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Janice A. Brown,
Blog: Cow Hampshire
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Women’s History
"The ongoing invisibility of women and girls is a serious issue for our country, and for the world. The invisibility of our history, heroes, stories, challenges, and success handicaps the future of all Americans, and it deeply affects our economy and our communities."--Megan Smith, U.S. Chief Technology OfficerWhat History Isn’t
“History isn’t about dates and places and wars. It’s about the people who fill the spaces between them.”
— Jodi Picoult, The StorytellerRecent Comments
- SOMME ABMC CEMETERY - AMERICANS FIGHT WITH THE MOTHER COUNTRY IN THE GREAT WAR - Meandering through the PrologueMeandering through the Prologue on A Nurse Hero of WWI: Elma Irene Groves of Lodi Wisconsin (1888-1918)
- Friday’s Family History Finds | Empty Branches on the Family Tree on New Hampshire Tidbits: Wow–Palindrome Dates To Notice in 2021
- Legend Has It: Doc Benton – The Morbid Library on The Strange Haunting of Mt. Moosilaukee
- James E Ramsey on New Hampshire Missing Places: Lone Star Ranch, Reeds Ferry
- LIVES LOST BEYOND THE MEDALS at MEUSE-ARGONNE ABMC CEMETERY - Meandering through the PrologueMeandering through the Prologue on More Lost Faces of WWI: American Nurses Who Died in Europe
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Monthly Archives: September 2018
New Hampshire WWI Military: Private Alfred J Cote of Warren
Private Alfred J. Cote is a bit of a mystery, though his military service in WWI and his death is not. In various records he is shown as being of Keene NH (the NH Adjutant General’s List of WWI Casualties) … Continue reading
New Hampshire in WWI: Heroes of Raymond
The year 1917 was an especially difficult one for the Town of Raymond in Rockingham County, New Hampshire. A month before the United States declared war the town hall burned down (13 March 1917). According to the book, Images of … Continue reading
Posted in History, Military of New Hampshire, New Hampshire Aviation, NH WW1 Military
Tagged 1, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1926, action, Dudley, Emerson, engraving, Escadrille, Europe, France, Gilman, I, installed, killed, killed in action, Lafayette, Library, Maple, memorial, monument, One, plaque, transcription, Tucker, unveiled, war, world, WW, WW1, WWI
2 Comments
New Hampshire in WWI: The Phelan Sisters of Milford
This is a short story about the Phelan Family of Cambridge MA who spent summers on their Milford, New Hampshire farm. The men mentioned served from Cambridge MA not Milford NH. One of the women in the story, Katherine … Continue reading
Posted in History, Military of New Hampshire, New Hampshire Women, NH WW1 Military
Tagged 1, farm, farming, Hampshire, I, new, New Hampshire, NH, One, Phelan, war, woman, women, world, WW1, WWI
4 Comments
New Hampshire Slanguage: Beach Wagon
I was looking at some 1960-ish photographs today, a few showing my family’s pale yellow beach wagon parked in the driveway. BEACH WAGON was the local (New England) term for what most people then called a “Station Wagon” (or a … Continue reading
Posted in History, Humor, New Hampshire Slanguage
Tagged 50s, 60s, auto, automobile, Beach, beach wagon, car, caravan, cruiser, England, fifties, Hampshire, new, New England, New Hampshire, NH, ocean, origin, phrase, sixties, Station, station wagon, SUV, term, travel vacation, vehicle, wagon, wood, woody, word
8 Comments
New Hampshire in World War I: U.S. Coast Guard Surfman George Henry Stenstream of Hampton and Rye
World War I was a war that most people wanted to forget. It was a terrible time both for the brave men and women in service, but also for those who remained at home. No one was safe from the … Continue reading
Posted in History, Military of New Hampshire, NH WW1 Military
Tagged 13, Coast, died, engrave, engraving, flu, George, Gloucester, guard, Hampshire, Hampton, honor, hospital, influenza, lifesaving, MA, Massachusetts, memorial, monument, new, New Hampshire, NH, No. 13, number, plaque, pneumonia, Portsmouth, roll, Rye, Sands, Station, Stenstream, surfman, surfmen, thirteen, U.S., United States, US, USCG, Wallis
11 Comments