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oldmarinesgt5

Male. Lives in Waco, Texas, United States. Born on August 5, 1945. Is married.
by on March 12, 2026
On the night of March 22, 1715, Jeremiah Meacham was troubled, as usual. He had secluded himself on the second story of his home in Newport, R.I., fearful that someone planned to harm him. He often expressed that fear to his neighbors. Meacham would quiz them, did they knew who was scheming to get him? They always answered “no one.” Jeremiah’s wife, Patience, and her sister Content Garsey crept up the stairs and approached Jeremiah. He had assembled a complete arsenal for his defense – an ax ...
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by on March 11, 2026
History is dotted with instances of mass hysteria, a perplexing phenomenon in which large groups of people are struck by the same physical or mental affliction without any apparent explanation, from uncontrollable movement to widespread paranoia. Given the uncertainty as to what causes these curious events, contemporary doctors have remained baffled as to how to prevent or cure them. Though there are some theories, plenty of questions remain, in some cases hundreds of years after the incident to...
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by on March 10, 2026
Bob David, a World War I veteran and businessman, got fed up with crime and corruption within law enforcement during Prohibition in Casper so he formed a secret group that called themselves "The Vigilantes." They took on an "epidemic" of bank robberies in the area. A concerned resident in Casper during Prohibition got fed up with crime and corruption within law enforcement, along with the vulnerability of the local money supply created by underground graft. So Bob David, a World War I vete...
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by on March 9, 2026
Culper Spy Ring Provides Washington with crucial information about British troops in NYC Caleb Brewster relied on a woman’s underwear and his own seamanship to bring vital intelligence to George Washington during the American Revolution. He belonged to the Culper Spy Ring, which operated from 1778 to 1783. ...
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by on March 6, 2026
Sixty-three years ago, on March 5, 1963, a Piper Comanche crashed into a wooded hillside near Camden, Tennessee. The crash killed Patsy Cline, Cowboy Copas, Hawkshaw Hawkins, and pilot Randy Hughes. Randy Hughes also managed Cline and was Copas’s son-in-law. They were returning from a benefit concert in Kansas City for the family of disc jockey Cactus Jack Call. ...
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by on March 3, 2026
During the American Revolution, 13 British colonies in North America fought for independence from English rule in what became one of the most defining conflicts in history. Certain moments from the Revolutionary War — which spanned from 1775 to 1783 — have certainly been etched into popular memory. But it was a long, complex conflict, and for every renowned tale such as the Boston Tea Party or Washington crossing the Delaware, there are lesser-known events that don’t always make it into textbook...
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by on February 27, 2026
Well, you may recall the final scene of the movie "Braveheart" where he yells “FREEDOM” while being executed. I want to assure you this never happened because in real life, his execution was so brutal, I am sure he merely whimpered and passed out. So William was captured and then tried for treason. At this time, the concept of the nation hadn’t taken hold, so treason merely meant going against your own king. Wallace argued it was not treason because Edward was not his King however, Edward dis...
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by on February 26, 2026
There have been copies of the Declaration of Independence for as long as there’s been a Declaration of Independence. The handwritten, signed document is currently safe from Nicolas Cage in the National Archives. But the Continental Congress’s printer John Dunlap made about 200 broadside copies of the document on July 4, 1776, of which 26 remain. These were posted in public places for soon-to-be Americans to read and celebrate. One of them will be sold at auction in May 2026 to commemorate the 25...
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by on February 25, 2026
Environmental reconstructions reveal that mammoths persisted long after they disappeared from the fossil record. Scientists have discovered that woolly mammoths coexisted with humans in North America for thousands of years longer than previously believed. (Image credit: Daniel Eskridge via Getty Images) Woolly mammoths may have survived in North America thousands of years longer than scientists previously thought, according to vials of Alaskan permafrost reveal. ...
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by on February 24, 2026
The Battle of Derna took place during the First Barbary War. William Eaton and First Lieutenant Presley O'Bannon captured Derna on April 27, 1805, and successfully defended it on May 13. In 1804, during the fourth year of the First Barbary War, the former American consul to Tunis, William Eaton returned to the Mediterranean. Titled "Naval Agent to the Barbary States," Eaton had received support from the US government for a plan to overthrow the pasha of Tripoli, Yusuf Karamanli. After me...
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by on February 23, 2026
The John Coffee Hays Collection at UT Austin’s Briscoe Center for American History contains a printed oral history by early Texas historian Andrew Jackson Sowell. The oral histories recount the involvement of settler Thomas Galbreath in three frontier skirmishes between the Texas Rangers and Comanche warriors during the 1840s. Sowell’s article serves as an example of the way Texas’s early events were passed orally by participants and thus became part of the inexact and possibly fictional landsca...
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by on February 20, 2026
The Sadie Hawkins dance is a familiar tradition to most Americans, best known for the custom of girls asking boys to the dance instead of the other way around. In a world where women run businesses, lead governments, and head nearly half of U.S. households, setting aside one special night for girls to take the lead can feel unnecessary and outdated. Still, the story behind Sadie Hawkins herself offers a fascinating window into Depression-era America and the surprising ways popular culture can sh...
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by on February 19, 2026
Destitute and convinced she was dying, Calamity Jane boarded a train in Billings, Montana, without a ticket. When she was about to be kicked off in Sheridan, Wyoming, sympathetic fans paid her way so she could get home to Deadwood. Dick Nelson was a railroad man who knew many of the characters who made the Wild West famous. He had arrived in Northern Wyoming in 1888 and became a freight brakeman with his headquarters in Sheridan. As a representative of the railroads, Nelson was assigned to...
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by on February 17, 2026
Whether relayed by way of a novel, poem, movie, or word of mouth, stories have served as a means of connecting people through shared experiences and emotions since we first learned to communicate with one another. Some of the most famous stories have endured for hundreds or thousands of years. William Shakespeare penned his celebrated plays in the 16th and 17th centuries. Beowulf was written several hundred years before that, while the Iliad and Odyssey epics push back even further into the f...
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by on February 16, 2026
Whether relayed by way of a novel, poem, movie, or word of mouth, stories have served as a means of connecting people through shared experiences and emotions since we first learned to communicate with one another. Some of the most famous stories have endured for hundreds or thousands of years. William Shakespeare penned his celebrated plays in the 16th and 17th centuries. Beowulf was written several hundred years before that, while the Iliad and Odyssey epics push back even further into the f...
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by on February 13, 2026
Dinosaurs have been extinct for 65 million years. That’s a long time, but not nearly as long as they were alive for: 165 million years. Their reign as the planet’s dominant species absolutely dwarfs our own, which began a few hundred thousand years ago, and accounts for just 0.007% of the Earth’s history — a blink of the cosmic eye. If you compressed the planet’s history into one calendar year, dinosaurs would have appeared on January 1 before going extinct in the third week of September; humans...
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by on February 11, 2026
After more than a century of use as a maritime distress signal, “SOS” has become shorthand for just about any emergency. You may have heard that it stands for “save our ship” or “save our souls,” but that’s actually a backronym, or an acronym made up after the fact. The letters in “SOS” didn’t initially stand for anything; they were originally chosen because they form a sequence of Morse code that can be transmitted more quickly than others. Morse code (named for Samuel Morse) is a way of tra...
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by on February 10, 2026
Lighters were invented before modern matches. Lighters seem, on the surface, to be a little more advanced than your standard pack of matches. But lighters were actually invented before matches as we know them today. Until the early 19th century, “matches” were flammable sticks made to carry fire from one place to another, not make fire on their own. Early self-igniting matches were too dangerous to be practical. The earliest, invented in 1805, involved dipping potassium chlorinate into sulphu...
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by on February 9, 2026
In 1843, approximately 1,000 people embarked on the arduous journey west across the young United States in the first major wagon train migration on the Oregon Trail. Spanning more than 2,000 miles from Independence, Missouri, to the promising lands of the Oregon Territory, the trail served as a lifeline for those seeking new beginnings in the American West. Each day, migrants traveled an average of 15 miles, though on a good day, anywhere from 18 to 20 miles could be covered, most of it on foot....
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by on February 6, 2026
When young Bobby Dunbar went missing in 1912, the whole country was eager to find him. The four-year-old Louisianan vanished into thin air on August 23, during a trip to Swayze Lake. Lessie and Percy Dunbar searched everywhere, to no avail. Desperate police dissected alligators and threw dynamite into the lake, and then offered a reward of $6,000 (about $160,000 today). All seemed lost until eight months after Bobby’s disappearance, when police arrested a man named William Cantwell Walters...
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by on February 5, 2026
In 1950, the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar was more than 13 times greater than it is today, meaning your money went much further, at least when it came to certain expenses. For instance, the average cost of a brand-new Chevrolet sedan was just $1,450 that year, the equivalent of around $19,416 today when adjusted for inflation. The median price for a single-family home, meanwhile, was only $7,354, or around $98,474 in today’s money. (If only!) That said, salaries were lower in the mid-2...
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by on February 4, 2026
Back in 1919, British airline Handley Page Transport made aviation and gastronomical history by serving the first in-flight meal. It wasn’t at all fancy — just a cold sandwich and fruit handed out by “cabin boys” on a flight from London to Paris. Over the next 100 years, however, aircraft meals underwent a variety of changes; in the years after World War II, multicourse suppers were served with tablecloths and real cutlery, a stark departure from today’s precooked and reheated trays or tiny bags...
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by on February 3, 2026
Among the fog-shrouded streets of Victorian London, where gas lamps flicker, and mysteries lurk in the shadows, we find the world’s most famous detective: Sherlock Holmes. Created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in 1887, Holmes and his uncanny sleuthing abilities have captivated readers for more than a century. With his razor-sharp intellect, quirky habits, and very particular set of skills, Holmes is capable of solving even the most perplexing cases, while his signature deerstalker cap, magnifying gl...
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by on February 2, 2026
Ida May Fuller of Ludlow, Vt., received the first Social Security check on Jan. 31, 1940. The check was numbered 00-00-0001, the first of the first batch of 220,000 checks issued to adults as well as children. Born on a farm outside of Ludlow, Ida May Fuller attended the Black River Academy in Rutland, Vt., three years behind Calvin Coolidge. She worked for a while as a schoolteacher, then in 1905 began work as a legal secretary. She never married. ...
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