McClure's Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 2, January, 1896
()
Related to McClure's Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 2, January, 1896
Related ebooks
McClure's Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 3, February 1896 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsRemembering the Kennebunks Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsHaunted Springield, Illinois Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsDelphi Complete Works of Washington Irving (Illustrated) Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Footprints of Abraham Lincoln: Presenting many interesting facts, reminiscences and illustrations Ebook
Footprints of Abraham Lincoln: Presenting many interesting facts, reminiscences and illustrations
byJ. T. HobsonRating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Revolutionary Paul Revere Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsFootprints of Abraham Lincoln: Presenting many interesting facts, reminiscences and illustrations never before published Ebook
Footprints of Abraham Lincoln: Presenting many interesting facts, reminiscences and illustrations never before published
byJ. T. HobsonRating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsLincoln's New Salem Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsReynolds Co, MO Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Lost Ghost Stories of Cleveland Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAround Selinsgrove Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Conquest The True Story of Lewis and Clark Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsGold!: The Story of the 1848 Gold Rush and How It Shaped a Nation Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Goffle Road Murders of Passaic County: The 1850 Van Winkle Killings Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsEthan Allen, the Robin Hood of Vermont Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Remarkable Life of Albert Haskell, Jr.: The King of Crown City Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsRemembering Fishkill Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Billy Yank and Johnny Reb How They Fought and Made Up Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Life Of Abraham Lincoln From His Birth To His Inauguration As President Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsSome Successful Americans Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Trail Of The Hawk: “He loved the people just as much as he feared and detested persons.” Ebook
The Trail Of The Hawk: “He loved the people just as much as he feared and detested persons.”
bySinclair LewisRating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Haunted South Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5An Artilleryman's Diary Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Journeys Through Bookland, Vol. 3 Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsDeadwood Gold: A Story of the Black Hills Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsPike County Ballads and Other Poems Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsCivilisation: Twenty Places on the Edge of the World Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Early Life of Abraham Lincoln Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAt the Dangerous Edge of Social Justice: Race, Violence and Death in America Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsLaurelton Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
Related podcast episodes
The Bell Witch - Unpleasant Dreams 6: The Bell Witch haunting is one of the oldest American hauntings on record and it is the subject of this week’s unpleasant dream. -- Cassandra Harold is your host. EM Hilker is our principal writer and researcher with additional writing by Cassandra... Podcast episode
The Bell Witch - Unpleasant Dreams 6: The Bell Witch haunting is one of the oldest American hauntings on record and it is the subject of this week’s unpleasant dream. -- Cassandra Harold is your host. EM Hilker is our principal writer and researcher with additional writing by Cassandra...
byUnpleasant Dreams0 ratings0% found this document useful12 Days of CraftLit - Eleventh Day: Holiday Stories & Music Podcast episode
12 Days of CraftLit - Eleventh Day: Holiday Stories & Music
byCraftLit - Serialized Classic Literature for Busy Book Lovers0 ratings0% found this document useful#1452 Lewis and Clark Extras: Clay Jenkinson recently lead a conference for the Smithsonian that introduced attendees to the Lewis and Clark expedition. The lecture was brimming with questions, so many that there was not enough time to answer all of them. This week, we try to... Podcast episode
#1452 Lewis and Clark Extras: Clay Jenkinson recently lead a conference for the Smithsonian that introduced attendees to the Lewis and Clark expedition. The lecture was brimming with questions, so many that there was not enough time to answer all of them. This week, we try to...
byListening to America0 ratings0% found this document usefulOctober 8, 2021 Plant Named After 50 Years, John Hay, J. Carter Brown, Faith Ringgold, Deanna Raybourn, Epitaph for a Peach by David M. Masumoto, and Bill Vaughan: Today in botanical history, we celebrate an American civil servant and poet, an American art expert, and a Harlem artist and gardener. We'll hear an excerpt from historical fiction by Deanna Raybourn. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a lyrical book... Podcast episode
October 8, 2021 Plant Named After 50 Years, John Hay, J. Carter Brown, Faith Ringgold, Deanna Raybourn, Epitaph for a Peach by David M. Masumoto, and Bill Vaughan: Today in botanical history, we celebrate an American civil servant and poet, an American art expert, and a Harlem artist and gardener. We'll hear an excerpt from historical fiction by Deanna Raybourn. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a lyrical book...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulSeptember 24, 2021 Fall Garden To-Dos, Metcalf Bowler, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Wilson Rawls, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Welcome to the Farm by Shaye Elliott, and a Weed Bouquet: Today in botanical history, we celebrate a British Spy/American Farmer, a social reformer and poet, and an American writer. We’ll hear an excerpt from a book written by the beloved Canadian writer Lucy Maud Montgomery. We Grow That Garden Library™... Podcast episode
September 24, 2021 Fall Garden To-Dos, Metcalf Bowler, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Wilson Rawls, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Welcome to the Farm by Shaye Elliott, and a Weed Bouquet: Today in botanical history, we celebrate a British Spy/American Farmer, a social reformer and poet, and an American writer. We’ll hear an excerpt from a book written by the beloved Canadian writer Lucy Maud Montgomery. We Grow That Garden Library™...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulNovember 1, 2021 Lee Smith, James Sherard, Charles Eliot, Dyed Flowers, Mary Rose O'Reilley, Flora by DK, and Stephen Crane: Today in botanical history, we celebrate a wealthy gardener and Apothecary whose garden became his legacy, a pioneering Landscape architect who left his mark on the world in his all-too-short life, and the fine fine fun that can be had dying... Podcast episode
November 1, 2021 Lee Smith, James Sherard, Charles Eliot, Dyed Flowers, Mary Rose O'Reilley, Flora by DK, and Stephen Crane: Today in botanical history, we celebrate a wealthy gardener and Apothecary whose garden became his legacy, a pioneering Landscape architect who left his mark on the world in his all-too-short life, and the fine fine fun that can be had dying...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document useful#1463 Petrification with David Nicandri: Clay Jenkinson and David Nicandri discuss Thomas Jefferson’s fascination with the mammoth, and his hope that Lewis and Clark would find living specimens. As it turns out, Nicandri and Jenkinson have an equal fascination. Also discussed is the... Podcast episode
#1463 Petrification with David Nicandri: Clay Jenkinson and David Nicandri discuss Thomas Jefferson’s fascination with the mammoth, and his hope that Lewis and Clark would find living specimens. As it turns out, Nicandri and Jenkinson have an equal fascination. Also discussed is the...
byListening to America0 ratings0% found this document useful098-The St. Albans Raid: In October 1864, a group of Confederate soldiers staged a surprise raid in northern Vermont. Podcast episode
098-The St. Albans Raid: In October 1864, a group of Confederate soldiers staged a surprise raid in northern Vermont.
byFutility Closet0 ratings0% found this document useful#1451 Presidential Tech: We welcome back the scholar and author to discuss her recent piece about Presidents and their technology. The conversation covers the use of social media now and then, and she and Clay Jenkinson rate which one the early founding fathers might have... Podcast episode
#1451 Presidential Tech: We welcome back the scholar and author to discuss her recent piece about Presidents and their technology. The conversation covers the use of social media now and then, and she and Clay Jenkinson rate which one the early founding fathers might have...
byListening to America0 ratings0% found this document useful#1476 Henry Laurens and the Tower of London: This week, a special conversation between the creator of the Thomas Jefferson Hour, Clay Jenkinson, and his daughter Catherine, home from England for the holidays. Among other things, they discuss Henry Laurens, an American Founding Father, a... Podcast episode
#1476 Henry Laurens and the Tower of London: This week, a special conversation between the creator of the Thomas Jefferson Hour, Clay Jenkinson, and his daughter Catherine, home from England for the holidays. Among other things, they discuss Henry Laurens, an American Founding Father, a...
byListening to America0 ratings0% found this document usefulOn Soup 0 ratings0% found this document usefulSeptember 23, 2019 The Autumn Equinox, Kubla Khan, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Plants by Lewis and Clark, Stuart Robertson, Ruth Patrick, Poems about September, Plant Parenting by Leslie Halleck, Moving Plants, and the 1937 Rose Garden in Hershey, Pennsylva: Today is the first day of Autumn also referred to as the Autumn Equinox. Equinox means ‘equal night’. On this day, both day and night are nearly the same length. Thereafter, the dark part of the year begins. ... Podcast episode
September 23, 2019 The Autumn Equinox, Kubla Khan, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Plants by Lewis and Clark, Stuart Robertson, Ruth Patrick, Poems about September, Plant Parenting by Leslie Halleck, Moving Plants, and the 1937 Rose Garden in Hershey, Pennsylva: Today is the first day of Autumn also referred to as the Autumn Equinox. Equinox means ‘equal night’. On this day, both day and night are nearly the same length. Thereafter, the dark part of the year begins. ...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document useful163-Enslaved in the Sahara: Twelve Americans were enslaved in Africa after an 1815 shipwreck. Podcast episode
163-Enslaved in the Sahara: Twelve Americans were enslaved in Africa after an 1815 shipwreck.
byFutility Closet0 ratings0% found this document useful#1506 Shackleton with David Nicandri: Clay Jenkinson welcomes back David Nicandri for a discussion about Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton, the explorer who led three British expeditions to the Antarctic. They also talk about Thomas Jefferson's influence on exploration. Nicandri is the author... Podcast episode
#1506 Shackleton with David Nicandri: Clay Jenkinson welcomes back David Nicandri for a discussion about Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton, the explorer who led three British expeditions to the Antarctic. They also talk about Thomas Jefferson's influence on exploration. Nicandri is the author...
byListening to America0 ratings0% found this document usefulMay 24, 2022 William Whewell, Queen Victoria, Anne Frobel, H. Howard Pepper, Cultivated by Christin Geall, and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky: Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Historical Events 1794 Birth of William Whewell ("Hyoo- uhl"), English polymath, scientist, and Anglican priest. He was... Podcast episode
May 24, 2022 William Whewell, Queen Victoria, Anne Frobel, H. Howard Pepper, Cultivated by Christin Geall, and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky: Subscribe | | | | Support The Daily Gardener Connect for FREE! | Historical Events 1794 Birth of William Whewell ("Hyoo- uhl"), English polymath, scientist, and Anglican priest. He was...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulJune 17, 2019 Reusing Potting Soil, Edwin Hunt, James Weldon Johnson, Alexander Braun, Nellie McClung, the University of Wisconsin's Arboretum, Emily Dickenson, Joanne Shaw, The Plant Hunters by Carolyn Fry, Geranium Care, and Lajos Kossuth: Do you change the oil in your window boxes and containers every spring? You really don't need to - I don't. Here's what I do: I remove about a quarter to a third of the soil in my containers, and I put it in my potting soil bin. Then, I add a little... Podcast episode
June 17, 2019 Reusing Potting Soil, Edwin Hunt, James Weldon Johnson, Alexander Braun, Nellie McClung, the University of Wisconsin's Arboretum, Emily Dickenson, Joanne Shaw, The Plant Hunters by Carolyn Fry, Geranium Care, and Lajos Kossuth: Do you change the oil in your window boxes and containers every spring? You really don't need to - I don't. Here's what I do: I remove about a quarter to a third of the soil in my containers, and I put it in my potting soil bin. Then, I add a little...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document useful#1358 Robinson Crusoe: "It’s a classic enlightenment story: a novel in the history of ideas about how civilization is created from nothing." — Clay S. Jenkinson We present another installment of the Jefferson Hour Book Club this week, and the selection is Robinson... Podcast episode
#1358 Robinson Crusoe: "It’s a classic enlightenment story: a novel in the history of ideas about how civilization is created from nothing." — Clay S. Jenkinson We present another installment of the Jefferson Hour Book Club this week, and the selection is Robinson...
byListening to America0 ratings0% found this document useful221-The Mystery Man of Essex County: Hanged in 1883 for killing his wife, an enigmatic stranger left behind six mysterious cryptograms. Podcast episode
221-The Mystery Man of Essex County: Hanged in 1883 for killing his wife, an enigmatic stranger left behind six mysterious cryptograms.
byFutility Closet0 ratings0% found this document usefulJanuary 20, 2021 January Garden Chores, Henry Danvers, Carl Linnaeus the Younger, Elizabeth Lawrence on Dogwoods and Spider Lilies, All Along You Were Blooming by Morgan Harper Nichols, and the first female botanist in America: Jane Colden: Today we celebrate the pardoned outlaw who donated the land for the Oxford Botanic Garden. We'll also learn about Carl Jr. - Linnaeus’s son - Linnaeus filius, who surely felt some pressure growing up in his father’s shadow. We’ll hear one of my... Podcast episode
January 20, 2021 January Garden Chores, Henry Danvers, Carl Linnaeus the Younger, Elizabeth Lawrence on Dogwoods and Spider Lilies, All Along You Were Blooming by Morgan Harper Nichols, and the first female botanist in America: Jane Colden: Today we celebrate the pardoned outlaw who donated the land for the Oxford Botanic Garden. We'll also learn about Carl Jr. - Linnaeus’s son - Linnaeus filius, who surely felt some pressure growing up in his father’s shadow. We’ll hear one of my...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document useful#1464 Jouett's Ride: We spend this week answering listener questions, including one asking us to discuss Jack Jouett. On June 3, 1781, Jouett made a 40-mile "midnight ride" on horseback to Charlottesville, Virginia and gave advance warning to Thomas Jefferson and Virginia... Podcast episode
#1464 Jouett's Ride: We spend this week answering listener questions, including one asking us to discuss Jack Jouett. On June 3, 1781, Jouett made a 40-mile "midnight ride" on horseback to Charlottesville, Virginia and gave advance warning to Thomas Jefferson and Virginia...
byListening to America0 ratings0% found this document usefulEpisode 35: "A Winter's Tale" Act 2: This week on The Literary Life, our hosts Angelina Stanford, Cindy Rollins and Thomas Banks are back to discuss Act 2 of by Williams Shakespeare. After sharing their commonplace quotes, they begin with a brief recap of the plot. They highlight the... Podcast episode
Episode 35: "A Winter's Tale" Act 2: This week on The Literary Life, our hosts Angelina Stanford, Cindy Rollins and Thomas Banks are back to discuss Act 2 of by Williams Shakespeare. After sharing their commonplace quotes, they begin with a brief recap of the plot. They highlight the...
byThe Literary Life Podcast0 ratings0% found this document usefulAugust 19, 2019 National Potato Day, Jane Webb, Phlox from the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Ellen Willmott, Willis Linn Jepson, Henderina Scott, Ogden Nash, Healing Herbs by Michael Castleman, Fall Herbs, and a Letter From Elizabeth Lawrence: Today is National Potato Day. Here are some fun potato facts: The average American eats approximately 126 pounds of spuds each year. And, up until the 18th century, the French believed potatoes called leprosy. To combat the belief, the... Podcast episode
August 19, 2019 National Potato Day, Jane Webb, Phlox from the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Ellen Willmott, Willis Linn Jepson, Henderina Scott, Ogden Nash, Healing Herbs by Michael Castleman, Fall Herbs, and a Letter From Elizabeth Lawrence: Today is National Potato Day. Here are some fun potato facts: The average American eats approximately 126 pounds of spuds each year. And, up until the 18th century, the French believed potatoes called leprosy. To combat the belief, the...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document usefulLife at Seven Miles Below the Sea: Helen Scales talks about “The Brilliant Abyss,” and Rebecca Donner discusses “All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days.” Podcast episode
Life at Seven Miles Below the Sea: Helen Scales talks about “The Brilliant Abyss,” and Rebecca Donner discusses “All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days.”
byThe Book Review0 ratings0% found this document usefulEpisode 103: “The Rocking Horse Winner” by D. H. Lawrence: We are back this week on The Literary Life with the final another episode in our 2021 Summer Short Story series, a discussion of D. H. Lawrence’s “.” After sharing their commonplace quotes, Angelina Stanford, Cindy Rollins and Thomas Banks begin... Podcast episode
Episode 103: “The Rocking Horse Winner” by D. H. Lawrence: We are back this week on The Literary Life with the final another episode in our 2021 Summer Short Story series, a discussion of D. H. Lawrence’s “.” After sharing their commonplace quotes, Angelina Stanford, Cindy Rollins and Thomas Banks begin...
byThe Literary Life Podcast0 ratings0% found this document usefulThe Many Confessions of Alfred Packer: The North American mineral rushes of the 19th Century saw hundreds of thousands flock to mountains and mines across the continent in search of fame and fortune, from panning for gold to working long, dangerous shifts down poorly run mines, entire industr... Podcast episode
The Many Confessions of Alfred Packer: The North American mineral rushes of the 19th Century saw hundreds of thousands flock to mountains and mines across the continent in search of fame and fortune, from panning for gold to working long, dangerous shifts down poorly run mines, entire industr...
byDark Histories0 ratings0% found this document usefulS02E19 A Christmas Carol — Marley's Ghost 0 ratings0% found this document usefulEpisode 179: “Kidnapped,” Intro to Robert Louis Stevenson and Ch. 1-6: Welcome back to a new read along series on The Literary Life Podcast! This week Angelina, Thomas, and Cindy will begin their discussion of Robert Louis Stevenson’s , covering chapters 1-6, as well as giving some background information on the beloved... Podcast episode
Episode 179: “Kidnapped,” Intro to Robert Louis Stevenson and Ch. 1-6: Welcome back to a new read along series on The Literary Life Podcast! This week Angelina, Thomas, and Cindy will begin their discussion of Robert Louis Stevenson’s , covering chapters 1-6, as well as giving some background information on the beloved...
byThe Literary Life Podcast0 ratings0% found this document usefulApril 15, 2019 The Garden as a World Unto Itself, William Kent, Allan Cunningham, George Harrison Shull, Francis Hallé, Alexander Garden, Francis Quarles, The Atlas of Poetic Botany, The Garden Budget, and Sphagnum Moss: William Kent wrote: "A garden is to be a world unto itself, it had better make room for the darker shades of feeling as well as the sunny ones.” I’ve usually think about my garden as my happy place. It’s... Podcast episode
April 15, 2019 The Garden as a World Unto Itself, William Kent, Allan Cunningham, George Harrison Shull, Francis Hallé, Alexander Garden, Francis Quarles, The Atlas of Poetic Botany, The Garden Budget, and Sphagnum Moss: William Kent wrote: "A garden is to be a world unto itself, it had better make room for the darker shades of feeling as well as the sunny ones.” I’ve usually think about my garden as my happy place. It’s...
byThe Daily Gardener0 ratings0% found this document useful#1353 Humboldt and Jefferson: "He was iconic in the world's idea of what a nation could possibly be, and what an enlightened leader could possibly be." — Clay S. Jenkinson portraying Thomas Jefferson This week features another episode in the Jefferson Hour book club. We discuss... Podcast episode
#1353 Humboldt and Jefferson: "He was iconic in the world's idea of what a nation could possibly be, and what an enlightened leader could possibly be." — Clay S. Jenkinson portraying Thomas Jefferson This week features another episode in the Jefferson Hour book club. We discuss...
byListening to America0 ratings0% found this document usefulThe Tortoise And The Hare By Elizabeth Jenkins - Rerun: In memory of the iconic Carmen Callil, we are rep… Podcast episode
The Tortoise And The Hare By Elizabeth Jenkins - Rerun: In memory of the iconic Carmen Callil, we are rep…
byBacklisted0 ratings0% found this document useful
Related articles
The Family Historian’s Essential Reading List Family Tree UKArticle
The Family Historian’s Essential Reading List
Jun 12, 2020
10 min readIndianola, Onward Texas Highways MagazineArticle
Indianola, Onward
May 14, 2019
11 min readAttics Reveal Their Secrets The FieldArticle
Attics Reveal Their Secrets
May 16, 2019
6 min readReaders’ Letters The OldieArticle
Readers’ Letters
Feb 9, 2022
The Oldie, 23-31 Great Titchfield Street, London, W1W 7PA letters@theoldie.co.uk To sign up for our e-newsletter, go to www.theoldie.co.uk SIR: Like Gyles Brandreth, my husband and I are great fans of Bargain Hunt. As well as enjoying the banter betw
6 min readIt Fires The Imagination Civil War TimesArticle
It Fires The Imagination
May 4, 2021
6 min readA Warning To The Fortean Fortean TimesArticle
A Warning To The Fortean
Jul 14, 2022
9 min readTwentieth Century Tales Fortean TimesArticle
Twentieth Century Tales
Apr 21, 2022
9 min readYour Letters Family Tree UKArticle
Your Letters
Oct 9, 2020
5 min readSecret Society Adirondack LifeArticle
Secret Society
Mar 30, 2023
5 min readAlong Forgotten Paths Motorcycle Mojo MagazineArticle
Along Forgotten Paths
Jun 5, 2019
7 min readIf These Walls Could Talk Northshore Magazine (Digital)Article
If These Walls Could Talk
Apr 27, 2021
6 min readDear Paul Family Tree UKArticle
Dear Paul
May 14, 2021
9 min readLetters To The Editor Country LifeArticle
Letters To The Editor
Nov 25, 2020
I WAS delighted that Loyd Grossman sees the obelisk as ‘the mark of every great city’ (‘Making a point’, November 11), but it may also be the mark of a minor country house. I obtained ours not from the sands of Egypt, but from that other repository o
3 min read‘My Family Hosted Tennyson, Churchill and Einstein’ Who Do You Think You Are?Article
‘My Family Hosted Tennyson, Churchill and Einstein’
Mar 7, 2023
5 min readJames Baldwin: ‘I Did Not Want to Weep for Martin, Tears Seemed Futile’ Literary HubArticle
James Baldwin: ‘I Did Not Want to Weep for Martin, Tears Seemed Futile’
Apr 4, 2018
10 min readA Legacy Of Hope And Glory Country LifeArticle
A Legacy Of Hope And Glory
Jun 9, 2021
DESPITE my birthplace in the Mississippi Delta and my early years in schools whose teachers tried hard to educate the children in the poorest state in the Union, I reckon I had a head start when I arrived in Suffolk as the bride of a farmer. White ch
3 min readThe Strange, True Story Of John Williams And Charles Pennock Audubon MagazineArticle
The Strange, True Story Of John Williams And Charles Pennock
Oct 4, 2021
16 min readWhere I Was From AnOther MagazineArticle
Where I Was From
Mar 4, 2024
In the May 1935 issue of the American Mercury, William Faulkner published one of the few pieces of fiction he set in California, a short story he called Golden Land. Golden Land deals with a day in the life of Ira Ewing Jr, age 48, a man for whom “25
13 min readThe Old Un's Notes The OldieArticle
The Old Un's Notes
Feb 8, 2023
4 min readOff The Record Who Do You Think You Are?Article
Off The Record
Jan 12, 2021
2 min readYour LETTERS Family Tree UKArticle
Your LETTERS
Jan 14, 2022
10 min readWhen Allen Ginsberg and Gary Snyder Roamed the Pacific Northwest Literary HubArticle
When Allen Ginsberg and Gary Snyder Roamed the Pacific Northwest
Nov 11, 2020
8 min readAn American Corner Of Buckinghamshire The OldieArticle
An American Corner Of Buckinghamshire
Oct 18, 2023
3 min readDear Paul Family Tree UKArticle
Dear Paul
Nov 13, 2020
This month we start with a genealogical challenge from Family Tree contributor Adele Emm. Adele’s grandma, who was born in 1898, began working in the weaving sheds when she was 12 and here, she met another lady who was to become a lifelong friend. Th
8 min readA Who’s Who Of Adirondack Hermits Adirondack LifeArticle
A Who’s Who Of Adirondack Hermits
Sep 19, 2019
10 min readNot-so-deserted Island Adirondack LifeArticle
Not-so-deserted Island
Mar 30, 2023
6 min readQ&A YOU ASK, WE ANSWER History RevealedArticle
Q&A YOU ASK, WE ANSWER
Jun 11, 2020
9 min readState Of The State 200 St. Louis MagazineArticle
State Of The State 200
Jul 27, 2021
21 min readDear Paul Family Tree UKArticle
Dear Paul
Jan 13, 2023
Back in October I looked at how researching your ancestors’ occupations can help you gain a better understanding of their daily lives, and asked readers to send details of some of the more interesting occupations that you have discovered on your fami
10 min readStory Of A City New Zealand ListenerArticle
Story Of A City
Apr 9, 2023
3 min read
Reviews for McClure's Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 2, January, 1896
0 ratings0 reviews