-
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy Search on This Blog
Copyright Disclaimer
All rights reserved © 2006-2024
Janice A. Brown,
Blog: Cow Hampshire
www.cowhampshireblog.com
Formerly
blogharbor.cowhampshire.com
All unpublished works.Translate this Page
-
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 StorytellerNovember 2024 M T W T F S S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Recent Comments
- Janice Brown on Littleton New Hampshire: Kilburn Stereoscopic Views
- Valley News - Upstart prevails in Grafton County sheriff’s contest on New Hampshire’s First Woman Sheriff and Deputy Sheriffs: Helen Kenney of Concord, M. Jennie (Wood) Kendall of Nashua, and Lillian (Christian) Bryant of Conway
- Upstart prevails in Grafton County sheriff’s contest – Westlebanon Valley News on New Hampshire’s First Woman Sheriff and Deputy Sheriffs: Helen Kenney of Concord, M. Jennie (Wood) Kendall of Nashua, and Lillian (Christian) Bryant of Conway
- Friday’s Family History Finds | Empty Branches on the Family Tree on Samuel Joy and His Spite Tombstone in Durham New Hampshire
- “Mowed down like a pack of cards”: Carrie M. Hall, nurse. | American Women in World War I on Chief Nurse of WW1 Expeditionary Forces, Red Cross Chief Nurse Harvard Unit, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital School of Nursing Founder, National Association President and Pioneer of American Nursing: Nashua New Hampshire’s Carrie May Hall (1873-1963)
Categories
- Boulders and Profiles
- Carnivals and Memes
- Cow Stories
- Creatures
- Current Events
- Genealogy
- Haunted New Hampshire
- History
- Holidays
- Humor
- Irish in New Hampshire
- Lost Faces of WW1
- Military of New Hampshire
- Military Squares
- Moovers And Shakers
- N.H. Historical Markers
- N.H. Missing Places
- Native Peoples
- New Hampshire Aviation
- New Hampshire Entertainers
- New Hampshire Glossary
- New Hampshire Inventors
- New Hampshire Men
- New Hampshire Politics
- New Hampshire Slanguage
- New Hampshire Sports
- New Hampshire Women
- NH Persons of Color
- NH Tidbits
- NH WW1 Military
- Not New Hampshire
- Oddities, Accidents and Crazy Weather
- Personal History
- Poetry
- R.I.P
- Really Old News
- Recipes
- Speechless Sunday
- Structures
- Travel
Tag Archives: 1
New Hampshire WWI Military: Private 1C Thomas H. Abbott of Concord
Thomas Harold Whitcomb Abbott was born 13 July 1896 in Concord NH, the son of Francis U. & Alice A. (Toof) Abbott. He grew up in Concord attending the local schools. In 1900 and 1910 censuses he can be found … Continue reading
New Hampshire WWI Military: Heroes of Bedford
It is not my intent to reproduce the fine work already completed by the Bedford Historical Society in their town history about World War I. That volume can be purchased from that organization, and it gives details of the community … Continue reading
New Hampshire Women and World War I ‘Food Work’
Food and meal preparation was a serious matter during World War I and it was mostly women upon whom the burden fell to create solutions. With a great deal of foodstuffs being send to Europe to feed the troops and … Continue reading
Posted in History, Military of New Hampshire, New Hampshire Women, NH WW1 Military
Tagged 1, Administration, college, committee, cooking, Council, defense, demonstration, economics, Extension, famine, food, Hampshire, Home, I, instruct, management, National, new, New Hampshire, NH, One, preparation, service, specialist, sugar, teach, UNH, University, war, wheat, woman, women, world, WW, WW1, WWI
4 Comments
100 Years Ago: The Camouflage Cookery of World War I
According to the Housewives Magazine of 1918, the word ‘camouflage’ means a deception, an illusion, something that is not what it seems to be. Prior to WWI the art of camouflage (to mask soldiers) was used, but to a lesser … Continue reading
Posted in History, Military of New Hampshire, New Hampshire Women, NH WW1 Military
Tagged 1, 100, Ago, camouflage, cook, cookery, cooking, food, Hampshire, I, new, New Hampshire, NH, One, recipe, war, woman, women, world, WWI, years
6 Comments