Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Women
shouldn't fake orgasms because we men don't care one way or the
other.”
Kenneth
Brennan
Trivia
question of the day:
What
was the only British possession(s) that was occupied by the Germans
in WWII? Answer at the end of the blog.
A
friend of mine told me something sad about a mutual friend. There
was a a couple of guys here in town known as “The Twins”, Gary
and Guy. Gary died a few years ago of a cause that I have forgotten,
Guy was a heavy smoker and had COPD. At the age of 61 he ended up in
an assisted living facility carrying around an oxygen tank. The
facility absolutely forbade smoking on their property, either outside
or inside. A while back they caught Guy smoking for the third time
and kicked him out. His daughter from Atlanta came and got him and
took him to her house...but she does not allow smoking on her
property either. Living on an oxygen bottle and still smoking...I
don't get it. BTW, he eventually died too.
This Date in
History July 20
1889
Earlier a barroom girl named Ella Watson met up with a barkeep
named James Averill in a saloon down in Kansas. James had 320 acre
homestead up in Wyoming. Ella and James decided to move onto the
homestead unmarried, this would allow Ella to homestead her own 320
acres. They were legally within their rights to homestead this
treeless grassland but the cattle barons were reluctant to give
“their” lands to settlers. It really wasn’t all their land;
many, many acres belonged to the United States Department of the
Interior who was trying to bring people to settle the west. The only
problem with Ella and James was they settled on land that cattle
baron James Bothwell considered “open range” and wanted that land
to graze his cattle. He had no legal way to kick them out so he did
the next best thing. He accused Ella and James of rustling. On this
date Bothwell and company captured the two and hanged them. Bothwell
went to court but the “cattle man friendly” jury acquitted him.
The American west was going through a transition from open range to
barbed wire fenced ranches. The old-timers did not like it but it
came anyway.
1969
“Tranquility base here, the Eagle has landed”. On this day
those immortal words were uttered by astronaut Neil Armstrong upon
the landing of the lunar excursion module (LEM) on the moon. This
was known as the Apollo 11 mission. After taking a rest and getting
into his space suit, Neil opened a hatch, crawled down a ladder and
stepped onto the moon surface. He then gave us another immortal
phrase in “That’s one small step for man and a giant leap for
mankind.” We don’t do anymore manned lunar exploration
now-a-days, but I remember Armstrong and Aldrin walking around on the
moon and how thrilling it was. By the way, Buzz Aldrin claims to
have seen a UFO.
1780
On this date US General Anthony “Mad Anthony” Wayne is tasked
with capturing a British blockhouse located about 12 miles north of
Hoboken, New Jersey. Wayne assembled two brigades of Pennsylvania
militia and headed out. The blockhouse is defended by 70 Loyalists
(Americans fighting for the British). Wayne ordered the attack but
it was repulsed as was two additional attacks. So Wayne says “to
hell with it” and withdraws. Wayne got his nickname when he
ordered an attack on a British encampment late at night. He ordered
his men to use bayonets only and they killed 94 British soldiers by
bayoneting them in the throat and they died without making a sound.
It takes all kinds.
The Saga of
Cynthia Ann Parker
She
was born in Crawford County, Illinois in 1826. When little Cynthia
was seven years old, her family moved to east Texas to the headwaters
of the Navasota River near present day Groesbeck, Texas. By 1834 the
extended Parker family had completed Fort Parker. When Cynthia Anne
was ten years old a large party of Comanche warriors swept down on
the fort and after killing 5 men, the Comanche kidnapped two women
and three children. The kidnapped children were Cynthia Anne, her
brother John and a cousin named James Plummer. I cannot find out
what happened to John and James but Cynthia Anne spent nearly 25
years with the Comanche. Her Comanche name was Naduah (Someone
found) and she married a Comanche warrior named Pohtocnocony or as
the white man called him, Peta Nocona. Cynthia and Peta Nocona had
two sons, Quanah (Fragrant) and Pecos (Peanuts) and one daughter
named Topsannah (Prairie Flower). Cynthia’s husband, Peta Nacona,
was eventually named chief of the tribe. In December of 1860 a troop
of Texas Rangers, led by Captain Sullivan Ross, surrounded and
captured a group of Comanche near the Pease River. Included in this
group were Cynthia and her infant daughter Prairie Flower. After
interviewing Cynthia many of the Rangers told Captain Ross that they
thought it would be best for Cynthia to be allowed to rejoin her
adopted Native American family because she had spent so much time
with them that they did not believe she could adapt to life with the
whites. But Captain Ross had heard so many complaints about white
children being kidnapped by the Natives that he thought it would be
best for all concerned if they tried to rehabilitate her. Cynthia
and Prairie Flower were sent to Camp Cooper where Cynthia was
identified by an uncle named Isaac Parker. Isaac took Cynthia and
Prairie Flower to his ranch near Birdville, Texas. The Texas
legislature granted Cynthia a league of land which is equal to 428
acres and a pension of $100 per year for five years. Incidentally,
most land grants given by the Mexican Government to the Anglo
settlers was a “labor and a league”. A labor was 177 acres that
had water frontage and a league was land without water frontage.
They also named her uncles Isaac and Benjamin Parker as her
guardians. It did not help. Cynthia was terminally homesick and tried
to escape several times. In 1862 Cynthia went to live with her
brother Silas in Van Zandt County, Texas. Silas was also named as
her guardian. After Silas was mustered in the Confederate Army,
Cynthia went to live with her sister Olrena. Just before the
outbreak of the Civil War, the Parker family was in negotiation to
send Cynthia back to live with her adopted family in west Texas but
unfortunately the war got in the way. To make things much worse, in
1864 Prairie Flower died of influenza. This was bad enough but what
made Cynthia so unhappy was that she missed her sons and did not know
what had happened to her husbands or sons. Anyway she wasted away
and died in 1870 of malnutrition at the age of 44 because she refused
to eat. After several movements of her body she was finally put to
rest beside her son Quanah and her daughter Prairie Flower in Fort
Sill, Oklahoma. Her son Quanah became a legend in the history of the
American Indians and I will do a biography on him in the near future.
The city of Quanah, Texas was named for him and the city of Nocona
is named for Cynthia’s Comanche husband.
Answer
to the trivia question:
The
only British possessions that were occupied by the Germans in WWII
was the channel islands of Jersey and Guernsey.
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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