Friday, October 2, 2015

Saturday, October 2, 1915. Banditry.

Pueblo Nuevo, Guanajuato was attacked by around 700 armed men on horseback thought to retreating members of Villa's army.  Locals resisted the attack, which amounted to banditry.

Following a drunken knife assault on Finnish immigrant Oscar Carlson in Wrangell, Alaska, a town authorized vigilance committee drove Mexican dock workers out of the town.  One of them was the guilty party, which had asked Carlson to fight or drink with them.  Ultimately, one was arrested and served time for the assault, but not before Mexicans in general had been driven out of the town.

New dockworkers from Mexico would return the following year.

An interesting aspect of this is that I wouldn't have thought there were Mexican dock workers in Alaska at the time.

It was a Saturday.


The childhood style of sailor suits for children is evident here, and is really odd.  It apparently had been started by Queen Victoria dressing her son in a sailor suit for an 1846 trip on the royal yacht.

Last edition:

Friday, October 1, 1915. Sedicioista raids stop.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Friday, October 1, 1915. Sedicioista raids stop.

Sedicionistas,  raids into the United States stopped with Carranza nearing recognition as the de facto leader of Mexico by the United States.

Last edition:

September 30, 1915. AAA

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Mid Week at Work: British Paratroopers in Germany during Operation Varsity.


September 30, 1915. AAA

Serbian Private Radoje Ljutovac shot down an enemy aircraft, becoming the first soldier known to have downed an enemy aircraft from ground fire, firing a captured Turkish fieldpiece on an anti aircraft mount.

He was a veteran of the First Balkan War and would survive the First World War, going on to open a general store thereafter.  He died in 1968 at age 81.

The Endurance began to crack up.


Heinrich Schneidereit, German weightlifter and gold and bronze medalist at the 1906 Olympic Games, was killed in action near Thionville, France. 

Last edition:

Wednesday, September 29, 1915. The Great New Orleans Hurricane.

Monday, September 28, 2015

More pool problems

I'm tempted to say it was inevitable, but news broke last week that Kelly Walsh's swimming pool, the sole surviving Casper high school pool, will have to come out next summer.

The choice was to rip it out this winter, or next summer, and to deprive the boys team of a pool, or the girls.

And I mean the boys and girls from both high school, as NCHS's pool came out last year, and of course the voters opted not to fund a new one.  Now, there will be no pool at all.

I suppose that this was known for some time and I missed it, but what was a surprise to everyone was that there is going to be a cost overrun, and that part of either the girls or boy's seasons would be compromised. The decision was made to compromise the girls season, based on the logic that it won't last as long for them as the construction will start in the summer and the outdoor summer pools will still be open at the beginning of their season.

Well, I suppose that's correct but the city is still building a replacement for an outdoor pool it ripped out a couple of years ago, so there's even a bit of a deficit there. And that relies upon the good graces of the city, perhaps already conferred, which feared the school district linking its bond election to their $.01 sales tax issue in the general election, which may have resulted in the failure of the school bond issue as that was done in a special election, at the city's request, to avoid that.  In a special election you are likely to omit the general voters.

All of this is a sad situation.  The NC pool and probably the original KWHS pool were funded by the community directly, on their own.  Now that most of our school construction is funded by the state (as long as the coal money holds out), we don't seem to be doing as good of job.

Tuesday, September 28, 1915. La Matanza of Ebenezer

Texas City, Texas.  September 28, 1915.

Between 15 to 30 ethnic Mexicans were murdered by the Texas Rangers at the Alamo (La Matanza of Ebenezer).   An entire series of murders of Hispanics occured in this era based upon guilt by ethnicity.

Field Marshal John French suggested to Gen. Foch that a determined assault at Loos could force a gap in the German line, but Foch demurred.

British and Indian troops defeated the Ottomans at the Battle of Es Sinn, taking a strategic point on the Tigris and Euphrates.

J.P. Morgan and the  Anglo French Financial Commission worked out the details on what was, at the time, the largest loan in history.

Last edition:

Monday, September 27, 1915. Murdered for being Hispanic, Jack Kipling killed in action.

Lex Anteinternet: Hurt feelings?

Recently I wrote about the Peabody Coal Company being unhappy about the inclusion of lyrics from John Prine's song Paradise in a pleading:
Lex Anteinternet: Hurt feelings?: There's a case pending, apparently, in the Federal District Court of Wyoming in which environmentalist have sued the Peabody Coal Compan...
Well, their motion to strike the lyrics failed, the court deciding they'd just have to live with it, in part because the song's been around since 1971 and everyone ought to be used to it by now.

Monday at the Bar: Courthouses of the West: Kimball County Nebraska Courthouse, Kimball Nebras...

Courthouses of the West: Kimball County Nebraska Courthouse, Kimball Nebraska:

This is the Kimball County Courthouse in Kimball Nebraska.  This fine looking courthouse was opened in 1928 and was constructed of Carthage stone, with floors of Ozark gray marble and fixtures made of solid walnut.  MKTH Photo.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Some Gave All: Wyoming Army National Guard Museum

Here we have yet another post that appeared on another one of our sites, that being the one dedicated to war memorials, that we're linking in here, as it shows us a lot of interesting things that relate directly to the focus of this blog, including some that have been commented on before.  As they say, and quite correctly, a picture is worth a thousand words, and these pictures, while not great.  Reveal quite a bit.  This "mirrored" posts depicts the Wyoming Army National Guard Museum in Cheyenne Wyoming.

As there was a fair amount of text in the original entry, we've set this off as quotes so that we can add our additional comments here and expand on it in the context of this post.

These photographs illustrate the location of the Wyoming Army National Guard Museum.  As I was taking this photo in an effort to illustrate the older, cavalry related, part of this structure, I failed to get a really good photo of the front of the museum.

The building was built in 1936, during a period of time during which cavalry was actually receiving increased attention in the American military.  The Wyoming National Guard (there was only an Army Guard at the time, as of course there was no Air Force at all, that being part of the Army) was cavalry at the time, being the 115th Cavalry Regiment. Some may wonder about the "AL" below the AD on the corner stone.  The AL is the date used in Masonry for the creation of the earth, and many buildings of this type during this era were dedicated with the participation of Masons.
Adding to this what these photos above (and below) depict is architectural evidence of a couple of really interesting things that were going on at the time.

Note the date of the construction, 1936, and what the building was constructed for, the Headquarters unit of the 115th Cavalry Regiment, Wyoming National Guard.

Cheyenne borders what was then Ft. D. A. Russell, which is now Warren Air Force Base.  This, then, tells us something about the oddity of how the Army and the National Guard interacted at the time.  Now, Camp Guernsey, the  huge Wyoming Army National Guard training range, is used nearly full time by units of various states Army National Guards as well as the U.S. Army and the U.S. Marine Corps.  In other words, the service had a high degree of interaction between the reserve and the active duty forces.  In 1936. .  . not nearly so much.  Indeed, it's really odd to think of a National Guard building being built just a few miles from a huge Army post. Why not just build a structure within the post grounds? Well, they didn't.

Additionally, note that this served a horse cavalry regiment, which shortly became a Horse Mechanized cavalry regiment. This stands counter to what a lot of people imagine occurring just three years prior to the German invasion of Poland. But in reality, cavalry not only remained in the U.S. Army in this period, but it had expanded in size and significance after World War One.

This wasn't folly, it reflected a sincere strategic concern. 

In retrospect, it's been enormously common to look down on the armies of World War Two, such as the American army and Polish army, and criticize them for retaining cavalry, as if they were mired in romanticism about the horse.  Far from it, in actuality, the lessons of World War One, when viewed in context, argued for mobility, and well into, and beyond, the late 1930s, that argued for the horse. The challenge was hot to retain mobility so that warfare didn't become static, like it had in late 1914, rather than mobile, and quick.  Armor in the original 1917-18 context didn't offer that promise, and it wasn't clear until World War Two that it did.

Indeed, there was actually quite a bit of horse cavalry action during World War One, something that's often forgotten or completely overlooked, and in some immediate post war examples cavalry was predominate.  Cavalry was hugely significant in the Russian Civil War and in the Russo Polish War, for example.  And, as nearly completely overlooked, ever single army during World War Two used horses, and quite a few armies, such as the Soviet Army, and yes the German Army, used quite a bit of cavalry.  It was World War Two, not World War One, that turned out to be the last big war featuring lots of cavalry.

So, in that context, the expansion of cavalry into the National Guard in the 1920s and 1930s makes a lot of sense. And that's what happened in Wyoming.

Wyoming's National Guard had only one pre 1920s National Guard cavalry unit, that being the Laramie Grey's.  Most of Wyoming's National Guard in the 19th Century was infantry. The reason is fairly simple. Cavalry is expensive.  Sure, there were a lot of people who rode in Wyoming in the 19th Century (and a lot of people who did not), but that didn't mean that the state would be able to provide a lot of horses for people to use once a week at drill (as Guard units, in that era, drilled once a week).  And people aren't necessarily keen on using their own horses for such things. Beyond that, quite a few of the best riders were not the people who would be in town and able to attend a National Guard drill every week.

Wyoming did, of course, famously contribute a volunteer cavalry regiment, the Second United States Volunteer Cavalry, during the Spanish American War. But that unit isn't properly considered to be a National Guard unit. Wyoming did provide some Guard units do the Spanish American War and the Philippine Insurrection, but none of them were cavalry.  In spite of that, it should be noted, the Wyoming Army National Guard retains the lineage of the Second United States Volunteer Cavalry, given Wyoming's role in raising this citizen soldier unit.

During World War One, in contrast, the Wyoming National Guard was artillery.  Artillery used a lot of horsepower in that era, and is pretty complicated to train men on, but that's what it was.  In the 1920s, however, as the Army became increasingly concerned about battlefield mobility, and as it operated to have more and more control over state Guard units and what they were, the Wyoming National Guard became cavalry. This was a cavalry armory.

Another interesting thing about this building's corner stone is the AL 5936 year mark, which is noted above. As noted above, this is a calendar year based upon a Masonic system.  The inclusion of Masons in the dedication of various public buildings has been noted on our blogs before, with both the Federal District Courthouse in Casper and the Colorado State House having cornerstones noting the same.  This demonstrates how significant fraternal organizations were in earlier eras, as this simply would not happen now.  Indeed, including such a mark on a cornerstone now would likely be controversial.  But at the time, it clearly was not.

It also is interesting in the context of the year system, as it reflects a once fairly common view that the world was only a little over 5,000 years old. There are still those who adhere to this, but it is certainly the common scientific view that the world is billions of years old, and most Christian faiths have no problem with this.  The AL system relied upon a fairly common set of efforts by various individuals to determine the age of the world by way of the Bible, even though the Bible never states how old the world is.

Its interesting to note that the Jewish year for 1936 would have been 5696, which isn't greatly different, is also based on the year of creation, with the initial  year being the year before the creation.  Most contemporary Jews would not have a problem with the scientific position that the world is billions of years old.

The calendar date for the Gregorian calendar here is noted as "AD 1936". This too is telling.  AD, of course, stand for Anno Domini, or Year of Our Lord.  As opposed to the AL system noted above, or the AM system of the Jewish calendar (the Year of the Word), the AD system is tied closely to an actual event, that being the birth of Christ. While some may scoff, the fact that the early history of Christianity featured twelve individuals going as far about the globe as they could, all with the same story, and all with the same practices, and  that they left very lengthy letters regarding it, pretty much fixes in time the event and that it happened.

The interesting thing about "AD" as a calendar date is that the whole glove now uses it, but some scholars have recently reworked AD as BCE, that standing for Before the Common Era.  This is a sort of snooty way of devaluing the Christian nature of a calendar that came about as a Papal reformation of an existing Christian calendar, but ironically, it enforces it. What's "common" about the "Common Era". Well, the Christian influence. Again, we have the remarkable fact that twelve men spread all over the known globe for a message that required them to live in poverty and to die for the message, and yet they retained the same on, and that this soon spread over the civilized world and change it. That's the common feature of the Common Era.  That some would even feel compelled to have to deny this is something that wouldn't have come about until our own era.


This shows the front of the building. This structure was used as a National Guard Armory from the 1930s until some time until the 1970s, but I suspect the brick structure was a latter addition.   These small armories became very unsuitable for continued use by the 1960s, and were replaced in quite a few instances during the 1970s to contemplate the need for much larger armories.  Compounding this need was the fact that in some instances, such as in Casper and Cheyenne, the old armories were well within the city limits by the 1960s making their use for military purposes difficult.
Not only is this true, we've noted it before with the photographs of the Casper Armory that came down in the late 1980s.  At any rate, the added element of the story I didn't fill in is that after the Cold War small town armories disappeared altogether, or at least they ceased to be used as armories.  All sorts of National Guard armories that existed in the 1980s when I was in the Guard are no longer used.  Only the bigger towns tend to retain armories, or areas that are so isolated that there's no other choice but to have them. Armories that once existed, for example, in Rawlins, Riverton, Wheatland and Thermopolis no longer do.  However, in some ways that's a long term trend.  Small Glenrock Wyoming had a National Guard unit in the 1920s and 1930s.  It hasn't since World War Two.


M7 105 Gun Motor Carriage. The Wyoming Army National Guard's 300th Armored Field Artillery used these during the Korean War, during which they won a Presidential and a Congressional Unit Citation for an action in which they directly engaged attacking Communist forces.
After World War Two, much of the Wyoming Army National Guard was converted to artillery and became the 300th AFA, as noted here. They used this fine gun, although it was already entering obsolescence.  Fearing the same chassis as the M4 Sherman tank, this was a very good self propelled gun.  By the late 1950s, however, it was obsolete in the U.S. Army, although it soldiered on in other armies into the 1970s.



This is a M59 Armored Personnel Carrier, two of which are on display at this museum.  I'm not aware of any Wyoming Army National Guard unit using these, but some must have as the other items on display here were definitely used by the Wyoming Army National Guard.  Wyoming's units included the 115th Mechanized Cavalry, the descendant of the 115th Cavalry and the 115th Cavalry (Horse Mech), in the 1950s and perhaps onto the 1960s, at which point the cavalry was phased out and the 115th lineage was carried on by the 115th Artillery Regiment.  The former cavalry units became battalions of the 49th Field Artillery along with the 300th AFA.  Today, those units are smaller and are once again the 300th AFA.
I was surprised to see this in the Guard's collection, but they must have used some when the Guard here still had mechanized cavalry.  These early APCs established the American type, but they were always problematic in some sense.


This is a USS M777 155mm howitzer, which is a gun still used by the US military.
This isn't an obsolete howitzer.  The fact that it would show up in this collection, however, shows the extent to which rockets have taken over in the heavy artillery field, in the U.S. Army.


Blog Mirror: Some Gave All: James Bridger's Ferry

I generally try not to post an entry on one of our (less published on) blogs entact here, save for courthouse and church photographic entries, but recently I had a couple that so related to changes in history, and indeed over the time upon which this blog theoretically focuses upon, that I've done that more than usual. Here's one such item, James Bridger's Ferry.

This was put up on our blog on monuments, but it is also now on our regular photograph blog, Holscher's Hub, and on our Railroad blog, Railhead.  I'm posting it here, as it says quite a bit about changes in transportation over the years.  Here was  have a location for a mid 19th Century ferry, that became a late 19th Century railroad bridge location, and then a state highway bridge location.

Note also, this says something, perhaps a little sad, about the nature of modern highways and how they're more efficient, but how they are also less part of things, in some ways.  This monument, put up in a location near the ferry site, is pretty much now never seen except by local traffic.  This is probably only a mile or so away from the Interstate highway, but no such monument appears there.  And the highway itself, that this monument is located on, was located between Orin Junction and Wheatland Wyoming.  Now the Interstate bypasses Orin Junction entirely and it really only zips by Wheatland. For that matter, there isn't a single town on the I 25 that, in Wyoming, you really have to stop in, while traveling the Interstate, except to get fuel if you need it.




This is one of Wyoming's many roadside monuments that's not longer really road side. This monument is on the old highway that ran from Orin Junction to Wheatland.  When the Interstate was built, Orin Junction was bypassed and for that matter, the Interstate zips through, not into, Wheatland.  Many such monuments exist, a few of which are now completely marooned. This one commemorates Jim Bridger's ferry across the North Platte River, which was placed in 1864.






A Burlington Norther Railroad Bridge, which itself isn't youthful, very near where the ferry once was.

Some Gave All: South Carolina World War One Memorial faces contro...

Some Gave All: South Carolina World War One Memorial faces contro...: A World War One memorial in South Carolina faces controversy due to its wording.

Monday, September 27, 1915. Murdered for being Hispanic, Jack Kipling killed in action.

Antonio Longoria.

Texas Ranchers Jesus Bazán, 67, and Antonio Longoria, 49, were murdered by Texas Rangers after visiting the Rangers camp to report horses being stolen.

Lt. John Kipling, the son of Rudyard Kipling, was killed in the Battle of Loos  He was 18 years old, but only barely so, and had initially been rejected for service due to his bad eyesight.

Rail cars carrying casinghead gas exploded in Ardmore Oklahoma, causing massive destruction and killing 43 people.

Last edition:

Sunday, September 26, 1915. Wab.

Sunday Morning Scene: Churches of the West: St Edmund Mission Church, Roman Catholic, Ranchester Wyoming

Churches of the West: St Edmund Mission Church, Roman Catholic, Ranchester, Wyoming

St. Edmund Mission Church is a small church in the small town of Ranchester, Wyoming. Located just north of Sheridan, the mission is served by the Parish in Sheridan.

Saturday, September 26, 2015

8mm Movie Film to Digital




I have some 8mm movie film of F86’s landing during the Korean War, some of which are damaged aircraft.

I’d like to get these films transferred to digital, but every time I look into it, the costs detour me.

Has anyone done this, and can you recommend somebody to do it at a reasonable price?

The Best Posts of the Week of September 20, 2015

Jeep

Sunday, September 26, 1915. Wab.

The French captured Souchez.  The Germans held in the face of British assaults and inflicted 8,000 casualties on 10,000 meen at Loos.  The French advanced and took 2,000 German pows in the Second Battle of Champagne.

The news of the big offensive hit the U.S. press.

Nobody was accepting responsibility for fighting on the U.S. border.

Wab was taken by a hunter.


Last edition:

Saturday, September 25, 1915. Large Allied Offensive in France.

Friday, September 25, 2015

Wyoming Fact and Fiction: Wyoming's Sheep Industry

Wyoming Fact and Fiction: Wyoming's Sheep Industry: By the early 1880s, cattlemen were starting to see more and more sheep being brought into eastern Wyoming. Some accepted them but many, som...

Saturday, September 25, 1915. Large Allied Offensive in France.

British troops advancing through gas, September 25, 1915.

The French Tenth Army and the BEF launched offensive attacks on the Western Front.  The main focus was a British effort at Loos and Champagne.  The British used gas for the first time in their efforts, and the British New Army, newly recruited volunteers, were committed to action for the first time.

The British also assaulted the Hohenzollern Redoubt.


Lord Kitchener demanded the redeployment of two British divisions and one French one from Gallipoli to Greece.


Former Princeton football standout Johnny Poe  was killed in action at age 41 while serving in the British Army.

Poe was a restless soul who had served in the National Guard prior to the Spanish American War and hoped to see action in it. He did not, so after briefly working as a cowboy, he joined the Army and served in the Philippine Insurrection.  He subsequently joined the Marine Corps in hopes of seeing action in Panama, but did not.  He was briefly a soldier of fortune in Central America thereafter.

The Ogden Standard posed a question.


The Casper paper warned that U.S. troops might cross into Mexico.


Last edition:

Friday, September 24, 1915. More border violence, Zapata advances, Bulgaria mobilizes, Tragedy at the Fair.