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Monday, July 22, 2024

Meet my Lucky Duck!

He hasn't a name but he is definitely male. I've had him for a long time, ever since I was a little girl. My great aunt Jessie was a firm believer in lucky ducks and bought me this little blue one so I could have my own bit of luck. I chose him for his cheerful yellow bill and his lovely sky-blue plumage.

Lucky Ducks were first created by Peter Rantell, when actors appearing in Whitby asked for a good luck charm (as one cannot make luck for oneself). A small, endearing duck was the result and now the business of producing them is over fifty years old. 

My lucky duck has perched on every ms that I've sent out. Now my mss are sent out in email form, my duck always perches on top of my computer on the night before I post. When he's not sitting on manuscripts, he glides on top of my mobile phone as it lies on the bookcase, waiting for THE CALL from a big movie producer.

Well, a duck and a girl can dream!

Lindsay



Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Movie Kisses Series 7/10/2024 The Quiet Man #prairierosepubs #moviekisses


Here we are at the seventh installment of my year-long look at The Kiss in historically-set movies.

 

Recap of movie kisses so far:

January KissThe Phantom of the Opera 

February KissThe Princess Bride

March KissThe African Queen

April KissShakespeare in Love

May KissQuigley Down Under

June KissIndiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny

What would a series about kisses in historically set movies be without a John Wayne and Maureen O’Hara kiss?

 Disappointing. That’s what it would be.

I cut my eye teeth, as the saying goes, on John Wayne movies. As such, John Wayne and his larger than life persona are a memorable part of my childhood. Maureen O’Hara was my favorite of all his leading ladies. I remember being absolutely crushed when I discovered they weren’t married. In my pre-teen thinking brain, they were such a perfect couple, how could they not be married. I was even a little put out with John when he kissed other leading ladies.

While I could rant about how many of Wayne’s movies did not age well for the portrayal of the women’s characters (McLintock! and The Quiet Man, I’m looking at you), I’m reminding myself that I mustn’t make judgements of the past through the lenses of our current societal mores.

Onward to this month’s kiss…


Regardless of my mini-complaint that The Quiet Man didn’t age well, the two kisses toward the end of the movie are my favorite John Wayne
 and Maureen O’Hara kisses. As always, Maureen O’Hara’s characters hold their own with Wayne's characters, and she shines in this movie in that regard.

I absolutely love the build-up to the kisses, which occurs during a storm in a cemetery.

The kisses come at the end of this clip. (1:23 and 1:49)

 


See you next month for more kisses from the big screen.



Sunday, July 7, 2024

Isabell Long? Who and Where

Post (C) Doris McCraw

aka Angela Raines

Evergreen Chapel, Evergreen Cemetery
Colorado Springs, CO
Photo (C) Doris McCraw

We know Isabell Long was the wife of a Civil War Veteran. Her headstone stands next to her husband John H Long. From there it gets murky.

Isabell, according to her headstone was born in 1846 and she died in 1836. Marriage records show she married in Tazewell County, Illinois on February 13, 1864. Pekin, founded in the 1820s along the Illinois River, probably was the largest town in that county. Her husband John had mustered out of the service in Sand Prairie, Tazewell County, Illinois in August of 1863.

Using the above information, Isabell was probably living in the vicinity and the couple may have known each other prior to John entering the service in 1862. 

We know Isabell was born in England. Her maiden name was Joyce. While searching through the immigration records, I found an Isabell Joyce who arrived in New York in 1860 with her mother and about seven other siblings. This Isabell was fourteen at the time. However, there is another Isabell Joyce who arrived in New York in 1851. So far, research has not verified which Isabell is the one who married John H. Long.

Image of the possible ship Isabell may have
taken in 1860
From Ancestry.com

The 1910 census stated the couple had been married forty-seven years, and Isabell had born seven children all of who were still alive at that date. Her youngest was eighteen in 1910.

Isabell outlived her husband dying at about the age of ninety. What stories she could have told.

For other stories in this Civil War series, click the links below.

Sgt. James W. Bell - Western Fictioneers

Martha Lynn Bell - Prairie Rose Publications

Captain Richmon Finch- Western Fictioneers

Sarah Jane Durkee Anderson - Prairie Rose Publications

Esther Walker, Part 2 - Western Fictioneers

Esther Walker - Prairie Rose Publications

Alpheus R. Eastman - Western Fictioneers Blog

Helen Rood Dillon - Prairie Rose Publications Blog

Virginia Strickler - Prairie Rose Publications Blog

Henry C. Davis - Western Fictioneers Blog

Chester H. Dillon - Western Fictioneers Blog


Until Next Time: Stay safe, Stay happy, and Stay healthy. 

Doris







Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Weird Coincidences

 Weird Coincidences

C.A. Asbrey



Carrying on from last month's post on Robert Lincoln's uncanny connections to presidential assassination, there were other strange things that I thought might interest you. 

Many have noted as synchronicity between the murders of JFK and Lincoln. Apart from serving in the same position they both faced significant Civil Rights challenges during their time as president and were elected to Congress in a ‘46 year; 1846 for Lincoln, Kennedy in 1946. The two men entered the White House in a ‘60 year; 1860 and 1960, and both lost a child while serving as President. Willie Lincoln at 11 from typhoid in 1862, and JFK's premature baby of JFK, Patrick, passed away at just two days old in 1963.

John F. Kennedy

The similarities grow with their deaths. They were both shot, probably not that an uncommon method of assassination, but both were shot in the head. Lincoln at close range in box number seven while attending a performance of "Our American Cousin" in Ford's Theatre, Kennedy from a distance while riding in the seventh car an open-air Dallas motorcade in a car manufactured by the Ford Motor Company called a Lincoln. The underlying commonalities continue in that they were both killed on a Friday and they were both killed by men with three names Lee Harvey Oswald and John Wilkes Booth. On top of all that, both attackers were able to flee the scene of the murders, and were killed before coming to trial. 

To top all of that off, both were succeeded by VPs called Johnson, and both were Southerners, whereas the presidents were Northerners. That part is less surprising as it's common for presidents to choose a running mate who will broaden their appeal.  

Thomas Jefferson

American history shares more than a few similar synchronicities. Political adversaries Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both died on the same day, the 4th July 1826. They were the last two remaining revolutionaries, and despite being rivals, had maintained a relationship by letter in their later years. On his death bed the 90-year-old Adams was unaware of his Jefferson’s death, whispered, “Thomas Jefferson survives.” He was wrong, as Jefferson had already died a few hours before.

When the Civil War broke out in 1861, the first battle was the  Battle of Bull Run. "Bull Run" got the name of a stream on the land a 46-year-old grocer named Wilmer McLean in Manassas, Virginia. 

The battle left his small farm in a state of devastation, so McLean took his wife to the safety of a new home in Appomattox, Virginia,. For around four years, this proved to be a good move until war found him again. In 1865, the war ended with Robert E. Lee surrendering to Ulysses S. Grant at the Appottomax Courthouse, mere steps from McLean's new property. The war begun and ended with Mr. McLean.

This is vaguely similar to the man who found war followed him when the Americans bombed Japan in WW2. Tsutomo Yamaguchi was unlucky enough to be in Hiroshima when the atomic bomb fell. He fled on a train, seeking safety. He arrived in Nagasaki in time to see a second flash. Over half his is body was covered in burns from radioactive ash, but he survived. Yamaguchi is the only person recognised by the Japanese government as having survived both bombings. The poor man died of cancer in 2010.

George Washington
George Washington is unquestionably one of, if not the, most important figure of the American Revolution.  Historians agree that the prime reason for the American Revolution was a series of Acts of Parliament imposed on colonists without their consent or any representation, such as the 1765 Stamp Act.

It's interesting to note that those acts were the result of Britain needing to pay significant war debts that were the result of the Seven Years War. The Seven Years War (1756-1763) was a global conflict involving the world powers of the time, and was fought mainly in Europe and the Americas. One of the first actions of the Seven Years War was the Battle Of Jumonville Glen, followed by the Battle of Fort Necessity. Those involved French troops driving off a British crew who were building a fort in disputed territory. The British then ambushed the French force and took the fort back, but were unable to hold it. They retreated to Fort Necessity and held out as long as they could before surrendering to the French. 

This set of events is considered one of the sparks that started the Seven Years War, which in turn caused the taxation, which then lit the fuse that started the revolutionary war.  

So who was the leader of the British forces who took the fort and then surrendered? George Washington.