Showing posts with label children. Show all posts
Showing posts with label children. Show all posts

September 20, 2018

Granville Prewitt Hanged for Murder of Jarvis and Ellen Buck, Wayne, 1886

Previously:

Click here for a list of my other Pulaski/Rockcastle/Laurel County KY articles

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[June 22, 1880] -



1880 census page for Magisterial District 4 of Wayne County, Kentucky, shows:

1. Jarvis Buck, head of household, age 35, white male, farmer, cannot read or write, born in North Carolina, both parents born in North Carolina;
2. Ellen Buck, age 31, white female, sister of Jarvis Buck, keeping house, cannot read or write, born in North Carolina, both parents born in North Carolina; and
3. Lias L. Buck, age 2, white male, (Ellen's son), born in Kentucky, whose father was born in Kentucky and mother in North Carolina. [1]



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[October 31, 1886] -

TWO HORRIBLE MURDERS.

A Young Man Enticed Into the Mountains to Have His Throat Cut.

His Sister in Turn Shares His Fate, Her Little Son Only Escaping the Murderers.

(Special to the Courier Journal.)

MONTICELLO, KY., Oct. 30. -- One of the most shocking murders that ever happened in this vicinity was committed in the southern part of this county last Tuesday night. Out in the mountains, ten miles from this place, lived a very humble family composed of Jarvis Buck, his sister, and her ten-year-old son. On Tuesday night this family was visited by a man whose name is Grand Prewitt. He ordered supper, which was prepared for him. He then told Buck that if he would go up on the mountain about a half mile that a fellow was up there who would give him a drink of whisky.  They went off together, but Prewitt soon returned and when asked where Buck was by his sister, replied that he would be back soon. Immediately he seized the woman, and the little boy fled to a neighbor's house and gave the alarm. The neighbors immediately went to the house and there found the heroic little boy's mother dead, with her throat cut from ear to ear and her skull terribly mashed in three places.

Search was instituted for Buck's body, but it was not found till Wednesday. When found the body was frightfully lacerated and the head almost 

SEVERED FROM THE BODY.

The scene of these two innocent persons, brother and sister, as they lay in their humble little hut, with their heads almost hacked off, was enough to raise the spirit of mobism in the hearts of the most tender-hearted, and a posse of men searched the country for Prewitt, and found him Wednesday night. He made no resistence, but denied the murder until brought before the little boy, who told him that he was the man who murdered his mother, and that he need not deny it. Prewitt then made a full confession of the whole affair.

PREWITT'S CONFESSION.

He said that he was approached by Jim Tuesday morning and offered a large sum of money to kill Jarvis Buck, and he agreed to do it. That night he went to Jarvis Buck's house and persuaded him to go out after a drink of whisky. When about 100 yards from the house Jim Jones and Bill Simpson met them, and he then cut his throat with a case knife. As soon as he did this Jones rifled his pockets, pulled off his boots and took his hat. Prewitt and Jones then went to the house to kill the sister and her son. He cut her throat and Jones made

JELLY OUT OF HER HEAD

with the washboard. He said they tried to catch the little boy, but could not.

This is the sworn confession of Grand Prewitt. Jones and Simpson deny having anything to do with it, but Prewitt calmly talks of the affair as though it amounted to nothing more than a hog killing. 

Yesterday there was strong talk of mobbing Prewitt, but after he confessed the excitement cooled down. All three of the brutes were brought to town to-day and lodged in jail. The exam[in]ing trial will come off next Monday. At present there is much excitement over the matter, and the universal opinion is that all three will certainly be hanged. They are 

VILLAINOUS LOOKING MOUNTAINEERS,

badly dressed, and judging from their appearance, they are capable of doing any kind of crime. They are poor and without influence or friends; so it is very certain that at least two of them will hang. The evidence is sufficient to convict Prewitt, apart from his confession, and there is strong proof against Jones, also. It is the most atrocious crime ever committed in the county, and the whole people are shocked.

The object of the murder was money. Buck had sold a horse a few days before for $60, and it is supposed that he had a little besides. Besides the money they took several articles of apparel and plunder of the house.

There is no danger of a mob now, as it is quite certain that they will be convicted in court in November. [2]


September 27, 2017

Father and Son Murder Witness Against Them, Hanged by Mob, Boyle, 1866

Previously:

Click here for a list of my other Pulaski/Rockcastle/Laurel County KY articles

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[April 12, 1866] -

FOUL MURDER OF AN OLD LADY NEAR PERRYVILLE. -- We yesterday received the startling information that Mrs. Polly Bottoms, and old and highly respected lady, residing near Perryville, in Boyle county, was foully murdered on Tuesday night last, by a man named Bill Taylor. Our informant states that some time ago the murderer and two other men committed a robbery at the house of Mrs. Bottoms, for which two of the perpetrators, having been caught, were tried and convicted and are now undergoing sentence at the Frankfort penitentiary. Taylor, the guiltiest of the wretches, made his escape at the time of the robbery, and has been at large ever since. Recently he was recognized as one of the robbers by a little daughter of Mrs. Bottoms, whereupon he visited the house about 10 o'clock Tuesday night, and deliberately murdered the old lady. He could have had no other object in perpetrating this cold blooded deed than to silence an important witness against him. We fervently hope that speedy and terrible justice will overtake the unmitigated demon. [1]




December 12, 2016

Freedmen's Bureau School Burned by Arsonists, Boyle, 1866

Previously:

Click here for a list of my other Pulaski/Rockcastle/Laurel County KY articles

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[August 24, 1866] -

Danville Aug 24, 1866

Brevet. Col. R. E. Johnston
Chief Supt. Six S. Dist.

Colonel,

I have the honor to report that a building built and used as a Freedman's Schoolhouse and owned by a Freedman named Jackson Davis was destroyed by fire last night in this town.

I have today initiated inquiries but have been unable to learn who were engaged in this outrage. There had been considerable excitement during the day, caused by the arrest of a Freedman charged with poissoning [sic] a man. During the evening this man and three others escaped from the jail which added to the excitement and probably led to the perpetuation of this outrage. At present I can merely inform you of the fact but hope in another report to give fuller information. The building was probably worth about $250.00. Will you please advise me what steps to take in this case. [1]



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[August 31, 1866] -

JAIL STAMPEDE -- FOUR PRISONERS MAKE THEIR ESCAPE. -- Our town was thrown into a hubbub of excitement on Monday night by the report of fire-arms in the proximity of the jail, and a rumor spreading to the effect that the prisoners had made a stampede. Upon inquiry we learn that Mr. Williams, the jailor, about 7 o'clock on the night above-mentioned, went to the prison cell for the purpose of giving the inmates their supper. He opened the door partially and handed in some four places of provisions to one of the prisoners, and was engaged in passing in the remainder, when James Slaughter, one of the prisoners, sprang to the door, caught hold of it, and though vigorously resisted by the jailer succeeded in opening (it opened on the inside), simultaneously with which action he presented a pistol at the head of the jailer, exclaiming: "Resist and you die." Mr. Williams, letting go the door, ran his hand in his pocket for his weapons as Slaughter and three other prisoners ran rapidly out the door into the street. Williams drew his pistol, and, aiming at them, was just in the act of shooting when his wife and two or three other ladies, who had entered the passage on their way to attend a town exhibition, ran in between him and them, and thus momentarily prevented his firing. He ran quickly to the door, however, and fired three shots at the party as they ran out on the pike. Fearing, then, that the remaining prisoners might make an escape likewise, he ran back in the passage with both his pistols presented, and secured the safety of the remaining six. Mr. Williams thinks he must have wounded some escaping party, as they were but a few steps from him when he fired. The names of the prisoners who escaped were James Slaughter, indicted in the Garrard Circuit Court for murder, Holman Crawford (m.c.) indicted for larceny, George Washington (m.c.) indicted for larceny, and Lee (m.c.) imprisoned on suspicion of poisoning. It is believed that the pistol in the possession of Slaughter was given him by some of his friends who recently visited him in the jail. None of the party have yet been retaken. -- Danville Gazette. [2]


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[August 31, 1866] -


FIRE. -- A small schoolhouse near the creek within the limits of the town was burned about 12 1/2 o'clock Monday night. It was occupied by negroes, we are informed. -- Danville Gazette. [ibid]




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[September 25, 1866] -

Danville, Ky. Sept. 25, 1866.

Brevet Colonel R. G. Johnston
Chief Supt Six. Sub. Dist Ky

Colonel,

I have the honor to transmit herewith reports due from this Dist for the month of Sept. except the school report, which will be forwarded as soon as the necessary teacher reports are received.

There is very little to do in this Dist. The Freemen are generally employed and well treated. During the past month, there has been but one outrage reported to me. The burning of the School house. There is no hope of learning who were the guilty parties in that case, as the fire was kindled during the night and when observed, the building was nearly destroyed.

The Freedmen are not willing usually to call attention to small affairs between themselves and whites, they say the Bureau will eventually be withdrawn, and then those who had difficulties will be worse off than if they had submitted to what the whites demanded. I believe though that the Freedmen are benefited by the presence of the Bureau, as it tends to keep the lower classes of whites from disturbing them.

Very Respectfully
Your Ablest Servt
W. R. Roume Capt. [?]
[3]



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[1] Kentucky, Freedmen's Bureau Office Records, 1865-1872, NARA Publication M1904, Roll 94, Danville Letters sent Jun 1866 - Sept 1867, vol 3. Page 18, Image 25.

[2] Excerpts from "State News." The Courier-Journal, Louisville, KY. August 31, 1866. Page 1. Newspapers.com.


[3] Kentucky, Freedmen's Bureau Office Records, 1865-1872, NARA Publication M1904, Roll 94, Danville, Letters sent Jun 1866 - Sept 1867, vol 3. Page 23, Image 28.

July 22, 2015

Two Killed, Two Wounded At Christmas Celebration, Laurel, 1910

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Click here for a list of my other Pulaski/Rockcastle/Laurel County KY articles

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[December 27, 1910] -

Christmas Tragedy in Mountains.

Pineville, Ky., Dec. 27. (Special.) -- William and Andrew Patterson were killed, and two children were wounded by stray bullets at a Christmas entertainment. Marcus Graham, who did the shooting, was attacked by the Pattersons. [1]





December 24, 2014

A Letter to Santa, 1905

[December 20, 1905] -


Cloverport, Ky., Dec. 17  Dear Santa I am a good little boy and I want you to bring me lots of nice things, I want a little red wagon and a pair of brass toed boots, And say Santa won't you move Cannelton across the river from Cloverport and make all the girls quit flirting with me.  From your little Friend Billy Wilson. [1]






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[1] Excerpt from "More Letters to Saint 'Nic.'" The Breckenridge News, Cloverport, KY. December 20, 1905. Page 1. LOC. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86069309/1905-12-20/ed-1/seq-1/

November 16, 2014

Man Brutally Beats Brother-in-Law to Death, Laurel, 1898

Previously:

Click here for a list of my other Pulaski/Rockcastle/Laurel County KY articles

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[October 28, 1898] -

Clint Strange was held at London without bail. He killed Henry Rowland by beating his brains out with a pair of tongs. Milt Green, white, who killed James Mullins, colored, was refused bail. Green walked up and shot Mullins in the back without warning. [1]





April 9, 2014

Boy Kills Father With Shotgun, Pulaski, 1909

Previously:

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[July 30, 1909] -


Virgil Starns, aged 16 shot and instantly killed his father, James Starns, near Woodstock, Pulaski county last Saturday morning.  The father had corrected the boy for some mis-doing, which the poor wretch resented, by the life of his father.  The gallows is the only reward for such a low down being.  He and two negro tenants, who were thought to have helped move the body some distance from where the shooting occurred, are now in jail at Somerset. [1]









April 1, 2014

Young Girl Accidentally Killed by Celebratory Gunfire, 1920

Previously:

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[April 28, 1920] -

CLAIMS SHOOTING OF GIRL 
OF PULASKI ACCIDENTAL

SOMERSET, Ky., April 27.-- Charles Mize today admitted killing little Grace Kirby, found dead Monday with a bullet wound above the left ear.

Mize claims the girl was killed by accident and that he fired at random with a gun of large caliber while riding a horse.  He did not know the girl was near at the time, he said.

Mize was lodged in jail here on a charge of involuntary manslaughter. [1]




May 4, 2012

Profile and Interview of Laura Ingalls Wilder, 1949


The following is an article printed in the Kansas City Star, Kansas City, MO. April 10, 1949. Pages 4D and 7D. Retrieved from Genealogybank.com.

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[April 19, 1949] - 

The Famous Author of the "Laura and Mary" Children's
Books, Mrs. Laura Wilder of Mansfield, Mo., is Shown
In Her Farm Home in Front of a Scroll Given Her By Seattle
School Children. A Similar Scroll, Presented By
California Readers, Is on the Bookcase.
A MISSOURI WOMAN'S BOOKS ARE FAVORED BY CHILDREN

World Acclaim Has Come to Laura Ingalls Wilder of Mansfield, Mo., Whose Writings Cover Pioneer Life in the Middle West.

BY CHESTER A. BRADLEY. (A Member of The Star's Staff.)

MANSFIELD, MO., April 9. -- Stories of Middle Western American pioneer life which were written here on a school tablet with a pencil are being read around the world and by millions of Americans. Their author, Laura Ingalls Wilder, 82, is known and loved by countless school children. Their parents also like her "Laura and Mary" stories.

By all standards Mrs. Wilder is a famous American author. Nevertheless, she is unaffected and as unassuming as in her earlier days here when she helped "pull a crosscut saw" on Ozark timber.

This month the city of Detroit is paying high tribute to Mrs. Wilder. It is naming one of its new branch libraries for her. Other such libraries there bear some of the most famous names in American history. 

Mrs. Wilder is the author of eight books that tell a story of everyday life in early Western America, extending from Wisconsin to the Dakotas and including ventures into the Indian territory of Kansas. Seven of the volumes are "Laura and Mary" stories, these characters being representative of Mrs. Wilder and a sister named Mary. The other book in the series is the story of a year in the boyhood life of her husband, Almanzo Wilder, who is 92 and a native of New York. 

Most of the Materials for the 50-Year-Old Wilder Home
Came From Their Farm ... The Large, Old-Fashioned
Chimney Opens into a Large Living Room Fireplace,
Reminiscent of the Pioneer Period of Which Mrs. Wilder
Has Written So Often.
Live In Distinctive Home.

This Ozark town of a little more than1,000 population is 250 miles southwest of Kansas City. The Wilders live a half mile east of it. Their unpretentious, 2-story, white frame house sits on a hill overlooking U.S. highway No. 60. It has a vine-covered stone chimney, tall and wide. Inside the home it is connected with a large fireplace in the living room--a room at once distinctive to a visitor because of its beamed ceiling and liberal use of woodwork, all white oak cut on the farm and shaped into lumber by the Wilders years ago. Except for the siding, most all materials used in building the home came right off the farm.

The living room also has several wall cases and shelves for the many books of the family library and there are framed scrolls and other pieces of art, written or painted in tribute to Mrs.Wilder's stories.

Mr. and Mrs. Wilder have lived in this home on the land they call Rocky Ridge farm since they moved here in a covered wagon from De Smet, S.D. in 1894. A drought lasting nearly three years had ruined most everything and everybody in the Dakotas, so the Wilders set out for the Ozarks, then known as "the land of the big red apple," seeking a new start in life.

They lived here in town for awhile, then acquired forty acres nearby, including a tree lien on the place. That proviso of the deal required that they carry out the terms of the former owner--to plant apple trees. The Wilders did, some ten acres at first, and their orchards were tended well enough that production reached proportions of carload shipments to Memphis, Tenn. and other markets. Mrs. Wilder recalls that spraying was virtually unknown and unneeded in those days.

By the hardest work in their earlier years here--Mrs. Wilder remembering well having helped to pull a saw on timber--they expanded their farm to more than 200 acres, had many chickens and dairy cattle and kept farm work going until recent years.

"We worked hard, but it was interesting and didn't hurt us any," Mrs. Wilder says.

She Raised Chickens.

Their farm was made one of the most successful hereabouts. Mrs. Wilder raised the chickens and her husband handled the cows. Once they had a contest, she says, as to whether cows or chickens brought the biggest returns.

"We had to work against each other trying to prove our point," she adds with a brightening of the eyes, adding quickly that the contest "ended in a draw."

The Wilders take pride in their long years of work and in the success they made on their Ozark farmland. Mrs. Wilder is much less willing to talk of her success as a writer or of any claim to fame. She disdains having any display made over her writing, although it has attained a place that brings fan mail from Japan, Sweden, and other countries as well as points all around America.

Her first writings were for newspapers and magazines, usually on poultry, or farming and rural subjects. It was not until 1932 that her first book was published and this event was more or less unexpected as far as she was concerned.

"Pa" Ingalls, her father, was a pioneer hunter, trapper and Indian fighter. He guarded property of the Chicago-Northwestern railroad in the days it was being built, had many adventures in the Middle West and became one of the founders of De Smet, S.D. 

Time after time she had heard him tell of his experiences and her own part in the family activities are worth reading, as proven by book sales today.

"These were family stories and I believed they should be preserved," Mrs. Wilder said, "so I wrote some of them down and sent them to my daughter Rose, so she could keep them. I also suggested she might want to use some of them in her writings." 

Rose Wilder Lane, her daughter, who lives in Danbury, Conn., already was nationally known as a reporter and author.

“Rose wrote back, some time later,” Mrs. Wilder continued, “that an editor had said the stories could be published if I would put some meat on the bones; so after that I started doing just that.”

“I wrote between washing dishes and getting dinner, or just any time I could,” she added. “But sometimes I got stumped on a phrase or a chapter. Maybe the way to do it would not come to me until after I had gone to bed and then I would think of something in the middle of th enight.”

Thus the many duties of an active farm wife took on new chores, but highly worthwhile ones.

She used an ordinary pencil and school tablet. Her manuscripts were sent to New York for typing, and all business connected with the work of publication was and is handled by her agent. He is George T. Bye, former Kansas Citian, who handles the writing of Mrs. Franklin D. (Eleanor) Roosevelt, and other celebrities.

Favorite Among Children.

Harper & Brothers of New York published the first book by Mrs. Wilder and all the others in the series. Chicago school children in 1947 selected Mrs. Wilder as their favorite author. She was honored in a special radio broadcast there. A plaque in the home here contains signatures of many Chicago children who took part in the events. Similar plaques have come from the Association of Children’s Librarians of Northern California; also one from Seattle, representing children and librarians of the Pacific Northwest.

Her books are very popular with Kansas City Public Library patrons. “Pa’s Fiddle,” well known in the books now is in the state museum at Pierre, S.D., but is played every year in a special annual concert there.

Mrs. Wilder was born at Pepin, Wis., on February 7, 1867, and a portrait of her father is drawn in "Little House in the Big Woods." Other titles in the series, all true stories, she says, are "Little House on the Prairie" (the family in the Indian Territory of Kansas); "Farmer Boy (Mr. Wilder's boyhood), "On the Banks of Plum Creek" (Early Minnesota); "By the Shores of Silver Lake" (Dakota territory); "The Long Winter" (one even worse than the recent one in Missouri); "Little Town on the Prairie" (in Dakota), and "These Happy Golden Years" (Laura, who was a school teacher at sixteen, meets Almanzo. Sleigh rides and buggy rides figure in the romance. Following marriage in South Dakota in 1885 they go to make their home in a little house on the claim they acquired.)

With fame and extra cash from book royalties in recent years, most persons would say the golden years are certainly continuing, but writing success has its drawbacks these days, Mrs. Wilder finds.

Hit By Income Tax.

She doesn't talk in figures of the money she has received for her books, but she says:

The more I wrote the bigger my income tax got, so I stopped. Why should I go on at my age? Why, we don't need it here anyway."

The latter statement was in regard to her complete satisfaction with the simple, comfortable life in the home she has known for more than half a century. The Wilders sold their farm with the provision they could occupy the home until “I just finished planting the potatoes,” said Mr. Wilder as he entered the home to greet visitors. Despite “not being strong” and his 92 years he is most alert to the current scene. Both the Wilders, however, complain of not being able to get help, "either inside or outside the house."

Detroit is planning appropriate ceremonies for the dedication of the library named for Mrs. Wilder. Officials there are eager for Mrs. Wilder to take part, but she says "definitely" she will not. It would be too much of a trip for Mr. Wilder, she adds; also, while she feels well, and certainly looks it, she says, "I'm too nervous" for anything like that. 

Her last public appearance as an author was in Detroit six years ago when she took part in book week events there.

Ralph A. Ulveling, library director of Detroit, said recently that "we believe her books will live and will be read with interest a hundred years from now just as they are today. If our prediction is correct we will naturally take particular pride in having been the institution that led the way in bringing her permanent recognition among the American men and women of letters."

Others honored similarly by Detroit libraries include such famous Americans as Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and Thomas A. Edison, Ulveling noted. Seldom has the city so honored any living person.

"In choosing the name of Mrs. Wilder," Ulveling said, "we did so because we felt that she was a Midwestern writer who in her series of books has presented an invaluable social history of this great central portion of the country. While some historians, and they have an important place present the great sweep of history, bringing out the political and the military influences, Mrs. Wilder has directed attention to the commonplace things, the way of life of people. Thus she has preserved a portion of our history which is the part that is most likely to be lost in the course of time. She has done this beautifully, ably and understandingly, and like so few writers she has done it in a way which is interesting both to children and to adults.


April 11, 2012

Letter to the Editor about Raising Children, 1912

From The Washington Herald, Washington, D.C., on February 19, 1912, in the "Topics of Interest to Every Woman" section:




Teach Children To Do Things.

Editor The Washington Herald:

"In your issue of February 12 you published an article entitled 'Let the Child Play,' which contains the argument given only by parents who have been and are a failure in the rearing of children.

"It has been my observation that the child that knows how to do things is the one that gets the most pleasure and joy out of life.  He gains such a delightful feeling of power in being able to do some useful thing, and doing it well; and especially is this true when he is able to create something.

"To create is primarily the object of industrial training; not necessarily that the child may become a wage-earner, as insinuated by the writer of the aforementioned article, but that he may learn something of his inherent ability and godlike powers.  This training is just as valuable to the child of the rich as to the child of the middle or poorer classes of all races and creeds.  We are turning out of our schools children who are utterly helpless in the world.  They have been given a lot of book instruction that has been entirely beyond their grasp, and has left them floundering in an unknown element, with nothing practical to take hold of.

"The conclusion of our practical educators of today is that manual training assists mental development.  That pupils who are dull in book learning may take more readily to manual training, and by the development of the hands and the mind is gradually awakened, and in the time the book which was so incomprehensible becomes easily mastered.  It is simply another application of the theory of leading from the concrete to the abstract.

Another Refutation.

"But there is another equally important refutation in the article.

"In this day and age, when evolution is no longer a theory, but a generally accepted fact, we must bear in mind that each child has had many childhoods back of it.  Is he always to remain a child?  Is it not time that he is getting a boost toward manhood?  If he be allowed to spend his childhood and youth in idleness and irresponsibility, how may you hope to change him when he has reached man's yearns? But if the training is begun in childhood it may be done so gradually that no strain is felt, and yet when maturity is reached one will be surprised at the ability which has been attained.  It is not a sad commentary upon our present system of education that there are so many men and women who are not able to help themselves, much less to contribute anything to the welfare of their fellow-men?

"After all, I believe that it is within the experience of each of us that our greatest pleasure and enjoyment has come through the performance of something really useful, instead of sitting around in idleness trying to be happy, which usually results in a deadly ennui, leading to sin and degradation, a menace to society and civilization.

Advocates Practical Training.

"This argument is by no means to advocate 'all work and no play,' for such is not the purpose of industrial training as advocated for the schoolroom, but only to use a small portion of his so-called working time in giving a concrete and practical training, which leads normally to the desire for more abstract knowledge.  Nor need we fear that the finer arts and higher sciences will be neglected, for they will be sought by those who are ready for them, only there will be fewer unprepared students 'forced' into a higher education, as is so often the case now.

"In connection with this I should like to put myself on record as being heartily in favor of using the Lincoln memorial fun for a technical school, which shall be complete in every respect and open to the pupils from all over the United States.

"There is a great need for something along this line, and yet at the same time it would be one of the grandest monuments to the  memory of our illustrious Lincoln.

"Mrs. DAN V. STEPHENS."

April 1, 2012

Mad Dog Pursued By Mob of Five Hundred, 1912

From the Washington Herald on February 19, 1912:


MAD DOG AMUCK, TERRORIZES TOWN

New York, Feb. 18.-- Hundreds of persons in Mount Vernon went to bed tonight almost in a state of siege because a supposedly mad dog was at large.  During the day the dog had nipped at least five persons, including a five-year-old girl, had wounded several dogs with his fangs and led a remarkable hunt while the churches were pouring their congregations into the streets.  The dog, a tramp cur, first appeared as the congregation was leaving the First Presbyterian Church on South Sixth avenue shortly after noon, and dashed into the midst of the throng on the sidewalk.  At Fifth avenue and First street, the dog tore the leg of five-year-old Ada Patterson and then ran toward Lieut. Michael Silverstein and Policeman Herman Mattes, who had been attracted by the cries of "mad dog!"

Running in the middle of the street the mongrel turned into South Fourth avenue, the principal street of the city.  At this time it was followed by a crowd of at least five hundred persons.  Silverstein and Mattes had commandeered an automobile and stood on the running board with their pistols drawn as the car followed the dog, but afraid to shoot on account of the throngs in the street.  The dog is still at large.

February 23, 2012

Dentist Used Fear of Tuberculosis to Attract Customers, 1910

I've had a request for more science and/or pseudo-science type articles, so here we go. This is a dentist's advertisement from the Tacoma Times of Tacoma, Washington on January 24, 1910:


TUBERCULOSIS

THE WHITE PLAGUE 

The war is on.  Are you in the fight? 
The scientists tell us that fresh air, pure food and rest are the most essential factors in combating this dread disease.  There can be no doubt but that the scientists are right, but there is something else that must be taken into consideration first.  It is a disease which affects ninety per cent of the population of the United States.  Caries, or decay of the teeth, is the disease referred to. 
The first step in digestion takes place in the mouth, and unless your teeth are in good condition the food will not be masticated properly, and no matter how pure it may be when it enters the mouth it will soon be contaminated; therefore, in order to get pure food into the stomach you must have a clean mouth.  Pure air! Would air be pure after passing through a sewer?  Hardly.  Look at your teeth.  Smell your own breath.  Some people would have to take air through a tube if they expected to get it into the lungs pure.
We must have rest.  Did you ever have an aching molar or an abscessed bicuspid?  Could you rest?  Not very long at a time.  If we are going to fight the white plague successfully we must also fight this most prevalent of diseases, decay of the teeth.  Children should be taken to the dentist as soon as the first teeth begin to erupt.  It is criminal negligence on the part of the parents to allow the baby teeth to decay.  On their proper care and attention depends the future health and happiness of the child. 
Yours for health and happiness, 

HUTCHINSON
Dentist

October 9, 2011

1.5-Year-Old Boy and His Pet Snakes

From The Caldwell Watchman of Columbia, Louisiana on January 8, 1915:


SNAKES IN INFANT'S LAP
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Mother Startled at Finding Child Petting Copperheads and Feeding Them.
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Altoona, Pa.--To keep him home, where she thought he would be in no danger, Mrs. John Kobac of Northwood, a suburb of Tyrone, carried a large bowl of bread and milk out on the front porch and summoned her active eighteen-month-old son George to a feast.

George "fell to," and the mother went off to finish her housework.  In a short time she heard him using pet names, and went out to see who was there.  She was horrified to discover George nursing two fair-sized copperheads.

The reptiles were lying in his lap, greedily feeding on the bread and milk, while he stroked them affectionately with his hands.

Mrs. Kobac screamed, grabbed the child and fled into the house as the snakes wriggled away.

August 19, 2011

Nine-Year-Old Pickpocket, 1911

From The World of New York City, NY, August 12, 1911:


9-YEAR-OLD GIRL PICKS 13 POCKETS AS SLEUTHS WATCH
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Detectives Follow Little Concotta Ingloso for Two Hours Before Arresting Her.
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The youngest girl pickpocket ever seen at the Children's Court pleaded guilty to-day before Justice Hoyt, and was remanded to the care of the Children's Society until August 19th, for further investigation. She is Concotta Ingloso, nine years old, fair-haired, pretty, with mild blue eyes, and diminutive in size for her age. 
When the child took the stand she admitted that she was a pickpocket, under the tutelage of a man whose name and description she has furnished to the police.  She said that a fourteen-year-old boy acted as a go-between, and relieved her of her spoils, for which she usually received about forty-five cents a day. 
Detective Wertheimer of the "Strong Arm Squad" and Detective Wittenberg of the Central Office were out yesterday looking for "big game," when they were startled to see a little girl deftly put her hand into the pocket of a woman's apron on Orchard street and withdraw a pocketbook.  This she put into a large handbag.  Thinking they would eventually trail her confederate, they followed her.  The trail led through Orchard and Houston street, through a section of First avenue, to Rivington, to Stanton, to Broome streets.  They followed her for two hours and saw her go through the pockets of thirteen persons before they arrested her. 
The little girl's father, Franceson Ingloso, of No. 222 Chrystie street, was in court before the little girl was arraigned. 
"I would rather see you dead than alive," he said to the child.  "You are not fit to bear the name Ingloso." 
Justice Hoyt showed great sympathy for the little girl, saying that she was far too young to realize her acts, and that the only person who was actually responsible was the man who had taught her to steal.  She has been a pickpocket for five weeks.



(That father was a tad bit harsh, don't you think?)

June 21, 2011

Infant Coffin Carried by Little Girls, Rockcastle, 1898

Previously:

Click here for a list of my other Pulaski/Rockcastle/Laurel County KY articles

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[July 8, 1898] -

Mt. Vernon Signal, Mt. Vernon, Kentucky
July 8, 1898

The infant of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Levisay died last Friday and was buried in the Presbyterian cemetery Saturday.  The coffin was carried to grave by little girls.

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We wish to return our many thanks to our friends for their kindness shown us in the sickness and death of our baby.  And especially to the little girls who bore its remains to its last resting place, also to Rev. Carmical for the beautiful little talk which he delivered at the church in his pleasant way.

R. H. Livesay,
Cassie Livesay.










May 26, 2011

Boy Without Limbs Exhibited at Zoo, Rockcastle, 1899

Previously:

Click here for a list of my other Pulaski/Rockcastle/Laurel County KY articles

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[January 20, 1899] -


Mrs. J. A. Franklin, of Conway, this county, has been engaged by the Cincinnati Zoo Garden at $15 per week and expenses for her family to exhibit her two-months old boy baby that was born without arms or legs.  The child is strong and healthy and bids fair to grow up to manhood.  This remarkable freak of nature, should it live, will be exhibited throughout the world as it is the only known instance where a child was born without limbs and lived. [1]












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[1] Excerpt from "Local and Otherwise." Mt. Vernon Signal, Mount Vernon, KY. January 20, 1899. Page 4. LOC. http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86069561/1899-01-20/ed-1/seq-4/