Showing posts with label Short History Series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short History Series. Show all posts

Sunday, July 12, 2020

Sample Chapter - Short History of Political Parties - 1844 Election

Sample Chapter - Short History of Political Parties 
1844 Election
The Issues
The issues of the 1844 election revolved around the doctrine of Manifest Destiny, the proposed annexation of Texas and slavery.
Manifest Destiny
The concept of manifest destiny has existed since the beginning of the Republic. Never a set political doctrine, the philosophy of manifest destiny embodied the idea that the United States should pursue a course of continuous expansion and that it was the destiny of the United States to occupy the entire North American continent from "sea to shining sea." The concept did not receive a name until James L. O'Sullivan, a Democratic party head, proclaimed in 1845:
".... the right of our manifest destiny to over spread and to possess the whole of the continent which Providence has given us for the development of the great experiment of liberty and federaltive development of self government entrusted to us. It is right such as that of the tree to the space of air and the earth suitable for the full expansion of its principle and destiny of growth."
Continued Expansion
The concept now had a name for the force that had thus far driven American expansion. The Northwest Indian Wars of the late 18th Century, the Florida Crises of 1818 and the movement to subjugate the Amerindian tribes had all been manifestations of this unspoken creed. The pressures between slave and free state expansion would ultimately become one of the many reasons the Civil War broke out 20 years later.
Manifest Destiny and the 1844 Election
James Polk campaigned on the theme of continued expansion by supporting the acquisition of the territory that would become the Oregon Territory and the annexation of Texas. Henry Clay waffled on the issue, confusing voters as to his stance.
Texas Annexation 
Republic of Texas declares independence from Mexico.
At Washington-On-The-Brazos a convention of Texans declared independence from Mexico on March 3, 1836. Also at this convention David Burnet was appointed interim president of the Republic until elections could be held. A constitution was adopted at this convention also on March 17. The Republic existed from 1836 until 1845, when it was admitted to the United States as a State.
A gentleman named Richard Ellis presided over this convention. He was originally from Virginia, had moved to Alabama and then to Texas Bowie County in 1834. His unanimous election to president of the constitutional convention helped hold that body together until the drafting of the constitution was complete.
Washington-On-The-Brazos is located on the Brazos River in south-central Texas at a ferry crossing. It had been settled in 1821. A small settlement, it became the birthplace of the Texan Republic and in 1842 it served as the capitol. The delegates which labored to form the Republic had been elected and represented every municipality in Texas. The building the delegates worked in was unheated and the delegates endured near freezing weather inside as they worked at forming a government. An advancing Mexican army commanded by Santa Ana forced the citizens of the town and the delegates to the convention to flee. This was the same army which days before had decisively beaten the Texans at the Alamo.
The Texans defeated this superior Mexican Army at San Jacinto on April 21, capturing Mexican General Santa Ana, which ensured Texan Independence.
Political Issue
Texas petitioned the United States for annexation soon after declaring independence. Both the Whigs and Democrats opposed the annexation because Texas wanted to enter as a slave state, which would upset the delicate balance between slave and free states. The issue continued to fester until 1843, when President John Tyler began to support annexation. He began secret talks with the Texans and came to an agreement. He submitted the treaty to the Senate, after which the document became public. The campaign for President revolved around the issue, however after the election lame duck President John Tyler and Congress worked together to pass, and sign, the legislation and sending it to the Texas legislature before the new Congress and President took office.
Oregon Territory
British explorer  Alexander Mackenzie had explored the area that would become the Canadian province of British Columbia in 1792, establishing a British claim to the region. The Lewis and Clark Expedition, which had explored the area that would become Oregon in 1803 - 06, establishing an American claim to the region. The two nations agreed to joint custody of the region as part of the Treaty of 1818. Initially, most of the business conducted by Canadians in the region was the fur trade, mostly conducted by the Hudson Bay Company. In 1841 the Oregon Trail was established, which began in Independence, Missouri and terminated at Oregon City. Local citizens of the region, left largely on their own by Britain and the United States, held a series of meetings in the now ghost town of Champoeg, Oregon, resulting in the formation of the Provisional Government of Oregon in 1843. The ongoing dispute with Great Britain over the boundary between the Canadian and United States portions of the region played a role in the 1844 when Polk linked the Texas situation with the Oregon country, proposing that Texas be admitted as a slave state and the Oregon Territory be organized as a free region. He thus gained both pro-slavery and abolitionist votes.
Slavery
The slavery issue revolved mainly about the power struggle between the northern free state and the southern slave states. The debate in this election was mainly about admitting Texas as a slave state and balancing their admission with admitting the Oregon country as a territory as a free territory. The Liberty Party's abolitionist stance played a minor role. That debate would be left to the Republican Party which would rise in the mid-1850's.


© 2020 Paul Wonning
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Saturday, July 4, 2020

Sample Chapter - Short History of the Post Office - Street Address History

Sample Chapter 
Short History of the Post Office
Street Address History
The practice of governments assigning street addresses arose not from the need to provide accurate mail delivery as much as the need to create a system to collect taxes, take censuses and record males eligible for conscription into the military. The practice has its European roots in the first known system devised in Augsburg, Germany in the 16th Century. A similar system arose in France during this same period. House numbering systems emerged in sporadic bursts in France, England and Germany over the next couple of centuries, however it did not become common practice until about the middle of the 18th Century. There is evidence that the people resisted the assignment of house numbers during this era. Numerous accounts exist of residents smearing freshly painted house numbers with mud and filth in an attempt to  thwart the new system.
In the United States
One of the earliest systems in the United States was in New York when apparently the British attempted to impose a system sometime after they captured the city in 1776. Philadelphia apparently led the effort after the revolution when they devised the system of odd numbers on one side of the street and even numbers on the others. They came up with this system in order to conduct the first census in 1790. One problem city planners had was that construction of new buildings after addresses for a city street had been assigned. This often necessitated the need to renumber an entire street Philadelphia also devised the decimal system in 1856, a system that assigned 100 numbers to each city block and made street numbering and renumbering much easier. Cities across the United States quickly adopted these systems. The need for accurate mail delivery sped the process of address assignment after the Post Office adopted free city delivery policies during the Civil War. In the United States there is no national system of assigning street numbers, though most use the even/odd system and decimal system. Address assignment systems can vary considerably across the nation. The development of the 911 emergency system in 1968 led to the elimination of the use of the rural route system of addressing houses and the assignation of individual house numbers for rural residences as a means to allow emergency personnel to find houses quickly.
© 2020 Paul Wonning

Sunday, May 31, 2020

Sample Chapter - Short History of Museums - Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum Story

Sample Chapter
Short History of Museums
Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum Story
Visitors to Madame Tussaud's Washington, DC can view lifelike figures of all 45 Presidents of the United States, the First Ladies, cultural icons, historical scenes, celebrities and much more.
Madame Tussaud's has location in many other cities, including:
Amsterdam
Bangkok
Beijing
Berlin
Blackpool
Chongqing
Delhi
Hollywood
Hong Kong
Istanbul
Las Vegas
London
Nashville
New York
Orlando
Prague
San Francisco
Shanghai
Singapore
Sydney
Tokyo
Vienna
Washington D.C.
Wuhan

Madame Tussaud's Washington, DC
1001 F Street, NW
Washington, DC 20004
1 (202) 942-7300
info@madametussaudsdc.com
https://www.madametussauds.com/washington-dc/en/

Madame Tussaud (December 1, 1761 – April 16, 1850) 
Born as Anna Maria Grosholtz, Madame Tussaud was the daughter of Joseph and Anne-Marie Walder Grosholtz and native to Strasbourg, France. Her father died in the Seven Years War two months before her birth. Her mother migrated to Bern, Switzerland where she took a job as housekeeper to a doctor, Philippe Curtius. She would use the name Marie later in life.
Apprentice as a Wax Modeler
In addition to being a doctor, Curtius was a skilled wax modeler. He began using his wax models to portray human anatomy but eventually began producing wax portraits of people. He developed an affection for young Marie, who would call him "uncle," and took her on as an apprentice. He considered her exceptionally skilled in the art. Curtius moved to Paris to create wax portraits for people in 1765. Marie and her mother joined him the next year.
Paris and Versailles
Over the next several years, Marie developed her skills. She created wax models for such famous personalities like  Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Benjamin Franklin and Voltaire. In her work she became intimate with the French royal family, who invited her to live with them at Versailles. Historical lore relates that she lived there for nine years as an art tutor to King Louis XVI’s sister.
French Revolution
The French Revolution erupted in 1789. Marie moved back to Paris just before mobs arrested the king and queen of France on August 10, 1792. They would execute the king by guillotining him on January 21, 1793. The queen would suffer the same fate nine months later. Because of her relationship with the royal family Marie was suspected of being a royal sympathizer. She and her mother were imprisoned and Marie had her head shaved in preparation for a date with the guillotine. A family friend of Curtius helped secure her release, however the French authorities compelled Marie to create wax death masks for guillotine victims to prove her loyalty.
Move to London
Curtius passed away in 1794 and bequeathed his collection of wax heads to Marie, who married François Tussaud a few months later. The couple would have three children. In 1802 she traveled to London with her sons to tour with her wax figures. She left her husband behind in France. Her exhibits became quite popular during a tour of the British Isles.  When Napoleon rose to power, the wars between England and France prevented her return to France, so she established a home base on Baker Street in London and continued touring with her collection. In 1833 she established a permanent exhibition on Baker Street. She created a separate chamber for her collection of artifacts from the French Revolution. Punch Magazine coined the term Chamber Of Horrors for this collection. Madame Tussaud, as she came to be known, died on April 16, 1850. Some of her wax figures still exist.
Madame Tussaud’s gallery has grown to become one of London’s top attractions as well as its many branches across the world.
© 2020 Paul Wonning

Saturday, May 23, 2020

Short History of Early Colonial Leaders


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The Short History of Early Colonial Leaders relates the stories of the founders of the original 13 colonies.
Scheduled for Publication sometime in 2020

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Sample Chapter - Short History of Early Colonial Leaders - Founder of Rhode Island Roger Williams


Sample Chapter 
Short History of Early Colonial Leaders
Founder of Rhode Island Roger Williams

Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
Banished from Massachusetts over religious differences with the Puritan church leaders, Roger Williams established Providence Plantations southwest of Plymouth on the northern end of  Narragansett Bay.

Roger Williams (c. 1631 -  Sometime between January 27 and March 15 1683) 
Sometime in late winter 1604 Alice Pemberton Williams presented her husband, James Williams, with a son, Roger. The date, between January and March, no one will ever know because the birth records burned in a fire that destroyed in 1666 during the Great Fire of London. His father was a merchant tailor in Smithfield, England.
Influence of Sir Edward Coke
An influential lawyer, judge and legislator in England, Sir Edward Coke took an important role in the life of Roger Williams. Many historians consider Coke the most important jurist during his lifetime. His many legal reforms and ideas played an important role in the American revolution and in the drafting of the third and fourth amendments to the Constitution of the United States. Coke oversaw much of Roger Williams education and probably influenced much of his thinking.
Education
Coke oversaw Roger's education at Charterhouse and also at Pembroke College, Cambridge where he received a BA in 1627. Gifted with a skill for learning languages he spoke Latin, Hebrew, Greek, Dutch, and French. He focused on theology and holy orders in the Church of England. However, while studying at Cambridge he became a Puritan. This disqualified him to take a position with the Anglican Church. After graduation a Puritan gentleman and member of Parliament, Sir William Masham, hired him as his chaplain. Williams married Mary Barnard (1609–76) on December 15, 1629.
Evolution of Theology
During this time William's religious views evolved. He believed that the Church of England was corrupt and false. He believed in the freedom of religion and that the church must separate itself from government to cleanse itself. His views were unpopular in England and authorities threatened to arrest him. Authorities had punished many religious dissenters by whipping or burning at the stake. With the authorities threatening arrest, Williams fled England and immigrated to Boston. He had learned of the first Puritan emigration to the New World in 1630, but did not join it at that time. He and his wife Mary did leave England on the ship, Lyon, in early December, 1630.
Roger and his wife Mary arrived in Boston on February 5, 1631.
Annoying the Puritan Leadership
After his arrival in Boston, he spent the next four years annoying Massachusetts colonial leaders with his views.  By October 1763, Massachusetts leaders had had enough and arrested him.
William's Views
Two of his beliefs got him into the most trouble, and both threatened the power structure of those in charge. First, he believed that religious dissent caused most wars. Therefore, he advocated complete tolerance of religion and that taxes should not be used to support the church. Second, he believed that the English should purchase the land they wanted from the natives. He preached that most of the colonies were there illegitimately and that they should buy the land from the tribes that had lived there.
Ministry in Salem and Plymouth
At first, the colonists in Boston welcomed him, but soon his views got him into trouble. He moved to Plymouth, which was more tolerant of his teachings. In 1633, a minister in Salem, the Reverend Samuel Skelton, invited him to his church as an unofficial assistant. Skelton passed away and Williams took over as the minister of the church. His return to Salem did not please the Puritan leaders and they sought to arrest him. They did arrest him in 1633 and placed him on trial. The matter was resolved and Williams released. However, by 1635 they ordered his appearance before the Court in both March and July. They ordered him removed from his position in the church; an order not complied with by the church. Finally, in October 1635 the court tried and convicted him of sedition and heresy. The court banned him from Massachusetts. Williams was ill at this time and officials allowed him to stay at his home until his health improved as long as he ceased preaching. By now most of Williams, supporters had faded away, but a few remained. Williams did not cease preaching, so in January the
Slipping Away in a Blizzard
Williams did not cease preaching, so in January the Sheriff went to his home to arrest him. Williams had gotten away during a blizzard three days earlier. He traveled fifty-five miles through the snow to find refuge with the Wampanoag tribe. He stayed with them for three months, until spring.
Role in the Pequot War
Williams had formed close ties with the Narragansett tribe. He had purchased land from them in 1636 to found his colony, which he called Providence Plantations. When the Pequot War broke out in 1637, Massachusetts Bay officials requested aid from Williams. Williams used his influence to persuade the Narragansett tribe to refrain from siding with the Pequot. The Narragansett tribe became the largest and most influential tribe in the region after the annihilation of the Pequot tribe.
Canochet Canonicus (1539 - June 4, 1647)
The son of Wessonsuoum Narragansett and Keshechoo Narragansetts Canochet was native to the Cape Cod area of current Massachusetts. Canonicus feared the arrival of the Pilgrims when they arrived in Plymouth during the fall of 1620. He sent a challenge to the Pilgrims in the form of a  bundle of arrows bound together with a snake skin. Pilgrim leader William Bradford returned after filling the wrap with gunpowder and lead shot. The explosive powder, which the natives had no exposure to, caused fear among the them. In response, Canochet signed a treaty of alliance with the English that he would honor for the rest of his life. After Boston's leaders expelled Williams and his wife, Canochet gave them the land they needed to establish a colony. His influence lasted far beyond his death, as the Narragansett remained largely at peace with the English until the 1675 King Philip's War.
Providence Plantations
Williams called his new colony Providence Plantations, because he believed it was God's providence that sent him to the area.
Rhode Island
A year after Williams founded Providence Plantation, William Coddington, John Clarke, and Anne and William Hutchinson founded a colony they called Pocasset on an island they acquired from the natives. They changed the island's name from Rhode Island to Aquidneck Island, .

Sunday, May 17, 2020

Sample Chapter - Short History of Political Parties - Nullification Crises


Sample Chapter 
Nullification Crises


The idea of states resisting Federal laws by nullifying them had simmered since 1798 when Kentucky protested Congress enactment of the Alien and Sedition Acts. The subject flared up briefly again in 1828 with the passage of the Tariff of 1828, but the issue once again faded away. John C. Calhoun wrote, and published anonymously, a pamphlet entitled “Exposition and Protest,” during the 1828 election while he was the vice presidential nominee with Andrew Jackson. Calhoun was a staunch backer of the nullification theory while Jackson was opposed. The issue would cause a serious political divide between the two men in years to come.
John C. Calhoun's “Exposition and Protest”
Calhoun used the pamphlet to explain his theories of nullification and present his arguments against the Tariff of 1828. He argued that since the federal government derived its power with the consent of the states, then states had the right to nullify any law Congress passed that the state deemed unconstitutional. He felt that the Tariff of 1828 was unconstitutional because it was used to protect certain industries in the United States, not to generate revenue. His opinion was that tariffs were legal as a revenue generator, however using them to protect one product while leaving others unprotected was unconstitutional. After publication, he presented it to the South Carolina legislature. Though the legislature had 5000 copies of the pamphlet printed and distributed, it took no legislative action on the ideas it expressed at the time. Even though he did not reveal that he had authored it, word did leak out.
Effects of the Tariff of 1828 on the South
The Tariff of 1828, also called the Tariff of Abominations, created an economic disaster for the southern states. The tariff imposed high duties on imported manufactured goods, which helped protect manufacturers in the north from foreign competition. For the southern states it imposed higher prices on the goods they needed. Since they sold the bulk of their cotton to foreign markets they found less demand for their product. The higher tariff had resulted in less need for Southern cotton for foreign mills because of the drop in their sales in the United States due to the tariff. In addition to this, some nations instituted a boycott of United States cotton in retaliation for the high tariffs. The economic decline led many southern states, especially South Carolina, to revisit the Nullification Theory after Calhoun, their chief ally, gained the vice presidency in 1832.
Tariff of 1832
Congress passed a new tariff law in 1832, attempting to diffuse the smoldering revolt of the southern states, especially hardest hit South Carolina. President Andrew Jackson signed the act into law on July 13, 1832. The Tariff of 1832 did not repeal the previous law, which the southern states found so odious. It merely reduced the duties. The new tariff did nothing to alleviate the crises.
South Carolina's Ordinance of Nullification
Many in South Carolina were still dissatisfied with the tariff. Resistance to it built in the state, prompting the South Carolina Assembly to pass an Ordinance of Nullification on November 24, 1832. In essence, the bill declared the tariff unconstitutional and that the legislature deemed it null and void. With this legislation, South Carolina threatened to secede from the Union over the tariff.

Jackson's Proclamation to the People of South Carolina
President Andrew Jackson responded to South Carolina's Ordinance of Nullification by issuing a proclamation on December 10, 1832 that denied that states had a right to nullify any law passed by Congress. In his Proclamation, he warned, "Should the nullifiers succeed in their views of separation, and the Union be in consequence dissolved."
Readers interested in reading the full transcript will find it at this link:

Force Bill
The United States Congress responded to South Carolina's affront to its authority by passing the Force Bill on March 2, 1833. The Force Bill included eight sections, five of which were the most important.
Section 1 authorized the President to use whatever force was necessary to secure ports and harbors and protect United States customs agents. It also provided authorization for the President to detain vessels and cargoes in order to enforce the collection of tariffs. Any attempt to obstruct the collection of tariffs was illegal and the President could use whatever force was necessary to collect the revenue.
Section 2 expanded federal court jurisdiction to cases involving the collection of import duties.
Section 3 allowed the President to use military force to deal with states, or regions within states, that resisted federal law or the federal courts.
Section 6 dealt with some state's resistance to imprison persons convicted of federal charges. It authorized United States Federal Marshals to arrest and confine these persons.
Section 8 was a sunset clause that ended the Force Bill at the end of the next session of Congress.
Interested readers can find the full legislation at this link:

Sunday, May 10, 2020

Sample Chapter - Short History of Post Office - Mid-1800's Mail Delivery Systems

Sample Chapter
Short History of Post Office
Mid-1800's Mail Delivery Systems
By 1845 many different types of mail systems had evolved, including:
Stage Coaches
Horse and Sulky
Railroad
Post Office
Saltwater Mail System
Ship Letters
Packet boat
Steamboat Companies
Semi-Formal
Informal
Stage Coach Companies
Brutal Travel
The stage coach originated in England in the 13th Century. Stage coach travel was dusty, bumpy and brutal. Most stage coaches seated about nine people on three seats inside the coach. The springless coaches provided for a rough ride over the dirt roads of the time. The stage coach acquired its name because travelers completed their journey in "stages." Typically, teams of two to six horses pulled the coaches, which could weigh in at about 2.000 pounds. Baggage and mail was stowed in leather compartments called boots at the front and rear of the compartment. More luggage and mail could be placed on top of the coach behind the driver. Leather curtains provided some protection against dust while the leather seats provided little leg room. There was no back support, so passengers riding in the middle of the seat had to cling to a leather strap suspended from the ceiling of the coach.
Periodic Stops
Most stage coach lines had several stops along the way. Minor stops, called "swing" stops, allowed a stop of about ten minutes. These were about twelve miles apart. The stage driver had a small brass horn he tooted before arriving at the stop to alert the attendant the stage was coming. Once at these stops, the horse team would be changed and the passengers allowed out for a few minutes of welcome relief. About every fifty or sixty miles the stage coach stopped at a "home" station. These stations were bigger and usually had a cabin or house for the passengers to catch a few hours sleep and a meal before proceeding on. Sometimes there was a blacksmith on the site. A Butterfield stagecoach could cover about 110 miles per day traveling at about 5 miles per hour.
Influential Lobby
The stage coach lobby evolved into a powerful lobby in Washington D. C. Generally, the Post Office awarded contracts for mail delivery to stage coach companies for four years. In 1838 stage coaches carried mail 29,593,192 total miles for a total cost to the Post Office of $1.889,792. This amounted to about $.06 per mile. Although the bids were supposed to be competitive, allegations existed about rigging in the awarding of these contracts, which could be quite lucrative. Many government officials regarded postal contracts as a way to unofficially subsidize stage coach lines.
Sulky Transportation of Mail
A sulky is a two wheeled cart pulled by one horse and one seat for the driver. Much of the mail during this era was carried on horseback or by sulky. In 1838 sulky mail routes covered 11,575,918 miles at a cost of $831,038. This works out to about $.07 per mile.
Railway Companies
Primitive railway systems began emerging in the United States around 1830. The first public railway, the B & O commenced operations on May 24, 1830 with the opening of 24 miles of track over which horses pulled wagons mounted on tracks. The legendary race between the steam engine Tom Thumb on August 28, 1830 began the move to steam power even though the horse defeated the locomotive in the race. Post Office officials began utilizing the new technology on November 30, 1832 when they awarded a contract to a stage coach line that operated between Philadelphia to Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The post office granted the company a $400 per year allowance to carry the mail for a short distance by rail. This practice increased over time. By 1838 the combined mileage for mail carried by rail and steamship totaled 2,413,092 miles at a cost of $410,488. This worked out to about $.17 per mile, however rail was much faster.
1838 - Railroads Designated Post Routes By Congress
The first recorded use of railroads for mail delivery was in Great Britain in 1830. Specially adapted railway carriages were used to carry mail kon the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Historical lore suggests that the South Carolina Rail Road carried the first bags of mail in 1831. Stage coach contractors Samuel Slaymaker and Jesse Tomlinson received the first recorded grant to use the railroad to carry mail regularly in the United States in 1832 from Philadelphia to Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Railroads saw increased use as mail carriers between 1832 and 1838. The United States Congress passed a law that designated all railroads as post roads on July 7, 1838. The law limited post riders and horse drawn vehicles to carrying mail to post offices that were not on a rail route.
Saltwater Mail System 
Crews on board the sailing ships that plied the oceans would go weeks, months, or even years away from homes and sweethearts. A letter from home was a tremendous morale booster. Sailors could spend many hours while at sea composing letters to send back home. Sailors, and their loved ones back home, kept in touch using the Saltwater Mailing System that had evolved over the years.
The System
The Saltwater Mail System was simple in concept and horrendously unreliable. A ship leaving port would take mail bags on board with their cargo. If, by chance, they met another ship at sea they would open the mail bag and see if there were any letters addressed to any of the crewmen on the other ship. The letters generally bore vague addresses like, "William Smith, Pacific Ocean." If by chance they found one or two letters belonging to crewmen, they would hand them over. They would then take any letters the crew, or officers, had written and add them to the mail bag. When they reached port, they would deposit the mail at that port and take on another bag when they departed. The "post offices," were frequently taverns near the waterfront that ship's captains would use as a sort of makeshift headquarters when they were in port. Needless to say, this system resulted in many letters taking months or years to reach the recipient. If they even arrived at all.
The Letters
Since postage was calculated by the number of pages, numerous systems evolved to put as much information as they could on one sheet. Many used a system called "cross writing," to double the amount of words they could put in a letter. Basically, they would write the letter from top to bottom, then turn the page 1/4 turn and continue writing, with these lines intersecting those written earlier.
Ship Letters
The salt water mail system used by sailors was part of a larger, loose knit system of mail often referred to as the ship letter system. Ship captains, both salt water and fresh water, frequently used a public house, or tavern, as an office. Tavern owners encouraged this practice, as a boat captain hanging out in their tavern generally led to and increase in traffic as people looked to boat captains as a source of news and mail. A visit to a tavern when a captain was in attendance would sometimes yield a letter dispatched from a faraway relative, lover or acquaintance. If you received a letter from a captain, it was common practice to pay the captain a fee for the service. Typically, the sender gave the captain 2 cents and the recipient 6 cents for the service. If you had a letter to mail, you would give it to the captain, he would add it to the growing accumulation of letters in his mail bag. Especially in the colonies, the ship letter system was slow and often unreliable. Many times letter writers would make several copies of an important letters and send them on different ships to increase the odds at least one would reach the recipient. Wars between nations could further complicate mail delivery. Ships sunk during naval actions would, of course, never deliver any mail on board. Others were captured and the letters became part of the prize seized by the captors. Piracy could also cause many letters to go undelivered. Ships sunk due to storms were another impediment to mail delivery in this system. A recent effort by the British National Archives to digitize many of the 160,000 letters seized as prize booty during Britain's wars in the 17th and 18th centuries will cause many of these letters to be digitized. They should provide a valuable insight into life during that time. Many of these letters are still sealed with wax.
Packet boat
In the early days of maritime history ships often sat in port until they had enough cargo and passengers to depart. This could be days, weeks or even months. In 1660 an innovation appeared as regularly scheduled ship departure began carrying mail between Great Britain and Holland. The routes later expanded to include France and Spain. These ships became known as packet ships, because their function in the beginning was to carry packets of mail between ports. At this time, privateers and pirates preyed upon shipping so most of these ships were armed and prepared to defend themselves against attack. Since this was a common danger, the companies offered a standard table of compensation for sailors that lost limbs during an attack. Packet ships were mainly small vessels that plied the oceans, rivers and canals of Europe and the United States. They maintained a regular schedule and eventually evolved into ships capable of carrying freight and passengers as well as mail. The packet trade, as it came to be called, became quite popular, and profitable for ships owners and those that used the service. Packet boats carried multitudes of immigrants to the United States on packet boats. Packet boats on the Erie Canal and others carried immigrants into the interior of the growing nation. By the early part of the Nineteenth Century steamship companies began supplanting packet boats as mail and passenger carriers.
Steamboat Mail Delivery
Robert Fulton and Robert Livingston teamed up to build the first steam powered boat in 1807, forever changing water transportation and the carriage of mail.
Robert Fulton (November 14, 1765 – February 24, 1815)
The son of son of Irish immigrants Robert Fulton and Mary Smith, Fulton received his education at a Quaker school about time he turned eight. His father died in 1774. He became an apprentice at a Philadelphia jewelry shop. While there he developed a talent for painting miniature portraits on lockets and rings. His talent for painting took him to London to seek his fortune in painting. His talent not sufficient for London tastes, he became acquainted with James Watt's invention, the steam engine. He met Robert R. Livingston and the two teamed up to build the first steamboat in 1807, based on designs Fulton drew. This steamboat, the Clermont, made its first voyage on August 17, 1807. Fulton was also a huge advocate of building the Erie Canal. Fulton died of tuberculosis in 1815.
Riverboats
Fulton’s first riverboats were designed for the deeper eastern American waterways  and didn’t fare so well in the shallower western rivers. He built a boat called the New Orleans to run down the Ohio River from Pittsburgh to New Orleans. The New Orleans departed Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in September, 1811. It traveled down the Ohio to Louisville, Kentucky, where it had to wait for the river to rise before it could navigate the Falls of the Ohio region. When the water finally rose, the boat had to navigate in water only five inches deeper the boat drew. Coincidentally, the catastrophic New Madrid earthquake struck as the boat slipped into a pool of water just below the Falls. The shock waves of the quake threw water out of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, felled trees into the rivers, and just created a general mess.  After many delays, the boat finally did reach New Orleans, but it never made the trip again. Rivers like the Ohio, Missouri, and Red Rivers needed boats with shallower drafts. These boats were eventually built, and river traffic at ports along these rivers blossomed.
Ocean Going Paddlewheelers
Paddle wheelers designed to cross the ocean were developed a little later. The Savannah, a converted coastal packet became the first paddle wheeler to cross the Atlantic. It departed Savannah Georgia on May 24, 1819 and arrived in Liverpool, England on the twentieth of June, 1819. Other ships made the trans-Atlantic crossing at irregular times until the British Cunard Line began a regular schedule in 1840. It was 1847 before American ships - the  Herman and Washington began service between America and Europe. The ocean going ships of this era were wooden paddle wheelers also equipped with masts to use to take advantage of favorable winds when they occurred. Freshwater paddle-wheelers were limited to the larger rivers and lakes. Canals were narrower than rivers and travel was discouraged because the turbulence induced by the paddles caused bank erosion.
Fulton died of tuberculosis in 1815.
Early Mail Carriage
Fulton's steamboats carried mail on some of their first voyages, beginning in 1807. Unofficial carriage of mail, without a contract with the Post Office, continued until 1823, when the United States Congress declared the nation's waterways as post roads, thus outlawing private carriage of mail. Typically, the unofficial carriage of mail used the ship letter system, however the volume of mail carried using this system created a drop in Post Office volume in many port towns by 1813. The Congress responded by passing a law that authorized local post masters to sign contracts with steamship companies to carry mail on February 27, 1815.
First Mail Contracts
The law that authorized post masters to sign contracts with steam ship companies also required all steam boat captains to deliver any mail they carried to the post office in any port at which they docked. This law compelled steamship companies to sign contracts with local post office officials, the first of which were signed later that same year. By the 1830 steam boats carried mail on the Ohio River, along the East Coast, the Hudson River, Erie Canal and the Mississippi River. By 1855 steamships carried mail a total of 14,619 miles. Two years before California achieved statehood, the Post Office authorized the establishment of post offices in that faraway territory in 1848. Since there was as yet no rail service between California and the eastern United States, steamship companies began forming that would provide a vital mail link between the two widely separated regions.
U.S. Mail Steamship Company
Established in 1848, the U.S. Mail Steamship Company transported mail from New York to New Orleans Havana and to the Isthmus of Panama. Mail arriving at the Isthmus was transported overland to a port on the Pacific Ocean and loaded on to a steam ship bound for California or Oregon. The Pacific Mail Steamship Company formed to transport mail from the west coast of Panama to the western United States coast. The U.S. Mail Steamship Company ceased operations in 1859.
Pacific Mail Steamship Company
A consortium of New York businessmen established the Pacific Mail Steamship Company on April 18, 1848, to carry mail from the western coast of Panama to points in California, Oregon and other points along the Pacific Coast. Initially, the steamship line transported mail and farm produce produced in California, however James W. Marshall's discover of gold at Sutter's Mill in California set off the California Gold Rush that same year. The steamship line found itself in the right place at the right time as gold fever set in and the rush of forty-niners streamed west. The company expanded its routes in later years, carrying passengers, mail and freight to Oregon, Washington and Alaska. The company closed in 1949.
Informal
Many farmers in the Midwest and other regions did not have a much cash on hand and could not afford to send letters via the Post Office. If they wanted to communicate with a family member or friend located in a distant town or city, they would write the letter and hold it until a local acquaintance was planning to travel to that place. They would entrust the letter to that person, who would deliver it free.
Semi-Formal 
Merchants located in large cities like Philadelphia, New York and Boston developed a sort of informal mailing system. Any merchant that had a need to travel from one large city to another would advertise the fact ahead of time. Any businessman that needed to send a letter to that city would contact him and give him the letter to deliver. This service was performed free, as all businessmen had need of the service. Many could achieve almost daily mail service between the large cities using this method.

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Sample Chapter - Short History of Museums - Frederick Douglass National Historic Site


Sample Chapter 
Short History of Museums
 Frederick Douglass National Historic Site
Frederick Douglass (c.1818 - February 20, 1895)
Born into slavery on a plantation in Talbot County, Maryland, Douglas was the son of Harriet Bailey, a slave. She gave him the name, Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey. His owners wife, Sophia Auld, started teaching him to read and write, but had to stop under her husband's orders. He managed to continue learning to read and  write on his own. He escaped with the aid of a free black woman, Anna Murray in 1838, whom he later married. The couple settled in New Bedford, Massachusetts where he joined the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. The couple adopted the surname Douglass as their married name. Douglass became an ordained minister in 1839. He became well known for his oratory as he began traveling to abolitionist meetings. The American Anti-Slavery Society invited him to participate in their "Hundred Conventions" project. He accepted the invitation.
American Anti-Slavery Society
Founded in 1833 by abolitionists William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan, the Society became one of the leading anti-slavery organizations. Frederick Douglass became one of its leaders. The Society was controversial because of its views. Because slavery had become so enmeshed in the nation's economy, abolishing it would have major economic repercussions. Thus, their efforts to abolish it were often met with violence.
"100 conventions" 
The six month tour included speaking engagements throughout the Midwest and New England states. During this tour violence broke out frequently, as was the case at Pendleton, Indiana, where rioters almost killed Douglass.
Fall Creek Friends
The first Quakers, or Friends as they refer to themselves, migrated into the Pendleton area in 1833 when Jonathan Thomas visited the area. He went on to found the Fall Creek Friends. The society built the Fall Creek Meeting House in 1836. The Fall Creek Friends became active in the abolishion movement.
The Riot
The meeting was too large for the Meeting House to host, so the Friends had advertised to rent a building. None were offered, so the Friends elected to hold the event in a grove in an orchard near the falls of Falls Creek. Workers erected a platform and the crowd gathered. Not all were there to hear the speakers talk. During one of the speeches, violence broke out from a mob of about sixty men that had gathered. The mob attacked the speakers and Frederick Douglas landed on the ground. One attacker raised an iron bar to strike him on the head, but one of the Friends managed to shove Douglass to safety. The mob began throwing rocks as Douglass and the others ran. As they jumped over a rail fence, one rock struck Douglass, knocking him unconscious. A number of Friends grabbed him and helped him escape to a nearby farm house, where they cared for him. He suffered cuts to the face and head and a badly broken hand. the hand never healed properly, leaving him with an injury that would plague him the rest of his life.
Author
In the following years Douglass authored three books, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave (1845),  My Bondage and My Freedom (1855) and Life and Times of Frederick Douglass published in 1892.
Travels to Europe
Douglass traveled to Europe in 1845 at the insistence of friends that feared his owners, attracted to his fame, would attempt to gain their property back. Douglass voyaged to England where he would stay for two years. During that time he traveled extensively in Ireland and England giving speeches. A fundraising effort by his supporters there raised enough money for them to purchase his freedom.
Abolitionist and Women's Suffrage
In 1847 he returned to the United States to reside in Rochester, New York. He started an abolitionist newsletter called the North Star with funds donated by his Irish and English supporters. He entered the arena of women's rights in 1848 when the attended the first women's rights convention, the Seneca Falls Convention.
Douglass would continue to deliver eloquent speeches and write in favor of emancipation for blacks and women's rights in the years before and after the Civil War. In 1874 he moved to Washington DC where he would live in a home overlooking the Anacostia River he would call Cedar Hill. Douglass passed away while attending a National Council of Women meeting on February 20, 1895. He is interred in Mount Hope Cemetery, near Rochester, New York.
Visitors to the site can experience educational seminars, see Douglass artifacts, photographs and documents.
Frederick Douglass National Historic Site
Mailing Address:
1411 W Street SE
Washington, DC 20020
(202) 426-5961
https://www.nps.gov/frdo/index.htm

Saturday, February 29, 2020

Sample Chapter - Short History of the Post Office - Genghis Khan and the Mail

Sample Chapter
Short History of the Post Office 
Genghis Khan and the Mail
Genghis Khan relied heavily upon the messenger service he developed to govern his huge empire.
Genghis Khan (c.1162 – August 18, 1227)
The son of Yesugei Baghatur and Hoelun, Genghis was probably native to Delüün Boldog, Mongolia and given the name Temüjin. His father, a tribal leader of the important Kiyad tribe. Historical lore relates that at birth Temüjin clutched a blood clot in his hand, considered an omen of future greatness. When Temüjin was about 10 years old a rival Tatars tribe's leader had his father poisoned. Temüjin attempted to claim the leadership position of the tribe, however they did not accept him and abandoned the family. Left to die, the family managed to survive the brutal environment of the Asian Steppe region. Their food consisted mainly of ox carcasses, wild fruit and small game Temüjin and his brothers managed to kill.
Kidnapped
Temüjin and his brother Khasar killed their older stepbrother Begter after he began to make claims to the family's leadership. This would have meant that he could claim Temüjin's mother Hoelun as his wife. An angry Temüjin and Khasar murdered him. Sometime after this a tribe that had been his father's ally kidnapped and enslaved him. With the help of two of his father's loyal followers and a sympathetic guard, Temüjin escaped during the night.
Marriage and Rise to Power
Temüjin married a girl to which he had been previously betrothed, Borte. In addition to the men that had helped him escape, Temüjin was able to gather more of his father's former allies and then joined Toghril, chief of the Kerait.  Temüjin's father had once helped the Kerait and thus gained their friendship. Temüjin proved to be a formidible leader and military strategist. His followers began a campaign of subjection over neighboring tribes, a task at which they had tremendous success.
The Great Khan
At this time the Central Asian plateau north of China consisted of dozens of tribes, including Naimans, Merkits, Tatars, Khamag Mongols, and Keraites.  Temüjin and his allies subdued these tribes one by one in a series of brutal, bloody campaigns. At length at a conference of these tribes in 1206 AD on the shores of the Kerulen river the leaders of these tribes awarded Temüjin with the title Great Khan.
Further Conquests
The Khan's warriors were hardy men that could survive for days riding their tough horses with few provisions and rest. Each rider equipped themselves with up to 16 spare horses, which allowed them extreme mobility and the ability to move quickly over long distances. The Mongols utilized enemy tactics and technology, if it benefited them. Under the Khan's leadership, this army expanded quickly, as conquered foes were frequently given the choice to either join the Khan or face total annihilation. The area governed by the Khan grew quickly as he attacked the Jin Emperor of China Emperor Xuanzong, eventually causing the fall of the empire by 1234. The conquest was completed by his sons, as Ghengis had died earlier. In addition to these conquests, Khan conquered the Khwarazmian Empire, Georgia, Crimea, Kievan Rus and Volga Bulgaria, adding each of these to his Mongol Empire that at his death in 1227 had become the largest contiguous empire on earth. The empire stretched from the Pacific Ocean to Eastern Europe. 
The Örtöö
Khan developed his messenger service, called the Örtöö, sometime around 1200 AD. The word Örtöö translates as the term checkpoint, which was a relay station on the route. At some point the service became known as the Yam, which is a Tatar word for road, related in turn to the Mongolian name for road, which is Zam. The Örtöö consisted of a series of relay stations located from 20 to 40 miles apart. Each station was equipped with horses, food and shelter. A messenger would arrive at the station, hand his message to the next rider in line, then eat and rest. The system grew to include thousands of relay stations. There were 1400 just in China. The Örtöö at one time had 50,000 horses, 6,700 mules, 1,400 oxen, more than 200 dogs, and 1,150 sheep. The service also owned over 6,000 boats and 400 carts. The system provided a means for the Khan and his officials to send messages, mail and intelligence reports. The Khan allowed merchants to use the service free. Abuse of the privilege led the Khan eventually to charge a fee.
The Messengers
The messengers were trustworthy individuals whose duties to the service superseded everything else. The members of the service enjoyed special privileges and carried a tablet called a  paiza that identified them as members of the service and designated their authority to obtain goods and services from the populace when they needed them. The service evolved into the largest and most efficient ever developed until modern times.

Short History of the Post Office


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Other Books in the Series:
Short History of Libraries, Printing and Language
Short History of Fire Fighting
Short History of Roads and Highways
Short History of Railroads
Short History of the Discoverers
Short History of Gardening and Agriculture
Short History of Public Parks
Short History of Political Parties
A Short History of Traditional Crafts



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Saturday, February 15, 2020

The Discoverers

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The Discovers will include short biographies of all the early European explorers of the New World. They include Christopher Columbus, Sir Francis Drake, Humphrey Gilbert, Bartholomew Gosnold and many more.
Summer 2020
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Saturday, January 25, 2020

Sample Chapter - Short History of Political Parties - James Madison on Political Parties

Sample Chapter
Short History of Political Parties
James Madison on Political Parties
Like Washington and many other of the Founding Fathers, Madison distrusted political parties during the time the men labored at crafting the document. Unlike Washington, Madison came to embrace political parties as a means of controlling differing political factions.
To understand Madison's view, we must first understand the two fundamental fears of the Founding Fathers. These were consolidation of power and fear of the majority. The Framers designed the Constitution to inhibit any faction from gaining supremacy and that majority rule would be difficult for any faction to achieve. Madison's view evolved to a point that he believed that the key to controlling factions was to create a large number of them, ensuring that none could achieve a majority. Madison defined a faction as:
“a number of citizens, whether amounting to a majority or minority of the whole, who are united and actuated by some common impulse of passion, or of interest, adverse to the rights of other citizens, or to the permanent and aggregate interests of the community.” 
Many readers will see the modern special interest groups as the embodiment of Madison's definition.
Madison came to believe that the best way to avoid the tyranny of the majority was to expand the political sphere of the United States as much as possible, fragmenting political factions and preventing any one faction from gaining a majority. This would force factions to compromise and encourage consensus government rather than the tyranny of majority rule. The construction of the Constitution thus discourages rapid change of policy. Instead, it encourages gradual change over a long period of time, allowing society to gauge the success of certain policies and allow for change along the way. Madison came to understand that political parties were necessary for the proper functioning of the Constitution.
Madison called the form of government that he had helped creat an "Extended Republic."
Note that he did not call it a democracy.
A democracy is a governmental form in  which the people participate directly.
A republic is a form of government in which people elect representatives to represent their views.
In explanation, Madison wrote in the Federalist Papers:
“The two great points of difference between a democracy and a republic are: first, the delegation of the government, in the latter, to a small number of citizens elected by the rest; secondly, the greater number of citizens, and greater sphere of country, over which the latter may be extended. The effect of the first difference is, on the one hand, to refine and enlarge the public views, by passing them through the medium of a chosen body of citizens…”
Madison believed that an extended republic diluted the power of factions. He believed that a democratic form of government would lead to tyranny.

Short History of Political Parties

Short History of Political Parties
Short History of Political Parties

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Sample Chapter
Short History of Political Parties
Description:
The Short History of Political Parties includes the history of the origin of political parties and their evolution in the United States.
Publication date sometime in 2020




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Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Sample Chapter - A Short History of Traditional Crafts - Gunsmiths

Sample Chapter
 A Short History of Traditional Crafts
Gunsmiths
The gunsmith performs a number of different tasks that involve many different skills, including woodworking, machinist, engineering and finishing. The first gunsmiths arose in Europe after the introduction of firearms in the Fourteenth Century. The Chinese, who had first invented gunpowder in the Ninth Century AD, were naturally the first ones to invent the firearm.
Gunpowder History
Invented by the Chinese in the Ninth Century, gunpowder at first was not explosive, but it was flammable. One of the first recorded uses as a weapon is a drawing of a flamethrower. The Chinese refined the mix, and soon they made rockets and fireworks. They used fireworks at first to scare away evil spirits. The technology spread to the Mongols, to India and then the Arabs. The technology reached Europe by the Thirteenth Century. Historians are not sure if the Mongol invaders brought the technology or if the knowledge came in through the Silk Road, but by the 1300's the Europeans had gunpowder. 
Gunpowder 
Classed as a "low explosive" substance, gunpowder produces a large amount of pressure and gas after a rapid burn. This explosion of gas and pressure is ideal for propelling a projectile down the barrel of a firearm or cannon, as it is not intense enough to destroy the device. Gunpowder is composed of three ingredients, potassium nitrate, carbon and sulfur. Sulfur comprises the smallest component at about ten percent. The colonies imported it from Sicily, which has huge deposits. Carbon, the next biggest component at about fifteen percent, they could manufacture from charcoal, an abundant resource made by burning wood. Potassium nitrate is the most important at seventy-five percent and is the most difficult to obtain.
Potassium Nitrate
Potassium nitrate, or salt peter, accumulates in caves as the composted remains of bat manure, or guano. The early colonists knew of no natural sources of salt peter in the New World. Sources were found later on, but the need for this critical material during the Revolutionary War forced the colonists to find foreign sources. There is another way to produce salt peter, but it is a long process. Any organic matter that contains nitrogen is a potential source for potassium nitrate. Manure, blood from slaughterhouses, and plant material of all kinds they would gather and put in a huge pile. They would water this pile from time to time with animal and human urine. This huge pile of organic matter would decompose, leaving compost behind. They would then leach the salt peter out of this compost with water. They could then re-crystallize the salt peter by evaporating the resulting liquid in the sun. This process typically took a year to produce the salt peter needed for gunpowder.
Brief History of the Firearm
The Chinese developed the fire lance sometime in the 10th Century. This was simply a tube they filled with gunpowder. They lit the gunpowder which ignited and shot a fiery bolt of sparks at an adversary. Sometimes they would put shrapnel of some kind in the tube to inflict greater damage. By the 12th Century the Chinese had evolved their craft to create the first hand cannons which shot cannonballs. The firearm was probably carried to the Middle East by Mongol invaders in the 14th Century. One of the earliest forms of firearms was a gun called an arquebus. This was a defensive weapon whose name derives from the German word Hakenbüchse, or "hook gun." The gun was mounted on hook like projection that steadied the weapon when the shooter fired the gun. Historians think that the arquebus first appeared in the Ottoman Empire sometime around 1465 and in Europe sometime around 1475. These early guns had to be fired by holding a lit match to a fire pan filled with gunpowder. This operation required a great deal of preparation at a time when the soldier was probably under attack. The development of the matchlock, possibly by the Japanese probably developed the matchlock and introduced it to the Portuguese sometime around 1543. The smooth bore muzzle loading musket appeared sometime around 1465, first as a heavier arquebus designed to penetrate armor. This led to the downfall of armor as protection and the musket evolved into a lighter firearm. The introduction of the matchlock made the musket more mobile.
Gunsmiths
The increasing complexity of firearms led to the appearance of gunsmiths that could make and repair the guns. The first gunsmiths were Italian craftsmen that assembled gun barrels. The early gunsmiths during the Middle Ages needed to join a guild in order to practice. Since there were no gunsmith guilds, these artisans joined blacksmithing guilds. As the various national governments soon began to employ gunsmiths their numbers and importance grew, leading to the appearance of specialized gunsmith guilds in the 14th Century. Britain lagged behind the other nations in gunsmiths leading King Henry VIII to invite gunsmiths in other European countries to work in London sometime before 1545. Because of the restrictive guilds in Continental Europe, many gunsmiths happily moved to England to practice their craft. Many gunsmiths migrated to America and began practicing their much needed craft among the first pioneers in the wilderness. The American gunsmiths developed the distinctive Kentucky, or Pennsylvania, long rifle which was much prized by pioneers like Daniel Boone for its accuracy. Gunsmiths provided a valuable service for the newly independent nation during the Revolutionary War.  Eli Whitney's introduction of standardized gun parts in 1798 made mass produced firearms more affordable and placed less reliance upon the hand crafted guns of the gunsmith. However, many gun enthusiasts still prefer the high quality weapon produced by a skilled gunsmith.

A Short History of Traditional Crafts

A Short History of Traditional Crafts
Description:
Discover the story behind many of the traditional handicrafts like black smithing, weaving, quilting, sewing, basket making and pottery. The book covers the history of those crafts as well as metal smiths, brewers and woodworkers. 

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Basket-Making
Candle Making
Ceramics
Embroidery
Glass Arts
Gunsmiths
Quilt Making
Spinning and Weaving History
Invention of Pottery 
Leather Manufacture History
Soap Making History
Metal Working History
Coppersmith History
Goldsmith History
Silversmith History
Tinsmith History
Blacksmiths
Jewelry Making History
Wood Crafting History
Saddle Making History
History of Beads
Glass Blowing History
Leather Crafts
Stone Carving History
Floral Design History
Rug-Making History
Rope Making History
History of Beer and Brewing
History of Wine Making
Toy Making History
Doll Making History
Doll House Making History
Tapestry Art History
Knitting History
Sewing History
Crocheting History
Paper Making
Acknowledgements 
About the Author
Mossy Feet Books Catalogue
Sample Chapter
Short History of Roads and Highways
Bicyclists Press for Better Roads

© 2019 Paul Wonning
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