In 2014, Murder by Gaslight posted Unsolved, a collection of
19th-century murders that had never been fully explained. The list included
some famous cases, including the murders of Andrew and Abby Borden, Carrie
Brown, Benjamin Nathan, as well as several other homicides that were never
prosecuted.
Since then, Murder by Gaslight has posted many more murder cases
that were never solved. Either
Welcome to this week's Link Dump!It's all in the family!What the hell was the Deerness Mermaid?Why clams are happy.The mystery of the Pied Piper.A cursed family.The strange story of an occult historian.Another reminder of how little we really know about our own planet.Abbott Parker was struck by lightning. And then things got really weird.The skull rock on Mars.What linguists think
Soapy Smith STAR NotebookPage 19 - Original copy1884Courtesy of Geri Murphy(Click image to enlarge)
oapy Smith begins an empire in Denver.Operating the prize package soap sell racket in 1884.This is page 19, the continuation of page 18, and dated April 14 - May 5, 1884, the continuation of deciphering Soapy Smith's "star" notebook from the Geri Murphy's collection. A complete introduction to
In 2014, Murder by Gaslight posted Unsolved, a collection of
19th-century murders that had never been fully explained. The list included
some famous cases, including the murders of Andrew and Abby Borden, Carrie
Brown, Benjamin Nathan, as well as several other homicides that were never
prosecuted.
Since then, Murder by Gaslight has posted many more murder cases
that were never solved. Either
If the backers behind the Empire State Building were really able to build an airship mooring mast at the top, as they announced in 1929 before the tower was completed, then perhaps the Hindenburg wouldn’t have had to dock in Lakehurst, New Jersey, after crossing the ocean from Germany. But of course, a dock at […]
If the backers behind the Empire State Building were really able to build an airship mooring mast at the top, as they announced in 1929 before the tower was completed, then perhaps the Hindenburg wouldn’t have had to dock in Lakehurst, New Jersey, after crossing the ocean from Germany. But of course, a dock at […]
In 2014, Murder by Gaslight posted Unsolved, a collection of
19th-century murders that had never been fully explained. The list included
some famous cases, including the murders of Andrew and Abby Borden, Carrie
Brown, Benjamin Nathan, as well as several other homicides that were never
prosecuted.
Since then, Murder by Gaslight has posted many more murder cases
that were never solved. Either
Welcome to this week's Link Dump!It's all in the family!What the hell was the Deerness Mermaid?Why clams are happy.The mystery of the Pied Piper.A cursed family.The strange story of an occult historian.Another reminder of how little we really know about our own planet.Abbott Parker was struck by lightning. And then things got really weird.The skull rock on Mars.What linguists think
Welcome to this week's Link Dump!It's all in the family!What the hell was the Deerness Mermaid?Why clams are happy.The mystery of the Pied Piper.A cursed family.The strange story of an occult historian.Another reminder of how little we really know about our own planet.Abbott Parker was struck by lightning. And then things got really weird.The skull rock on Mars.What linguists think
Faahee, or surf-swimming, is a favorite pastime with the natives of the Sandwich Islands. According to Ellis, a recent writer, “Individuals of all ranks and ages, and both sexes, follow this sport with great avidity. They usually select the openings in the reefs or entrances of some of the hays, where the long, heavy billows rolled in unbroken majesty upon the reef or the shore. They used a small board, which they called papa faahee—swam from the beach to a considerable distance, sometimes nearly a mile—watched the swell of the wave, and when it reached them, they mounted on its summit, and amid the foam and spray rode on the crest of the wave to the shore; sometimes they halted among the coral rocks, over which the waves broke in splendid confusion. When they approached the shore, they slid off the board, which they grasped in the hand, and either fell behind the wave or plunged toward the deep and allowed it to pass over their heads.
“Sometimes they were thrown with violence upon beach, or among the rocks on the edges of the reef. So much at home, however, do they feel in the water, that it is seldom any accident occurs.
“I have often seen among the border of the reef, forming the boundary line to the harbor of Fare in Huahine, from 50 to 100 persons, of all ages, sporting like so many porpoises in the surf that has been rolling with foam and violence toward the land; sometimes mounted on top of the wave, and almost enveloped in spray, at other times plunging beneath the mass of water that has swept like mountains over them, cheering and animating each other ;and by the noise and shouting they made, rendering the roar of the sea and the dashing of the surf comparatively imperceptible.”
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, April 7, 1866.
"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