have a type of vision for which camouflage is fairly irrelevant.  Waterfowl are distinctly different, which is why it appeared first here.

For one reason or another camouflage has so come into American society that at the present time its seen simply everywhere.  Some of this is due to companies that want to associate with the activities of their employees, so they have camouflaged company hats, but a lot of it is simply a fashion trend.  Camouflage started to make its way into everyday wear after the Vietnam War and its very much everywhere now.

One change in clothing underappreciated, is that by the 1940s outdoorsmen were wearing rubber soled boots.  In the teens they weren't.  The era of hobnails had come to an end in North America, if not in Europe, where millions of soldiers were still marching in hobnailed boots. American soldiers weren't.  The era of the universal vibram sole was still thirty years away or so, even though the Swiss design already existed, but rubber soles were now standard in American outdoor footwear.  Interesting, soles that were regarded as revolutionary at the time would be regarded as inadequate now.

Hobnails were standard on most heavy duty outdoor shoes well into the 1930s.  Alternatively, men simply wore leather soled shoes with no hobnails. Shoes of this type are incredibly slick, but that's what was around.  Good rubber soled shoes started to be introduced in the 1930s and in 1937 Italian Vitale Bramani introduced the Vibram sole after designing it in the wake of the deaths of two friends of his mountain climbing.  Even before that Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. had praised much less aggressive rubber soled shoes in his book East of the Sun, West of the Moon, about hunting in the Himalayas.  Vibrams were so much of an advance that the U.S. Army had adopted them for mountain boots by World War Two, although the adoption of that sort of sole for combat boots in general had to wait until they appeared on Jungle Boots, from which they spread to all types of combat boots thereafter.

Sportsmen were quick to pick up on rubber soled boots and they were very much in the fields by the 1940s.

In terms of equipment simply carried by hunters, by and large most hunters today would find the equipment very similar and for that matter they would all the way back to 1910 and back.  I've already dealt with rifles and things associated with them, so will not deal with that again. Beyond that, most hunters carried a hunting knife and maybe a few accessories. Some, if they were way out back, might carry a compass and maps. All this is still true, except the compass has been replaced by now almost entirely by the GPS which is now almost a universal item owned and carried by hunters. While I don't appreciate a lot of modern technology, rather obviously, I"m a huge fan of the GPS.  Between WWI and WWII there were no advancements of that type at all, so there would have been no changes.

One thing I should note is that once in the game fields hunters were afoot. That sounds obvious, but today thanks to the unfortunate introduction of the ATV, this is much less the case.  I despise ATVs and are the one thing, together with the cell phone,t that I wish I could banish.  Anyhow, in the 1910-1920 time frame, as with the 1939-1950 time frame, once hunters were where they were going, they were afoot.

Well, maybe. 

Most hunters I knew who had started hunting in the West early on weren't shy at all about driving across the prairie if they felt it warranted.  It was very common.  It still frankly is with ranchers, who while they may complain about people "making new roads" aren't shy about doing it themselves.  In recent years, due to the onset of the ATV, there's been a dedicated effort to restrict vehicle access in all sorts of ways, and I"m in favor of that.  Hunters with vehicles in the 40s, however, were only really restrained from doing that out of concern for damaging their vehicles or wearing out hard to replace tires.  In the 1910-20 time frame vehicles were amazingly durable off road and this was no doubt the same, for those who had them.

For really rough country, then, before, and now, there were horses and mules. I don't know the extent to which town people in the 40s kept horses, but it may be a lot more common than I'd imagine.  I know that in my own town there were places to rent horses on the edge of town forever, and as far back as I can personally remember there were men who kept horses for no other purpose.  Indeed, this takes us back to vehicles a bit in that at least as far back to the 1920s and all the way through the 70s there were men who carried horses in the back of pickup trucks with stock racks.  I haven't seen this done now since that time.  There were also quite a few very light duty horse trailers that were towed by trucks we'd regard as light now.

Turning to fishing, I've already discussed reels.  Fishing equipment itself, beyond that, changed very little between World War One and World War Two, other than that the first primitive waders started to come in.

This was due to advancements in the production of rubber prior to World War One.   Commercial waders were offered as early as 1850, but it was really in the 1910s when they started to be really practical.  Having said that, rubber production in that period still wasn't really perfected for clothing, and it wasn't until 1942 that this would be the case, due to World War Two.

Anything that came in during the war wasn't available commercially until after the war.  Therefore, modern waders really came in at that time.  Prior to that, therefore, most men simply waded in with clothing somewhat suitable for that, something most would not do today.  Cotton trousers and canvas tennis shoes were very common for this in the 1940s. Chuck Taylor high top tennis shoes were in fact very common in this use, having come in during the 1920s, and that was the early practice of my own father. 

Indeed, being short of stature and having a hard time finding waders, and beyond that simply being cheap, wading in with light tropical weight Army trousers and tropical combat boots was my own practice up until extremely recently.  It's definitely different that using waders and even now in streams I'll do that.  Anyhow, if you want an idea of what the practice was during the Second World War era, or the First World War era, watch the fishing scenes of A River Runs Through It and you'll know.

Conclusion

Well, that covers a lot of ground, more than I meant to cover at first.  Hopefully its been interesting.  If you know something that's been omitted here, add to it.  Or if there's something to correct, do that.


_________________________________________________________________________________

*I should note the seriousness with which Wyomingites take game and fish laws is not universal everywhere. Recently an oilfield electrician told me about an event, some years ago, in which he was part of a local electrician's crew that marveled at the stew and chili that was served by a Texas oilfield crew everyday on location. They learned, in the process of this, that the crew was poaching deer and that is what they were eating.  They accordingly turned them over to the Game and Fish.

The Texas crew was stunned. They just couldn't grasp what is that they'd done wrong.

**During World War Two civilian manufacture of automobiles ceased. So basically it's nearly impossible to find civilian vehicles manufactured in model years 1943 to 1945 and there were really not many 1941 and 1942 models either.

***This is another way that I compere very poorly with my father.  For that matter, I compare poorly in every respect, of which this is a notable one.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/23/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Blog Mirror: Reasons for wilderness huts 2/10: hunting and fishing


Reasons for wilderness huts 2/10: hunting and fishing

By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/23/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Location: Finland

Friday, November 22, 2019

The Impeachment Testimony

All the Impeachment Testimony in transcript form, here.

Just in case you wonder what the testimony actually states after reading what other people have said it says.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/22/2019 08:37:00 PM No comments:
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Labels: Blog Mirror, The Impeachment Trial of Donald Trump

November 22, 1919. Carlisle Missing, Labor having a party, Petroleum and its costs.

Those following the posts here recently (fewer in number now that the Great War and the drama associated with it are over, somewhat), have been reading about the quixotic flight of Wyoming train robber, Bill Carlisle and may be disappointed to not find him here again.  Well, the pursuit having fizzled, he was off the front page.  He was out there, hiding, or something, but posses headed for the Hole in the Wall or expecting another train robbery were disappointed, and therefore the local newspaper's readers were as well.  Instead, they read about the coal strike and increased tension with Mexico.

First national convention of the Labor Party, Chicago Ill.  November 22, 1919

In Chicago a new political party was meeting, the Labor Party of the United States. This back when third parties still had a chance of success.

This party wouldn't have much, as such.  It merged with another party in 1921 to become the Farmer Labor Party.  That party lasted until 1936 when a further merger created the Federated Farmer Labor Party, which became the Minnesota Farmer Labor Party at that time.  It lasted until 1944.

The populist party was a left wing populist social democratic party.  Three of its members occupied the Minnesota state house as governor from 1931 until 1939, showing it to be successful.  It also sent Congressmen to Washington every year from 1918 until 1942, save for one year.  One year it sent five Congressman back east.  Four Minnesota Senators were also members of the party or associated with it.  In 1944 it reorganized and became the Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor Party which is affiliated with the Democratic Party, meaning that its relevance is minimal in real terms.  Democrats in Minnesotal are part of the Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor Party whether they know it or not, meaning that current Presidential candidate Amy Klobuchar is a member of it.

"Block 818 from the west".  November 22, 1919.

Down in Texas more panoramic photos of big oil fields were being photographed.  

Elsewhere, the Gasoline Alley bunch was meeting and pondering the costs of transportation.


Thanksgiving Day, then as now, was coming right up.  On this Saturday The Literary Digest anticipated the holiday on its cover with a Rockwell illustration.  Thanksgiving day itself in 1919 was on November 27.



By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/22/2019 06:04:00 AM 1 comment:
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Loyalty to Principals and Disappointment.

The test of a person's real commitment to a process is when it yields results they can't stand.

By that measure, most people, or at least a lot of people, have no commitment to the processes they claim to hold dear.  And we have that example in the form of two people whose ideals couldn't be more distant. . . Donald Trump and Pope Francis.

A lot of people don't like Donald Trump or Pope Francis.  I don't have any idea what the two men think of each other, assuming they often do, but to the extent there's been commentary by one about the other, Trump has taken some heat from Pope Francis.  He appears to have wholly ignored it, as we'd expect him to do.  As far as I know, Trump hasn't made any significant comments about Francis, but he may have.  Clearly they don't see eye to eye on nearly anything.

Which brings up the question of how can I link them in a common comment and what the title of this entry is about.

Donald Trump was elected President under the electoral system mandated by the United States Constitution. During the primary that ran up to his election the Democrats were horrified by him as well as a lot of traditional Republicans.  On the latter point, there was real doubt that he'd have the support of any Republicans at all when he took office, but he has, probably largely as the GOP determined it had no where else to go.

Trump has horrified a lot of people for a variety of reasons that all boil down to his personality in some ways.  He's brash, rude, crude and seemingly doesn't abide by any rules and often appears to be making things up as he goes (which later on appears to be less the case than it might at first seem). Democrats have absolutely hated him from the very first moment of his Presidency but he's far from popular with a lot of Republicans and independents.

In some ways he's a Rust Belt throwback that looks upon the United States as it was imagined to be in the 1950s and has acted to try to take the country in that direction.  In other ways, he's the President that the guys who have Confederate flags on their trucks and who claim to be Tea Party members wanted and still love.

Pope Francis, like most popes, was unknown to the world when he first became pope, but it didn't take long for him to gain the ire of Traditionalist Catholics.  His first encyclical, on economic matters, horrified them and he started to get assertions that he was a closet Socialist.  Since that time his vague statements to the press, poor choice of press correspondence, and constant flirting with what may be regarded as the hard edge of Liberal Catholicism has caused Trads to now hold him in contempt.

They aren't each other, to be sure, but they've acquired a nearly equal level of animosity.

And that animosity has grown so extreme, it betrays the principals, or the declared principals, of their opponents.

All American political parties have asserted, since the very onset, that at their core, over everything else, its democracy that they value.  So surely with Trump the thing is that his opponents will simply wait until 2020 and seek to secure an elected replacement.  Well, not so much.

From the very first moment of his presidency he's secured uniquely hostile opposition.  Talk of removing him started in some quarters as soon as he took office.  Into office there was serious discussion of removing him through a never used Constitutional vehicle to go around impaired Presidents on the basis that surely he's impaired, as nobody who thinks the things he evidently does could not be.  Right now, an effort to remove him is going on in Congress even though the election is only one year away. That process, the impeachment process, has been badly used twice before, but at least as of right now it appears that there's no illegality involved, just more of Trump's incredible willingness to mix the personal with the political and act in a fairly crude and brash manner.

With Trump it's now clear that there have always been insiders and officials who have pretty much ignored his instructions.  Indeed, it's amazing how many people who have had high jobs have just ignored him, to be celebrated for that fact later.  Trump came in with some raving about a "deep state" that was anti democratic and, as Victor David Hanson has recently written, recent events have shown that while there's no "deep state", political insiders and career bureaucrats are so vested in their concepts of a large state and how things should run that they have worked against the Chief Executive continually.

Pope Francis in turn has met with  an unmatched level of opposition in recent years.  Clerics whom we did not previously know of have publicly gone against him on some things.  He's received a Dubia (not without justification I might add), a process so rare that the authors of it were not themselves sure of how to go about it. An insider wrote a book accusing him of being mean and dictatorial  Most recently, and shockingly, some senior figures have accused him of heracy publicly and some senior church officials have questioned the legitimacy of his election as Pope.  That latter claim was one that was previously regarded as the province of nutty sedovacantist but as recently as a couple of years ago that started to evolve to where some of the Cardinals in the College were accused of violating a prohibition against campaigning and then now there's some well known Catholic figures in the Traditionalist camp who basically hold his election to be invalid, even though they don't quite go so far as to say that.

Well, what of this.

Americans claim that they value democracy as the primary virtue of politics.  If so, they ought to wait for elections rather than seek a judicial or political bypass to them.  We haven't been doing very well at that recently.  Indeed, since 1973 we've been giving up on that at an increasing rate.

It doesn't matter if you like the President or not.  Those who go back and read my comments on the 2016 election will see that I was stunned Trump was nominated and assumed that he would be defeated and worried what his election would mean. But here we are.  There's a year to go.  If people who find that Trump offends them are offended, they should find a candidate to take the offensive.  

Notably, on that last point, the candidates most qualified to take on that role are the ones getting the least attention in the Democratic field while those least likely to prevail in 2020 are sucking all the air out of the room.

Orthodox Catholics assert that the Holy Spirit protects the Papacy from causing permanent doctrinal error.  Therefore, while they can make their displeasure over Pope Francis' papacy known, and I'll place myself in the camp that frankly finds him to be not only a disappointing Pope, but one who I really wish had not been elected to the position, that doesn't mean that they can morally engage in wild sedovacantist theories (Patrick Coffin . . . are you listening?).  He was elected the Pope. Even if several Cardinals violated the ban, to their own detriment, against campaigning, that doesn't impact that fact.  He's the Pope.

We betray our real beliefs by what we want when we don't get what we want.  The real measure of our commitment to something is supporting it when we don't get that.

Institutions that are damaged by their disloyal supporters take a long time to recover.  Impeaching a President because he's the antithesis of liberal values and polite society, no matter how much his policies may be despised, means it will happen again and that the rift in the nation's politics will solidify for a generation.  Trump's supporters already feel that Liberals are engaging in a constant effort at a coup to their detriment.  Removing a President on thin legal grounds will in effect actually do that. Even trying the President on such claims will anger them for decades to come.  If there's any doubt, the mere fact that an impeachment is even being considered is due to the GOP making that same attempt on President Clinton in spite of completely lacking any legal grounds to do so.

The Papacy will survive I have no doubt. And no lasting damage or iffy doctrine will result.  But Traditionalist hanging around in the near sedovacantist camp is doing damage if for no other reason that it casts doubt on their beliefs.

There is a way to be a loyal dissenter.  It's hard, as it requires a person to act in accordance with their stated beliefs, rather than their deepest desires.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/22/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Canon Law, Catholic, Commentary, Donald Trump, Government, law, Politics, Pope Francis, religion, The Law

Blog Mirror: Southern Big Horns

Holscher's Hub: Southern Big Horns

Southern Big Horns





















By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/22/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Friday Farming, nature, Weather

Blog Mirror:

I couldn't agree more:

My Dog Is Not A Fur Baby


Dogs aren't people.

I really dislike the rampaging anthropomorphism that is going on in our society now days.  It shows how much we've departed from nature.  A dog is a dog, just as a cat is a cat.  Recognizing that doesn't demean them, it's to honor themselves for what they are, and us for what we are.


By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/22/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Animals, Blog Mirror, Friday Farming

Thursday, November 21, 2019

Chasing Carlisle. November 21, 1919

The Hole In the Wall Country, November 2019.

On this day in 1919, the newspapers were reporting that Bill Carlisle was headed for a location that was the archtype of destination for regional bands. . . some twenty years prior.

The Hole In the Wall.


After all, where would a Wyoming train robber on the lam go, other than to the same place that Butch and Sundance had?

Scene from the Red Wall Country, November 2019.

Well, it was a romantic notion.  Wyoming in 1919 wasn't the Wyoming of 1899, or even 1909, no matter how much the thought of a wild flight to the Hole In The Wall might have been fancied the imagination of a people for whom that region had been an impenetrable criminal fortress only a couple of decades prior.


In 1919, the territory was still wild in many ways.  Indeed, the first decade of the 20th Century saw an ongoing range war in the form of a cattlemen v. sheepmen killings.  As late as the latter part of the first decade of the 20th Century a criminal escapee simply disappeared forever.


But by the same token, by 1919 the criminal sanctuary no longer was one. There was no more Hole In The Wall Gang.  Most of the former members of that group were dead, in prison, or reformed.  Following the Tipton train robbery by The Wild Bunch, the authorities were no longer willing to tolerate the lack of law enforcement that allowed it to continue to exist and were willing to expend the resources necessary to penetrate it.  Prior to that happening, the badmen dispersed. Some would return, and as late as the 00s, but they weren't hitting trains.


Carlisle was.

Buffalo Creek Canyon, December 2019.

Indeed, part of the appeal of the Carlisle story is that he was already an anachronism, in his own time.  In 1919, the year after the Great War had ended, a war which had featured aircraft and submarines and mass violence on a mass scale, Carlisle was out on his own, in the vast countryside, raiding trains, badly.


People were sort of rooting for him.


Even as they knew, he'd be caught.


By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/21/2019 12:30:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1890s, 1900s, 1910s, 1919, Casper Wyoming, Crime, Personalities, police, Railroads, Rock River Wyoming, Transportation, Wyoming

It's a quid pro quo, but is it criminal?

The testimony of Gordon Sondland made it plain that Donald Trump did expect something in return for releasing military aid to Ukraine, and that was a Ukrainian investigation that included investigating the nature of Hunter Biden's activities in Ukraine.  Beyond that, and perhaps more importantly, his testimony makes it plain that knowledge extended to others in the administration, including Vice President Pence.*

While there will be those who continue to deny this, it can't rationally be at this point. But that still doesn't answer the question.

Is it illegal?

And if it isn't, is it an impeachable offense?

This gets us uncomfortable close to the "everybody does" it defense in some ways that was raised by an administrative official some days ago . . .if a defense is needed.  One well argued op ed, by Daniel McCarthy, argues that no defense at all is needed, and we'll get to that in a moment.

Let's start with the "quid pro quo" aspect of this.  That means, in Latin, "this for that".

A quid pro quo arrangement isn't illegal per se. Indeed, lots of things people do every day are done on a quid pro quo basis, and almost all business deals are based on it to at least some extent.  In the use in regard to crimes, however, it's meant to suggest something that's an illegal exchange.  A bribe, some type of coercion, or the like.  Even where bonafide professional criminals are involved, however, a quid pro quo arrangement isn't necessarily illegal.

But quite a few are.  Don Coreleone's taking care of the thugs who hurt the morticians daughter, for example, in The Godfather, in exchange for a favor, is illegal.

But was this illegal?

It's not clear at all that it is.

Keep in mind, and Americans need to very much keep in mind, that an immoral exchange isn't necessarily illegal.  Indeed, while Americans are very fond of claiming that "you can't legislate morality", they only mean that in the case of their own favored vices.  Americans are very much in favor of legislating morality as long as its the immoral acts of other people.  In recent years, entire crimes have been added to the books based on things being unfair for other groups I'm not part of, for example. The outlawing of insider trading, for example, is just that.  Insider trading is a natural advantage of insiders, and making it illegal is legislating morality.

When we hear cries to put bankers in jail, and the like, for bank failures or something, that's what we really mean. They made a lot of money without caring, perhaps, about everyone else, and that's bad.  Bad behavior should be illegal, we feel.

Except for our own.

Be that as it may, not everything has been covered yet, and Donald Trumps pressure to have a foreign government investigate the son of a political rival isn't clearly illegal.  At least it isn't to me, although I profess not to be an expert in the criminal law.

Indeed, quid pro quo arrangements seem to be standard fare of Executives in diplomacy.  We tolerate a lot of them, as long as they're of a somewhat different nature. For example, if arms had been voted for Iraq, we'd tolerate an Administration withholding them until internal reforms were made in the country.  And we'd likewise support withholding aid to a country if an administration was pressuring it to address a problem we all agreed was a problem.

We'd even tolerate an insistence that a regime conduct a criminal investigation, as long as it didn't seem so targeted.  So when people argue that this isn't clearly illegal, it in fact isn't clearly illegal.

Almost nobody is willing to actually defend the conduct . . except maybe some people implicitly are. That takes us to the op ed in the New York Times.  In it, the Times author argues that not only do some not see a problem, but that Trump's conduct is simply Trump being Trump and, moreover, Trump engaging in the very activity that he was elected to perform. That article is here:

Trump Is Doing Exactly What He Was Elected to Do

Don’t impeach him. His actions have all been within the scope of the presidency.
And like it or not, the article has a point.  Trump might not have seen this as wrong as his world view is so different from most who are in politics, and who follow it.

Indeed, for those in politics, and those who really follow it, this seems so shocking as its beyond the established political pale, which Trump himself is also beyond. This means we now have two groups, irrespective of party, that really don't conceive of the political world even remotely similarly.  For those who really like politics, this is so far beyond the established rules, it seems like it is criminal, even if it isn't. For those who feel that all politicians have let them down, this is just a businessman doing what businessmen do, and there's nothing to complain about.

And that explains why the needle isn't moving at all on who supports, and doesn't support, the President.

Impeachments by their very nature are highly risky.  They threaten to wreck democracy simply by occurring. Those in the Democratic Party who argue that impeaching Donald Trump is necessary to preserve democracy should consider that, and might be better off putting their efforts into the election instead.  Both prior impeachment trials conducted by the Senate have been wholly unjustified and served to make things worse.  This effort won't succeed. 

Indeed the last effort was hopelessly tainted by the fact that Bill Clinton hadn't come even remotely close to engaging in an impeachable offense.  He had not violated the law.  Here, it's not clear what the law is that Trump can be accused of violating.  Engaging in improper pressure on a foreign government isn't a crime, it's just really bad behavior.  Lots of administrations engage in really bad behavior, but this is uniquely bad as its uniquely outside of the rules.  But be that as it may, it doesn't appear to be criminal.

Everyone seems to be aware of this.  The Democrats in the House, therefore, have been trying to use the term "bribery" now rather than quid pro quo. It doesn't seem to really fit that definition, however, and it certainly doesn't from a criminal prospective. That makes the effort much closer to a vote of no confidence.

But our Constitution doesn't feature such a provision.  As it doesn't, use of the impeachment process to do that, which frankly will be the third such attempt, stands at some point to result in a success, at which point no President will be safe from those who oppose him attempting it.  During the portion of my life in which I can recall people's views on Presidents, not one single one hasn't had some rabid detractors, and for at least four of those Presidents outside of Trump there are those who used the word "impeachment" pretty loosely.  At least two of those Presidents did things that were arguably illegal, but nobody would have seriously considered impeachment.

Donald Trump has been a unique President in nearly every fashion imaginable.  A person doesn't have to like or dislike him to acknowledge that.  He received less than 50% of the popular vote and a person has to at least suspect that he will not gain reelection in 2020.

In recent years political elites have operated on at least one other occasion to use the judicial power to remove questions from the voters.  All that has ever done in this country is to preserve an argument in a more virulent form.  Removing Donald Trump for bad conduct will confirm in the minds of his supporters that he was taken out by a "deep state", and in an odd sort of accidental way, that argument will gain credibility as it will be a professional political class that would be taking that step, horrified as it is by Trump acting outside the rules that almost everyone agrees are there.

At least at this point, that action entails more long term risks to the nation, no matter what a person's views are, than forgoing that attempt.  At a bare minimum, it won't work, and only serves to focus an argument over Trump himself, rather than actual policies, for the fall election.

These are odd times, and odd times are dangerous.  With seemingly only a few days left in the hearing, the House should go home for Thanksgiving and ponder the deeper questions that this episode raises.  The risks of acting here would seem to exceed the advantages of just waiting until the fall.  On this, Nancy Pelosi's original instincts are likely correct, showing that her supporters who credit her with vast political skills would seem to be right at least here.


*The inclusion of Vice President Trump implicitly means that if President Trump is removed from office via impeachment, the Vice President logically faces the same possibility.

By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/21/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 2010s, 2019, Crime, Government, law, Politics, The Impeachment Trial of Donald Trump, The Law

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

The lesson of past hearings. . .

Joseph Welch, hand in head, being questioned by Joseph McCarthy

Joseph Welch was the chief legal counsel for the U.S. Army when it fell under the gaze of Joseph McCarthy.  McCarthy asserted that there were Communist that had not been brought to light by the Army in the Army, in defense plants, or in institutions associated with national defense.  The claim wasn't actually wholly without merit, actually as at least a few Communists, in 1954, were in the service and more in industry, which was not surprising if we consider that the 1930s had been the high water mark of American Communism and there were more at that time, the 30s, than there ever would be again. Some would end up in the service by default, and indeed at least one openly Communist American officer, a veteran of the Spanish Civil War, received the Silver Cross for heroism in the Pacific before later being killed in action. The Army certainly wasn't a hotbed of Communism, however, and the claims were seen as extreme at the time.

On June 9, 1954, Welch, now in day 30 of the hearings, challenged McCarthy confederate Roy Cohn to provide the Attorney General with the names of the 130 subversives that McCarthy claimed were working in American defense plants "before sundown" that day.  That wasn't done, but McCarthy called out the name of a lawyer who worked in Welch's Boston law office as a member of a Communist front organization.  The lawyer had indeed been a member of it in his youth (recall the comment about the 30s again).

When this occurred, the famous exchange resulted.  Welch at first commented:
Until this moment, Senator, I think I have never really gauged your cruelty or your recklessness. Fred Fisher is a young man who went to the Harvard Law School and came into my firm and is starting what looks to be a brilliant career with us....Little did I dream you could be so reckless and so cruel as to do an injury to that lad. It is true he is still with Hale and Dorr. It is true that he will continue to be with Hale and Dorr. It is, I regret to say, equally true that I fear he shall always bear a scar needlessly inflicted by you. If it were in my power to forgive you for your reckless cruelty I would do so. I like to think I am a gentleman, but your forgiveness will have to come from someone other than me.
McCarthy should have known better than to attempt to joust with a figure like Welch, but he kept on and didn't yield, resulting in:
Senator, may we not drop this? We know he belonged to the Lawyers Guild ... Let us not assassinate this lad further, Senator. You've done enough. Have you no sense of decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?
McCarthy still wouldn't yield. Welch rebuked him and informed him he wouldn't answer any more questions. The audience broke into applause.

McCarthy was wrecked forever.

Yesterday Republicans in the Impeachment hearings suggested that Lt.Col. Vindman, the child of Ukrainian immigrants, might not be fully loyal to the United States as the Ukrainian administration offered him a position as their defense chief several times.  He declined every time.  There's no suggestion that he ever entertained the offer, and to entertain it would not be a sign of anything in particular.  After all, Douglas McArthur was head of the Philippine's army after retiring, the first time, from the U.S. Army. That didn't make him disloyal.  And apparently at least one senior American Air Force officer with Eastern European ties has taken up such a position.  Claire Chenault spent years in the service of the Nationalist Chinese, but he's never been considered to have been disloyal.

The real question should have been what did Lt. Col. Vindman hear, and what did it mean.  Both Vindman and another witness said that they were distressed by what they heard, Vindman very much so, but that they didn't hear the word "bribe" and neither came so far as to claim what they heard was regarded as a bribe. Vindman did go further than the other witness in his opening remarks in upholding the reputation of the removed ambassador, a noble thing to do, but perhaps straying outsides of the confines of what he should have done.

Still, for the second time in two weeks the House Republicans have managed to attack a witness and have the attack fall back on themselves.  

Joseph McCarthy attacked a lot of witnesses in his hearings in the early 1950s.  Now forgotten, McCarthy's claims were a lot more accurate, indeed highly accurate, than recalled.  He benefited from the work of a prior committee from the 1930s and he was also almost certainly getting information secretly and without Administration knowledge from the FBI.  But his behavior just went to far.  Attacking the Army itself went too far, and then attacking Fred Fischer in a collateral attack went way too far.  It was so devastating, in fact, that McCarthy's apologist have accused Welch of cleverly setting  it up.  But McCarthy' set himself up.

Americans don't like politicians attacking servicemen, and the GOP, which has been closest to the service since World War Two, has members who dislike it most of all.  McCarthy didn't survive attacking the Army.  Today's House Republicans would have done well to remember that.

The results of these hearings, as already noted, are foreordained.  But the election isn't.  For undecided voters seeing a soldier like Vindman impugned may be hard to forget. 

McCarthy ended up censured later that year.  His career declined.  He died in 1957 with the cause officially being hepatitis, but which is widely believed to have been due to alcoholism or contributed to by alcoholism.  He was 48 years old.  He left behind a wife of for years, Jean, whom was 33 years old at the time of his death.

Joseph Welch would die three years after that, at age 69.  He's often best remembered today for his role as the judge in Anatomy of a Murder, which he played after his role in the Army McCarthy hearings.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/20/2019 06:30:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1950s, 1954, 2010s, 2019, Army, Personalities, Politics, The Impeachment Trial of Donald Trump, Ukraine

November 20, 1919. Rumors


Carlisle was being reported as sassy and successful on this day in 1919.  In fact, his attempt at robbing a Union Pacific passenger train near Medicine Bow failed due to his own scruples. . . he couldn't rob soldiers, and he'd been wounded disarming a passenger.


Rumors were circulating that he'd sent a bragging telegram.  I'm not that familiar with the details of this story, but I don't believe that he did.


He had been lost track of, that's true.


But I don't believe that he'd made it to Casper.

The press was giving him greater abilities than he had.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/20/2019 05:53:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1910s, 1919, Casper Wyoming, Crime, Medicine Bow Wyoming, Newspapers, press, Railroads, The Press, Transportation

Mid Week at Work: Mule on main street in Columbus, Georgia. May, 1941.


By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/20/2019 12:01:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1940s, 1941, Animals, Equine Transportation, Mid-Week at Work

For those trained in courtroom law. . . .

one of the really aggravating things about the House impeachment hearings is how gut wrenching funky the procedure is.

As an example, in a trial, let's say a criminal trial, the prosecution presents its opening statement, and then the defense.  Then the evidence is put on. At the conclusion of the trial, the prosecution delivers its closing, then the defense, and then the prosecution, which has the burden of proof, gets the last word.

Often the court puts the lawyers on the clock. As in, each side gets X minutes for its statements.

In the impeachment proceedings, however, which I guess are sort of like a grand jury, there were openings, then witnesses, and then on Tuesday the 19th (the resumption of testimony), new statements again.

That's absurd.

The entire wacky process really shows why a real jurist should preside over hearings of this type so that they're run like real judicial proceedings. I'm not opining on the outcome in any fashion, but giving House members repeated openings is really gratuitous and shows a real lack of ability.  If you didn't cover it the first time, cover it in your closing.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/20/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 2010s, 2019, Commentary, law, Politics, The Impeachment Trial of Donald Trump

Mid Week At Work: Howitzers head west: Military sends guns to B.C. for avalanche control

Howitzers head west: Military sends guns to B.C. for avalanche control: Castanet- The military has mobilized, moving large 105-mm Howitzers west from Manitoba. The annual pilgrimage is part of the Canadian Armed Forces efforts to keep drivers along the Trans-Canada . . .
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/20/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: Canadian Army, Mid-Week at Work, Weapons, Weather

Tuesday, November 19, 2019

November 19, 1969. Apollo 12 Lands on the Moon.


By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/19/2019 06:46:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1960s, 1969, NASA, Outer space

International Men's Day, 2019

Photograph of a Soviet soldier prior to the Battle of Kursk, 1943. This photograph is really remarkable in that it shows a soldier in the Red Army making a visible religious devotion in a state that didn't approve of that.  Given the style of the cross, he was likely Catholic and probably Polish or Ukrainian.

I'm sure that this day will go largely unnoticed and unobserved.  I'm only aware of it due to Kursk.  Perhaps its a day that can serve for meaning more than its intended to mean.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/19/2019 06:04:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1940s, 1943, 2010s, 2019, Catholic, Christianity, International Men's Day, Photography, Red Army, religion, World War Two

November 19, 1919. Robbing No. 19 and Rejecting the Versailles Treaty


Robbing a train as soon as you escape the pen for robbing trains does seem like a pretty bad idea.  At least one paper wondered if it was actually him.


You have to wonder what Carlisle was thinking.  How did he plan on getting away with this?


By this time, it was also clear that the proposed Versailles Peace Treaty was in real trouble in the U.S. Senate.


Indeed, it was in so much trouble that on this day in 1919, the Senate voted to reject the Treaty, with Republican opposition to the League of Nations being a major cause of that vote.


There would be a couple of more attempts, but the United States never did ratify the treaty, passing instead a peace treaty with Germany later that adopted much of it, but not all of it. The US would not join the League of Nations.
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Labels: 1910s, 1918-1919 Paris Peace Conference, 1919, Crime, Diplomacy, Medicine Bow Wyoming, Personalities, Railroads, Transportation, World War One, Wyoming
Location: Medicine Bow, WY 82329, USA

You have to see the battle flag (follow the link).

Today in World War II History—November 17, 1939 & 1944

POSTED: Sunday, November 17, 2019 by Sarah Sundin
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/19/2019 12:00:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1940s, Blog Mirror, boats and ships, U.S. Navy, World War Two

Monday, November 18, 2019

First week of Impeachment Hearings Highlights and Impressions

The country, for only the fourth time in its history, has now endured an opening week of impeachment hearings in the House of Representatives.

Some people who have the time have watched it blow by blow and minute by minute.  But most of us haven't.  For those of us in the latter category, this think offering is served up.

The highlight that shouldn't have been turned out to be the testimony of former Ambassador to the Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch.  The daughter of Russian immigrants, Ms. Yovanovitch is a career foreign service officer. She was removed from her Ukrainian position, under criticism from President Trump, before the now infamous phone call.

The fact that she was removed before the phone call should have made her a fairly irrelevant witness unless the Democrats were able to lay foundation, which it does not appear that they could do, that she was removed as she was an obstacle to the quid pro quo suggestion.  It now appears quite certain, as we'll note below, that this was more than a flight of fancy for Trump at the time of the call.  Proving something like that is very difficult to do, and the GOP members of the House knew that and initially were taking the position of "why are you here?".

That blew up with the President, who claims he isn't watching the hearings, started tweeting about the former Ambassador while she was testifying.  The tweets were insulting and the House Republicans couldn't endure it.  In the end, they praised her service and the House gave her an ovation as she left.

The President and his Twitter account have long been subjects of discussion and now the nation is more or less immune to them. Still, this brings up one of the things we'll note below.  Presidents shouldn't have Twitter accounts at all, and this conduct is not dignified. In addition, Twitter is frankly extremely juvenile in general as any conversation limited to a few words would have to be, and to the extent it isn't, it's when it points to something else. The fact that the President can't keep off of Twitter is itself quite disturbing.

The second think that occurred happened after the hearings were over for the week when it was revealed that a former National Security official has testified in a closed deposition that Gordon Sondland, envoy to the European Union, acted on the President's orders to require Ukraine to open an investigation into the Biden's.

So where does this leave everything?

It might make no difference at all, long term.  Indeed, it now appears that the Impeachment Hearings aren't affecting the views of the electorate at all. Those who support Trump still do. Those who oppose him rather obviously still do. The murky middle, which hasn't made up its mind, still hasn't, left stuck as they are between tolerating a President that they don't like personally and at least partially politically or turning towards Democrats who themselves are turning more and more to the left.  Indeed its notable that middle of the road Democrats are suddenly either entering the race or gaining ground in the polls, and that President Obama even made a statement about the hard left positions of his party over the weekend.

In terms of impeachability, the question still remains whether or not the conduct complained of is actually illegal.  It frankly may very well not be.

For that reason the Administration floated the "everybody does it" defense a couple of weeks ago, which wasn't well received. And frankly, the couple of instances of analogous, roughly, conduct that I can think of in some cases were illegal.  Not all, but some.  Be that as it may, not everyone does this.

But that may make it really politically unwise, not illegal.  For that reason, some Democrats have suggested that the "misdemeanor" line in the Impeachment text of the Constitution means "misdemeaning the office", whatever that is.

That argument takes the power really close to a vote of no confidence type of roll, which is what these hearings really strike me as.  While what exactly the founders meant when they stated that a President could be removed for "high crimes and misdemeanors" is somewhat unclear, they didn't mean that the process could take on that role.  The House should be, therefore, extremely careful about evolving it into that, as once that occurs, there's no end to claims by an unhappy political party that an opponent is "midemeaning" his office.

Probably aware of that, there's been a recent effort to convert the "quid pro quo" conversation into bribery, but that frankly doesn't float legally.  Lots of conversations, including reprehensible but legal ones, have a quid pro quo aspect to them.  The real time tweeting by the President about the Ambassador was floated as witness tampering, but that is really a strained suggestion as well.

On that latter point, something occurred to me that I was going to post and then I heard a pundit note the same thing, depriving me of a clean "you heard it hear first" claim.  I'll claim it anyhow.

There have been a lot of comparisons to this process and earlier impeachment efforts, but none of them really feel right.  It didn't occur to me at first, but then the tone of the last week caused it to occur to me.  These hearings don't feel like prior impeachment proceedings, they feel like the hearings of the McCarthy Era.

Now, before anyone jumps up to make assumptions on that, I'm not making a direct overall comparison and I don't even really hold the fully standard view of Joe McCarthy that is accepted text. But what I will note is that McCarthy, who really broke very little new ground of any kind in his hearings (and who was almost certainly being fed information from the FBI), grew increasingly extreme in his tone.  The entire thing broke down and his career was ruined during the McCarthy Army hearings at the point at which witness Joseph Welch asked him "have you no decency sir?"  After that, McCarthy was done.

The point here is that McCarthy was not a polished man and came across as a bull in a china shop from the onset.  Other hearings on the same topics had happened before and in fact were going on in the Senate at the same time.  McCarthy's behavior drew the attention of a press that didn't like him and his own boorish behavior brought him and his work down.  He was a hero for awhile, but in the end, things blew up on him.  When they did, the press and the Democrats really turned on him and his own party distanced itself.

President Trump should take a lesson from that, but likely won't, and can't, just as McCarthy seemingly couldn't arrest his own inclinations even when there were warning signs it was going to get him into trouble.  The entire atmosphere here has bee similar to the McCarthy era with the President taking the role of McCarthy.  Attacking the Ambassador definitely went too far.  The hearings now have the feel of those 1950s hearings in which civility was completely stripped and accusations flew out in public in a raw form.  In the end, that didn't serve McCarthy well even though, when his claims are looked at years later from a factual and analytical light, he was more right than wrong.

All that should give us a little hope, however, as when the McCarthy era ended the nation returned to a normal level of civility very quickly.  We've been living in an increasingly rude and ruder era now for at least twenty years.  If we're now surprised by how quickly insults fly, we probably shouldn't be.  Maybe this is where the pendulum swings and people start addressing each other with more civility.  If so, perhaps we can now quit having an entire selection of East Coast politicians that should like they're playing roles in Goodfellas.

And maybe Congressman Jim Jordan can find his coat.

Off to the next week of hearings, which may conclude them.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/18/2019 06:48:00 AM No comments:
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Labels: 1950s, 2010s, 2019, Government, law, Monday at the bar, The Impeachment Trial of Donald Trump, the spoken word, The written word, You heard it here first

Some thoughts on how little the public understands about the Supreme Court

People are truly clueless on how the United States Supreme Court functions, or what it even does.

There are, for example, a lot of news stories around right now suggesting that the Supreme Court had determined that plaintiff's who have sued Remington Arms have a meritorious suit.

The Court has determined no such thing.

The Court simply didn't act to intervene to stop the suit.  It rarely does that on any suit.  Anyone who has any familiarity with the Court at all would have been stunned if the Court did take that step.  

What it hasn't done is is to decide the merits of it at all, or whether there's any legal basis for the suit.

The Court will be taking up DACA.

DACA is just the sort of nightmare scenario that the Court now has to deal with as Congress will not do its job.  Indeed, that's basically the issue.

It's been clear for at least forty years that Congress needs to do something on immigration.  Nearly anyone who has looked at this has that opinion.  But it won't.  It won't in part as doing something is tough and any bill will be unpopular.  It also won't as the Democrats tend to see every immigrant as a future Democratic voter (a dangerously inaccurate assumption) and the GOP tends to seen every immigrant as a future servant of some sort (likewise inaccurate). Both parties also tend to secretly feel that immigrants serve a larger American economy by depressing wages and therefore prices, although nobody is going to admit they think that.  The reason that they don't want to think that is that this make both parties co-conspirators in an economic concept in which the lower rung of American jobs is made to intentionally evaporate. . . except for immigrants occupying them, and it also operates as an intentional act to keep wages in those occupations at rock bottom.

So it's easier to do nothing whatsoever.

Congress' failure to act caused President Obama to bring DACA into effect through an executive order.  That was almost certainly an unconstitutional act, but as its a lot easier to do nothing rather than something liberal members of Congress cry about the Court acting on DACA, which would in effect be a direction to Congress to do its job.  

You'd think that Congress would be screaming to resume its traditional powers, but of course it can actually do that just be doing it. And indeed, recently the Democrats have been voicing that view as they've been very unhappy with some things that President Trump has done.  Not so unhappy as to actually decide that they'll cause Congress to resume its mandated functions, but unhappy enough to suggest that they might to that.

Anyhow, DACA is going before the Supreme Court and some seem to think that this means they'll be deciding whether it was a good idea or not. They won't. The only question is whether the executive order that brought it about was constitutional or not, and it probably isn't.

Protesting in front of the Court has really become a big deal the last few sessions.  It's pointless.  There's no reason at all to believe that the Justices consider protesters views on anything.

If people really want to protest an issue in front of the Court, they ought to do that in front of Congress.  Things get to the Supreme Court because of things Congress does, or in the case of DACA, refuse to do.  And members of the House and Senate are elected and do have to consider the views of the voters.

No matter.  The inaccurate reporting and the protests will go on, I'm sure.
By The Weary Yeoman. - 11/18/2019 12:01:00 AM No comments:
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Thomas More, counsellor of law and statesman of integrity, merry martyr and most human of saints: Pray that, for the glory of God and in the pursuit of His justice, I may be trustworthy with confidences, keen in study, accurate in analysis, correct in conclusion, able in argument, loyal to clients, honest with all, courteous to adversaries, ever attentive to conscience. Sit with me at my desk and listen with me to my clients’ tales. Read with me in my library and stand always beside me so that today I shall not, to win a point, lose my soul. Pray that my family may find in me what yours found in you: friendship and courage, cheerfulness and charity, diligence in duties, counsel in adversity, patience in pain—their good servant, and God’s first. Amen

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    2 months 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 ...
    7 months 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...
    8 months ago
Show 5 Show All

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...
    4 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, ...
    6 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...
    7 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
  • 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...
    9 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...
    9 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 -
    10 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...
    10 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...
    10 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...
    10 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...
    10 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...
    10 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...
    13 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 ...
    13 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...
    13 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...
    14 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 ...
    14 years ago
  • Native American Food
    Contemporary Native American Recipes - [image: buffalo] * Native American Cuisine * ...
    14 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...
    18 years ago
Show 5 Show All

Total Pageviews

Blogger and Blogging Related.

  • Too Clever By Half
    Could Google delete your blog? - Spoiler: *Yes, Google can delete your blog. ¶ * [image: cartoon villian with black hat and twirly moustache] But someone else could have deleted it, if ...
    3 days ago

General Interest and Micellaneious Blogs

  • Heather Cox Richardson
    Politics Chat, December 9, 2025 -
    3 hours ago
  • Tyler Gardner
    5 Financial Priorities for Women in Their 60s #money #wealth #tyler -
    4 hours ago
  • Towns and Nature
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    7 hours ago
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    A/V Geeks 16mm Lunch 12-9-2025 -
    9 hours ago
  • The Rural Blog
    Trump announces $12 billion in farm aid, but many farmers don't think bailout checks address bigger challenges - American farmers need more markets. *(USDA photo)* The Trump administration announced a $12 billion aid package for U.S. farmers hurt by the president's “...
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  • Institute for the Study of War
    Rapid Crisis Analysis: ISW’s Approach to the Twelve-Day Israel–Iran War -
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  • 100 Movies Every Catholic Should See
    [UPDATED LINK]: What Was the Best Movie of the 1970s? - The next in our series of decade polls!
    14 hours ago
  • Wyoming Debrief
    Wyoming Debrief December 9, 2025 - Today’s trivia question: How much revenue is generated each year by Wyoming ski resorts? Send us your answer to WyomingPublicRadio@gmail.com or by message ...
    16 hours ago
  • More Perfect Union
    We Had 400 People Shop For Groceries. What We Found Will Shock You. -
    16 hours ago
  • Stephen Bodio
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    20 hours ago
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    The Ninth Annual James Proclaims Advent Calendar of Christmas(ish) Films – Door 9 - The biggest problem with Home Alone 3 is that it’s called Home Alone 3. It’s a movie I have avoided since its 1997 release, mainly because it doesn’t take ...
    23 hours ago
  • Kyla Scanlon
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  • The Beautiful Mess by John Pavlovitz
    We Can't Change These Hateful People, America. We Have to Outnumber Them. - There’s an old saying: “When the horse is dead… dismount.”
    1 day ago
  • The Grey NATO
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    1 day ago
  • Suzzassippi
    Why I support independent businesses: Mutual benefit - I will never forget my first trip to the west coast of California and San Francisco. I was totally unprepared, not only for the weather (coming from Texas ...
    1 day ago
  • BAMF Style
    Salt and Pepper: Sammy Davis Jr. in Green Suede - Vitals Sammy Davis Jr. as Charles Salt, nightclub singer and co-owner London, Spring 1968 Film: Salt and Pepper Release Date: June 21, 1968 Director: Ric...
    1 day ago
  • Jimmy Akin
    In the Hands of the Prophets (DS9) – The Secrets of Star Trek - A school lesson turns explosive—literally—as Bajoran religious politics collide with Federation ideals. Dom Bettinelli, Jimmy Akin, and Fr. Jason Tyler deb...
    1 day ago
  • Vintage Hamilton Watch Restoration
    1935 Bartley (Bartlett) - Hamilton introduced the 14/0 sized movements used for the newly design tank models in 1935. These new calibers were used in all of the narrow and long m...
    2 days ago
  • Silver Bulletin
    SBSQ #27: Is redistricting backfiring on Republicans? - Redistricting 201. Plus, do NFL teams understand game theory? And, should the Knicks trade for Giannis?
    2 days ago
  • Old Salt Blog
    Radio Broadcasts Reporting Attack on Pearl Harbor 84 Years Ago Today - An interrupted broadcast of a football game, a newsbreak during a performance by the New York Philharmonic, a weather report followed by an announcement ...
    2 days ago
  • Cellmate of Boethius
    Lex Anteinternet: Turning our backs on American Careerism. A synchronicitous trip. - Lex Anteinternet: Turning our backs on American Careerism. A synchr...: The Angelus by Jean-François Millet I experience synchronicity in some interesting ...
    2 days ago
  • Thinking about...
    Land War or Self-Terrorism? - Trump's Likely Next Step
    2 days ago
  • Inkslingers
    16 Cartoonists Jam with Mayor Jimmy Walker in 1927! - 1927 jam drawing done by 16 cartoonists for Mayor Jimmy Walker of NYC. The post 16 Cartoonists Jam with Mayor Jimmy Walker in 1927! appeared first on Ink...
    3 days ago
  • Interesting Times with Ross Douthat
    The Shifting Politics Around Transgender Rights -
    4 days ago
  • Striking 13
    Thank God for Bluesky - A little love letter to the people who would not compromise with Nazis.
    4 days ago
  • School of the Unconformed
    The Generative Life: Learning Begins at Home - For those of you who prefer to read off paper rather than the screen, we have converted the post into an easily printable pdf file.
    4 days ago
  • Garrison Keillor
    Back home in Minnesota - I flew to Minnesota on Wednesday where it was below zero, but never mind that, I’m a happy man, I’m in love, I have work to do, and it felt good to desce...
    4 days ago
  • Put This On
    Style & Fashion Drawings: Thrifting Tips, Part One - The post Style & Fashion Drawings: Thrifting Tips, Part One appeared first on Put This On.
    4 days ago
  • Michelle Cox Author
    She Imagined Her Husband Had a Girlfriend Named “Bubbles.” - Fanny Jones was born on May 19, 1926 in Kentucky on a farm. Her parents, Ike and Gertie Stores, had seven children, but not much is known about them exc...
    5 days ago
  • Uncivil Savant
    A Space Between - News, books, music and a pause
    5 days ago
  • The Catholic Gentleman
    No. 1 Guarantee of a Child's Success -
    6 days ago
  • The Catholic Gentleman
    No. 1 Guarantee of Your Child’s Success - Every parent wonders if their child will grow up successful, strong, capable, and grounded in faith. Most turn to schools, activities, friendships, or st...
    6 days ago
  • The RAND Blog
    The Students Who Disappear Before They Count - Community colleges are slowly rebounding from the pandemic, but many students disappear between applying and the first weeks of class. These early losses o...
    6 days ago
  • New Grub Street
    An Interview with Poet Rosa Lía Gilbert Pt.2 - Encountering Poetry and Place
    6 days ago
  • I Could Be Wrong.
    - Thanksgiving has passed, and we are now officially into the Holiday Season. Going all the way back to the first Thanksgiving proclamation by Abraham L...
    6 days ago
  • Fighting On Film
    Making ‘The Wild Geese (1978)’ Special, ft Tony Earnshaw - This week we look back at the making of the 1978 classic ‘The Wild Geese‘, Matt is joined by Tony Earnshaw, whose latest book ‘50 Men into the Valley of th...
    1 week ago
  • Exiled Heart
    Tolkien Against the Technocrats - Transhumanism, Tolkien, and Why There Is No Neutral World
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  • Introvert, Dear
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  • the cook & the writer
    Our Oregon Road Trip, Part 1 - A few weeks ago we loaded Lily into the car and took off on a road trip to the Oregon Coast. On the first day of the trip we stopped for lunch at the Sun...
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  • Die, Workwear!
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  • Language Lovers Archives - Collins Dictionary Language Blog
    Conversations in French – greetings for special occasions - When it comes to important events like birthdays, anniversaries, promotions, or religious and cultural holidays, it might make someone’s day … Continued
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  • The Dilettante's Dilemma
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  • Dumbest Blog Ever
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  • The Road Chose Me
    FOR SALE - ONE OF A KIND Jeep camper ready to explore the world! -
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  • Mr. Money Mustache
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  • Government Book Talk
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  • ISW Blog
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  • Wyoming Breezes
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  • Omnia in Christo
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  • Stories by Natali.S
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  • The Rover Haven Blog - Rover Haven Straps
    Paired for (Mis)Adventure: Omega Planet Ocean 2209.50 and Fr. Hartkopf 527 Militärmesser. - Classic Michigan adventure requires an old school scout/utility camp knife. The Friedrich Hartkopf 527 Militärmesser is a recently discontinued modern clas...
    5 months ago
  • University of Wyoming Trustees
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    8 months ago
  • Slow Living LDN.
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    8 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...
    8 months ago
  • Almost Iowa
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    8 months ago
  • The Catholic Engineer
    Pi Day 2025 - Setting a New Personal Record of 1000 Digits of Pi -
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  • 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, ...
    10 months ago
  • American Trad Style Blog | Ivy League Style Blog | OCBD Blog
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    10 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’...
    11 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...
    11 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...
    1 year ago
  • Flyover Country
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    1 year 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
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    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*
    2 years 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
    2 years 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...
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  • " FIFTY YEARS TOO LATE"
    Photo -
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  • Civics307
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  • The Lamp Magazine
    Weigh Station - On a ghost in the machine.
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  • Form Follows Function
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    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
    5 years ago
  • Stories by Natália Mazotte on Medium
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    5 years ago
Show 5 Show All

Agriculture, Agrarian, Ranching, and Gardening Blogs

  • Over The Field
    Distracted Means of Production - By demanding our attention, machines prevent good work from being done.
    6 hours ago
  • Young Agrarians
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    9 hours ago
  • Wyoming Catholic Cowboys
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    10 hours ago
  • The Agrarian's Lament
    Trump Says He’s Bailing Out Farmers. Here’s who REALLY benefits. -
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  • reddirtinmysoul.com/
    Wait - I realize now that I took all the photos from tonight’s Open House and Silent Auction with the library’s iPad. Which is great until I have no photos to pos...
    21 hours ago
  • Western Horseman
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    1 day ago
  • Desert Canyon Farm Green Thoughts
    December 7, 2025 Solstice Greetings from Chris & Tammi - Winter 2025 Solstice Greetings! As another amazing year ends and a new one begins, we are reflecting on all that has happened this year. With much sadness,...
    2 days ago
  • Fellin Pitts Farm
    To the mill - The first load of grain arrived at the mill today.
    4 days ago
  • Uncivil Savant
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    5 days ago
  • Heavenstretch
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    1 week ago
  • The Prairie Homestead
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  • Mad Farmer
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  • Our Heritage of Health
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    2 weeks ago
  • NSAC’S Blog
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  • Voices Blog - Yale Sustainable Food Program
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  • A Habitation
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    2 months ago
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    2 months ago
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    3 months ago
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    3 months ago
  • The One-cow Revolution
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  • Agrarian Trust
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  • two branches homestead
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  • The Short Rows - Agricultural History Society
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    7 months ago
  • Blog - The Transient Grazier - Clarion Farms
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    8 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...
    9 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...
    9 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...
    10 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...
    1 year 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 ...
    1 year 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...
    1 year 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
  • 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...
    2 years 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...
    4 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...
    5 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...
    6 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...
    7 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...
    10 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
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Baseball

  • baseballmusings.com
    MegaBaseball Winner - The White Sox won the amateur draft lottery. They did not qualify for the lottery in 2024 despite the most losses in the modern era: After the White Sox, t...
    2 hours ago
  • Uncle Mike's Musings: A Yankees Blog and More
    What I Think Happened to the "Peanuts" Characters - *December 9, 1965, 60 years ago:* *A Charlie Brown Christmas* premieres on CBS, based on the comic strip *Peanuts* by Charles Schulz. There have been spec...
    8 hours ago
  • A Manly Pastime - A Baseball History Blog
    Peg Shubnell - The Ultimate Baseball Fan - Yesterday, Carol and I attended the funeral of my cousin Peg Shubnell who died on Thanksgiving Day at age 89. Peg was a wonderful person who had a long ...
    14 hours ago
  • 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...
    6 months ago

Buildings and Architecture

  • Father Pitt
    A Few More Houses on Espy Avenue, Dormont - Espy Avenue is perhaps the highest-toned street in Dormont, lined with fine houses by distinguished architects. We’ve seen a bunch of them before; here are...
    22 hours ago
  • Painted Bricks
    "U Bett It Hurts" Tattoo parlor, formerly Casper's Piggly Wiggly. - This building appears to be empty, and it also appears to have been divided into sections. The portion to the left of the photo was clearly once part ...
    2 weeks ago
  • Courthouses of the West
    Wyoming Judge’s Secret Life Is Hand-Writing Top-Selling Legal Thrillers - Wyoming Judge’s Secret Life Is Hand-Writing Top-Selling Legal Thrillers
    3 weeks ago
  • Churches of the West
    Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus. - Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospi...: Pope Leo XIII issued Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus. TAMETSI FUTURA PROSPICIENTIBU...
    5 weeks ago
  • Churches of the East
    Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus. - Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospi...: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus. Pope Leo XIII issued...
    5 weeks ago
  • Churches of the South
    Pope Leo to MAGA Climate Skeptics: “Repent” The pope warned that ridiculing global warming is not courage — it’s contempt for the poor and for God’s world. - Pope Leo to MAGA Climate Skeptics: “Repent”The pope warned that ridiculing global warming is not courage — it’s contempt for the poor and for God’s world.
    2 months 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...
    1 year 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...
    18 years ago
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Food and Cooking Blogs

  • Cookin' with Congress
    Eating Like Andrew Jackson -
    2 hours ago
  • Sandwiches of History
    Egg Salad Sandwich (1911) on Sandwiches of History -
    7 hours ago
  • To The Bone
    When the Bourbon Starts Flowing - The Roman saying, in vino veritas — “in wine there is truth” — very much applies to bourbon at a hunt camp.
    16 hours ago
  • Wild Game & Fish
    Oven Baked Hamburger Steaks and Gravy - Oven Baked Hamburger Steaks with a homemade onion and mushroom gravy are served with roasted baby potatoes. This venison hamburger steak recipe is the ki...
    1 day ago
  • Musings Over a Barrel
    Seventeen Years in the Cellar: Samichlaus 2008 - Each year, on the Feast of St. Nicholas, we traditionally break out a few old bottles of *Samichlaus Bier* that have been aging undisturbed in the cellar. ...
    2 days ago
  • The New Vintage Kitchen
    What to cook when your fingers are frozen and you fall asleep by the fire. - Well, they had thawed out by the time I actually started cooking. It’s been cold. Winter is here, and temperatures have been unseasonably lower than usual,...
    2 days ago
  • Mary and Tom's Kitchen | Our cooking, grilling, smoking, preserving and fermenting journal.
    Broccoli Cheddar Soup like Billy Parisi - 12/7/2025 – Mary made this soup that loosely follows Chef Billy Parisis’s recipe. It was great and to some extent better than the very similar recipe at th...
    2 days ago
  • The 1940's Experiment
    Vlogmas 2025 – Playlist - Dear all, I’m trying to post a little video update every day on YouTube to get back into the habit of creating content again. I’m looking forward to the ...
    3 days ago
  • Peak To Plate
    Roast Pheasant with Honey Mustard Glaze - An easy roast pheasant recipe with bold, balanced flavor. If you want a simple yet impressive way to cook pheasant, this roast pheasant with honey mustar...
    4 days ago
  • Beer Et Seq
    Fettled and Pickled Porter! - There was a time when a cold season brought hot beer. Not hot as in siiiiik (see cool current Tylenol ad), but hot like a fire makes. Mulled was a term in ...
    5 days ago
  • Alaska Department of Fish and Game
    Shaped by Wildlife: Keely O'Connell -
    5 days ago
  • The View from Great Island
    Easy Holiday Cheese Appetizers (Ready in 15 Minutes) - [image: easy holiday cheese appetizers on a plate] Two quick, no-cook holiday cheese appetizers made with Boursin and Laughing Cow ~ colorful, fun, and re...
    5 days ago
  • Researching Food History - Cooking and Dining
    The Beveridge Automatic Cooker - Christmas foods and other Dec. food history zoom talks are listed below. The winter scene in a horn is from a Baltimore company's trade card (3x4 1/4in.)....
    1 week ago
  • the cook & the writer
    Our Oregon Road Trip, Part 1 - A few weeks ago we loaded Lily into the car and took off on a road trip to the Oregon Coast. On the first day of the trip we stopped for lunch at the Sun...
    1 week ago
  • Steve1989MRE
    2022 US Meal Cold Weather Turkey Tetrazzini MCW Review Arctic Freeze Dried Military MRE Tasting Test -
    1 week ago
  • Hunter Angler Gardener Cook
    Hackberry Muffins - [image: Hackberry muffins in a bowl in the sunlight.] A recipe for hackberry muffins. Hackberries are a common tree fruit in North America, but there are t...
    2 weeks ago
  • Homesick Texan
    Turkey chili Frito pie - When a friend threw a late-fall party, she served turkey Frito pies. Her husband is unable to eat red meat, so the family has become quite adept at replaci...
    2 weeks ago
  • TheFancyNavajo
    5 Modern Navajo & Indigenous Recipes for the Holidays - The holidays are just around the corner and if you are looking to add some Indigenous and Navajo flavors to your table this year, we got you! These are s...
    3 weeks ago
  • From Field To Plate
    Smoked Snow Goose with a Blackberry, balsamic, and basil glaze. - Whole Smoked Snow Goose Hickory smoked with blackberry basil balsamic glaze Ingredients Goose prep Glaze Instructions 1. Prep the goose Pluck, remove the...
    3 weeks ago
  • dirndl kitchen
    14 German Recipes That Are Perfect For Thanksgiving! - It’s Thanksgiving season in America, a holiday I did not grow up with in Germany. While turkey and mashed potatoes (usually) take center stage, why not a...
    3 weeks ago
  • ME AND MY BIG MOUTH
    Feeling the heat - Serving up a full English-style Christmas feast on a broiling hot December day doesn't really make sense. But, for me, as for many Australians, the traditi...
    4 weeks ago
  • Wild Harvest Table
    Venison Burritos - This classic burrito recipe is delicious the day you make it and freezes well for future easy meals. Scale it up to make a big batch- you’ll be happy to ha...
    5 weeks ago
  • Wife Of A Hunter
    Ground Elk Chopped Cheese - This Ground Elk Chopped Cheese is something the New York bodega’s would be jealous of! It is SO easy and delicious and would work with any of the ground...
    1 month ago
  • Wild Game Cuisine – NevadaFoodies
    Elk Leek Soup with Fingerling Potatoes - Take stock in a comforting bowl of my brothy Elk Leek Soup promising to warm you up inside and out during frigid and bone-chilling... The post Elk Leek So...
    1 month ago
  • Rachel Laudan
    Goodbye concentrator, farewell rollator - I’ve been humming this to “Goodbye Picadilly, Farewell Leicester Square, the chorus of “It’s a long way to Tipperary,” a World War I marching song that m...
    3 months ago
  • a 12 Gauge Girl Blog - a 12 gauge girl
    Pheasant Marsala Meatballs - "You can't teach an old dog new tricks," everyone has heard the saying. Normally I tend to agree. I have a thirteen-year-old yellow lab and she has no de...
    3 months 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...
    6 months 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...
    6 months 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...
    8 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...
    9 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...
    11 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...
    1 year 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...
    1 year 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...
    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…
    2 years 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...
    2 years ago
  • Kitchen Feasts
    Broccoli Slaw - Ready to hit refresh and start something new? After eating this you will start (or…
    2 years 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...
    3 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.
    6 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...
    6 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...
    8 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...
    10 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 & 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...
    14 years ago
Show 5 Show All

History and History Related Blogs (General)

  • Past Daily: A Sound Archive of News, History, Music
    Chuck Berry – Brussels – 1965 – Past Daily Lunchroom - Chuck Berry – Architect of Rock n’ Roll. Chuck Berry for Tuesday Lunch – recorded February 6, 1965 for Face […] The post Chuck Berry – Brussels – 1965 – ...
    3 hours ago
  • Photo of the Day
    Photo of the Day - The World War I news on this day in 1917.
    4 hours ago
  • Industrial History
    Barge Canal Lock #20 west of Marcy, Whitesboro & Utica, NY - (Satellite) Erie Canal Overview Street View, Aug 2011 Katherine Weisbrod, May 2023 nycanalmap
    8 hours ago
  • This Day in Aviation
    9 December 1959 - 9 December 1959: At Bloomfield, Connecticut, U.S. Air Force Captain Walter J. Hodgson and Major William J. Davis flew a Kaman H-43B-KA Huskie, 58-1848, to ...
    14 hours ago
  • Restricted Data
    New book: The Most Awful Responsibility - This is just a brief post to make sure I have announced on here formally that my new book from HarperCollins is now on sale! The Most Awful Responsibility:...
    16 hours ago
  • Whatever It Is, I’m Against It
    Today -100: December 9, 1925: In the right direction - Calvin Coolidge sends Congress his State of the Union address (not yet called that). He calls for joining the World Court because “Wars do not spring into...
    19 hours ago
  • Colonial Press
    This Day in History: Navy Nurses at Pearl Harbor - On this day in 1941, Pearl Harbor reels from a surprise Japanese attack. Have you ever thought about the Navy nurses present on that day so long ago? Like ...
    20 hours ago
  • The Vintage Inn
    Vintage Christmas Sheet Music Covers from the 1930s–1950s - Take a festive trip back in time with this collection of vintage Christmas sheet music covers from the 1930s–1950s. These charming designs capture the ho...
    1 day ago
  • Fishwrap
    Cousin Molly and the Kentucky Christmas Fund - In 1925, a young widow named Olive Cummings Anderson launched a new column in The Paducah Sun in Kentucky. She wrote under the pen name The post Cousin M...
    1 day ago
  • A Hundred Years Ago
    Mignons Cookies Recipe - I recently found a hundred-year-old recipe for Mignons, and decided to give it a try. Mignons are almond cut-out cookies. The cookie dough contains ground ...
    2 days ago
  • ZEITGEIST
    A British-German Feast - On the King's State Banquet for the German President
    2 days ago
  • Today In Wyoming's History
    Town of Mills marker. - A marker placed in 1990 that notes the origins of the then Town of Mills. Mills is now classified as a city. The following plaque is in the same park...
    3 days ago
  • HatHistorian
    Réponses au FAQ -
    4 days ago
  • Cow Hampshire
    The Quiet Journey That Carried Us - It began, as so many journeys do, with a name. *Patrick.* Not the saint. Not a hero carved in stone. Just a name etched into a Vermont census list, beside ...
    4 days ago
  • Theresa Kaminski
    The Year of Jane Grant: On Marcia Davenport and Archival Absences - Way back in the spring of this year I traveled to Washington, D.C. It was a multi-purpose trip. I wanted to attend the annual conference of the Biographers...
    6 days ago
  • Hoover Heads
    “The Service of Universities to Freedom”: Part 1 - By Thomas F. Schwartz In mid-October, 1954, Herbert Hoover received an invitation from West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer to visit. Hoover accepted and...
    6 days ago
  • Today's Document
    Fifth annual message of President Thomas Jefferson - Fifth annual message of President Thomas Jefferson Record Group 46: Records of the U.S. SenateSeries: Presidential MessagesFile Unit: Presidential Message...
    6 days ago
  • History Nebraska
    Nebraska History Spotlight: the Robert Henri Museum and Gallery - The Robert Henri Museum and Gallery is a national treasure that is the result of the work of many volunteers, board members, and professional staff who h...
    6 days ago
  • Canadian History Ehx
    Barbara Ann Scott - The year is 1948. We’re at the Winter Olympics in St. Moritz, Switzerland. After a 12-year hiatus, the world gathered for what were called the “Games of Re...
    1 week ago
  • Mark Holan's Irish-American Blog
    St. Mary’s, Dublin, no longer ‘Pro-Cathedral’ - Pope Leo XIV in November formally designating St. Mary’s Pro-Cathedral as the cathedral of the Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin, ending 200 years of “pro-tem...
    1 week ago
  • Dispatches from the LP-OP
    George Singleton tells of 1988 trip to Nancy Mountain - George Buster Singleton *(For decades, local historian and paranormal investigator George “Buster” Singleton published a weekly newspaper column called “S...
    1 week ago
  • The Importance of the Obvious
    Proclaiming Thankfulness – A Century Ago - “As we have grown and prospered in material things, so also should we progress in moral and spiritual things. We are a God-fearing people who should set ou...
    1 week ago
  • Legal Legacy
    Review of “Trans History: From Ancient Times to the Present Day” by Alex L. Combs & Andrew Eakett - Trans history should not be regarded as a niche subject; it is an important aspect of who we are as a people, providing another perspective on the historic...
    1 week ago
  • Pritzer Military History Blog
    The Empty Chair and the Gratitude That Connects Us - The Empty Chair and the Gratitude That Connects Us asmith-miller Mon, 11/24/2025 - 14:44 October 15, 2025 History Citizen Soldier Battle of the Bulge Worl...
    2 weeks ago
  • 20th Century Adventures
    Hunt Like Grand-Dad! How to get the right gear for your hunt! -
    2 weeks ago
  • 20th Century Adventures
    Hunt Like Grand-Dad! How to get the right gear for your hunt! -
    2 weeks ago
  • wwiiafterwwii
    ideas for mixing aviation with the Iowa class battleships - Over the years I considered writing on this, but did not as there are other commentaries on the topic already. However some of them “mix things up” as to w...
    2 weeks ago
  • Meandering Through The Prologue
    MISSION SAN GABRIEL ARCÁNGEL – TRANSFORMING THE WORLD OF CALIFORNIA - Catholic priests ventured out into California to create missions in the 18th century from their Spanish bases in the Bajio of Mexico. Priests accompanied...
    2 weeks ago
  • Western Mining History
    Seven Troughs, Nevada: The Long Tunnel - Seven Troughs was a well-known Nevada gold mining district that saw its most productive years from 1907 to 1917. By the 1920s the district was largely idle...
    2 weeks ago
  • Home on the Range
    How We Lived – Part 1. Immigrants in Chicago - After the failed revolutions in Europe in 1848 Bohemians began immigrating to America and settling in Chicago. Small numbers at first, but the pace of imm...
    2 weeks ago
  • Blog | Don't Know Much
    Pilgrims, Parades, and Pigskin: A Thanksgiving Primer - A few questions and answers about the fourth Thursday in November The post Pilgrims, Parades, and Pigskin: A Thanksgiving Primer first appeared on Don't ...
    3 weeks ago
  • Some Gave All
    Mills to rename park, add amenities to honor military members and first responders - Mills to rename park, add amenities to honor military members and first responders
    3 weeks ago
  • Reporting History
    November 10, 1862 — The Pirate Alabama - November 10, 1862 — The Pirate Alabama[image: Sketch of the CSS Alabama, a three-masted steam-powered vessel.] New York, Nov. 7. — Capt. Vickery, of the ba...
    4 weeks ago
  • Military History
    Exchange of letters between the Governor of Hong Kong and the Colonial Office in London in 1941 - The correspondence is taken from File No. CO/129/590/14 held at the National Archives in UK. The file was closed until 1992. The Governors letters/report...
    4 weeks ago
  • Germans from Russia Settlement Locations
    Bergtal, Kyrgyzstan - *During our expedition across Kyrgyzstan, we stumbled upon a truly unexpected place — a village inhabited almost entirely by ethnic Germans. Just a short...
    5 weeks ago
  • Jennifer Chronicles
    ✈️ Announcing New Series: Memoir of a Commuter Marriage - The post ✈️ Announcing New Series: Memoir of a Commuter Marriage appeared first on Gen X Blog.
    5 weeks ago
  • Lenathehyena's Blog
    They came for Scotland: Westminster’s Robber Barons - Big boys bash smaller boys. That’s the reality of life’s unfairness. Big powers bash smaller powers. Because they can. Empires are created in this way. Do...
    5 weeks ago
  • PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS PHOTO ARCHIVES
    Black cat walking in front of large selection of used vacuum cleaners, near Farmington, New Mexico - Black cat walking in front of large selection of used vacuum cleaners, near Farmington, New Mexico Photographer: Sam Adams Date: 2008 Negative Number:...
    5 weeks ago
  • The History of English Podcast
    Episode 186: A Dutch Treat - In this episode, we explore two important developments in North America. First, we examine the legendary story of the Pilgrims’ arrival in New England in 1...
    5 weeks ago
  • This Day In Automotive History
    October 28, 1983 – Toyota unveils 3 concept cars - When the 1983 Tokyo Motor Show opened its doors to the public on this day of that year, attendees were welcomed under the theme “Vehicles: Past, Present,...
    1 month ago
  • WyoHistory.org
    Conversations with Headstones Podcast - Conversations with Headstones Podcast WyoHistory.org Saturday, October 25, 2025 *Lena Newlin, host* *Guest: Scott Hunter, Parks Manager, City of Laramie*...
    1 month ago
  • Ghosts of DC
    Is the Bunny Man Real? The True 1970 Story Behind Virginia’s Most Famous Legend - Discover the true story of Virginia's Bunny Man legend. Two documented 1970 incidents on Guinea Road in Fairfax County created one of the most enduring u...
    1 month ago
  • Armstrong Undergraduate Journal of History (new edition)
    False Friends: The Pereiaslav Agreement of 1654 and Competing Narratives in Russian and Ukrainian Historiographies - Jiansheng Zhang (Princeton University) As Ukraine and Russia are now entangled in Europe’s largest war since World War II, it is crucial to understand how ...
    1 month ago
  • Throughout History
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    1 month ago
  • Robert Bickers
    Andy West (1960-2025) - I have written briefly in the Guardian recently about the life and work of my former classmate Andy West who died in the summer, or at least some of it. An...
    1 month ago
  • Historical Digression
    Dr. James Thacher and the Haunted Road to Plymouth - The coach jolted and swayed as it passed along the deeply rutted road, pulled by a pair of weary horses moving at a slow walk. Their journey to Plymouth wa...
    2 months ago
  • Veteran Voices Military Research
    Ralph DeShon Sawyer Jr., United States Navy - Ralph DeShon Sawyer [Jr.] was born on 5 October 1918, in Haverhill, Essex, Massachusetts, the son of Ralph D. Sawyer and Hazel Annie Seaman. Ralph DeShon...
    2 months ago
  • The Text Message
    Deaf Historical Sites in the National Register of Historic Places - By Jerrod J. Grill, Archives Technician in the Digitization Division at the National Archives and Records Administration in College Park, Maryland A little...
    3 months ago
  • Forward with Roosevelt
    FDR, Collector - By Kevin Thomas America 250 — Landmark Documents from President Roosevelt’s Early American History Collections Follow our #America250 series of articles hi...
    3 months ago
  • The Unwritten Record
    Link Roundup: The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki - This week marks eighty years since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima (August 6th, 1945) and Nagasaki (August 9th, 1945). We would like to reflect back on pr...
    4 months ago
  • Base Hospital 50 - University of Washington
    Father William Martin Carroll, CSsR - *The U.S. Army Chaplain Corps was officially authorized on July 29, 1775, and 2025 marks the 250th anniversary of the Corps. In honor of this milestone, ...
    4 months ago
  • The NDC Blog
    New Records Released – 2025 Third Quarter Release List - On July 8, 2025, the National Declassification Center (NDC) released a listing of 52 declassification projects that consists of 664,527 pages that complet...
    4 months ago
  • Merle Massie A Place in History
    Telephone of the Wind: Creating a Wind Phone at Massie Panoramic Farm - The story of creating the wind phone at Massie Panoramic Farm.
    5 months 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.
    7 months 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...
    7 months 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...
    7 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 ...
    10 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...
    11 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...
    11 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...
    1 year 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...
    1 year 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...
    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
  • 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
  • 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...
    2 years 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...
    2 years 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 ...
    3 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...
    3 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
  • 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…
    4 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...
    5 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...
    5 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...
    6 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...
    6 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...
    7 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 ...
    8 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...
    10 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...
    11 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...
    12 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 the American Revolution and Colonial North America

  • UE Loyalist History
    A LOYALIST TOWN IN QUEBEC - During the American Revolution,the former French Seigneury of Sorel, in the colony of Quebec, became an important area as a British military post and ref...
    14 hours ago
  • Emerging Revolutionary War Era
    250 Years Ago Today: The Battle of Great Bridge - On the cold morning of December 9, 1775, a British force of redcoats marched out of their wooden stockade and advanced towards the rebel earthworks on the ...
    17 hours ago
  • Journal of the American Revolution
    Lafayette and the Journey to Yorktown - During the American War for Independence, 1781 proved to be a monumental year for the young nation. They would achieve an astounding victory at the Siege...
    17 hours ago
  • Fort Ticonderoga Blog
    This Week, Celebrate the 250th Anniversary of the Historic ‘Noble Train of Artillery’ Beginning at Fort Ticonderoga - This week, beginning December 5 and running through December 7, Fort Ticonderoga will celebrate the 250th anniversary of one of the most ambitious and su...
    6 days 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...
    4 years ago

History of the American Civil War

  • Civil War Memory
    H.K. Edgerton's Fading Rebel Yell - H.K.
    16 hours ago

History of the North American West

  • Today In Wyoming's History
    Town of Mills marker. - A marker placed in 1990 that notes the origins of the then Town of Mills. Mills is now classified as a city. The following plaque is in the same park...
    3 days ago
  • Museum Minute
    Museum Minute: The illustrator for “The Call of the Wild” showed empathy for animals - The “The Call of the Wild” book and other materials are part of the Phillip R. Goodwin collection at the McCracken Research Library at the Center of the West.
    2 months ago
  • WyomingHistory.org
    The Red Ocher Mine at Sunrise - The Red Ocher Mine at Sunrise Ellis Hein Tuesday, December 19, 2023 *How it was found* “Well, we had no idea what was going on, but I knew we had to do s...
    1 year ago

History of World War One.

  • Roads To The Great War
    A Recommended World War One Author: Edward Lengel - If you have been watching Ken Burns's American Revolution series on PBS, you'll recognize historian Edward Lengel, who provides expert commentary on the wa...
    17 hours ago
  • Canada’s Army of Colonels: Battalion Commanders of the First and Second World Wars
    Lt-Col. M.C.K. Halford - Lieutenant-Colonel Mike HalfordHallamshire Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment The battalion did the work, and I got the DSO. (Quoted in Daily Telegraph...
    1 day ago
  • With the British Army In Flanders
    The Rifle Grenade Part Seven – The British No. 22 ‘Newton Pippin’ Rifle Grenade & the Newton 6-inch Trench Mortar - We looked at British rifle grenades in some detail recently, and here we have the only example of a British rod grenade in my collection, the No. 22 ‘Newt...
    1 week ago

History of World War Two

  • World War Wisdom
    The REAL Reason Soldiers Put Spoons In Their Boots -
    6 hours ago
  • Today World War II
    Today in World War II History—December 9, 1940 & 1945 - 85 Years Ago—Dec. 9, 1940: In Egypt, British troops advance against a larger Italian force at Sidi Barrani and take three forts. 80 Years Ago—Dec. 9, 194...
    18 hours ago
  • World War Two Today
    Italians surprised in the Desert - 9th December 1940: The British, outnumbered in the desert, offer limited expectations for their offensive - claiming it is just an 'important raid'
    20 hours ago
  • Canada’s Army of Colonels: Battalion Commanders of the First and Second World Wars
    Lt-Col. M.C.K. Halford - Lieutenant-Colonel Mike HalfordHallamshire Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment The battalion did the work, and I got the DSO. (Quoted in Daily Telegraph...
    1 day ago
  • PT Boat Red
    PTs fight back at Pearl Harbor, Dec 7, 1941 - In the midst of the overwhelming horror of the surprise attack by the Imperial Japanese on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the first US ve...
    3 days ago
  • 1,000 Men, 1000 Stories
    Research: Three Months in the Mediterranean, 1943 (26) - *Monty's Eighth and Canadian Army are Earning Their Keep* German Defensive Line at Mount Etna (Sicily) 'Cracked'!! Allied forces are working their way towa...
    1 week ago
  • POWs In Canada
    “Lest We Forget” – November 11, 1945 - Today is the first peace-time Armstice Day after another world war. The Second World War, too, saw the peoples of the Empire arise as one man to defend wha...
    4 weeks ago
  • At The Front
    Early MP44 Pouches - For some years as a kid, I struggled to decipher what kind of pouches the troops in the well known photos of the relief of Kovel (above) were wearing. In...
    5 weeks 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...
    1 year 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...
    6 years ago
  • Pacific Paratrooper
    Intermission Stories (7) Harold Selley, Medic - Medic, Harold Selley Harold Selley was in the Medical Company of the 7th Cavalry Regiment from the time time he arrived in Korea, July 1950. He would rema...
    11 years ago
Show 5 Show All

Military

  • Task & Purpose
    US Southern Command posts photo of Marine with ‘Jerusalem Cross’ patch - The command posted a photo of a Marine deployed to the Caribbean sporting a patch bearing the cross. The post US Southern Command posts photo of Marine w...
    5 hours ago
  • MandatoryFunDay
    Weddings are getting crazy -
    7 hours ago
  • Warfronts
    Yemen Is About to Break In Two. Here's What that Means. -
    9 hours ago
  • Defence Blog
    Syrian army parades Turkish-supplied armored vehicles - Turkish-built Ejder TTZA 6×6 armored personnel carriers were unveiled for the first time during a military parade held in Damascus celebrating the fall of ...
    17 hours ago
  • Duffel Blog
    Duffel Blog presents: 10 other things Admiral Bradley is solely responsible for - Admiral also responsible for 90% of what’s wrong with America
    1 day ago
  • The Chieftain
    American Rheinmetall, and the HX3 -
    3 days ago
  • The Angry Staff Officer
    Don’t bother improving your chess - Civil discourse requires a shared allegiance to civil society The opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not reflect those of the Army Nati...
    1 week 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
Show 5 Show All

Outdoor Blogs

  • Wide Open Spaces
    Wyoming's Snowy Range Gets Slammed With 75 Inches Of Snow - Getty Image[image: Wyoming's Snowy Range Gets Slammed With 75 Inches Of Snow] Here I was excited over the two inches of snow we got in Virginia this past ...
    4 hours ago
  • Wes Siler’s Newsletter
    How To Buy A Flashlight - Taking advantage of the latest and greatest in an ever-evolving category is way easier than you might think
    5 hours ago
  • Explorersweb
    Dispatches from Terror Camp, the Online Polar Fan Conference - Last weekend, I and 1,800 others attended Terror Camp, a three-day virtual event celebrating polar history, science, and media. Here are the highlights.
    8 hours ago
  • Field Ethos
    Rank Has Its Privileges - By Will Dabbs, MD Field problems in the Alaskan interior for my combat unit typically ran about three… The post Rank Has Its Privileges appeared first on...
    8 hours ago
  • The Land Desk
    The lie of the "salt-of-the-earth" Sagebrush Rebel - Also: Big Data Center Buildup accelerates; More uranium "mining" in Lisbon Valley; Messing with Maps: housing edition
    13 hours ago
  • Coyote Gulch
    Water across the West at risk as President Trump targets national monuments: A new study found that about 83% of water passing through public lands uses monument designation for its only protection — Wyatt Myskow (High Country News) - Click the link to read the article on the High Country News website (Wyatt Myskow): December 9, 2025 This story was originally published by Inside Climate ...
    14 hours ago
  • Going Feral
    Lex Anteinternet: Cowboy Boots - Lex Anteinternet: Cowboy Boots: Title: An array of boots at the F.M. Light & Sons western-wear store in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Library of Congress p...
    15 hours ago
  • Uncommon Path – An REI Co-op Publication
    Winning the World Snowshoe Championships with Jennifer Britz - Transcript Jennifer Britz is a trail runner based in Bar Harbor, Maine. She spends half the year on Acadia National Park’s rugged trails and the other ha...
    16 hours ago
  • Revivaler
    1978 Van Veen OCR1000 - [image: Van Veen OCR1000 wankel rotary engine motorcycle] The Van Veen OCR1000 is a motorcycle that few have heard of. It was powered by a 996cc Comotor ...
    17 hours ago
  • Natural Resources & Energy
    Mountains are warming faster than valleys, and the West’s water supply is at risk, study finds - New research shows that mountain regions around the world are warming faster than the lowlands below them. Scientists say that could have big consequences ...
    1 day ago
  • Chukar Culture
    Happy Holidays, and Free Shipping! - Free shipping on all Chukar Culture merchandise until the end of 2025!
    1 day ago
  • Claretbumbler
    Silver Blue Bumble - I am risking life and limb here as I commit fly tying heresy. The ‘bumble’ patterns devised by the late, great Justice T.C. Kingsmill Moore were ahead of t...
    1 day ago
  • Casting Across
    Dark Skies Fly Fishing: Winter 2025 - After meeting the good folks behind Dark Skies Fly Fishing back in the beginning of 2025, I’ve been able to contribute articles to this great new publica...
    1 day ago
  • Project Upland
    Early Shotgun Innovations and Patents By English Gunmakers - The English may not have invented the breechloading shotgun, but they certainly perfected it This... The post Early Shotgun Innovations and Patents By En...
    1 day ago
  • Truttablog
    Mangoes, dancing and tantrums - One river, two friends, different frequencies...things that link flyfishers.
    1 day ago
  • Wyoming Game and Fish Department
    Hunter Harvest Surveys -
    1 day ago
  • The River Beat
    Urban fishing in Normandy - The Risle seemed every bit the equal of England’s finest chalkstreams, so when our host offered to arrange a day’s fishing on an upstream beat, I leapt a...
    2 days ago
  • Survival & Emergency Preparedness
    Criminal Activity in my Neighborhood Yesterday - We had an incident in our neighborhood yesterday which seems like it was a couple who were either casing my neighbor, or trying the old "distract the vic...
    5 days ago
  • The Reigning Chukar Champions
    Picking a pup - I’m sure that everyone who reads this post has gone through the process of picking a hunting partner for chasing one kind of bird or another. I’ve been the...
    6 days ago
  • In Forest and Field
    Each and Every Day of Fall … - … *one or more of my cameras are used to make photographs of the natural world. Photographs that illustrate the mammals, birds, insects, plants or landsc...
    6 days ago
  • Troutrageous! Fly Fishing & Tenkara Blog
    A Slow Day and a Quick Release - I snuck out last weekend to hit a pond I like to fish on occasion. I haven’t fished it in a few years as there’s been a lot of development in and around ...
    1 week ago
  • Sussex Trout Fishing
    My Way - I don’t like modern fly fishing values. Since I started fly fishing for trout over 50 years ago, it has evolved from a niche country sport into a global in...
    1 week ago
  • Crest, Cliff & Canyon
    The Perfect Loveliness of Home - “Why so glorious in the fall? Biology and astronomy reach a showy crescendo, and who could it be for? .… Maybe it’s for no one, a happenstance of grace the...
    1 week ago
  • 3MULES.COM
    Kern County Animal Services Notification of Intent to Seize Animal - Our journey has been on pause in Kern County, California, as we rest and repair gear. As we wait, the Mules have been invited guests on private property of...
    1 week ago
  • Hickman's Hinterlands
    The Dying Art of Being a Bum - On "Useless Humans" in the Age of AI
    1 week ago
  • Brooks and Becks
    End of a weird but actually ok season . - I know I am letting the blog drift but i thought an end of season update was in order. Also to show that I do also listen to those kind readers who emai...
    2 weeks ago
  • bearded fisherman
    The girls enjoying pumpkins #pumpkins #pigs #sows #homestead -
    2 weeks ago
  • AFTCO - Conservation
    Good News for White Seabass Anglers & The Advancement of Proper Marine Aquaculture in the U.S. - This land transfer strengthens the long-term stability of a program anglers have supported for decades. It also strengthens the foundation for future U.S...
    2 weeks ago
  • Hike Pyrenees - walking holidays in the Spanish Pyrenees
    New for 2026: Canyons of Ainsa - Our new Canyons of Ainsa holiday explores the eastern side of the Ordesa National Park. It explores the kilometre deep canyons of Añisclo and Pineta and ta...
    2 weeks ago
  • Wanderings up North
    Glen Affric Way Day 3 - So a nice quiet night I was sleeping well,it’s a very large car park and apart from us there was just 3 motor homes parked up,so it was strange to get w...
    3 weeks ago
  • Arizona Wanderings
    Wet Fly Swing Podcast - I had an awesome opportunity to join Dave Sawyer on the West Fly Swing Fly Fishing Podcast. Our conversation was a high level overview of the fishing her...
    3 weeks ago
  • Southern Rockies Nature Blog
    Red Sky at Night Gives Me a Fright - The Northern Lights seen in eastern Colorado (Colorado Parks and Wildlife). This past week has seen the Northern Lights visible as far south as Texas Her...
    3 weeks ago
  • Athabascan Woman Blog
    From Kaltag to the Alaska Air National Guard: Honoring Technical Sergeant Wanda Solomon-Parsons - From the Yukon River village of Kaltag to the Alaska Air National Guard, Wanda Solomon-Parsons has lived a life rooted in hard work and service. Her father...
    3 weeks ago
  • Laramie Audubon
    Trip Report - 11th Oct 2025 Laramie River Greenbelt (from Optimist Park) - Laramie Audubon Society Members met on a blustery fall morning to walk the Laramie Greenbelt Trail in search of fall migrants. A check of the radar before ...
    3 weeks ago
  • Birdhunter
    North Dakota is Loaded with Pheasants! - That is what we heard from reliable sources and locals. There are pheasants for sure, but 3 weeks into the season, hunting public land, we did not see that...
    4 weeks ago
  • Trout On Dries
    Road trip: Bwo’s, Blue Jays and Bat flips - “The Blue Jays won the bat flip contest hands down. Some of the best ones I’ve seen since Jose Bautista was at the plate. They showed-up, stood tall, faced...
    4 weeks ago
  • Paddle Making (and other canoe stuff)
    "EDH" 19th Century Penobscot Paddle - The upcoming *Native American, Tribal, Ancient & Asian Art Auction* from TAOS Auction Co (Santa Fe, New Mexico), features a 19th century Penobscot paddle ...
    4 weeks ago
  • The Borealist
    Swing Away - We were back up north trying to hit the King and reacclimatize ourselves to familiar ground, after spending the better part of autumn down south, chasing...
    4 weeks ago
  • Species Spotlight
    Species Spotlight: Cabrilla - Cabrilla is one of the most challenging inshore species for anglers. Perhaps the hardest-hitting fish in existence, their raw strength and powerful runs ...
    5 weeks ago
  • NatureSound.it
    Shotgun Microphones Vs. Parabola - Reading Time: < 1 minute Here a test at the limit of a reasonable sound pickup distance (about 40 meters) regarding a type of Robin call, the so-called rep...
    5 weeks ago
  • Mouthful of Feathers
    Remedy. - Are you having trouble laying off wild flushes? Are bumped birds hitting the ground? Is a limit your only measure of success? Still considering ground slui...
    1 month ago
  • BHA Media
    Backcountry Hunters & Anglers Condemns Effort to Roll Back Public Lands Rule - *For Immediate Release:* Sept. 12, 2025 *Contact:* Media@backcountryhunters.org *Washington, D.C*.—Backcountry Hunters & Anglers (BHA) is voicin...
    2 months ago
  • Forest History Society
    “Forests, Laws, and Peoples’ Rights: Snapshots of Forestry History” - This blog post is the fourth in a five-part series written by Yale School of the Environment students enrolled in a graduate seminar that accompanied the...
    3 months ago
  • AFTCO Films
    Custom Rod Shop – Tuna Rods with Adrian Martinez -
    3 months ago
  • Gun Dog Blog
    Dog Trainer Spotlight: Chris Akin - An insightful interview about retriever training with one of the best duck dog trainers alive, Chris Akin.
    3 months ago
  • The Smokey Wire : National Forest News and Views
    Let’s Discuss: Chiefs’ Letter on Proposed Wildfire Agency - Here’s the text of the former Forest Service Chief’s Letter. I have a great deal of respect for all the Forest Service Chiefs, and I don’t always agree wit...
    3 months ago
  • Land Cruiser Of The Day!
    1971 Toyota Land Cruiser FJ55 For Sale – Rare Donor or Restoration Project - For sale: a 1971 Toyota Land Cruiser FJ55, also known as the iconic “Iron Pig.” This vintage 4×4 is being offered as a donor vehicle or a full restoration ...
    4 months ago
  • Living with Birddogs
    Fingers Crossed - A friend and well known field trialer from Southern California has bred his female setter to a stud dog from Talmadge Smedley's kennel. I am hoping to g...
    4 months ago
  • NOLS Blog
    Instructor Spotlight: Caeden Greene - [image: Instructor Spotlight: Caeden Greene] A NOLS experience can truly be a transformative experience for a young person’s life, and that was certainly...
    5 months ago
  • Call of the Stream
    A TRIBUTE TO RIETA JOHNSTONE AND TROUT BUNGALOW - I was deeply saddened recently to hear the news of Rieta Johnstone’s passing on 4 June 2025 I first met Rieta in 2005 when I was researching trout acclimat...
    5 months ago
  • The Everyday Hunter
    Stop Looking for Robins - I'm not sure why people think robins are a harbinger of spring. Maybe it's because that's what we've heard since we were little kids. But...
    6 months ago
  • Gearset | Skillset
    Pennsylvania Governor’s Twenty Shooting Match: An AAR - Recently I had the opportunity to compete in the Pennsylvania Governor’s Twenty shooting match up at Fort Indiantown Gap, near …
    6 months 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 ...
    7 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...
    9 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...
    9 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 ...
    11 months ago
  • Leland Fly Fishing Blog
    The AeroFoam Guide Series Black Caddis: Your Ultimate Spring, Fall, and Winter Fly - When the air begins to turn a bit crisp and the water runs cold, there is one insect that often reigns supreme: the *Black Caddis*. These hardy insects m...
    11 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...
    11 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 ...
    1 year 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.
    1 year 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...
    1 year 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...
    1 year 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...
    2 years ago
  • Tips & Tricks Archives - Wolf Survival Gear Blog
    Successful Tips for November Deer Hunting - For hunters, November is an exciting and favored month. It’s a pivotal time for deer hunters, marked by the peak rutting (breading) season and the unique...
    2 years 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...
    2 years 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
  • 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
  • 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...
    5 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
  • 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...
    6 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...
    6 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....
    6 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...
    6 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...
    7 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...
    7 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...
    10 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

  • Letters from Leo — the American Pope & US Politics
    Pope Leo Criticizes Trump’s Ukraine Plan Sidelining Europe - After meeting with Zelenskyy, Leo XIV delivered a pointed critique of Trump’s go-it-alone approach — warning that any plan excluding Europe is “unrealistic...
    3 hours ago
  • Wyoming Catholic Cowboys - raw and real
    Comfort - Trying comforting people back to the Faith. https://youtu.be/Fvy7uzLiG60
    10 hours ago
  • What We Need To Know
    Critical Theory and the Politics of Divine Love, Part 1 - Michel Therrien examines cultural resistance to hierarchies of dependency
    13 hours ago
  • The Dawn Patrol
    "From Rock Music to Theology": a new podcast interview - At Cafe Atlantique, Milford, CT, 11/2/25 I'm grateful to Father Jack Bentz, SJ, for giving me the opportunity to speak about my faith and life on his podc...
    1 day ago
  • Further Up
    Religion, Revisited - Reviewing Ross Douthat and Charles Murray
    1 day ago
  • Joe In Black Ministries
    Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary | Monday, December 8, 2025 -
    1 day ago
  • City Father
    Our Hope in Terrible Days - Just 171 years ago in 1854, while guiding a Church still struggling to recover from the calamitous experience of the French Revolution, Blessed Pope P...
    1 day ago
  • Cellmate of Boethius
    Lex Anteinternet: Turning our backs on American Careerism. A synchronicitous trip. - Lex Anteinternet: Turning our backs on American Careerism. A synchr...: The Angelus by Jean-François Millet I experience synchronicity in some interesting ...
    2 days ago
  • Well-Tempered
    Four Last Things - The Endings and Beginnings of Advent
    4 days ago
  • Priesthood from the Inside Out
    St. Dismas: Good Thief, Good Friend - As a prison chaplain, I rely heavily on St. Dismas.
    4 days ago
  • Reality Theology with Griffin Gooch
    Your Ethics Might Be Making You a Terrible Person - Why You Shouldn’t Sleep on WWJD
    5 days ago
  • Letters from Fiddler's Greene
    Travelers From The Other Side - Speech Excerpt from Cascade Frontier Oregon Event, 2025
    6 days ago
  • The Catholic Gentleman
    No. 1 Guarantee of Your Child’s Success - Every parent wonders if their child will grow up successful, strong, capable, and grounded in faith. Most turn to schools, activities, friendships, or st...
    6 days ago
  • On Religion
    The convert era: What will Orthodox America look like in 2040 (Part II) - The Orthodox baptism rite includes a three-stage exorcism that is extremely detailed about the spiritual warfare that surrounds new Christians. Finally, th...
    1 week ago
  • Leila Miller
    Dear Protestant: Where did you get your New Testament? - For decades now, Protestants have used New Testament verses to show me where the Catholic Church is wrong about something. I always make them take the n...
    2 weeks ago
  • liturgy guy
    75% of Charlotte Seminarians Come from Parishes with Altar Rails - This weekend the faithful of Charlotte have learned that as of the 1st Sunday of Advent November 30, 2025, Bishop Michael Martin has ordered that altar rai...
    4 weeks ago
  • I Must Follow if I Can
    Dr Brant Pitre on Active Participation in the Mass - He delves into the Scripture, the theology, as well as the history of it in the Church and why it went away for a few hundred years. Highly recommended wat...
    5 weeks ago
  • Churches of the West
    Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus. - Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospi...: Pope Leo XIII issued Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus. TAMETSI FUTURA PROSPICIENTIBU...
    5 weeks ago
  • Churches of the East
    Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus. - Lex Anteinternet: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospi...: Thursday, November 1, 1900. Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus. Pope Leo XIII issued...
    5 weeks ago
  • About Catholics
    Can Catholics Participate in Halloween? - To answer the question, can Catholics participate in Halloween? It’s essential to understand what Halloween truly is, its origins, and the Church’s teachin...
    5 weeks ago
  • About Catholics
    Can Catholics Participate in Halloween? - To answer the question, can Catholics participate in Halloween? It’s essential to understand what Halloween truly is, its origins, and the Church’s teachin...
    5 weeks ago
  • Churches of the South
    Pope Leo to MAGA Climate Skeptics: “Repent” The pope warned that ridiculing global warming is not courage — it’s contempt for the poor and for God’s world. - Pope Leo to MAGA Climate Skeptics: “Repent”The pope warned that ridiculing global warming is not courage — it’s contempt for the poor and for God’s world.
    2 months ago
  • Canon Law Made Easy
    Can You Convalidate the Invalid Marriage of a Catholic Who’s Left the Church? - Q1: My son and his wife are no longer practicing Catholics. They were “married” by an evangelical minister. My son is now deeply upset that his marriage...
    2 months ago
  • Advocates for Solidarity
    Stepping Stones - Nine states that will determine the Solidarity Party's future
    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.
    3 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
Show 5 Show All

Politics and Economics

  • Politics, Policy, Political News Top Stories
    Spanberger stops short of full embrace of redistricting effort in Virginia - Virginia’s governor-elect said voters are the real voices that matter on redistricting in the commonwealth.
    1 hour ago
  • Robert Reich
    Has Trump totally lost it? Watch! - It’s one thing to read about his mental decline, another to see it. That’s why this video is so important.
    3 hours ago
  • Economy
    Forest Service looks to public land, local tax dollars to house its workers - Proponents see Bridger-Teton National Forest project as a novel approach to keep vital forest workers close to the lands they manage. Critics see a “slippe...
    6 hours ago
  • Adam Kinzinger
    The GOP’s War on Civil Service: A Rejection of Its Own History - A look at how Garfield’s murder and Arthur’s unexpected courage created modern civil service protections—and why today’s GOP is trying to dismantle them.
    7 hours ago
  • THE deEP STATE : The political artwork of Michael de Adder
    Last minute gift idea - Santa's Workshop
    8 hours ago
  • Wyoming Legislature
    Budget hearings day 6: Health department scrutiny - Rep. Ken Pendergraft (R-Sheridan) has been trying to figure out how to find cuts in the state health department’s budget as part of a three-member subcommi...
    10 hours ago
  • Politics & Government
    Budget hearings day 6: Health department scrutiny - Rep. Ken Pendergraft (R-Sheridan) has been trying to figure out how to find cuts in the state health department’s budget as part of a three-member subcommi...
    10 hours ago
  • Blog - Adam Smith Institute
    Promoting free or even paid-for landfill use - There are economic, environmental, and practical arguments for making landfill disposal free or even subsidized, rather than charging tipping fees.
    15 hours ago
  • Public Notice
    Mike Johnson's downward spiral - Speaker of the House is a tough job. But he's particularly bad at it.
    16 hours ago
  • The Ezra Klein Show
    Jon Stewart Rewatches Himself on ‘Crossfire’ | The Ezra Klein Show -
    1 day ago
  • The Dean's Report by Dean Obeidallah
    Sabrina Carpenter and Franklin the Turtle just punched Trump in the face! - They did what corporate media refuses to do!
    2 days ago
  • Diaper Diplomacy
    "The president of the United States called Minnesotans garbage"- Walz vs Trump on Somalia & "R" word -
    3 days ago
  • Jonah Goldberg, Author at The Dispatch
    ‘The Perception of Unfettered Power’ | Ruminant - Warmwater seafood is overrated.
    3 days ago
  • Wyoming Legislature
    Capitol Interpretive Exhibits and Wayfinding Subcommittee, December 16, 2025 -
    5 days ago
  • National Distributist Party
    The Hound Podcast | Ep. 2 | Rerum Novarum -
    2 weeks ago
  • Medianism
    Behind the curtain of immigration - Economists tend to favor relatively free trade in goods and the discipline is even more optimistic about the benefits of the free movement of people. For ...
    10 months ago
Show 5 Show All

Radio

  • OneTubeRadio.com
    1940 Barrage Balloons - Eighty-five years ago this month, the December 1940 issue of Practical Mechanics had this illustration of the barrage balloons that were a familiar sight o...
    3 hours ago
  • Buy Two Way Radios
    December 2025 Holiday Specials! - Don't miss the savings on Radios and accessories during our 2025 December Holiday Sale at Buy Two Way Radios! The post December 2025 Holiday Specials! ap...
    1 day ago
  • The KØNR Radio Site
    Winter Activation Of Bow Tie Mountain - On December 1, most SOTA summits in Colorado gain an additional 3 points due to the Seasonal (Winter) Bonus. Joyce/K0JJW and I were looking for a summit ...
    1 week 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
    2005: A Swiss Bridge Hailed as “a Delicate Expression of Structural Art” is Formally Dedicated - December 9, 2005 The Sunniberg Bridge near eastern Switzerland’s Alpine village of Klosters was officially opened to vehicular traffic nine years after its...
    9 hours ago
  • Stream Liner Memories
    Yellowstone National Park in 1909 - Here’s the 1909 edition of the Yellowstone Park booklet that was available from the Northern Pacific for free, as opposed to requiring 4¢ in postage stamps...
    19 hours ago
  • The Work Truck Blog
    Towns and Nature: Butler, PA: Bantam Jeep Building Fire - Towns and Nature: Butler, PA: Bantam Jeep Building Fire: ( Satellite ) The administration building of Bantam Jeep has been vacant for a long time. It burne...
    3 days ago
  • The Aerodrome
    Casper airport sees 10-year high for November flights - Headline in the CST: Casper airport sees 10-year high for November flights
    3 days ago
  • Kingston's Hanley Spur
    Woolen Mill History - Enhanced Post - AN OVERVIEW Known locally as the Woolen Mill, this four-storey 1882 enterprise was originally known as the Kingston Cotton Manufacturing Company. A sing...
    6 days ago
  • Great Northern Rwy's Mansfield Branch Line (1909-1985) and the Waterville Railway Co. (1910-1954)
    Custom built HO scale farm toy shop - Piper Farm Toys Reardan, WA. Frequented this store many times as a kid and adult. Operated by Bob Piper he passed on 2017. The store closed several years b...
    6 days ago
  • This Day In Automotive History
    October 28, 1983 – Toyota unveils 3 concept cars - When the 1983 Tokyo Motor Show opened its doors to the public on this day of that year, attendees were welcomed under the theme “Vehicles: Past, Present,...
    1 month ago
  • Railhead
    Towns and Nature: Dubuque, IA: Lost/CGW Depot - Towns and Nature: Dubuque, IA: Lost/CGW Depot: ( Satellite , as is rather typical, the depot's land got used by a highway. It looks like the Milwaukee trac...
    2 months ago
  • The Trolley Dodger
    Another Fall Harvest - We are back with an all-new Trolley Dodger blog post, our 316th. Our fifth book, The Chicago, Aurora and Elgin Railway, has arrived, to very positive revie...
    2 months ago
  • I'm Just Here For The Potty
    Boysen State Park, Wyoming. - This is an example of one of the numerous privies at Boysen State Park in Fremont County on US Highway 20 (Wyoming Highway 789). While these actually se...
    3 months 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 ...
    6 months ago
  • Frisco Archive
    MP15DC 361 - MP15DC 361 at Kansas City, Kansas on December 21, 1980 (Jame F. Primm II).
    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]:
    6 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...
    11 years ago
Show 5 Show All

War Game Blogs

  • JJ's Wargames
    Battle of Cape Finisterre, (Calder's Action), 22nd July 1805 - Far Distant Ships. - Admiral Sir Robert Calder's Action off Cape Finisterre, 22nd July 1805 - William Anderson Last weekend the Devon Wargames Group together with friends gat...
    3 days ago
  • KEITH'S WARGAMING BLOG
    Churn and Burn - My thoughts on the sometimes questionable effects of commercialised wargaming have surfaced from time to time on this blog. Most recently, in a post disa...
    4 days ago
  • Grymauch's Solo Wargaming Blog
    WOTR Battle of Hedgeley Moor, 24th April 1464 - This is a scenario from the Wars of the Roses Hail Caesar supplement. Background of the battle reproduced from the supplement: The Lancastrian situatio...
    1 week ago
  • The Mad Padre's Wargames Page
    The Singapore Sling - Final Edition - Our naval defence correspondent "Neptune" offers another column from his vantage point at the Empire Lounge, Raffles Hotel (*reflecting state of play in ...
    2 weeks ago
  • Blog - Stuart Ellis-Gorman
    Playing at the World, 2e Volume 2: Three Pillars of Role-Playing Games by Jon Peterson - I have made no secret of my affection for Jon Peterson’s study of the origins of Dungeons and Dragons (D&D), both in its original single volume form and in...
    2 months ago
  • War Blog - Modern Warfare 1946-2021
    War Blog - About -
    3 months ago
  • The Raft
    Torpedoes & Tides: The Campaign System - Torpedoes & Tides will also include campaign rules. Alan Saunders is already busy playtesting them (you can read all about it on his blog), and I have also...
    3 months ago
  • AJ's Wargaming Blog
    New STL Files - Swivel guns for Age of sail or Pirate gaming - This is the next installment of my 3D STL files series. These are swivel guns for 28mm age of sail or pirate games. There are many makers of deck guns, b...
    3 months ago
  • Musket, Sword and Paint
    Unboxing Qin Dynasty Army 1/72 - In this video we unbox the 1/72 scale Qin Army by Caesar Miniatures. These plastic miniatures come in 12 different poses and 42 in a box. Great set for gam...
    3 years ago
Show 5 Show All

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