Via Newspapers.comTime to saddle up those ghost horses! The “San Francisco Chronicle,” December 30, 1931:Horses, horses, horses. Three phantom black horses, galloping soundlessly with the speed of the wind, have set Berkeley agog with a mystery that has even the scientific police department of that community guessing. The horses have been seen in the Berkeley hills north of the
Soapy Smith STAR NotebookPage 24 - Original copy1884Courtesy of Geri Murphy(Click image to enlarge)
oapy Smith's "STAR" notebook page 24, 1882 and 1884, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland. Steamer Ancon.
This post is on page 24, the last of the "STAR" notebook pages I have been deciphering and publishing for the last two years, since July 24, 2023. The page is two separate notes dated 1882
Before Riverside Park, before Riverside Drive, before the sparsely populated Manhattan district known since the 18th century as Bloomingdale was urbanized into the Upper West Side, there was a lone modest house. Perched on the edge of the Hudson River in the West 80s, the two-story, pitched-roof dwelling appears to have no neighbors. A back […]
Youth With Executioner by Nuremberg native Albrecht Dürer … although it’s dated to 1493, which was during a period of several years when Dürer worked abroad. November 13 [1617]. Burnt alive here a miller of Manberna, who however was lately … Continue reading →
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, March 28, 1868.Robert Sprague, a normally peaceful man, was spending a quiet evening with his family in their home in Jasper, Iowa, on February 17, 1868. He was reading the Bible with his mother, wife, and children when his 70-year-old mother asked him a question in relation to a religious meeting the night before. At the previous night’s meeting,
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[Editor’s note: Guest writer, Peter Dickson, lives in West Sussex, England and has been working with microfilm copies of The Duncan Campbell Papers from the State Library of NSW, Sydney, Australia. The following are some of his analyses of what he has discovered from reading these papers. Dickson has contributed many transcriptions to the Jamaica […]
Gambling in Cheyenne, so far from being an amusement or recreation merely, rises to the dignity of a legitimate occupation—the pursuit of nine-tenths of the population, both permanent and transient. There are twenty gambling saloons in this diminutive town, the proprietors of which pay yearly licenses of six hundred dollars for each table and as every room averages half a dozen green-baize covers, the revenues to the country are by no means trifling. One of the largest of these "hells" is the Bella Union, on Main Street, and the artist of the Leslie Overland Trip visiting it both by daylight and gaslight, found subjects enough for his busy pencil in its regular habitues. The large rooms always full and always orderly; each man is too busy with his calculations and too wrought up with the intense strain of the occasion to indulge in any playful ebullitions or suggestions of a "free fight." Round the long green tables are grouped such picturesque and savage figures as only a frontier town can show—the stalwart scout, in his fringed suit of buckskin, weather-stained and soiled; the long-booted miner, the lank greaser, with his swarthy face and glittering eyes; and here and there perhaps a woman pulling up her little pile at gold and silver. One women, at least is a permanent institution at the Bella Union, presiding with orderly gravity over the lansquenet table. There are tables for faro, rouge-et-noir, roulette, and vingt-et-un and over each, for the accommodation of patrons, is hung a framed copy of the rules of the game, the limit of the checks, etc., varied occasionally by a big ornamentally lettered "Welcome," or some playful motto immensely suggestive to Cheyenne eyes, if not to those of the passing visitor.
"Every man in town gambles," the proprietor informed our artist, with perfect coolness. “All sporting characters here, sir!” and, in the same breath goes on to deplore the heavy burden of his licenses, and lament, with an air of injured virtue, the difficulties ever in the way of the seeker after an honest livelihood.
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, November 3, 1877.
"We follow vice and folly where a police officer dare not show his head, as the small, but intrepid weasel pursues vermin in paths which the licensed cat or dog cannot enter."
The Sunday Flash 1841