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J.B. Mauney became a rodeo legend. Then a bull broke his neck. - Washington Post. How Texas ranchers are recovering after Texas wildfires. Subscribe to The Y’all — a weekly dispatch about the people, places and policies defining Texas, produced by Texas Tribune journalists living in communities across the state. PAMPA — On the second day of the Smokehouse Creek fire, Dale Jenkins was looking out his window. He could see the wispy white smoke passing over the hill on the horizon of his Candadian ranch.

A squad of local volunteer firefighters had worked all night to contain the fire. Jenkins, a life long rancher in the Texas Panhandle, had witnessed enough wildfires to know this wasn’t over. It was too windy. The Panhandle rancher and his family hurried to save more than 100 heads of cattle that were to be sold for breeding in two weeks for more than $300 per head. Jenkins personally wrangled 24 cows and 11 calves into a fenced-in area on his land. Jenkins and his peers stressed the fire’s hidden costs. “Historic homes and ranches burned to the ground — literally museums to our region and way of life.

Scientists discover unknown prehistoric world — on Earth. The Hottest Drink of the 1893 World's Fair Was an Artificial Orange 'Cider' - Gastro Obscura. Imagine you’re a wide-eyed attendee of the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago, also known as the World’s Fair. Luckily, you’ve finally landed at the front of the line for the marvelous Ferris wheel, the first ever constructed. Unluckily, it’s a hot June day, and two rotations on the Ferris wheel take 20 minutes. After stumbling out of the Ferris wheel cabin, you’ve sweated through your fine fair-going clothes. Feeling dizzy and nauseous from the heat more than the heights, you see a welcome sight: Next to the ride, a stand is selling ice-cold orange cider.

Sweet, sour, and nonalcoholic, orange cider was the hottest drink of the World’s Fair. Learn with Us! Check out our lineup of courses taught by world-class experts from around the world.See Courses World fairs and expositions have long been a way for nations, states, institutions, and businesses to show off their best sides to large audiences. But there were much more offensive versions. Ingredients Instructions Notes and Tips. This Was Village Life in Britain 3,000 Years Ago. Archaeologists discover a lost world of 417 ancient Mayans cities buried in remote jungle, connected by miles of 'superhighways,' WaPo reports. Lost cities hidden for thousands of years discovered under forest. Thaddeus Stevens, Revolutionary. If Abraham Lincoln was, in historian James McPherson’s apt words, a “reluctant” revolutionary, Thaddeus Stevens was an eager one.

“There was in him,” Frederick Douglass said of the Radical Republican and Pennsylvania congressman, “the power of conviction, the power of will, the power of knowledge, and the power of conscious ability,” qualities that “at last made him more potent in Congress and in the country than even the president and cabinet combined.” An ardent believer in the “free labor” capitalist society then developing in the US North, Stevens strove throughout his life both to assist that economic system’s growth and to rid it and the nation as a whole of “every vestige of human oppression” and “inequality of rights.”

At the national level, he worked above all to outlaw the ownership of human beings that was central to the economy, social relations, and politics of the Southern states. Accomplishing that task, he well knew, would be a huge undertaking. Why? Indians 101: Acoma Pueblos and the Spanish, 1539-1599. Threaded through Time: the History of Crochet. For many of us, crocheting is a central piece in our life puzzle: it can be a relaxing retreat from everyday life, a business, an artistic medium, an intergenerational connection, or a way to reach out to a community through service. Curled up with a classic pattern in your favorite crochet spot, do you ever For many of us, crocheting is a central piece in our life puzzle: it can be a relaxing retreat from everyday life, a business, an artistic medium, an intergenerational connection, or a way to reach out to a community through service.

Curled up with a classic pattern in your favorite crochet spot, do you ever wonder, “Who do I have to thank for this?” —and not just who designed the pattern or taught you to crochet, but who got the metaphorical yarn ball rolling for the very first time? According to Hubpages, Kathryn from Crochet Concupiscence, and Marks, crochet entered the mainstream in European publications as the 1800s picked up steam. In her article for Crochet Insider, Denise J. Thicker Than Water: A Brief History of Family Violence in Appalachian Kentucky ‹ Literary Hub. Around the turn of the century, on a patch of quiet, eastern Kentucky farmland, my great-great grandmother took a hatchet and buried it into the chest of a woman who had been hanging around her husband, or so the family story goes.

The hatcheting was the first story I had ever heard about Mary Jane Fields Bishop (or Granny Bishop as she was known on my dad’s side of the family). A shocking introduction, to say the least. Knowing I come from people who lived very hard lives and endured terrible things is difficult. Knowing that I come from someone who ruined others’ lives and did terrible things haunts me perhaps more than it should, considering I didn’t choose my origins. And yet I keep digging. I keep trying to understand the blood I came from and just how much of it still runs in my veins. When I first started researching my family in earnest a few years ago, I went out to my late grandmother’s house in Riverhaven.

The hatchet story nearly didn’t get told. Opinion | Howell Raines: The Civil War history they didn’t want you to know. December 20, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. EST Comment Save Howell Raines, a former executive editor of the New York Times, is the author of “Silent Cavalry: How Union Soldiers from Alabama Helped Sherman Burn Atlanta — and Then Got Written Out of History.” A new generation of Civil War scholars is filling in what one commentator calls the “skipped history” of White Southerners who fought for the Union Army. My given name is an Anglicized version of the biblical middle name of James Hiel Abbott, who died in 1877 after helping his son slip through rebel lines to enlist in the 1st Alabama Cavalry, a distinguished regiment of bluecoat fighters whose story was deliberately excluded from the Alabama Department of Archives and History in Montgomery.

How did a regiment of 2,066 fighters and spies from the mountain South, chosen by Gen. The Owens were not alone in what was a national academic movement to play down the sins of enslavers. ‘Sometimes you feel you’re in Palestine’: culture and cause burn brightly in Chile | Chile. Above canvas awnings along the narrow streets in Patronato, a busy commercial district in Chile’s capital, Palestinian flags hang from lampposts and frame warehouse doors. Bakeries sell baklava, pita and falafel; and shelves are stacked with products imported from the Middle East, their ingredients hastily covered over with Spanish approximations.

Here in Santiago, 8,000 miles from Gaza, Palestine’s cause and culture burn brightly: Chile is home to the largest Palestinian diaspora outside the Middle East, numbering as many as 500,000 people. “I would love to say that the support is born from an innate sympathy for human suffering,” said Dalal Marzuca, 28, a third-generation Chilean Palestinian. “But I think it’s more likely that everyone here just has a friend, colleague or classmate with Palestinian heritage.” “Being Chilean Palestinian is unique,” said Marzuca. “We’re all suffering because of this, it’s a death foretold,” she said, her voice shaking. Henry Kissinger, Who Shaped U.S. Cold War History, Dies at 100. “History has treated Acheson more kindly,” Mr. Kissinger wrote. “Accolades for him have become bipartisan.”

Thirty-five years after his death, he said, Acheson had “achieved iconic status.” Mr. Kissinger clearly became an icon of a different kind. And he was acutely aware that the challenges facing the nation had changed. At age 96, he plunged into questions surrounding artificial intelligence, teaming up with Eric Schmidt, Google’s former chief executive, and the computer scientist Daniel Huttenlocher to write “The Age of AI: And Our Human Future” (2019), in which he discussed how the development of weapons controlled by algorithms, rather than directly by humans, would change concepts of deterrence. After donating his papers to Yale, Mr. Mr. One student asked him about his legacy. “Now that I’ve reached beyond their age,” he added, “I’m not worried about my legacy.

Michael T. A Rare Look Inside Victorian Houses From The 1800s (13 Photos) | Dusty Old Thing. We’ve always lived in and been fascinated by old houses. Our childhood home was built in 1812 in a small, rural town and came with so many interesting stories and peculiarities that it often felt as if it was its own character. In reviewing old photos for our site, we’ve always set aside those that give a glimpse of what daily life could have been like in these houses in the late 1800s and early 1900s. We hope you enjoy these photos as much as we enjoyed putting them together! Here’s an 1890’s Victorian dining room. If these walls could talk! We love old photos from inside homes that give a glimpse in to daily life.

Such is the case with this 1865 photo called “Interieur” taken by Lady Frances Jocelyn. Here’s one of our favorites: Marcel Vanderkindere’s image of a summer lounge in Belgium in 1895. A rare view inside a 19th century Victorian home. Inside an 1880’s home. An elegant, high-ceilinged home in Cortland, New York in the 1890s. Here is a more middle-class parlor. (81) Chaco Canyon and the Chaco Phenomenon. Lyman's Red River War | Lyman's Wagon Train Battle Foundation | Red River War | Canadian Texas. Why many Republicans would prefer students never learn the truth about American history. Ancient footprints upend timeline of humans’ arrival in North America. Comment Dozens of awe-inspiring ancient footprints left on the shores of an ice age lake have reignited a long-running debate about when the first people arrived in the Americas.

Two years ago, a team of scientists came to the conclusion that human tracks sunk into the mud in White Sands National Park in New Mexico were more than 21,000 years old. The provocative finding threatened the dominant thinking on when and how people migrated into the Americas. Soon afterward, a technical debate erupted about the method used to estimate the age of the tracks, which relied on an analysis of plant seeds embedded with the footprints. Now, a study published in the journal Science confirms the initial finding with two new lines of evidence: thousands of grains of pollen and an analysis of quartz crystals in the sediments.

“If anything, early findings like the White Sands footprints should inspire further scientific investigation in what is a dynamic and changing field,” Becerra-Valdivia said. Atlasobscura. It’s 1864, and the Civil War is raging. But southern secession isn’t the only danger threatening the Union. The United States has plenty of other enemies, foreign and domestic. If they got their way, this is what the formerly united states would look like—not two, but four nations jostling for space and supremacy on the land mass between the Pacific and Atlantic. The map title reads: Our Country as Traitors & Tyrants Would Have It; or Map of the Disunited States.”It was published in New York by H.H. Learn with Us! Check out our lineup of courses taught by world-class experts from around the world.See Courses The core of the CSA was composed of seven Southern, slave-holding states who seceded following the election of Abraham Lincoln in November 1860: Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, and South Carolina.

The map shows all these states but one as part of the eventual CSA, with Confederate Missouri only going up to the Missouri River, which transects the state. Bill Richardson, Champion of Americans Held Overseas, Dies at 75. As governor, he raised teachers’ salaries, abolished the death penalty, signed legislation to allow New Mexicans to carry concealed handguns, established a fund to pay for public works, supported gay rights, raised the minimum wage and offered prekindergarten programs for 4-year-olds.

But he declined to pardon William H. Bonney, known as Billy the Kid, for killing a New Mexico sheriff 130 years earlier. (Mr. Bonney was said to have been promised a pardon if he testified in another case.) Mr. In 1997, when he was at the United Nations, Mr. He usually got his way, though, as a result of relentless bargaining and a gregarious personality. In his first campaign for governor, he set a Guinness World Record by shaking 13,392 hands in eight hours at the New Mexico State Fair. The Surprising Contents of an American POW's Journal - JSTOR Daily. “Killed in Action” was the tragic news Lieutenant Joseph “Ed” Carter’s family received from the front.

As they would eventually find out, but only after holding a funeral service, Carter was alive and (relatively) well, imprisoned at Stalag Luft III, a German prisoner of war camp that mostly housed airmen. The sheer number of prisoners of war held during World War II is incomprehensible, with some 35 million military personnel detained by enemy forces throughout the war. Prisoner treatment varied between strict adherence to the Geneva Convention and its provisions all the way through summary execution and torture, depending on the nation, camp, and day.

During his imprisonment, Carter was able to keep a journal, a digitized version of which is available on JSTOR courtesy of Wake Forest University. The journal falls somewhere between a collage, an art project, and a diary. Carter liked lists—the journal is full of them. Carter’s sense of humor is evident throughout his diary. Author Event | Hopwood DePree with Downton Shabby. How the Virgin Mary Became the World’s Most Powerful Woman. This story appears in the December 2015 issue of National Geographic magazine. It’s apparition time: 5:40 p.m. In a small Roman Catholic chapel in Bosnia and Herzegovina, in the village of Medjugorje, Ivan Dragicevic walks down the aisle, kneels in front of the altar, bows his head for a moment, and then, smiling, lifts his gaze heavenward. He begins to whisper, listens intently, whispers again, and doesn’t blink for ten minutes. His daily conversation with the Virgin Mary has begun. Dragicevic was one of six poor shepherd children who first reported visions of the Virgin Mary in 1981.

I’m in Medjugorje with a group of Americans, mostly hockey dads from the Boston area, plus two men and two women with stage 4 cancer. “The anxiety and depression were gone,” he told me. The next morning, with his friends Rob and Kevin, he met another of the “visionaries,” Vicka Ivankovic-Mijatovic, in a jewelry shop and asked for her help. Since then, Boyle has been back to Medjugorje 13 times. At St. Who wrote the Dead Sea scrolls? Science may have the answer. In November 1946, as the sun slowly rose over the Judean Desert, three Bedouin cousins went looking for a lost goat in the hills close to the Dead Sea.

Intent on finding the animal, they stumbled instead on some of the most important religious texts in the ancient world—the Dead Sea Scrolls. Some 100,000 fragments from around 900 manuscripts, found in 11 caves, have been discovered to date, and new scroll fragments continue to be found to this day. Written on animal parchment and papyrus, most of the manuscripts are sectarian, though about 100 of them are biblical text, providing insight into the Bible and shedding light on the histories of Judaism and Christianity. Every book of the Hebrew canon—the Christian Old Testament—are among the texts (except Esther). They also contain previously unknown prayers, hymns, mystical formulas, and the earliest version of the Ten Commandments. The Dead Sea Scrolls are estimated to be 2,000 years old.

First theories Debating identities Jerusalem origins? ‘His Name Was Bélizaire’: Rare Portrait of Enslaved Child Arrives at the Met. Gouverneur Morris, writer of Constitution’s ‘We the People,’ was disabled. Florida Board fails hilariously at proving "Slavery taught skills" Amarillo Globe-News. The True History of Custer's Last Stand. Enslaved by George Washington, Harry Washington Escaped to Freedom—and Joined the British Army | History. Study Offers New Twist in How the First Humans Evolved. Titanic: Amateur radio heard SOS in Welsh town 3,000 miles away. Titanic: First ever full-sized scans reveal wreck as never seen before. The Rediscovery of America: why Native history is American history | Books. Slavery and the Guardian: the ties that bind us | Slavery. ‘100-year find’: Enormous Viking ship holds surprising clues on burial rituals.

Long-Lost Letters Bring Word, at Last. A look inside the world of the Neanderthals. The Bronc-busting, Cow-punching, Death-defying Legend of Boots O’Neal. The Scottish History That Inspired Outlander. National Geographic Magazine. New discovery by Croatoan Archaeological Society helps to further dispel the myth of The Lost Colonists | Island Free Press. The Mysteries of the Sacred City of Caral-Supe | AlienCon. Yes, Vikings Really Did Live in the Americas 1,000 Years Ago. AAAS. DNA offers a new look at how Polynesia was settled.

Ancient footprints could be oldest traces of humans in the Americas. Dazzling Color Photos of the Legendary Romanov Costume Ball of 1903. Who were the nine tribes of ancient Scotland? Viking city: excavation reveals urban pioneers not violent raiders | Cities. 10 fascinating facts about John Wesley and United Methodism | United Methodist Communications. The Origin Of "Piss Poor" And Other Popular Sayings. NM Ranch Includes Comancheros, Ownership Disputes In History. Ireland's heatwave reveals amazing Newgrange discovery. Researchers Have Made A Truly Remarkable Discovery About King David. Vikings brought Amerindian to Iceland 1,000 years ago: study. Watch What Amarillo Looked Like Back In The 1960's. Why Are the Lizzie Borden Murders Still Unsolved? – Dusty Old Thing.

BRAND BURNING | Texas History and genealogy, written by those who lived it. | Frontier Times Magazine. THE THRILLING ADVENTURES OF A TEXAS COWBOY | Texas History and genealogy, written by those who lived it. | Frontier Times Magazine. How far back in time could you go and still understand English? Tattooing in the Civil War Was a Hedge Against Anonymous Death.

Viking Treasures of Dublin. Anne Frank’s Family Tried to Escape to the United States, New Research Shows. Sprawling Mayan network discovered under Guatemala jungle. INDIANS EAT A MAN ALIVE | Texas History and genealogy, written by those who lived it. | Frontier Times Magazine. Hidden Poisons of the Royal Court. The Best of the West: True Westerner of the Year. Danjnewsom » The Lineage of Jesus. In Search of Doc Holliday - True West Magazine. Getting dressed in the 18th century – Blog, Liverpool Museums. A Tragedy of the Pedernales - J. Marvin Hunter, Sr | Texas History and genealogy, written by those who lived it. | Frontier Times Magazine. Horse-Riding Librarians Were the Great Depression's Bookmobiles. RED SEA: Archaeologists Discover Remains Of Egyptian Army From The Biblical Exodus. History of River Falls.

Reconstructed face of Robert the Bruce is unveiled. No Wounds In His Back - True West Magazine. Davy Crockett Surrendered?! Jim Bowie, a Slave Trader?! Sam Houston, a Coke Addict?! Last day of the dinosaurs' reign captured in stunning detail. Shipwrecked Nazi Steamer May Hold Clues to the Amber Room's Fate | Smart News | Smithsonian Magazine.

Unhinged Facts About Joanna Of Castile, The Mad Queen. Indians 201: The Two Spirit. Punished By Ducking - History Is Fun. On September 11, Blind Luck Decided Who Lived or Died. Columbus was a mass killer and the father of the slave trade.