Sublime
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Samuel Whittemore, age seventy-eight, was working in his fields on April 19, 1775, when he spotted a brigade of British soldiers sent to assist the retreat of forces from Lexington and Concord. Whittemore loaded his musket and ambushed the soldiers from behind a nearby stone wall, killing one. He then drew his dueling pistols, killed a second
... See moreElysha Dicks • Someday Is Today
Joe Page
@joepage
Trevor Newberry
@trevornewberry
Ironically, then, like places throughout the South, Harpers Ferry is a monument to the defeated. Only here the defeated are wild-eyed radical abolitionist John Brown and his companions, and not the Confederate dead.
Imani Perry • South to America: A Journey Below the Mason-Dixon to Understand the Soul of a Nation
I was expecting a wealth of amateur historians, with an encyclopedic knowledge of the fur trade and fresh insights to borrow, but the first twenty people I talked to had never heard of Joe Walker. Reading history books, it turned out, was not a popular
Richard Grant • Ghost Riders: Travels with American Nomads
John Voorhees
@johnvoorhees
Bob Black • The Abolition of Work
John Hritz
@jhritz