Posts Tagged ‘history’

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Where am I living this time?

September 18, 2014

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Not so much living as vacationing.  Did you know that you can rent a fire look out tower at several locations in the US National Forest system?

The National Forests Foundation has information about lookout rentals in the western states

And nine questions about renting one of the lookouts

And lookout rentals by state

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These are high, but not high-end, accommodations, but once you get there, the views must be magnificent!

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Lookout living is not all blue huckleberries and kinnikinnik jam, however.  Like lighthouse keepers, lookout living requires some accommodations.

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Here are some of the photos from this delightful book that combines history, drawings, photos and recipes. The book is available from the National Forests Foundation website store, or Amazon.

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lookout woodlookout3lookout2See also:

Lustron Homes

Quonset Huts

Dymaxion House

Heinlein House

Sears Mail-Order Homes

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Where am I sightseeing?

September 15, 2014

londonTHE-BLACK-FRIAR-T33127_K910120Black Friars Pub

All too often I come across photos or stories or memories of interesting or magnificent places that have been lost to history. This post is about hidden architectural treasures in London which still exist – including a wonderful photo of the interior of the iconic Battersea Power Station.  They have been captured in the book, London: Hidden Interiors.

The Guardian has a wonderful SLIDE SHOW of photographs from the book.

london masonic templeMasonic Temple

Photographs by Derrek Kendall; the book is by Phillip Davies.

 

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Why do I think the dark is rising?

September 11, 2014

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I was an adult when I read Susan Cooper’s excellent books in the Dark is Rising sequence.  Even so, they scared the pants off me.

Think about this from the Wall Street Journal, Brutal Rise of Islamic State Turns Old Enemies Into New Friends. 

WSJ

Go here for the story.

And here for the active infographic. (Graphic by Chris Kaeser and Stuart A. Thompson/The Wall Street Journal)

You know what day it is.

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Whose birthday am I celebrating on tattoo Tuesday?

September 9, 2014

colonel_sanders_KFC

Harland David Sanders, born September 9, 1890, in Henryville, Indiana.

Colonel Sanders was an American businessman, best known for founding Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC), and later acting as the company’s goodwill ambassador and symbol.

Sanders held a number of jobs in his early life, such as a fireman, insurance salesman and running filling stations. He began selling fried chicken from his roadside restaurant in Corbin, Kentucky, during the Great Depression. Sanders identified the potential of the restaurant franchising concept, and the first KFC franchise opened in Utah in 1952. The company’s rapid expansion across the United States and overseas saw it overwhelm him however, and in 1964 he sold the company to a group of investors led by John Y. Brown, Jr. and Jack C. Massey for $2 million.

Ref: Wikipedia

You can down load Col. Sanders cookbook here.  It includes this recipe:

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And the tattoo:

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Why am I stuck on you?

September 8, 2014

On September 8, 1930, Scotch Tape was first marketed by 3M.

The brand and the tape has endured.  That little “snail” dispenser has been pretty much unchanged since 1939.  The following story is reblogged from Wired.

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1930: 3M begins marketing the first waterproof, transparent, pressure-sensitive tape after employee Richard Drew figures out how to coat strips of cellophane with adhesive.

Initially sold by the St. Paul, Minnesota, company as a moisture-proof seal for bakers, grocers and meatpackers, the product quickly got repurposed during the Depression by money-strapped consumers who used the tape as a cheap home-repair tool.

“Cellophane Tape” picked up the “Scotch” tag, according to legend, when a St. Paul car dealer became annoyed because the cellulose ribbons originally only had adhesive on the borders. Slagging 3M (known in those days as the Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co.) for being stingy, he invoked Scotland’s penny-pinching reputation and dubbed the product “Scotch tape.”

The name stuck.

In 1939, 3M introduced its so-called “snail” dispenser, which remains in use today. Less durable was the company’s kilt-wearing mascot “Scotty McTape.” Introduced in 1944, the logo became a fixture in the ’50s, when Scotch tape, heavily advertised on TV, dominated its market sector so thoroughly that it became a brand name on par with Kleenex and Coke.

3M had rolled out so many variations of the basic product by 1978 that Saturday Night Live spoofed the product with a skit about a store that sells nothing but Scotch tape.

Outside the pop-culture realm, the tape attached itself to scientific research. Russian experimenters demonstrated in 1953 that if they peeled a roll of Scotch tape in a vacuum, the resulting triboluminescence produced X-rays.

American scientists proved in 2008 that the tape’s triboluminescent radiation was strong enough to leave an X-ray image of a finger on photographic paper.

Highbrow recognition came in 2004 when New York’s Museum of Modern Art exhibited Scotch tape as one of its “indispensable masterpieces of design.”

Sales show no sign of winding down. 3M reports that enough tape is sold annually to circle the globe 165 times.

More information here at the 3M tape site.

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Where am I living?

September 3, 2014

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This beautifully remodeled 4-bed, 3.5-bath home in Warrenville, Illinois, was originally constructed in 1922. It is listed for $375,000.  The 1,965 square foot interior has radiant heat floors throughout. Granite counters, tile floors, and brand new fixtures have equipped the kitchen for the 21st century.  Ref.: realtor.com

I love this idea.  You used to be able to order a house kit from Sears.  They also gave you the opportunity to make additions and changes, and to order the hardware and fittings that you preferred.  Sigh.

From 1908–1940, Sears, Roebuck and Co. sold about 70,000 – 75,000 homes through their mail-order Modern Homes program. Over that time Sears designed 447 different housing styles, from the elaborate multistory Ivanhoe, with its elegant French doors and art glass windows, to the simpler Goldenrod, which served as a quaint, three-room and no-bath cottage for summer vacationers. (An outhouse could be purchased separately for Goldenrod and similar cottage dwellers.) Customers could choose a house to suit their individual tastes and budgets.

Sears was not an innovative home designer. Sears was instead a very able follower of popular home designs but with the added advantage of modifying houses and hardware according to buyer tastes. Individuals could even design their own homes and submit the blueprints to Sears, which would then ship off the appropriate precut and fitted materials, putting the home owner in full creative control. Modern Home customers had the freedom to build their own dream houses, and Sears helped realize these dreams through quality custom design and favorable financing.

More here at the Sears Archive.

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Look up Sears Houses on google images for more wonderful floorplans, prices and ordering instructions (!)

Well maintained Sears homes are still in existence and seem to be highly desirable.

See also:

Lustron Homes

Quonset Huts

Dymaxion House

Heinlein House

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Whose birthday am I celebrating on tattoo Tuesday?

September 2, 2014

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Queen Liliuokalani, the last monarch of Hawaii was born on September 2, 1838.

Unfortunately, her reign was not a happy one:

The Queen was deposed on January 17, 1893, and temporarily relinquished her throne to “the superior military forces of the United States.”

More here at Encyclopedia Britannica.

 

Tattoos of Hawaii

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What do I wish?

September 1, 2014

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Take rest; a field that has rested gives a bountiful crop.  Ovid

Wishing you a restful Labor Day.

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What am I being buzzed by?

August 30, 2014

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Hornets – it’s time for the Air Show.

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Last year the show was canceled because of government sequestration.  This clip is from 2012.

This event began in Cleveland in 1929 as the National Air Races. Holding the races in Cleveland gave a big push to industry in this city.

The event circulated to different cities for nine years and was finally brought to Cleveland in 1929 by a group of local businessmen headed by Louis W. Greve and Frederick C. Crawford. Greve was president of the Cleveland Pneumatic Tool Company, which made the hydraulic undercarriages that held the wheels on airplanes. Crawford was general manager and later president of Thompson Products Inc., now a part of TRW Inc. Thompson Products developed the experimental sodium-cooled cylinders, which enabled Charles Lindbergh’s Spirit of St. Louis to reach France.

The inaugural event in 1929 attracted an estimated 300,000 spectators, and took place over 20 days.

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Read more about it here.

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What am I noting on tattoo Tuesday?

August 26, 2014

 

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The eruptions of Krakatoa on August 26-27, 1883 were among the most violent volcanic events ever recorded.  The eruption was the equivalent of 13,000 nuclear blasts the size of Little Boy that devastated Hiroshima.  It obliterated two-thirds of the island on which it is located.  Although part of Indonesia, the blast was heard as far away as Perth Australia. Adding to the destruction were the immense tidal waves that followed the event.   (Wikipedia)

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It is not Krakatoa, but here is a nice volcano tat.

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