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Volume 10, #5

Sep/Oct 2021

The international heritage interpretation e-magazine.

Nov/Dec – a Civil War Xmas

In this issue:

Years ago I had the opportunity to work for the Bar U Ranch in Alberta, Canada. I

taught interpretation – they taught me how to be a cowboy (I should have been a

cowboy). Long story short – lots of articles on old west interpretation in this issue. I

also love Halloween – so articles on witches and scary clowns. Some general

autumn articles as well, so I hope you enjoy this issue – lots of fun. My Nov/Dec

issue is different – a focus on a Civil War Christmas. Some not too nice stories of

enslaved people during that time period, and related “Christmas during the Civil

War” articles are included. I hope you enjoy this issue and more special issues on

Climate Change and other topics are coming for 2022. More InterpTalks to start

again in September as well – watch for notices. Happy autumn. JV

jvainterp@aol.com.

Page

- Boot Hill Cemetery Tombstone, Arizona. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 3

- Interpreting the Day of the Dead - 3000 years of cultural heritage. The Arizona Republic 8

- Interpreting Halloween. The History Channel Staff. 11

- Why Leaves Change Color in the Fall. USDA Forest Service. 14

- 5 Legendary Wild West Outlaws. Lesley Kennedy. 18

- The Trail of Tears. The History Channel Editors. 25

- Navajo Code Talkers. Jennifer Rosenberg 30

- Monarch Butterfly Migration and Overwintering. USA Forest Service 34

- Victorian Mourning Interpretation For Historic Homes. Amanda Sedlak-Hevener 41

- The Twenty Mule Team and Borax - a story of the old west. J. Veverka 46

- 9 Halloween Tales & Traditions. History.Com Editors. 52

- A Brief History of Creepy Clowns. Becky Little 58

- History of Witches. History.Com Editors 62

- History of Zombies from Ancient Times to Pop Culture. Kimberly Lin 68

- Cahokia Mounds: The Largest Ancient City in North America. Kimberly Lin. 75

- 7 Ancient Sites Some People Think Were Built by Aliens. Nadia Drake 82

- Hanging coffins: China's mysterious sky graveyards. Katie Hunt 88

- 7 of the Gutsiest Women on the American Frontier. Brynn Holland 96

- From Witch Hunting to Witchcraft Allegations: Who Was Giles Corey? Ofek Hagag 106

- “Events on a Halloween Night during the Bicentennial of 1976 in Stone Mount” M. Macdonald 112

InterpNEWS is published six times a year as a FREE John Veverka & Associates publication and published as

a service to the interpretive profession. If you would like to be added to our mailing list just send an e-mail to

jvainterp@aol.com and we’ll add you to our growing mailing list. Contributions of articles are welcomed. It

you would like to have an article published in InterpNEWS let me know what you have in mind. Cover photo:

Tombstone Cemetery Grave Marker- www.heritageinterp.com – jvainterp@aol.com – SKYPE: jvainterp


InterpNEWS

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Boothill Cemetery

Tombstone, Arizona

From Wikipedia, the free

encyclopedia

Boothill Graveyard is a small graveyard of at least 250 interments located in Tombstone, Cochise County,

Arizona. [2] Also known as the "Old City Cemetery", the graveyard was used after 1883 only to bury

outlaws and a few others. It had a separate Jewish cemetery, which is nearby.

"Boot Hill" refers to the number of men who died with their boots on. Among a number of pioneer Boot

Hill cemeteries in the Old West, Boothill in Tombstone is among the best-known, and it is one of the city's

most popular tourist attractions.

Originally called Boothill Cemetery, the graveyard was founded in 1878. Cowboys who "died with their

boots on" lie next to housewives, business men and women, miners, gamblers, ladies of the "red-light

district" and all the famous and not so famous occupants that contributed to Tombstone's early history.

By the 1920s, Boothill had fallen into ruin with many grave markers lost or unreadable. A group of

citizens in Tombstone and Cochise County began the task of researching old burial records, consulting with

relatives, older residents, and using all means available to identify the occupants and mark the graves

properly.

The task took several years and the efforts of many to accomplish. This resulted in the graveyard being

restored much as it was in the early years when it was the city cemetery.


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Notable interments and grave markers[

Boothill Graveyard in 1940, before it was fully restored

Marshal Fred White, killed by Curly Bill Brocius on October 30, 1880.

On the night of October 28, 1880, several Cowboys entered town and began drinking, with several

of them firing their pistols in the air at different locations. Marshal White proceeded to confront

each of them and disarm them. All of those confronted by him gave up their weapons voluntarily,

without incident. Late that night, White encountered "Curly Bill" Brocius at the east end of town, on

a dark street in a vacant lot where the Birdcage Theater now stands. Brocius was intoxicated and he

(or his companions) were firing pistols into the air. White instructed Brocius to surrender his pistol.

Brocius did this by pulling the weapon out of his pocket, handing it barrel-first to White. Wyatt Earp

later claimed that he thought the pistol's hammer was "half-cocked" over a live round (it was later

found to have contained six live rounds). When White grabbed the barrel and pulled, the weapon

discharged, shooting White in the groin area.

Wyatt Earp, who witnessed the shooting and flash but could not clearly see the action in the

dark, pistol-whipped Brocius, knocking him unconscious, and arrested him. Wyatt told his

biographer many years later that he thought Brocius was still armed at the time and did not notice

that Brocius' pistol lay on the ground in the dark until Brocius was already down. [5] Brocius was

arrested by Wyatt Earp and his brother Morgan, both of whom were working as Pima County

sheriff's deputies at the time.

Tom McLaury, [Frank McLaury]], and Billy Clanton, killed in the O.K. Corral shootout on October 26,

1881.

Tom McLaury (June 30, 1853 – October 26, 1881) was an American outlaw. He and his

brother Frank owned a ranch outside Tombstone, Arizona, Arizona Territory during the 1880s. He was

a member of a group of outlaws Cowboys and cattle rustlers that had ongoing conflicts with

lawmen Wyatt, Virgil, and Morgan Earp. The McLaury brothers repeatedly threatened the Earps

because they interfered with the Cowboys' illegal activities. On October 26, 1881, Tom and Frank were

both killed in the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona Territory. The Tombstone

shootout was his only gunfight.


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Dan "Big Dan" Dowd, Omer W. "Red" Sample, James "Tex" Howard, William E. "Billy" Delaney, and

Daniel "York" Kelly, perpetrators of the Bisbee massacre, legally hanged on March 28, 1884. [7] John

Heath, accused of organizing the robbery leading to the massacre, has a grave marker nearby but his

body was actually returned to his hometown in Terrell, Texas.

March 8, 1884 - Tombstone, Arizona Territory- four men, members of the Heath gang, were

lynched for their part in the infamous Bisbee massacre on Dec 8, 1883. One of those hung

was Dan Kelly, AKA Yorky, had left his home in Cork County, Ireland in 1881 for a chance

at a new life in the U.S. Kelly was living near Clifton, Arizona Territory, in December 1883

when a gang of outlaws raided the town of Bisbee and killed several people.

Dan Kelly was one of the men suspected of holding up a store with two other hard cases,

Red Sample and Tex Howard. He left town and headed north, where his movements were

almost impossible to trace due to a blinding snowstorm that had hit the area.

Kelly boarded a train at Bowie Station on Dec. 11, but was put off near Deming after

claiming that he was an itinerant hobo. Kelly was eventually arrested and taken back to

Tombstone, Arizona Territory, to stand trial for the Bisbee robbery. Kelly claimed he was

innocent but was sentenced to hang on the gallows. He was not fearful of that moment and

remained talkative and full of good spirit.

Kelly signaled the executioner to proceed and shouted, "Let her loose." In an instant he was

dead. Kelly's remains were transported to Boot hill cemetery.


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Jack Dunlop aka "Three Fingered Jack" ] died of wounds on February 24, 1900 after an attempted

holdup.

Shot by Jeff Milton. Dunlap, one of a band of train robbers, attempted to rob an express

car which Milton guarded. He was critically wounded and his friends left him to die. He

was found and brought to Tombstone, where he lived long enough to inform on his

friends.

China Mary a.k.a. Mrs. Ah Lum. According to True West Magazine China Mary managed a well-stocked

general store where she dealt in both American and Chinese goods. Mary was also a money lender and she

used her own judgment to determine borrower's credibility. When Mary died of heart failure in 1906, the

town folks had a large turnout for her service. She was buried in Tombstone's Boothill Cemetery.


InterpNEWS

Boothill Graveyard was also a huge part of Tombstone. Founded in 1879, Boothill Graveyard was used

until the new cemetery – New Tombstone City Cemetery – opened in 1884. After the new cemetery opened

and began being used, Boothill Graveyard was called “The Old Cemetery.” The newer cemetery is still

being used today. Stories say that Boothill received its name from the fact that the individuals there had

died unexpectedly or violently and were buried boots intact. However, Boothill was in fact named after the

pioneer cemetery in Dodge City hopefully helping tourism in the late 1920s. Many individuals from

Tombstone are in this cemetery, including victims from a shootout that took place in 1881 between the

Cowboys and Earps on Fremont Street. For years, though, the cemetery was neglected. It was taken over

by the desert and gravestones were removed by vandals. Some began to clean up The Old Cemetery in the

1920s and doing research so that the grave markers could be properly replaced.

The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral is the most famous Tombstone event, although it happened in a Fremont

Street vacant lot and not the O.K. Corral. The event took place on October26, 1881 when the Cowboys had

a bit of a run-in with a few Earps – Morgan, Virgil and Wyatt. Not even 30 seconds and about 30 gun shots

later, Frank and Tom McLaury and Billy Clanton were dead. For many, it is believed that it this sole event

that has kept the city of Tombstone alive.

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The Tombstone Epitaph offers us more insight to the town with it's December 29, 1881 article on

the shooting of Virgil Earp. The article in part reports...

" At about 11:30 o'clock last night, U.S. Deputy Marshal Virgil Earp was proceeding from the

Oriental Saloon, on the northwest corner of Allen and Fifth streets, to his room at the

Cosmopolitan Hotel, and when he was about the middle of the crossing of Fifth Street, five shots

were fired in rapid succession by unknown men, who were standing in the old Palace Saloon

that is being rebuilt next door above Tasker and Pridham's store, on the southwest corner of the

same street".


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Interpreting the Day of the Dead

- 3000 years of cultural heritage.

The Arizona Republic

More than 500 years ago, when the Spanish Conquistadors landed in what is now central Mexico, they

encountered natives practicing a ritual that seemed to mock death.

Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/ent/dead/articles/dead-history.html#ixzz4CjALosg3story.html#ixzz4CjALosg3

It was a ritual the indigenous people had been practicing at least 3,000 years. A ritual the Spaniards would

try unsuccessfully to eradicate.

A ritual known today as Dia de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead.

Dia de los Muertos is celebrated in Mexico and certain parts of the United States, including metro Phoenix.

Although the ritual has since been merged with Catholic theology, it still maintains the basic principles of

the Aztec ritual, such as the use of skulls.

Today, people don wooden skull masks called calacas and dance in honor of their deceased relatives. The

wooden skulls also are placed on altars that are dedicated to the dead. Sugar skulls, made with the names of

the dead person on the forehead, are eaten by a relative or friend, according to Mary J. Adrade, who has

written three books on Dia de los Muertos.


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The Aztecs and other Meso-American civilizations kept skulls as trophies and displayed them during the

ritual. The skulls were used to symbolize death and rebirth.

The skulls were used to honor the dead, whom the Aztecs and other Meso-American civilizations believed

came back to visit during the month long ritual.

Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/ent/dead/articles/dead-history.html#ixzz4CjAGNQEd

The skulls were used to honor the dead, whom the Aztecs and other Meso-American civilizations believed

came back to visit during the month long ritual.

Unlike the Spaniards, who viewed death as the end of life, the natives viewed it as the continuation of life.

Instead of fearing death, they embraced it. To them, life was a dream and only in death did they become

truly awake.

"The pre-Hispanic people honored duality as being dynamic," said Christina Gonzalez, senior lecturer on

Hispanic issues at Arizona State University. "They didn't separate death from pain, wealth from poverty like

they did in Western cultures."

However, the Spaniards considered the ritual to be sacrilegious. They perceived the indigenous people to be

barbaric and pagan.

In their attempts to convert them to Catholicism, the Spaniards tried to kill the ritual.

But like the old Aztec spirits, the ritual refused to die.

To make the ritual more Christian, the Spaniards moved it so it coincided with All Saints' Day and All

Souls' Day (Nov. 1 and 2), which is when it is celebrated today.

Previously it fell on the ninth month of the Aztec Solar Calendar, approximately the beginning of August,

and was celebrated for the entire month. Festivities were presided over by the goddess Mictecacihuatl. The

goddess, known as "Lady of the Dead," was believed to have died at birth, Andrade said.

Today, Day of the Dead is celebrated in Mexico and in certain parts of the United States and Central

America.

"It's celebrated different depending on where you go," Gonzalez said.

In rural Mexico, people visit the cemetery where their loved ones are buried. They decorate gravesites with

marigold flowers and candles. They bring toys for dead children and bottles of tequila to adults. They sit on

picnic blankets next to gravesites and eat the favorite food of their loved ones.

In Guadalupe, the ritual is celebrated much like it is in rural Mexico.

"Here the people spend the day in the cemetery," said Esther Cota, the parish secretary at the Our Lady of

Guadalupe Church. "The graves are decorated real pretty by the people."

In Mesa, the ritual has evolved to include other cultures, said Zarco Guerrero, a Mesa artist.


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"Last year, we had Native Americans and African-Americans doing their own dances," he said. "They all

want the opportunity to honor their dead."

In the United States and in Mexico's larger cities, families build altars in their homes, dedicating them to the

dead. They surround these altars with flowers, food and pictures of the deceased. They light candles and

place them next to the altar.

"We honor them by transforming the room into an altar," Guerrero said. "We offer incense, flowers. We

play their favorite music, make their favorite food."

At Guerrero's house, the altar is not only dedicated to friends and family members who have died, but to

others as well.

"We pay homage to the Mexicans killed in auto accidents while being smuggled across the border," he said.

Read more: http://www.azcentral.com/ent/dead/articles/dead-history.html#ixzz4CjA8CMH5


InterpNEWS

Interpreting Halloween

The History Channel Staff.

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Straddling the line between fall and winter, plenty and paucity, life and death, Halloween is a time of

celebration and superstition. It is thought to have originated with the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain,

when people would light bonfires and wear costumes to ward off roaming ghosts. In the eighth century,

Pope Gregory III designated November 1 as a time to honor all saints and martyrs; the holiday, All Saints’

Day, incorporated some of the traditions of Samhain. The evening before was known as All Hallows’ Eve

and later Halloween. Over time, Halloween evolved into a secular, community-based event characterized

by child-friendly activities such as trick-or-treating. treating. In a number of countries around the world, as the days

grow shorter and the nights get colder, people continue to usher in the winter season with gatherings,

costumes and sweet treats.

ANCIENT ORIGINS OF HALLOWEEN

Halloween’s origins date back to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain (pronounced sow-in). The Celts,

who lived 2,000 years ago in the area that is now Ireland, the United Kingdom and northern France,

celebrated their new year on November 1. This day marked the end of summer and the harvest and the

beginning of the dark, cold winter, a time of year that was often associated with human death. Celts

believed that on the night before the new year, the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead

became blurred. On the night of October 31 they celebrated Samhain, when it was believed that the ghosts

of the dead returned to earth. In addition to causing trouble and damaging crops, Celts thought that the

presence of the otherworldly spirits made it easier for the Druids, or Celtic priests, to make predictions

about the future. For a people entirely dependent on the volatile natural world, these prophecies were an

important source of comfort and direction during the long, dark winter.

To commemorate the event, Druids built huge sacred bonfires, where the people gathered to burn crops and

animals as sacrifices to the Celtic deities. During the celebration, the Celts wore costumes, typically

consisting of animal heads and skins, and attempted to tell each other’s fortunes. When the celebration was

over, they re-lit their hearth fires, which they had extinguished earlier that evening, from the sacred bonfire

to help protect them during the coming winter.

By 43 A.D., the Roman Empire had conquered the majority of Celtic territory. In the course of the four

hundred years that they ruled the Celtic lands, two festivals of Roman origin were combined with the

traditional Celtic celebration of Samhain. The first was Feralia, a day in late October when the Romans

traditionally commemorated the passing of the dead. The second was a day to honor Pomona, the Roman

goddess of fruit and trees. es. The symbol of Pomona is the apple and the incorporation of this celebration into

Samhain probably explains the tradition of “bobbing” for apples that is practiced today on Halloween.


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HALLOWEEN COMES TO AMERICA

Celebration of Halloween was extremely limited in colonial New England because of the rigid Protestant

belief systems there. Halloween was much more common in Maryland and the southern colonies. As the

beliefs and customs of different European ethnic groups as well as the American Indians meshed, a

distinctly American version of Halloween began to emerge. The first celebrations included “play parties,”

public events held to celebrate the harvest, where neighbors would share stories of the dead, tell each other’s

fortunes, dance and sing. Colonial Halloween festivities also featured the telling of ghost stories and

mischief-making of all kinds. By the middle of the nineteenth century, annual autumn festivities were

common, but Halloween was not yet celebrated everywhere in the country.

In the second half of the nineteenth century, America was flooded with new immigrants. These new

immigrants, especially the millions of Irish fleeing Ireland’s potato famine of 1846, helped to popularize the

celebration of Halloween nationally. Taking from Irish and English traditions, Americans began to dress up

in costumes and go house to house asking for food or money, a practice that eventually became today’s

“trick-or-treat” tradition. Young women believed that on Halloween they could divine the name or

appearance of their future husband by doing tricks with yarn, apple parings or mirrors.

In the late 1800s, there was a move in America to mold Halloween into a holiday more about community

and neighborly get-togethers than about ghosts, pranks and witchcraft. At the turn of the century, Halloween

parties for both children and adults became the most common way to celebrate the day. Parties focused on

games, foods of the season and festive costumes. Parents were encouraged by newspapers and community

leaders to take anything “frightening” or “grotesque” out of Halloween celebrations. Because of these

efforts, Halloween lost most of its superstitious and religious overtones by the beginning of the twentieth

century.

By the 1920s and 1930s, Halloween had become a secular, but community-centered holiday, with parades

and town-wide parties as the featured entertainment. Despite the best efforts of many schools and

communities, vandalism began to plague Halloween celebrations in many communities during this time. By

the 1950s, town leaders had successfully limited vandalism and Halloween had evolved into a holiday

directed mainly at the young. Due to the high numbers of young children during the fifties baby boom,

parties moved from town civic centers into the classroom or home, where they could be more easily

accommodated. Between 1920 and 1950, the centuries-old practice of trick-or-treating was also revived.

Trick-or-treating was a relatively inexpensive way for an entire community to share the Halloween

celebration. In theory, families could also prevent tricks being played on them by providing the

neighborhood children with small treats. A new American tradition was born, and it has continued to grow.

Today, Americans spend an estimated $6 billion annually on Halloween, making it the country’s second

largest commercial holiday.


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TODAY’S HALLOWEEN TRADITIONS

The American Halloween tradition of “trick-or-treating” probably dates back to the early All Souls’ Day parades in

England. During the festivities, poor citizens would beg for food and families would give them pastries called “soul

cakes” in return for their promise to pray for the family’s dead relatives. The distribution of soul cakes was

encouraged by the church as a way to replace the ancient practice of leaving food and wine for roaming spirits. The

practice, which was referred to as “going a-souling” was eventually taken up by children who would visit the houses

in their neighborhood and be given ale, food, and money.

The tradition of dressing in costume for Halloween has both European and Celtic roots. Hundreds of years ago, winter

was an uncertain and frightening time. Food supplies often ran low and, for the many people afraid of the dark, the

short days of winter were full of constant worry. On Halloween, when it was believed that ghosts came back to the

earthly world, people thought that they would encounter ghosts if they left their homes. To avoid being recognized by

these ghosts, people would wear masks when they left their homes after dark so that the ghosts would mistake them

for fellow spirits. On Halloween, to keep ghosts away from their houses, people would place bowls of food outside

their homes to appease the ghosts and prevent them from attempting to enter.

HALLOWEEN SUPERSTITIONS

Halloween has always been a holiday filled with mystery, magic and superstition. It began as a Celtic end-of-summer

festival during which people felt especially close to deceased relatives and friends. For these friendly spirits, they set

places at the dinner table, left treats on doorsteps and along the side of the road and lit candles to help loved ones find

their way back to the spirit world. Today’s Halloween ghosts are often depicted as more fearsome and malevolent, and

our customs and superstitions are scarier too. We avoid crossing paths with black cats, afraid that they might bring us

bad luck. This idea has its roots in the Middle Ages, when many people believed that witches avoided detection by

turning themselves into cats. We try not to walk under ladders for the same reason. This superstition may have come

from the ancient Egyptians, who believed that triangles were sacred; it also may have something to do with the fact

that walking under a leaning ladder tends to be fairly unsafe. And around Halloween, especially, we try to avoid

breaking mirrors, stepping on cracks in the road or spilling salt.

But what about the Halloween traditions and beliefs that today’s trick-or-treaters have forgotten all about? Many of

these obsolete rituals focused on the future instead of the past and the living instead of the dead. In particular, many

had to do with helping young women identify their future husbands and reassuring them that they would someday—

with luck, by next Halloween—be married. In 18th-century Ireland, a matchmaking cook might bury a ring in her

mashed potatoes on Halloween night, hoping to bring true love to the diner who found it. In Scotland, fortune-tellers

recommended that an eligible young woman name a hazelnut for each of her suitors and then toss the nuts into the

fireplace. The nut that burned to ashes rather than popping or exploding, the story went, represented the girl’s future

husband. (In some versions of this legend, confusingly, the opposite was true: The nut that burned away symbolized a

love that would not last.) Another tale had it that if a young woman ate a sugary concoction made out of walnuts,

hazelnuts and nutmeg before bed on Halloween night she would dream about her future husband. Young women

tossed apple-peels over their shoulders, hoping that the peels would fall on the floor in the shape of their future

husbands’ initials; tried to learn about their futures by peering at egg yolks floating in a bowl of water; and stood in

front of mirrors in darkened rooms, holding candles and looking over their shoulders for their husbands’ faces. Other

rituals were more competitive. At some Halloween parties, the first guest to find a burr on a chestnut-hunt would be

the first to marry; at others, the first successful apple-bobber would be the first down the aisle.

Of course, whether we’re asking for romantic advice or trying to avoid seven years of bad luck, each one of

these Halloween superstitions relies on the good will of the very same “spirits” whose presence the early

Celts felt so keenly


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USDA Forest Service

f you are lucky, you live in one of those parts of the world where Nature has one last fling before settling

down into winter's sleep. In those lucky places, as days shorten and temperatures become crisp, the quiet green

palette of summer foliage is transformed into the vivid autumn palette of reds, oranges, golds, and browns

before the leaves fall off the trees. On special years, the colors are truly breathtaking.

How does autumn color happen?

For years, scientists have worked to understand the changes that happen to trees and shrubs

in the autumn. Although we don't know all the details, we do know enough to explain the basics and help you

to enjoy more fully Nature's multicolored autumn farewell. Three factors influence autumn leaf color-leaf

pigments, length of night, and weather, but not quite in the way we think. The timing of color change and leaf

fall are primarily regulated by the calendar, that is, the increasing length of night. None of the other

environmental influences-temperature, rainfall, food supply, and so on-are as unvarying as the steadily

increasing length of night during autumn. As days grow shorter, and nights grow longer and cooler,

biochemical processes in the leaf begin to paint the landscape with Nature's autumn palette.

Where do autumn colors come from?

A color palette needs pigments, and there are three types that are involved in autumn color.

Chlorophyll, which gives leaves their basic green color. It is necessary for photosynthesis, the chemical

reaction that enables plants to use sunlight to manufacture sugars for their food. Trees in the temperate

zones store these sugars for their winter dormant period.

Carotenoids, which produce yellow, orange, and brown colors in such things as corn, carrots, and

daffodils, as well as rutabagas, buttercups, and bananas.

Anthocyanins, which give color to such familiar things as cranberries, red apples, concord grapes,

blueberries, cherries, strawberries, and plums. They are water soluble and appear in the watery liquid of

leaf cells.


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Both chlorophyll and carotenoids are present in the chloroplasts of leaf cells throughout the growing season.

Most anthocyanins are produced in the autumn, in response to bright light and excess plant sugars within leaf

cells.

During the growing season, chlorophyll is continually being produced and broken down and leaves appear

green. As night length increases in the autumn, chlorophyll production slows down and then stops and

eventually all the chlorophyll is destroyed. The carotenoids and anthocyanins that are present in the leaf are then

unmasked and show their colors.

Certain colors are characteristic of particular species. Oaks turn red, brown, or russet; hickories, golden bronze;

aspen and yellow-poplar, golden yellow; dogwood, purplish red; beech, light tan; and sourwood and black

tupelo, crimson. Maples differ species by species-red maple turns brilliant scarlet; sugar maple, orange-red; and

black maple, glowing yellow. Striped maple becomes almost colorless. Leaves of some species such as the elms

simply shrivel up and fall, exhibiting little color other than drab brown.

The timing of the color change also varies by species. Sourwood in southern forests can become vividly colorful

in late summer while all other species are still vigorously green. Oaks put on their colors long after other species

have already shed their leaves. These differences in timing among species seem to be genetically inherited, for a

particular species at the same latitude will show the same coloration in the cool temperatures of high mountain

elevations at about the same time as it does in warmer lowlands.

Does weather affect autumn color?

The amount and brilliance of the colors that develop in any particular autumn season are related

to weather conditions that occur before and during the time the chlorophyll in the leaves is dwindling.

Temperature and moisture are the main influences.

A succession of warm, sunny days and cool, crisp but not freezing nights seems to bring about the most

spectacular color displays. During these days, lots of sugars are produced in the leaf but the cool nights and the

gradual closing of veins going into the leaf prevent these sugars from moving out. These conditions-lots of

sugar and lots of light-spur production of the brilliant anthocyanin pigments, which tint reds, purples, and

crimson. Because carotenoids are always present in leaves, the yellow and gold colors remain fairly constant

from year to year.

The amount of moisture in the soil also affects autumn colors. Like the weather, soil moisture varies greatly

from year to year. The countless combinations of these two highly variable factors assure that no two autumns

can be exactly alike. A late spring, or a severe summer drought, can delay the onset of fall color by a few

weeks. A warm period during fall will also lower the intensity of autumn colors. A warm wet spring, favorable

summer weather, and warm sunny fall days with cool nights should produce the most brilliant autumn colors.


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What triggers leaf fall?

In early autumn, in response to the shortening days and declining intensity of sunlight, leaves begin the

processes leading up to their fall. The veins that carry fluids into and out of the leaf gradually close off as a

layer of cells forms at the base of each leaf. These clogged veins trap sugars in the leaf and promote production

of anthocyanins. Once this separation layer is complete and the connecting tissues are sealed off, the leaf is

ready to fall.

What does all this do for the tree?

Winter is a certainty that all vegetation in the temperate zones must face each year. Perennial plants, including

trees, must have some sort of protection to survive freezing temperatures and other harsh wintertime influences.

Stems, twigs, and buds are equipped to survive extreme cold so that they can reawaken when spring heralds the

start of another growing season. Tender leaf tissues, however, would freeze in winter, so plants must either

toughen up and protect their leaves or dispose of them.

The evergreens-pines, spruces, cedars, firs, and so on-are able to survive winter because they have toughened

up. Their needle-like or scale-like foliage is covered with a heavy wax coating and the fluid inside their cells

contains substances that resist freezing. Thus the foliage of evergreens can safely withstand all but the severest

winter conditions, such as those in the Arctic. Evergreen needles survive for some years but eventually fall

because of old age.

The leaves of broadleaved plants, on the other hand, are tender and vulnerable to damage. These leaves are

typically broad and thin and are not protected by any thick coverings. The fluid in cells of these leaves is

usually a thin, watery sap that freezes readily. This means that the cells could not survive winter where

temperatures fall below freezing. Tissues unable to overwinter must be sealed off and shed to ensure the plant's

continued survival. Thus leaf fall precedes each winter in the temperate zones.

What happens to all those fallen leaves?

Needles and leaves that fall are not wasted. They decompose and restock the soil with nutrients and make up

part of the spongy humus layer of the forest floor that absorbs and holds rainfall. Fallen leaves also become

food for numerous soil organisms vital to the forest ecosystem.


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What happens to all those fallen leaves?

Needles and leaves that fall are not wasted. They decompose and restock the soil with

nutrients and make up part of the spongy humus layer of the forest floor that absorbs

and holds rainfall. Fallen leaves also become food for numerous soil organisms vital to

the forest ecosystem.

It is quite easy to see the benefit to the tree of its annual leaf fall, but the advantage to

the entire forest is more subtle. It could well be that the forest could no more survive

without its annual replenishment from leaves than the individual tree could survive

without shedding these leaves. The many beautiful interrelationships in the forest

community leave us with myriad fascinating puzzles still to solve.

Where can I see autumn color in the United States?

You can find autumn color in parks and woodlands, in the cities, countryside, and mountains - anywhere you

find deciduous broadleaved trees, the ones that drop their leaves in the autumn. Nature's autumn palette is

painted on oaks, maples, beeches, sweet gums, yellow-poplars, dogwoods, hickories, and others. Your own

neighborhood may be planted with special trees that were selected for their autumn color.

New England is rightly famous for the spectacular autumn colors painted on the trees of its mountains and

countryside, but the Adirondack, Appalachian, Smoky, and Rocky Mountains are also clad with colorful

displays. In the East, we can see the reds, oranges, golds, and bronzes of the mixed deciduous woodlands; in the

West, we see the bright yellows of aspen stands and larches contrasting with the dark greens of the evergreen

conifers.

Many of the Forest Service's 100 plus scenic byways were planned with autumn color in mind. In 31 States you

can drive on over 3,000 miles of scenic byways, and almost everyone of them offers a beautiful, colorful drive

sometime in the autumn.

Thanks to the USDA Forest Service for this contribution to InterpNEWS.


InterpNEWS

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5 Legendary Wild West

Outlaws

LESLEY KENNEDY

Train robberies. Horse thievery. Cattle rustling. Shootouts. Cold-blooded murder.

The most notorious outlaws of the Wild West have long been romanticized as daring robbers and

swashbuckling killers since their stories first hit early American tabloids. In many ways, their

narratives have been shaped—in dime-store novels, TV shows and Hollywood films—to fit the

frontier ideals of rugged individualism and pioneering spirit.

"Americans love an underdog, a person who stands up against perceived tyranny,” wrote Bill

Markley in Billy the Kid and Jesse James: Outlaws of the Legendary West. . “Jesse James and Billy

the Kid personify that rebellious spirit. Americans overlook the crimes and see the romance of the

rebel.”

We rounded up five of the 19th century's most infamous outlaws, whose popular legends endure,

despite their history of violent crime.

Jesse James

5 Le Wild

West Outlaws

Born in Clay County, Missouri in 1847, Jesse James grew

up as part of a Confederacy-supporting, slave-owning

family. As a teen in 1864, James and his brother Frank

joined a guerrilla unit responsible for murdering dozens of

Union soldiers.

For some historians, James never stopped fighting

the Civil War, translating his fury over the defeat of the

secessionist cause into a career sticking up banks, trains

and stagecoaches. At times, he saw himself as a modern

Robin Hood, robbing from the politically

progressive Reconstruction supporters and giving to the

poor.

16-year-old Jesse James posing with three

pistols, Platte City, Missouri, July 10, 1864.

According to the State Historical Society of Missouri, the

James-Younger gang operated widely, from Iowa to Texas

to West Virginia. Overall, between 1860 and 1882, they

are believed to have committed more than 20 bank and

train robberies, with a combined haul estimated at around

$200,000.


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While they usually focused more on robbing train safes than individual passengers, they did ruthlessly

murder countless people who got in their way.

As newspapers began to mention James, his love for the attention grew.

"He was audacious, planning and robbing banks in the middle of the day and stopping the most

powerful machines of the time—railroad engines—to rob their trains and successfully get away,”

wrote Bill Markley in Billy the Kid and Jesse James: Outlaws of the Legendary West.

The James legend grew with the help of newspaper editor John Newman Edwards, a Confederate

sympathizer who perpetuated James's Robin Hood mythology. "We are not thieves, we are bold

robbers,” James wrote in a letter Edwards published. "I am proud of the name, for Alexander the

Great was a bold robber, and Julius Caesar, and Napoleon Bonaparte."

But while he did steal from the rich, there's no evidence James gave to the poor.

In 1881, the governor of Missouri issued a $10,000 reward for the capture of Jesse and Frank

James. On April 3, 1882, at the age of 34, James was shot and killed by one of his accomplices,

Robert Ford, who was found guilty of murder but pardoned by the governor.

The REAL Jesse James and his

killer Robert Ford: Photograph

owned by family who kept outlaw

safe in 1870s verified by experts


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Billy the Kid

Legend says the Wild West outlaw Billy the Kid—cattle rustler, gunslinger, murderer, escape

artist—killed 21 people before he turned 21 years old, his age at death. The reality may be closer

to nine. But the early days of Henry McCarty, later known as William Bonney, "the Kid," are

murky.

Billy the Kid was likely born in New York City in 1859, later moving to Indiana, Kansas and

Denver before his family settled in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Orphaned as a teen after his mother

died of tuberculosis, Henry was separated from his brother and placed in foster homes. It wasn’t

long before he fell into petty theft. After a September 1875 arrest for stealing clothing from a

Chinese laundry, Henry reportedly shimmied up the jailhouse chimney and escaped, ultimately

making his way to southeast Arizona.

In 1876, he took up with an Arizona gang known for stealing horses. In 1877, after being charged

with murdering a blacksmith, he fled home to New Mexico and joined another band of thieves. In

1878, he joined a posse called the Regulators set on revenge for a cattleman's murder in what came

to be called the Lincoln County War. By 1880, his name was spread across tabloid newspapers.

“Billy became the symbol of the American loner: the little guy fighting against all odds; the

misunderstood youth who battled the combined corrupt government and business forces hell-bent

on his destruction,” wrote Markley. “Everyone wanted to be associated with Billy the Kid—he

stayed at their ranch or he stole one of their horses.”

With a $500 reward on his head, the fugitive was gunned down by New Mexico Sheriff Pat

Garrett on July 14, 1881.

One of the most acclaimed Old West lawmen in America was Pat Garrett. He was immortalized in history

after tracking down and killing the notorious outlaw, 21-year-old Billy the Kid.

But Garret himself also lost his life in an infamous way: suffering two shots, one in the head, and another

tearing through his ribs and shoulder. All while urinating? Perhaps. It is said his body was found with

unbuttoned trousers. This nefarious event took place on February 29, 1908.


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Belle Starr

Belle Starr, pictured sitting side saddle on her horse wearing a single loop holster with a pearl-handled

revolver, c. 1886. Roeder Brothers/Buyenlarge/Getty Images

Born to a well-to-do, Confederate-sympathizing family, Myra Maybelle Shirley Starr—later

known as Belle, and, eventually, the "Bandit Queen"—was a teenager in Scyene, Texas, in 1864

when outlaws Jesse James and the Younger brothers used her family’s home as a hideout.

In the years that followed, Starr married three outlaws: Jim Reed in 1866, who ran with the

Younger, James and Starr gangs and was killed in 1874 by police; Bruce Younger In 1878; and

Sam Starr, a Cherokee, in 1880.

After Belle and Sam Starr were later charged with horse stealing, a federal offense for which she

served time, she was again charged with horse theft in 1886. This time, because of her legal skills,

she was acquitted. But in the meantime, her husband and an Indian policeman had shot each other

to death.

Starr herself was murdered February 3, 1889, at the age of 40, close to her Oklahoma cabin in the

Cherokee Nation. Some suspect her son, Ed Reed, whom the Texas State Historical Association

asserts she had recently beaten for mistreating her horse. The crime has never been solved.

Two days following her death, The New York Times called her “the most desperate woman that

ever figured on the borders.”


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But according to Glenn Shirley, author of Belle Starr and Her Times: The Literature, the Facts,

and the Legends, the only truth in the report was the fact that she had died.

“Almost overnight, the name of Belle Starr became a household word throughout the nation,” he

writes. “She had been elevated to a seat of immortal glory as a sex-crazed hellion with the morals

of an alley cat, a harborer and consort of horse and cattle thieves, a petty blackmailer who dabbled

in every crime from murder to the dark sin of incest, a female Robin Hood who robbed the rich to

feed the poor, an exhibitionist and clever she-devil on horseback and leader of the most

bloodthirsty band of cutthroats in the American West. All this despite the lack of a contemporary

account or court record to show that she ever held up a train, bank or stagecoach or killed

anybody."

Butch Cassidy


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Born Robert LeRoy Parker in 1866, in Circleville, Utah to devout Mormons, the famed outlaw who

later adopted the moniker Butch Cassidy grew up dirt poor, one of 13 children. As a teen, working

on a nearby ranch to help feed his family, legend has it he met Mike Cassidy, a cattle rustler and

mentor, who taught him, according to Time, "how to make a better, if distinctly dishonest, living."

Landing in the gold rush town of Telluride, Colorado, Cassidy, along with three other men, on

June 24, 1889 committed the first crime attributed to him—a bank robbery, during which the trio

made off with $20,000.

Adopting his new name (some say "Butch" comes from time spent working as a butcher) and

hiding out in Wyoming, he began adding outlaw cowboys to his gang, known in the press as the

"Wild Bunch." They included Harry Longabaugh, aka the Sundance Kid.

After spending 18 months in prison for horse theft in 1894, in 1896, Cassidy’s Wild Bunch robbed

a Montpelier, Idaho bank, stealing $7,000. The gang went on to commit several other robberies in

the Southwest, including a $70,000 haul during a Rio Grande train robbery in New Mexico.

With the authorities hot on their trail, Cassidy and Longabaugh eventually fled to Argentina.

Eventually, Cassidy went back to robbing trains and payrolls up until his alleged death in 1908.

Now, about that death: Most historians say Butch and Sundance, immortalized in the Robert

Redford/Paul Newman movie, died in a shootout in Bolivia, but others theorize the pair escaped,

living out their lives under aliases.


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John Wesley Hardin

Did he kill 20 men? Forty? Fifty? The total body count may be unclear, but according to John

Wesley Hardin, they all deserved it. "I never killed anyone who didn't need killing," he famously

said.

By all accounts, Hardin was one of the most dangerous gunslingers in the American Southwest.

“When compared with John Wesley Hardin, Billy the Kid was a rank amateur,” wrote Lee Floren

in his book John Wesley Hardin: Texas Gunfighter. “For by the time Wes Hardin reached his 21st

birthday, he was credited with killing 27.”

Born in 1853 in Bonham, Texas to a Methodist preacher, Hardin displayed his outlaw nature early:

He stabbed a classmate as a schoolboy, killed a Black man during an argument at 15 and, as a

supporter of the Confederacy, claimed to take the lives of multiple Union soldiers soon after,

according to the Texas State Historical Society.

More than a dozen killings later, he surrendered in 1872, broke out of jail, joined the anti-

Reconstruction movement and just kept killing, the society reports. Fleeing capture with his wife

and children, he was nabbed by Texas Rangers in Florida in 1877 and sentenced to 25 years for the

murder of Charles Webb, a deputy sheriff. During his prison term he tried repeatedly to escape,

read theological books, served as superintendent of the prison Sunday school and studied law,

according to the society. He also wrote his autobiography. Hardin was pardoned on March 16,

1894, and subsequently admitted to the bar.

But life on the straight and narrow didn’t last long. According to the society, Hardin hired

assassins to murder one of his clients—with whose wife he was having an affair. And on August

19, 1895, Constable John Selman, one of the hired guns, shot and killed Hardin in the Acme

Saloon—ironically, it is believed, because he had not been paid for the hit job.


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The Trail of Tears

HISTORY.COM EDITORS

At the beginning of the 1830s, nearly 125,000 Native Americans lived on millions of acres of land

in Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina and Florida–land land their ancestors had occupied

and cultivated for generations. By the end of the decade, very few natives remained anywhere in

the southeastern United States. Working on behalf of white settlers who wanted to grow cotton on

the Indians’ land, the federal government forced them to leave their homelands and walk hundreds

of miles to a specially designated “Indian territory” across the Mississippi River. This difficult and

sometimes deadly journey is known as the Trail of Tears.

The 'Indian Problem'

White Americans, particularly those who lived on the western frontier, often feared and resented

the Native Americans they encountered: To them, American Indians seemed to be an unfamiliar,

alien people who occupied land that white settlers wanted (and believed they deserved). Some

officials in the early years of the American republic, such as President George Washington,

believed that the best way to solve this “Indian problem” was simply to “civilize” the Native

Americans.


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The goal of this civilization campaign was to make Native Americans as much like white

Americans as possible by encouraging them convert to Christianity, learn to speak and read

English and adopt European-style economic practices such as the individual ownership of land and

other property (including, in some instances in the South, African slaves). In the southeastern

United States, many Choctaw, Chickasaw, Seminole, Creek and Cherokee people embraced these

customs and became known as the “Five Civilized Tribes.”

But their land, located in parts of Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, Florida and Tennessee, was

valuable, and it grew to be more coveted as white settlers flooded the region. Many of these whites

yearned to make their fortunes by growing cotton, and they did not care how “civilized” their

native neighbors were: They wanted that land and they would do almost anything to get it. They

stole livestock; burned and looted houses and towns; committed mass murder; and squatted on land

that did not belong to them.

State governments joined in this effort to drive Native Americans out of the South. Several states

passed laws limiting Native American sovereignty and rights and encroaching on their territory. In

Worcester v. Georgia (1832), the U.S. Supreme Court objected to these practices and affirmed that

native nations were sovereign nations “in which the laws of Georgia [and other states] can have no

force.” Even so, the maltreatment continued. As President Andrew Jackson noted in 1832, if no

one intended to enforce the Supreme Court’s rulings (which he certainly did not), then the

decisions would “[fall]…still born.” Southern states were determined to take ownership of Indian

lands and would go to great lengths to secure this territory.


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Indian Removal

Andrew Jackson had long been an advocate of what he called “Indian removal.” As an Army

general, he had spent years leading brutal campaigns against the Creeks in Georgia and Alabama

and the Seminoles in Florida–campaigns that resulted in the transfer of hundreds of thousands of

acres of land from Indian nations to white farmers. As president, he continued this crusade. In

1830, he signed the Indian Removal Act, which gave the federal government the power to

exchange Native-held land in the cotton kingdom east of the Mississippi for land to the west, in the

“Indian colonization zone” that the United States had acquired as part of the Louisiana Purchase.

(This “Indian territory” was located in present-day Oklahoma.)

The law required the government to negotiate removal treaties fairly, voluntarily and peacefully: It

did not permit the president or anyone else to coerce Native nations into giving up their land.

However, President Jackson and his government frequently ignored the letter of the law and forced

Native Americans to vacate lands they had lived on for generations. In the winter of 1831, under

threat of invasion by the U.S. Army, the Choctaw became the first nation to be expelled from its

land altogether. They made the journey to Indian Territory on foot (some “bound in chains and

marched double file,” one historian writes) and without any food, supplies or other help from the

government. Thousands of people died along the way. It was, one Choctaw leader told an Alabama

newspaper, a “trail of tears and death.”


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The Trail of Tears

The Indian-removal process continued. In 1836, the federal government drove the Creeks from

their land for the last time: 3,500 of the 15,000 Creeks who set out for Oklahoma did not survive

the trip.

The Cherokee people were divided: What was the best way to handle the government’s

determination to get its hands on their territory? Some wanted to stay and fight. Others thought it

was more pragmatic to agree to leave in exchange for money and other concessions. In 1835, a few

self-appointed representatives of the Cherokee nation negotiated the Treaty of New Echota, which

traded all Cherokee land east of the Mississippi for $5 million, relocation assistance and

compensation for lost property. To the federal government, the treaty was a done deal, but many of

the Cherokee felt betrayed; after all, the negotiators did not represent the tribal government or

anyone else. “The instrument in question is not the act of our nation,” wrote the nation’s principal

chief, John Ross, in a letter to the U.S. Senate protesting the treaty. “We are not parties to its

covenants; it has not received the sanction of our people.” Nearly 16,000 Cherokees signed Ross’s

petition, but Congress approved the treaty anyway.

28

By 1838, only about 2,000 Cherokees had left their Georgia homeland for Indian Territory.

President Martin Van Buren sent General Winfield Scott and 7,000 soldiers to expedite the

removal process. Scott and his troops forced the Cherokee into stockades at bayonet point while

whites looted their homes and belongings. Then, they marched the Indians more than 1,200 miles

to Indian Territory. Whooping cough, typhus, dysentery, cholera and starvation were epidemic

along the way, and historians estimate that more than 5,000 Cherokee died as a result of the

journey.

By 1840, tens of thousands of Native Americans had been driven off of their land in the

southeastern states and forced to move across the Mississippi to Indian Territory. The federal

government promised that their new land would remain unmolested forever, but as the line of

white settlement pushed westward, “Indian Country” shrank and shrank. In 1907, Oklahoma

became a state and Indian Territory was gone for good.


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Can You Walk The Trail of Tears?

The Trail of Tears is over 5,043 miles long and covers nine states: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia,

Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma and Tennessee. Today, the Trail of Tears

National Historic Trail is run by the National Park Service and portions of it are accessible on

foot, by horse, by bicycle or by car.

Sources

Trail of Tears. NPS.gov.


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Navajo Code

Talkers

By

Jennifer Rosenberg

Thought Co

In United States history, the story of Native Americans is predominantly tragic. Settlers took their land,

misunderstood their customs, and killed them in the thousands. Then, during World War II, the U.S.

government needed the Navajos' help. And though they had suffered greatly from this same government,

Navajos proudly answered the call to duty.

Communication is essential during any war and World War II was no different. From battalion to battalion

or ship to ship - everyone must stay in contact to know when and where to attack or when to fall back. If the

enemy were to hear these tactical conversations, not only would the element of surprise be lost, but the

enemy could also reposition and get the upper hand. Codes (encryptions) were essential to protect these

conversations.

Unfortunately, though codes were often used, they were also frequently broken. In 1942, a man named

Philip Johnston thought of a code he thought unbreakable by the enemy. A code based on the Navajo

language.

Philip Johnston's Idea

The son of a Protestant missionary, Philip Johnston spent much of his childhood on the Navajo reservation.

He grew up with Navajo children, learning their language and their customs. As an adult, Johnston became

an engineer for the city of Los Angeles but also spent a considerable amount of his time lecturing about the

Navajos.

Then one day, Johnston was reading the newspaper when he noticed a story about an armored division in

Louisiana that was attempting to come up with a way to code military communications using Native

American personnel. This story sparked an idea. The next day, Johnston headed to Camp Elliot (near San

Diego) and presented his idea for a code to Lt. Col. James E. Jones, the Area Signal Officer.


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Lt. Col. Jones was skeptical. Previous attempts at similar codes failed because Native Americans

had no words in their language for military terms. There was no need for Navajos to add a word in

their language for "tank" or "machine gun" just as there is no reason in English to have different

terms for your mother's brother and your father's brother - as some languages do - they're just

both called "uncle." And often, when new inventions are created, other languages just absorb the

same word. For example, in German a radio is called "Radio" and a computer is "Computer." Thus,

Lt. Col. Jones was concerned that if they used any Native American languages as codes, the word

for "machine gun" would become the English word "machine gun" - making the code easily

decipherable.

However, Johnston had another idea. Instead of adding the direct term "machine gun" to the

Navajo language, they would designate a word or two already in the Navajo language for the

military term. For example, the term for "machine gun" became "rapid-fire gun," the term for

"battleship" became "whale," and the term for "fighter plane" became "hummingbird."

Lt. Col. Jones recommended a demonstration for Major General Clayton B. Vogel. The

demonstration was a success and Major General Vogel sent a letter to the Commandant of the

United States Marine Corps recommending that they enlist 200 Navajos for this assignment. In

response to the request, they were only given permission to begin a "pilot project" with 30

Navajos.


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Getting the Program Started

Recruiters visited the Navajo reservation and selected the first 30 code talkers (one dropped out, so 29

started the program). Many of these young Navajos had never been off the reservation, making their

transition to military life even more difficult. Yet they persevered. They worked night and day helping to

create the code and to learn it.

Once the code was created, the Navajo recruits were tested and re-tested. There could be no mistakes in any

of the translations. One mistranslated word could lead to the death of thousands. Once the first 29 were

trained, two remained behind to become instructors for future Navajo code talkers and the other 27 were

sent to Guadalcanal to be the first to use the new code in combat.

Having not gotten to participate in the creation of the code because he was a civilian, Johnston volunteered

to enlist if he could participate in the program. His offer was accepted and Johnston took over the training

aspect of the program.

The program proved successful and soon the U.S. Marine Corps authorized unlimited recruiting for the

Navajo code talkers program. The entire Navajo nation consisted of 50,000 people and by the end of the

war 420 Navajo men worked as code talkers.

The Code

The initial code consisted of translations for 211 English words most frequently used in military

conversations. Included in the list were terms for officers, terms for airplanes, terms for months, and an

extensive general vocabulary. Also included were Navajo equivalents for the English alphabet so that the

code talkers could spell out names or specific places.

However, cryptographer Captain Stilwell suggested that the code be expanded. While monitoring several

transmissions, he noticed that since so many words had to be spelled out, the repetition of the Navajo

equivalents for each letter could possibly offer the Japanese an opportunity to decipher the code. Upon

Captain Silwell's suggestion, an additional 200 words and additional Navajo equivalents for the 12 most

often used letters (A, D, E, I, H, L, N, O, R, S, T, U) were added. The code, now complete, consisted of 411

terms.

On the battlefield, the code was never written down, it was always spoken. In training, they had been

repeatedly drilled with all 411 terms. The Navajo code talkers had to be able to send and receive the code as

fast as possible. There was no time for hesitation. Trained and now fluent in the code, the Navajo code

talkers were ready for battle.


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On the Battlefield

Unfortunately, when the Navajo code was first introduced, military leaders in the field were skeptical. Many

of the first recruits had to prove the codes' worth. However, with just a few examples, most commanders

were grateful for the speed and accuracy in which messages could be communicated.

From 1942 until 1945, Navajo code talkers participated in numerous battles in the Pacific, including

Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima, Peleliu, and Tarawa. They not only worked in communications but also as regular

soldiers, facing the same horrors of war as other soldiers.

However, Navajo code talkers met additional problems in the field. Too often, their own soldiers mistook

them for Japanese soldiers. Many were nearly shot because of this. The danger and frequency of

misidentification caused some commanders to order a bodyguard for each Navajo code talker.

For three years, wherever the Marines landed, the Japanese got an earful of strange gurgling noises

interspersed with other sounds resembling the call of a Tibetan monk and the sound of a hot water bottle

being emptied. Huddled over their radio sets in bobbing assault barges, in foxholes on the beach, in slit

trenches, deep in the jungle, the Navajo Marines transmitted and received messages, orders, vital

information. The Japanese ground their teeth and committed hari-kari. *

The Navajo code talkers played a large role in the Allied success in the Pacific. The Navajos had created a

code the enemy was unable to decipher.

* Excerpt from the September 18, 1945 issues of the San Diego Union as quoted in Doris A. Paul, The

Navajo Code Talkers (Pittsburgh: Dorrance Publishing Co., 1973) 99.

Bibliography

Bixler, Margaret T. Winds of Freedom: The Story of the Navajo Code Talkers of World War II. Darien, CT:

Two Bytes Publishing Company, 1992.

Kawano, Kenji. Warriors: Navajo Code Talkers. . Flagstaff, AZ: Northland Publishing Company, 1990.

Paul, Doris A. The Navajo Code Talkers. Pittsburgh: Dorrance Publishing Co., 1973.


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Monarch Butterfly

Migration and

Overwintering

The annual migration of North America’s monarch butterfly is a unique and amazing phenomenon. The

monarch is the only butterfly known to make a two-way migration as birds do. Unlike other butterflies that

can overwinter as larvae, pupae, or even as adults in some species, monarchs cannot survive the cold winters

of northern climates. Using environmental cues, the monarchs know when it is time to travel south for the

winter. Monarchs use a combination of air currents and thermals to travel long distances. Some fly as far as

3,000 miles to reach their winter home!

Where Do Monarchs Go?

Monarchs in Eastern North America have a second home in the Sierra Madre Mountains of Mexico.

Monarchs in Western North America overwinter in California.

Eastern North American Population

Overwintering in Mexico

The eastern population of North America’s monarchs overwinters in the same 11 to 12 mountain areas in the

States of Mexico and Michoacan from October to late March.

Monarchs roost for the winter in oyamel fir forests at an elevation of 2,400 to 3,600 meters (nearly 2 miles

above sea level). The mountain hillsides of oyamel forest provide an ideal microclimate for the butterflies.

Here temperatures range from 0 to 15 degrees Celsius. If the temperature is lower, the monarchs will be

forced to use their fat reserves. The humidity in the oyamel forest assures the monarchs won’t dry out

allowing them to conserve their energy.

Directional Aids

Researchers are still investigating what directional aids monarchs use to find their overwintering location. It

appears to be a combination of directional aids such as the magnetic pull of the earth and the position of the

sun among others, not one in particular.

Clustering in Colonies

Monarchs cluster together to stay warm. Tens of thousands of monarchs can cluster on a single tree.

Although monarchs alone weigh less than a gram, tens of thousands of them weigh a lot. Oyamel trees are

generally able to support the clustering butterflies, but sometimes branches break.


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Protection of Oyamel Forest

Conservation of overwintering habitat is very important to the survival of monarchs. The Mexican

Government recognized the importance of oyamel forests to monarch butterflies and created the Monarch

Butterfly Biosphere Reserve in 1986.

Monarchs can travel between 50-100 miles a day; it can take up to two months to complete their journey.

The farthest ranging monarch butterfly recorded traveled 265 miles in one day.

Monarch butterflies clustering in tree tops at the El Rosario Sanctuary, Michoacan, Mexico. Photo by Sue

Sill, LCHPP, Inc.

Monarchs living west of the Rocky Mountain range in North America overwinter in California along the

Pacific coast near Santa Cruz and San Diego. Here microclimatic conditions are very similar to that in

central Mexico. Monarchs roost in eucalyptus, Monterey pines, and Monterey cypresses in California.


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Stories of Biodiversity on the Move, Monarch Butterflies (Danaus plexippus)

A Google Earth Tour is posted on YouTube describing the migration of monarch butterflies, and the people

that help them out along the way. It was produced by Atlantic Public Media in cooperation with

the Encyclopedia of Life. Producers: Eduardo Garcia-Milagros and Ari Daniel Shapiro.

Flyways

Traveling South

Eastern North American monarchs fly south using several flyways then merge into a single flyway in

Central Texas. It is truly amazing that these monarchs know the way to the overwintering sites even though

this migrating generation has never before been to Mexico!

Monarch Butterfly Fall Migration Patterns. Base map source: USGS National Atlas.


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Congregation Sites

Monarchs only travel during the day and need to find a roost at night. Monarchs gather close together

during the cool autumn evenings. Roost sites are important to the monarch migration. Many of these

locations are used year after year. Often pine, fir and cedar trees are chosen for roosting. These trees have

thick canopies that moderate the temperature and humidity at the roost site. In the mornings, monarchs bask

in the sunlight to warm themselves.

Monarchs at sunrise on wild black cherry (Prunus serotina) tree roost. Photo by Denise Gibbs.

Monarchs basking at sunrise before taking flight from a bayberry (Myrica pensylvanica) thicket roost site.

Photo by Denise Gibbs.


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Use of Peninsulas

Monarchs traveling south congregate on peninsulas. The shape of the peninsula funnels the migrating

butterflies. At its tip, the monarchs find the shortest distance across open water. They congregate along the

shore to wait for a gentle breeze to help them across.

Monarchs bask just after sunrise on a groundsel-tree (Baccharis halimifolia) where they roosted for the

night, at the edge of Oyster Bay. Photo by Denise Gibbs.


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Traveling North

As warm temperatures and lengthening days arrive, the migratory generation of monarchs finishes the development they halted prior to their migration. They

become reproductive, breed and lay the eggs of the new generation. This starts the northern journey back to North America. Unlike the generation before

them, who made a one-generation journey south, successive generations make the journey north.

Monarch Butterfly Spring and Summer Migration Patterns. Base map source: USGS National Atlas.

Multiple Generations

Generation 1 monarchs are the offspring of the monarchs who overwintered in Mexico. Each successive

generation travels farther north. It will take 3-4 generations to reach the northern United States and Canada.

For More Information

The University of Minnesota Monarch Lab: Migration


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Tracking Migration

The northern migration is tracked by an organization called Journey North. You can help track the

migration of the monarch butterfly by visiting this site.

Report your sightings!

The Western Monarch Milkweed Mapper project is part of a collaborative effort to map and better

understand monarch butterflies and their host plants across the Western U.S. Data compiled through this

project will improve our understanding of the distribution and phenology of monarchs and milkweeds,

identify important breeding areas, and help us better understand monarch conservation needs.

Help us track monarchs and milkweed across the West!

You can learn more about a project to track the southern migration at Papalotzin, The Journey of the

Monarch Butterfly.

The Monarch Highway Poster

The landscape that parallels roadways, like the I-35 corridor, can provide natural habitat to support the

annual migration of the monarch butterfly. The Pollinator Partnership, including a number of state, local

and federal government agencies, corporations, and organizations collaborating and supporting pollinators

and conservation of their habitat developed this poster to celebrate the monarch butterfly.

The I-35 corridor follows Interstate 35 through six states from Minnesota south to Texas, following the

central flyway of monarch migration. In 2016, these states signed a memorandum of understanding that

informally named I-35 the “Monarch Highway” and agreed to implement coordinated management

practices along the corridor that benefit monarchs and other pollinators.

Visit the Pollinator Partnership to see the poster and read more about The Monarch Highway…


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Victorian Mourning

Interpretation For

Historic Homes

By Amanda Sedlak-Hevener

mandyhevener@gmail.com

(reprinted from interpNEWS July 2017)

Victorian mourning rituals permeated the 19 th century. They transformed a formerly simple act of

mourning the dead into something elaborate. An entire industry sprang up around mourning rituals, with

manufacturers creating specific clothing, bakeries making mourning biscuits and other foods, and even

artisans designing jewelry made from the hair of dead loved ones. Books on proper mourning etiquette

were produced and sold both in the U.S. and in England.

The mourning process started when Queen Victoria’s husband, Prince Albert died of what is

believed to be typhoid fever in 1861. They were apparently very much in love, and had a total of nine

children together during their 21 year marriage. The dual loss of her mother, in March 1861, as well as her

husband in December of that same year, caused Victoria to mourn deeply. She wore black clothing for the

remainder of her life (even to her children’s weddings), and people dubbed her “the widow of Windsor.”

This is where Victorian mourning customs come from - Queen Victoria’s actions. These customs spread

across the pond and became the “only” way to mourn the loss of a loved one in America during the time

period.

After Prince Albert’s death, Queen Victoria only used black-bordered stationary and refused to

allow her daughters and aides to wear any jewelry other than jet beaded necklaces. (For the record, jet is

considered a “minor gemstone” and its chemical makeup is similar to that of coal. It’s basically made of

pressurized, decayed wood that has been smoothed and made shiny and turned into beads.) She

memorialized him with public statuary, including an equestrian statue in Wolverhampton, in 1866, and a

seated version of him covered in gilt located in Hyde Park that was put into place in 1877. Not to mention

her creation of Royal Albert Hall. Even though Royal Albert Hall was his idea, construction of it did not

begin until 1867, 6 years after his death.

Victorian mourning etiquette dictated how the deceased would be displayed, prior to burial. The

body of the deceased was placed in the parlor or front room of his or her home in a coffin, which was

sitting on top of sawhorses or simple wooden chairs. In most cases, the dead was embalmed (although not

always). Flowers were placed in the room in order show that the deceased was loved, but also to mask the

smell. Parlors were used because they were typically the best decorated rooms in the house. Houses of this

time period were built with extra wide doors to allow the coffins to horizontally pass through them. The

body was never left alone in the house. No matter what, the widow/widower/children/servants/someone

was always there with it. A 24 hour vigil was the most common period for wakes, but some lasted 3 to 4

days, depending on the distance mourners had to travel.


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Not only were there elaborate rituals in the home, but there was a mourning period that had to

adhered to as well. This varied, based on the survivors of the deceased. Mourning pertaining to women was

in three stages: deep mourning, second mourning, and half mourning. Deep mourning started immediately

following death until a year and a day have a passed. Second mourning started after deep mourning, and

lasted for 9 to 12 months. Half mourning came next, and lasted for 6 months. However, some women, like

Queen Victoria, remained in mourning for the rest of their lives. This mourning was typically observed by

widows, and sometimes by widowers, who could remarry during the mourning period. A widower who

remarried while in mourning could wear a typical suit and tie on his wedding day, but had to go back into

mourning the next day. Amazingly, his new wife had to go into mourning for the prior wife as well.

Mourning wasn’t just something practiced when a spouse died. Here are some mourning periods for

other family members:

For a parent: 6 months to a year

For children over 10 yrs old: 6 months to a year

For children under 10 yrs: 3 to 6 months

Infants: 6 weeks and up

For siblings: 6 to 8 months

For aunts and uncles: 3 to 6 months

For cousins: 6 weeks to 3 months

For aunts or uncles related by marriage: 6 weeks to 3 months

Grandparents: 6 months

Special clothing was the most important component of the mourning period. It was usually made of

crepe – an uncomfortable black fabric known for turning a rusty color over time (where the term “widows

weeds” comes from) or leaking dye all over the person wearing it. Those with more money could afford

dresses made of wool, cotton, or a silk and wool blend called bombazine. Any type of cloth could typically

be used, as long as it wasn’t shiny. Widowed women wore full length dresses with cape-like sleeves and

high collars, styles of which went from lavish (for the wealthy) to simple (for the not-so-wealthy.) They also

wore veils that covered their faces which were worn as such during the funeral/wake, and then pushed back

so they could see for the rest of the mourning period. Mourning bonnets were also worn, in lieu of veils.

Some went so far as to wear black gloves. During the ourning period, women wore very little jewelry and

carried black bordered handkerchiefs, which were not fully dyed because of the instability of the color. No

one wanted to get a face full of dye.

Men who lost their wives/children/loved ones wore black suits with simple white shirts, although some

simply wore their everyday suit with a black armband. Scarves, stoles, and sashes (all in black, of course)

were worn, as well as black shoes, gloves and hats. Some men wore regular hats with black “weepers,”

which were thin strips of black crepe wrapped around like a hatband with black ribbons festooned onto

them.

Children under the age of 12 in mourning wore white with black armbands during the summer

months, and gray during the winter ones. However, they also wore black bonnets, sashes, ribbon trimming,

and belts. Over the age of 12, children wore mourning clothing that was the same as that worn by adults.

Mourning wasn’t just practiced by the family of the deceased. Household servants and other mourners not in

the direct line from the deceased wore mourning cockades and badges with their regular clothing. Everyone

who came into contact with the deceased in his or her daily life had to go into mourning.


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Special mourning jewelry was created to memorialize the deceased. This is where human hair

brooches and bracelets, memory lockets, and other items came from. Black beads, such as jet, glass, clay,

onyx, and vulcanite were favored, as well as cross pendants. The hair of the deceased was shaped into

crosses and placed, alongside weeping willow branches, in shadowboxes. In some cases, the hair was sent

by mail to a specialized artisan who then returned it in the correct woven form. Hairwork became a form of

needlework, similar to needlepoint, and was popularized in women’s magazines at the time, such as

Godey’s Lady’s Book.

Love me forever Victorian morning

jewelry reliquary broach.

In the house that was previously occupied by the deceased, a

number of things had to be done before the first mourner

arrived to pay their respects. Portraits and mirrors in the

home (or anything shiny, like vases, in more extreme cases)

were covered in black crepe fabric. A simple black-ribboned

wreath, usually made of laurel, yew or boxwood, would be

placed on the door, and the front door knob would be

decorated with black ribbons. If the deceased were a child,

white ribbons would be used instead. Some people draped

their windows with black crepe as well. Every family

photograph in the house would be turned around to face the

wall, or, if it couldn’t be turned around, it was draped with

fabric like the others. Also, clocks would be stopped at the

time of death and left that way until the funeral ceremony

ended.

After the house was ready, death announcements or funeral announcements would be sent out. In

some cases, the announcements would be hand delivered, but they were mailed out as well. At one point

during the Victorian Era, people asked the post office to produce special mourning stamps, as their regular

colorful stamps were seen as too “cheery” to be used to mail out funeral announcements and death notices.

Once all of the mourners had paid their respects to the deceased, a funeral hearse would arrive to

carry the coffin to the church for a religious ceremony. This ceremony could be elaborate or simple,

depending on the religion and class status of the deceased and his or her family. The color of the draping on

the hearse indicated whether or not the dead was an adult (black cloth) or a child (white cloth). The burial

ritual at the ceremony was very similar to those practiced today, complete with a prayer and everyone

gathering around the casket.

When the funeral ceremony was complete, people would go back to the home of the deceased and

eat. A traditional tea or dinner was served. These mourning foods included ladyfingers, funeral pie, biscuits,

and cakes. There were also funeral cookies, wrapped in paper with the deceased’s name and dates of birth

and death printed on them. The meal was as simple or extravagant as the finances of the deceased’s family.

Post funeral meals were a tradition from ancient times that are still practiced today.

Sometimes the biscuits would be wrapped in white paper with black sealing wax and handed out as

funeral favors to those who couldn’t make it back to the house for the post-funeral meal. While some of the

food served was produced in the household of the deceased, other things were purchased. Commercial

bakeries made funeral biscuits wrapped in paper that were printed with “uplifting” quotes, poems and bible

verses. These can be compared to the holy cards given out today, and were kept as morbid souvenirs of the

deceased. Examples of Victorian mourning poems that were printed on these wrappings:


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When ghastly Death, with unrelenting hand,

Cuts down a father! brother! or a friend!

The still small voice should make you understand,

How afraid you are -- how near your final end.

But if regardless and still warned in vain,

No wonder if you sink to endless pain:

Be wise before it's too late, use well each hour

To make your calling and election sure.

AND

Thee we adore, eternal Name,

and humbly bow to thee,

How feeble is our mortal frame!

What dying worms we be.

Our wasting lives grow shorter still,

As days and months increase;

And every beating pulse we tell,

Leaves but the number less.

The year rolls round and steals away,

The breath that first it gave;

Whate'er we do, where'er we be,

We're traveling to the grave.

In addition, despite the religiosity of the time period, spiritualism was popular. This was a way of

communicating with the dead in the afterlife. Séances were held to communicate with deceased loved ones.

This is where the idea of the classic séance comes in – a spiritualist/psychic sitting at a round table holding

the hands of the loved ones who want to communicate with the deceased in the “other world.” And yes,

knocking, thumping noises, eerie noises, tables falling over or tilting, etc were all an expected part of the

séance. Although it could never be proven whether or not the psychic/medium ever contacted the dead, they

certainly put on a show while trying to. One of the most famous practitioners of this newfound

“spiritualism” was Mary Todd Lincoln, who held séances in the White House while her husband was

president. After his death, her beliefs in this grew even stronger.

Photography was in existence, but many could not afford it, so only pictures taken of their loved

ones happened after that particular loved one died. This led to death photography, where the dead would

either be photographed alone, in some cases, laying on a bed, in a coffin, or propped up sitting or standing

with the help of an elaborate set of stands. (Note: this practice is highly questioned today, and some

scholars believe that photographs of the dead were never taken. However, their dissent hasn’t been proven

either.) Makeup and prosthetic eyes would sometimes be applied to make the deceased look better, but

sometimes they just left the him or her looking, well, dead. In some cases, the living posed alongside their

dead loved one. This usually happened with children. Mourners would also have their photos taken holding

pictures or a book of pictures of the deceased, as this would illustrate and memorialize the depth of their

sorrow. In some cases, the photos of the dead would be taken in their homes, but in others, they would be

transported (presumably by hearse) to a photography studio.


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There was also spirit photography, which supposedly captured images of the dead was popular as

well. Sometimes the images of the dead were superimposed behind a depiction of the living, using a kind of

19 th century photoshop. In others, photos of the interior of the house were taken with ghostly images in

them. Both were proof of the afterlife, and that the deceased was still around.

In all, Victorian mourning is a series of interesting and complex rituals that truly hearken back to

another time period.

How To Set Up A Historic Home For A Victorian Mourning Ritual

Mirrors and portraits in the house must be covered with black cloth, preferably crepe.

In some cases, everything shiny in the house (vases, etc) was draped with black cloth as well.

All clocks must be stopped at the time the deceased passed into the next realm.

A black ribboned wreath is placed on the doors to the parlor. Other door knobs and hand rails are bedecked

with black ribbons. If the deceased is a child, then white ribbons are appropriate.

Someone must sit alongside the deceased until the funeral procession begins.

White flowers were placed alongside the coffin, which usually sat on sawhorses or ladder-backed chairs.

Mourning a spouse traditionally had three periods: deep mourning (the first year), second mourning (the

next 9 to 12 months after that), and half mourning (6 months after second mourning ended.)

Wakes traditionally took place in the home, although the body was embalmed at a funeral home.

The dead were carried out of the house feet first. This prevented him from looking back at the house and

trying to get another family member to follow him in death.

This was more than a down-home simple way of mourning. It was very regimented and stoic and proper.


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The Twenty Mule

Team and Borax -

a story of the old west.

Compiled and Edited by

John Veverka

Growing up as a child in Mansfield, Ohio, and watching black and white TV (we had 3 channels) in the

1950's there were lots of TV shows about the old west, from the Lone Ranger, to the Old Ranger, Death

Valley Days (photo below) . The latter TV show had many hosts, one of whom was Ronald Regan (during

his acting years) and those shows were sponsored by the Twenty-Mule Team Borax company. I even had

a model of the twenty-mule team to put together. So when I came across some articles on the subject, I

thought you might enjoy one of the true stories of the old west, cobbled together from several different

sources, just for fun. So let's start at the beginning.

First of all -what is Borax anyway. This old advertisement booklet explains. We'll meet Borax Bill a

little later in the story.


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The Twenty-mule teams.

Twenty-mule teams were teams of eighteen mules and two horses attached to large wagons that ferried

borax out of Death Valley from 1883 to 1889. They traveled from mines across the Mojave Desert to the

nearest railroad spur, 165 miles (275 km) away in Mojave. The routes were from the Harmony and

Amargosa Borax Works to Daggett, California, and later Mojave, California. After Harmony and Amargosa

shut down in 1888, the mule team's route was moved to the mines at Borate, 3 miles east of Calico, back to

Daggett. There they worked from 1891 until 1898 when they were replaced by the Borate and Daggett

Railroad.

The wagons were among the largest ever pulled by draft animals, designed to carry 10 short tons (9 metric

tons) of borax ore at a time.

In 1877, six years before twenty-mule teams had been introduced into Death Valley, Scientific American

reported that Francis Marion Smith and his brother had shipped their company's borax in a 30-ton load

using two large wagons, with a third wagon for food and water, drawn by a 24-mule team over a 160-mile

stretch of desert between Teel's Marsh and Wadsworth, Nevada.

The twenty-mule-team wagons were designed to carry 10 short tons (9 metric tons) of borax ore at a time.

The rear wheels measured seven feet (2.1 m) high, with tires made of one-inch-thick (25 mm) iron. The

wagon beds measured 16 feet long and were 6 feet deep (4.9 m long, 1.8 m deep); constructed of solid oak,

they weighed 7,800 pounds (3,500 kg) empty; when loaded with ore, the total weight of the mule train was

73,200 pounds (33.2 metric tons or 36.6 short tons).

The first wagon was the trailer, the second was "the tender" or the "back action", and the tank wagon

brought up the rear.

With the mules, the caravan stretched over 180 feet (55 m). No wagon ever broke down in transit on the

desert due to their construction.


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A 1,200-U.S.-gallon (4542.49 L) water tank was added to supply the mules with water en route. There were

water barrels on the wagons for the teamster and the swamper. Water supplies were refilled at springs along

the way, as it was not possible to carry enough water for the entire trip. The tank water was used at dry

camps and water stops.

Borax wagons with the water tank.

The June 1940 issue of Desert Magazine confirms that the primary water tank was 1200 U.S. gallons. This

detail is also given in "The History Behind the Scale Model".

An efficient system of dispersing feed and water along the road was put in use. Teams outbound from

Mojave, pulling empty wagons, hauled their own feed and supplies, which were dropped off at successive

camps as the outfit traveled. The supplies would be on hand to use when a loaded wagon came back the

other way, and no payload space was wasted. There was one stretch of road where a 500-gallon wagon was

added to take water to a dry camp for the team that would be coming from the opposite direction. The

arriving team would use the water and take the empty tank back to the spring on their haul the next day,

ready for re-filling and staging by the next outbound outfit.

The teams hauled more than 20 million pounds (9,000 metric tons) of borax out of Death Valley in the six

years of the operation. Pacific Coast Borax began shipping their borax by train in 1898.

Horses were the wheelers, the two closest to the wagon. They were ridden by one of the two men generally

required to operate the wagons and were typically larger than their mule brethren. They had great brute

strength for starting the wagons moving and could withstand the jarring of the heavy wagon tongue, but the

mules were smarter and better suited to work in desert conditions. In the Proceedings Fifth Death Valley

Conference on History and Prehistory, two articles discussed freight operations in the Mojave with specific

details on the use of mules and horses. In "Of Myths and Men: Separating Fact from Fiction in the Twenty

Mule Team Story", author Ted Fave discussed how the teams were assembled, trained, and used. "Nadeau's

Freighting Teams in the Mojave", based on Remi Nadeau's historic accomplishments hauling freight

throughout the desert region, gives further insight as to the superiority of mules for general use.

The teamster drove the team with a single long rein, known as a "jerk line", and the aid of a long blacksnake

whip. The teamster usually rode the left wheeler, but he could also drive from the trailer seat, working the

brake on steep descents. The swamper usually rode the trailer, but in hilly country, he would be on the back

action available to work the brake.


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From the trailer, armed with a can of small rocks, he could pelt an inattentive mule and send it back to

work. Both men were responsible for readying the team, feeding and watering of the mules, and any

veterinary care or repairs that needed to be done. There was a mid-day stop to feed and water the mules in

harness. The night stops had corrals and feed boxes for the mules. A day's travel averaged about 17 miles,

varying slightly from leg to leg. It took about ten days to make a trip one way. Cabins were constructed by

the company for use of drivers and swampers at the night stops.

Francis Marion Smith, who came to be known as "Borax Smith", founded Pacific Borax. Cora Keagle

recounted his history in an article, "Buckboard Days in Borate", published in Desert Magazine in September

1939. Smith was a great promoter and sent drivers out with jerk-line teams to major U.S. cities to promote

the company's laundry product with free samples. The exhibition teams were typically mules for the

promotion value, but Smith explained that in actual use, wheel horses were a standard practice. Outside

contractors hauling for the company typically used mixed teams. Francis Marion Smith, who came to be

known as "Borax Smith", founded Pacific Borax. Cora Keagle recounted his history in an article,

"Buckboard Days in Borate", published in Desert Magazine in September 1939. Smith was a great promoter

and sent drivers out with jerk-line teams to major U.S. cities to promote the company's laundry product with

free samples. The exhibition teams were typically mules for the promotion value, but Smith explained that

in actual use, wheel horses were a standard practice. Outside contractors hauling for the company typically

used mixed teams.

Francis Marion Smith,

Joe Zentner wrote of the origins of the advertising campaign on the Desert USA website in "Twenty Mule

Teams on the move in Death Valley". Bill Parkinson, formerly a night watchman for the company, had to

learn quickly how to drive the team when he was given the role of "Borax Bill". He was the first, but not the

last, driver known by that name. The 1904 St. Louis World's Fair was the maiden appearance for the team

and was such a success that Parkinson went on tour.


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The team eventually made its way to New York City, parading down Broadway. After that showing, the

mules were sold, and the wagons shipped back to California. The mules also appeared at the Golden Gate

Bridge dedication, according to "The Last Ride, the Borax Twenty Mule Team 1883 - 1999".

A short item in the June 1940 edition of Desert Magazine mentioned that two of the original borax wagons

were en route to the New York World's Fair. The item followed with the note that muleskinner "Borax

Bill" Parkinson [3] had driven an original wagon from Oakland, California, to New York City in 1917,

spending two years on the journey. The mule team also made periodic re-enactment appearances on hauls

into Death Valley.

In 1958, a twenty-mule team made a symbolic haul out of the new pit at U.S. Borax, commemorating the

transition from underground to open-pit mining. [11] Other appearances for twenty-mule teams included

President Wilson's inauguration in 1917. [12]

Promotional team appearances ended with an outing in the January 1, 1999, Rose Parade. The team had a

shakedown outing in a 1998 Boron, California, parade. The company spent $100,000, refitting the 115-

year-old wagons and obtaining harness and mules for the performance. There were no plans for additional

public appearances for advertising purposes, as the company no longer had a retail product line.

U.S. Borax put out a paperback publication entitled The Last Ride, the Borax Twenty Mule Team 1883 -

1999 that included many details about the history of the team and the preparation for the Rose Parade

outing. There is a photo of Borax Bill driving the team down Broadway in New York City with bells on

every animal. Most of the time, only the leaders wore bells. Another picture shows the team in San

Francisco in 1917. This picture clearly shows the teamster on a horse. Another historic picture shows a

working borax freight team with a mixture of horses and mules. https://www.amazon.com/Last-Ride-

Borax-Twenty-Mule/dp/B0016G0XSG


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References:

Of Myths and Men: Separating Fact from Fiction in the Twenty Mule Team Story, by Ted Faye,

Proceedings Fifth Death Valley Conference on History and Prehistory.

Desert Magazine, http://www.scribd.com/doc/2095190/193909-Desert-Magazine-1939-September Desert

Magazine September 1939, Buckboard Days in Borate.

The Last Ride, the Borax Twenty Mule Team 1883 - 1999.

Proceedings Fifth Death Valley Conference on History and Prehistory: Remi Nadeau's Freighting Teams in

the Southern Mining Camps; Of Myths and Men: Separating Fact from Fiction in the Twenty-Mule Team

Story. Community Printing and Publishing, Bishop, California 93514. 1999. ISBN 0-912494-05-0.

Owens Valley History Mysteries

www.owensvalleyhistory.com/ovh_mystery/page79.html

539 x 150 · 42 kB · jpeg

Ghosts of the Past 4

www.owensvalleyhistory.com/20_mule_team2/page9c.html

539 x 150 · 42 kB · jpeg

Death Valley and The 20 Mule Team

maid4ugreenville.blogspot.com/2012_11_01_archive.html

935 x 260 · 102 kB · jpeg

https://www.bing.com/images/search?view=detailV2&ccid=tduZtiTc&id=4FE77E838D994813D04FA0DE

64E846A9A5C15390&q=20+Mule+Team+Death+Valley&simid=608034007445081643&selectedIndex=1

&ajaxhist=0


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9 Halloween Tales &

Traditions

HISTORY.COM EDITORS

On Halloween, people shed reality for a day and mark the holiday with costumes, decorations and parties.

Creepy legends and characters have evolved based on real, terrifying events. And a Halloween tradition of

confronting the dead has led to legions of ghost stories—and hoaxes.

Read about Halloween traditions and legends:

A Fear of Vampires Spawned by Consumption

llustration of a family member dying from consumption in the 19th century.

Duncan 1890/Getty Images


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During the 19th century, the spread of tuberculosis, or consumption, claimed the lives of entire

families in Rhode Island, Connecticut, Vermont and other parts of New England.

Before physicians were able to explain how infectious diseases were spread, hopeless villagers

believed that some of those who perished from consumption preyed upon their living family

members. This spurred a grim practice of digging up the dead and burning their internal organs.

Why Witches Fly on Brooms

The evil green-skinned witch flying on her magic broomstick may be a Halloween icon—and a

well-worn stereotype. But the actual history behind how witches came to be associated with such

an everyday household object is anything but dull.

The earliest known image of witches on brooms dates to 1451, when two illustrations appeared in

the French poet Martin Le Franc’s manuscript Le Champion des Dames (The Defender of Ladies).

The association between witches and brooms may have roots in a pagan fertility ritual, in which

rural farmers would leap and dance astride poles, pitchforks or brooms in the light of the full moon

to encourage the growth of their crops. This “broomstick dance" became confused with common

accounts of witches flying through the night on their way to orgies and other illicit meetings.


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Why Haunted Houses Opened During the Great Depression

Halloween night mischief inspired communities to open haunted houses during the Great

Depression. Quavond/Getty Images

In the period leading up to the Great Depression, Halloween had become a time when young men

could blow off steam—and cause mischief. Sometimes they went too far. In 1933, parents were

outraged when hundreds of teenage boys flipped over cars, sawed off telephone poles and engaged

in other acts of vandalism across the country. People began to refer to that year’s holiday as

“Black Halloween,” similarly to the way they referred to the stock market crash four years earlier

as “Black Tuesday.”

Rather than banning the holiday, as some demanded, many communities began organizing

Halloween activities—and haunted houses—to keep restless would-be pranksters occupied.

Jack-o-Lanterns and the Legend of 'Stingy Jack'

The original Jack-o-lanterns

were carved out of turnips.

Sandsun/Getty Images


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An Irish myth about a man nicknamed “Stingy Jack” is believed to have led to the tradition of

carving scary faces into gourds. According to the legend, Jack tricks the Devil into paying for his

drink and then traps him in the form of a coin. The Devil eventually takes revenge and Stingy Jack

ends up roaming Earth for eternity without a place in heaven or hell. Jack does, however, have a

lighted coal, which he places inside a carved turnip, creating the original Jack-o-lantern.

Abraham Lincoln’s 'Ghost' in the White House

For years, presidents, first ladies, guests,

and members of the White House staff

have claimed to have either seen Abraham

Lincoln or felt his presence. Grace

Coolidge, wife of Calvin Coolidge, the

30th president, was the first person to

report having seen the ghost of Abraham

Lincoln. She said he stood at a window of

the Oval Office, hands clasped behind his

back, gazing out over the Potomac,

perhaps still seeing the bloody battlefields

beyond.

One of the last photographs of President

Abraham Lincoln taken on March 6, 1865.

Library of Congress


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Spirit Photography Claims to Capture Ghosts on Film

In the post-Civil War era, when many

Americans were reeling from loss, a

photographer named William Mumler

claimed to capture ghosts on film. While

taking self-portraits for practice, one of

Mumler’s prints came back with an

unexplainable aberration. Although he

was “quite alone in the room” when the

shot was taken, there appeared to be a

figure at his side, a girl who was “made

of light.”

Mumler showed the photo to a

spiritualist friend who told him the girl

in the image was almost certainly a

ghost. Mumler then began a swift

business in so-called spirit photography.

A "spirit" photograph taken by William

Mumler in the post-Civil War era.

The J. Paul Getty Museum

Irving Writes ‘The Legend of Sleepy Hollow’ After Fleeing Yellow

Fever

Washington Irving's 1820 tale of a headless horseman who terrorizes the real-life village of Sleepy

Hollow is considered one of America's first ghost stories—and one of its scariest. Irving may have

drawn inspiration for his story while a teenager in Tarrytown, New York. He moved to the area in

1798 to flee a yellow fever outbreak in New York City.

Irving’s story takes place in the New York village of Sleepy Hollow. A lanky newcomer and

schoolmaster, Ichabod Crane, is chased by a headless horseman. In the tale, Irving weaves together

actual locations and family names, and a little bit of Revolutionary War history with pure

imagination and fantasy.


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An illustration from 'The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.'

Smithsonian American Art Museum, museum purchase made possible in part by the Catherine Walden

Myer Endowment, the Julia D. Strong Endowment, and the Director's Discretionary Fund

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow resurfaces every year around Halloween. Washington Irving's 1820

tale of a headless horseman who terrorizes the real-life village of Sleepy Hollow is considered one

of America's first ghost stories—and one of its scariest.

But Irving didn’t invent the idea of a headless rider. Tales of headless horsemen can be traced to

the Middle Ages, including stories from the Brothers Grimm and the Dutch and Irish legend of the

“Dullahan” or “Gan Ceann,” a Grim Reaper-like rider who carries his head.

Elizabeth Bradley, a historian at Historic Hudson Valley, says a likely source for Irving’s

horseman can be found in Sir Walter Scott’s 1796 The Chase, which is a translation of the German

poem The Wild Huntsman by Gottfried Bürger and likely based on Norse mythology.

“Irving had just met and become friends with Scott in 1817 so it's very likely he was influenced by

his new mentor's work,” she says, “The poem is about a wicked hunter who is doomed to be hunted

forever by the devil and the ‘dogs of hell’ as punishment for his crimes.”

According to the New York Historical Society, others believe Irving was inspired by “an actual

Hessian soldier who was decapitated by a cannonball during the Battle of White Plains, around

Halloween 1776.”


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A Brief History of Creepy

Clowns

Becky Little

The spectre of the “creepy clown” has gotten a lot of attention as of late. Beginning in August

2016, creepy (and fake) clown sightings spread across the U.S. and other countries, creating a kind

of viral clown panic. And as summer came to a close in 2017, killer clowns came for American

audiences in the TV show American Horror Story: Cult and the film remake IT, which earned

$123 million at the box office on its opening weekend.

Why exactly have creepy clowns become such a trope in pop culture? After all, didn’t they used to

be happy and cheerful? Well, not exactly, according to Benjamin Radford, author of Bad Clowns.

“It’s a mistake to ask when clowns went bad,” he says, “because they were never really good.”

The “trickster,” he explains, is one of the oldest and most pervasive archetypes in the world (think

Satan in the Bible). The trickster can be both funny and scary, and he (it’s usually a “he”) makes it

hard for others to tell whether he’s lying. Clowns are a type of trickster that have been around for

a long time—one of the most recognizable is the harlequin, a figure who emerged in Italian

commedia dell’arte theatre in the 16th century.


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The harlequin was known for his colorful masks and clothing with diamond-shaped patterns, and

often served as the comical, amoral servant in plays that toured throughout Europe. These plays

also inspired a clownish puppet named “Punch,” who appeared in British shows starting in at least

the 18th century. The character would later be written into a popular puppet show called “Punch

and Judy,” in which Punch cracked jokes, beat his wife, and murdered his child.

Punch is a “gleeful madcap colorful character, but he’s also this horrific monster,” Radford says,

noting that creepy clowns appeal across age groups, not only to kids, but to teens and adults as

well. “It’s this strange mix of horror and humor that has always drawn us to clowns.

Bad—or at least, sad—clowns continued to appear in European culture throughout the 19th

century. Charles Dickens’ novel The Pickwick Papers (1836) featured an alcoholic clown; and in

the 1880s and ‘90s, both a French play and an Italian opera centered on murderous clowns (one

play was accused of plagiarizing the other).

These complicated clowns made it to America, too. In 1924, U.S. audiences met a bitter and

vengeful clown in the silent film He Who Gets Slapped. A decade and a half later, a prankster

villain named the Joker make his debut in a Batman comic. And even though Emmett Kelly, Jr.,

one of the most famous American circus clowns in the early 20th century, was no villain, neither

was he cheerful. Rather, his “Weary Willie” character was a hobo clown with a painted-on frown.

But then came a change. In the 1950s and ‘60s, American television introduced audiences to a

couple of new clowns who were always happy.


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“Ronald McDonald being in commercials spread ‘the happy clown’ across the country,” Radford

says of the fast food mascot. “Same thing with Bozo the Clown. There were dozens of Bozos in

different regions that were very, very popular during the era. So it was really television that helped

propel the sort of default happy/good clown into the public’s consciousness.”

Yet by the late 1970s and early ‘80s, the American image of the clown was already shifting again,

this time toward something more sinister. One of the influences in this shift was the media

coverage of John Wayne Gacy, a serial murderer who had occasionally dressed as “Pogo the

Clown.” Radford notes that Gacy was not a professional clown, and that he didn’t dress up as Pogo

very often or use his costume to lure children (his victims were teenagers and young men). But

once in jail, Gacy helped cultivate his image as a killer clown in the media by drawing selfportraits

of himself as Pogo.

Then came IT, the Stephen King novel about a scary, supernatural clown who lurks around the

suburbs and murders children (this was part of a bigger shift toward scary suburban scenarios in

the horror film genre). After the novel came out in 1986, it was adapted into a TV movie starring

Tim Curry as Pennywise the Dancing Clown.


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Which means that once again, television brought a new clown into people’s living rooms—a

threatening, child-harming one—that recent creepy clown panics suggest viewers have not shaken

since. In 2013, residents in the U.K. town of Northampton were alarmed by a man who wandered

around town wearing a mask reminiscent of Curry’s Pennywise and occasionally yelled out lines

from the movie (turns out it was just some 22-year-old causing problems).

The United States’ 2016 clown panic, too, had echoes of IT’s mystical, murderous villain. King

certainly didn’t invent the evil clown. But he may have helped make Americans paranoid that one

could be lurking outside their doors.


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History of Witches

History.Com Editors

Witches were perceived as evil beings by early Christians in Europe, inspiring the iconic

Halloween figure.

Images of witches have appeared in various forms throughout history—from evil, wart-nosed

women huddling over a cauldron of boiling liquid to hag-faced, cackling beings riding through the

sky on brooms wearing pointy hats. In pop culture, the witch has been portrayed as a benevolent,

nose-twitching suburban housewife; an awkward teenager learning to control her powers and a trio

of charmed sisters battling the forces of evil. The real history of witches, however, is dark and,

often for the witches, deadly.

The Origin of Witches

Early witches were people who practiced witchcraft, using magic spells and calling upon spirits for

help or to bring about change. Most witches were thought to be pagans doing the Devil’s work.

Many, however, were simply natural healers or so-called “wise women” whose choice of profession

was misunderstood.


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It’s unclear exactly when witches came on the historical scene, but one of the earliest records of a

witch is in the Bible in the book of 1 Samuel, thought be written between 931 B.C. and 721 B.C. It

tells the story of when King Saul sought the Witch of Endor to summon the dead prophet Samuel’s

spirit to help him defeat the Philistine army.

The witch roused Samuel, who then prophesied the death of Saul and his sons. The next day,

according to the Bible, Saul’s sons died in battle, and Saul committed suicide.

Other Old Testament verses condemn witches, such as the oft-cited Exodus 22:18, which says,

“thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.” Additional Biblical passages caution against divination,

chanting or using witches to contact the dead.

'Malleus Maleficarum'

Witch hysteria really took hold in Europe during the mid-1400s, when many accused witches

confessed, often under torture, to a variety of wicked behaviors. Within a century, witch hunts

were common and most of the accused were executed by burning at the stake or hanging. Single

women, widows and other women on the margins of society were especially targeted.

Between the years 1500 and 1660, up to 80,000 suspected witches were put to death in Europe.

Around 80 percent of them were women thought to be in cahoots with the Devil and filled with

lust. Germany had the highest witchcraft execution rate, while Ireland had the lowest.

The publication of “Malleus Maleficarum”—written by two well-respected German Dominicans in

1486—likely spurred witch mania to go viral. The book, usually translated as “The Hammer of

Witches,” was essentially a guide on how to identify, hunt and interrogate witches.


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"Malleus Maleficarum" labeled witchcraft as heresy, and quickly became the authority for

Protestants and Catholics trying to flush out witches living among them. For more than 100 years,

the book sold more copies of any other book in Europe except the Bible.

Salem Witch Trials

As witch hysteria decreased in Europe, it grew in the New World, which was reeling from wars

between the French and British, a smallpox epidemic and the ongoing fear of attacks from

neighboring native American tribes. The tense atmosphere was ripe for finding scapegoats.

Probably the best-known witch trials took place in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692.

The Salem witch trials began when 9-year-old Elizabeth Parris and 11-year-old Abigail Williams

began suffering from fits, body contortions and uncontrolled screaming (today, it is believed that

they were poisoned by a fungus that caused spasms and delusions).


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As more young women began to exhibit symptoms, mass hysteria ensued, and three women were

accused of witchcraft: Sarah Good, Sarah Osborn and Tituba, an enslaved woman owned by

Parris’s father. Tituba confessed to being a witch and began accusing others of using black magic.

On June 10, Bridget Bishop became the first accused witch to be put to death during the Salem

Witch Trials when she was hanged at the Salem gallows. Ultimately, around 150 people were

accused and 18 were put to death. Women weren’t the only victims of the Salem Witch Trials; six

men were also convicted and executed.

Massachusetts wasn’t the first of the 13 colonies to obsess about witches, though. In

Windsor, Connecticut in 1647, Alse Young was the first person in America executed for

witchcraft. Before Connecticut’s final witch trial took place in 1697, forty-six people were accused

of witchcraft in that state and 11 were put to death for the crime.

In Virginia, people were less frantic about witches. In fact, in Lower Norfolk County in 1655, a

law was passed making it a crime to falsely accuse someone of witchcraft. Still, witchcraft was a

concern. About two-dozen witch trials (mostly of women) took place in Virginia between 1626 and

1730. None of the accused were executed.

Are Witches Real?

One of the most famous witches in Virginia’s history is Grace Sherwood, whose neighbors alleged

she killed their pigs and hexed their cotton. Other accusations followed and Sherwood was brought

to trial in 1706.

The court decided to use a controversial water test to determine her guilt or innocence. Sherwood’s

arms and legs were bound and she was thrown into a body of water. It was thought if she sank, she

was innocent; if she floated, she was guilty. Sherwood didn’t sink and was convicted of being a

witch. She wasn’t killed but put in prison and for eight years.


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A satirical article (supposedly written by Benjamin Franklin) about a witch trial in New Jersey was

published in 1730 in the Pennsylvania Gazette. It brought to light the ridiculousness of some

witchcraft accusations. It wasn’t long before witch mania died down in the New World and laws

were passed to help protect people from being wrongly accused and convicted.

Book of Shadows

Modern-day witches of the Western World still struggle to shake their historical stereotype. Most

practice Wicca, an official religion in the United States and Canada.

Wiccans avoid evil and the appearance of evil at all costs. Their motto is to “harm none,” and they

strive to live a peaceful, tolerant and balanced life in tune with nature and humanity.

Many modern-day witches still perform witchcraft, but there’s seldom anything sinister about it.

Their spells and incantations are often derived from their Book of Shadows, a 20th-century

collection of wisdom and witchcraft, and can be compared to the act of prayer in other religions. A

modern-day witchcraft potion is more likely to be an herbal remedy for the flu instead of a hex to

harm someone.

Today’s witchcraft spells are usually used to stop someone from doing evil or harming themselves.

Ironically, while it’s probable some historical witches used witchcraft for evil purposes, many may

have embraced it for healing or protection against the immorality they were accused of.


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But witches—whether actual or accused—still face persecution and death. Several men and women

suspected of using witchcraft have been beaten and killed in Papua New Guinea since 2010,

including a young mother who was burned alive. Similar episodes of violence against people

accused of being witches have occurred in Africa, South America, the Middle East and in

immigrant communities in Europe and the United States

.

Sources

About Wicca. The Celtic Connection.

Case Study: The European Witch Hunts, c. 1450-1750 and Witch Hunts Today. Gendercide Watch.

The Salem Witch Trials. Oxford Research Encyclopedias.

Witchcraft: Creation of the “evil other.” Susan Moulton, Sonoma State University.

Witchcraft in Colonial Virginia. Encyclopedia of Virginia.

Witchcraft: The Beginnings. University of Chicago.

Witches and Witchcraft: The First Person Executed in the Colonies. State of Connecticut Judicial

Branch Law Library Services.

Demonology: The Malleus Maleficarum—Proliferating Witch Hysteria. Mount Holyoke College.

The Persecution of Witches, 21st-Century Style. The New York Times.

Women and Witches: Patterns of Analysis. The University of Chicago Press.


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History of Zombies from Ancient

Times to Pop Culture.

Kimberly Lin

Origin of “Zombie”

The word zombie most likely derives from the West African Kimbundu word “nzambi,” the name for a

snake god or any divine spirit. It later came to mean “reanimated corpse” in the voodoo tradition (Online

Etymology Dictionary). In Haitian Creole or Haitian French, the zombie describes a monster from Haitian

folklore. As per the legend, a zombie is a dead body that has been reanimated by black magic. The word

first entered the English language in 1819, when the poet Robert Southey wrote “History of Brazil.” Over a

century later, W.B. Seabrook wrote a novel that introduced zombies to America, “The Magic Island,” which

was about Haitian voodoo cults and their zombie minions. The first horror r movie about zombies, “White

Zombie,” came out three years later in 1932.

Zombies in the Stone Age

The history of zombies may go back all the way to the Stone Age. Some scholars believe that fear of

reanimated corpses may have led to the evolution of the gravestone. Originally, people would place cairns

or piles of rocks over a freshly buried body to make sure it could not dig its way out. In the article, “The

Surprising History Behind Gravestones,” Mica Matlack explains that the usage of gravestones was to keep

the dead in their graves:

In the stone age, when humans were still nomadic in nature, the dead d would be buried and a great stone or

boulder rolled atop the grave. These stones were called gravestones and their purpose was to prevent the

deceased from rising after death, a fear still prevalent in modern society.

In Syria, Archaeologists found skulls s from a site that they dated at 10,000 years old. Someone bashed the

skulls in and completely removed them from the rest of their bodies. Apparently, this ritual was a tradition

for some time in the Europe/Near East region, as archaeologists have found other sites like this. Although

scholars have posed many viable theories, Juan José Ibañez from the Spanish National Research Council in

Barcelona says that “the find may suggest that Stone Age cultures believed dead young men were a threat to

the world of the living. (New Scientist)

Ancient Greek Zombies

In the 1980s, archaeologists found graves in a necropolis in Sicily, which was colonized by Greeks around

800 BC. Some of the tombs contained bodies pinned down with rocks and other heavy objects. Experts

speculate that those particular sites may have belonged to people whom the Greeks thought were capable of

rising from their graves. To prevent a revenant from getting out, the ancient Greeks would either incinerate,

dismember, or restrain the individual in its grave. Dr. Carrie L. Sulosky Weaver, archaeologist and

researcher of the Passo Marinaro necropolis in Sicily explains:


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Skulls found in Syria crushed and detached from their bodies. Credit: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones

Cientificas.

“In the ancient world, revenants are feared because it is believed that they leave their graves at night for the

explicit purpose of harming the living…revenants could be trapped in their graves by being tied, staked,

flipped onto their stomachs, buried exceptionally deep, or pinned with rocks or other heavy objects.

Tomb number 653 in Kamarina’s Passo Marinaro necropolis contains an adult whose head and feet are

completely covered by large fragments of an amphora (a ceramic storage vessel), presumably intended to

pin the individual to the grave and prevent it from seeing or rising. The second tomb, number 693, contains

a child approximately 8 to 13 years old, with five large stones placed on top. Like the amphora fragments, it

appears that these stones were used to trap the body in its grave.”


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Tomb 653 showing feet and head of adult body weighted down with amphora. Credit: D. Weiss from

G. Di Stefano’s excavation journals.

Tomb 693 showing 5 stones placed atop a child. Credit: D. Weiss from G. Di Stefano’s excavation journals.


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Greek Beliefs About Zombies

The ancient Greeks believed that certain people were especially likely to return as revenants. Those people

included suicides, murder victims, and illegitimate children. Additionally, babies born on an unlucky day or

with congenital defects, and people who had died from drowning, plague, or a curse could rise again. Since

the initial find in the 1980s, archaeologists have found more revenant graves, including some in Cyprus that

were buried between 4500 and 3800 BC and were pinned down by millstones.

The Undead Around the World

Norse mythology describes the draugr, which is a revenant or undead creature. The word draugr means

“again walker.” They live in their tombs but can escape to visit the living to find victims. Draugr are

generally very large and swollen, ugly, and black. If someone is bitten by one, the bitten person can become

a draugr. The Norse monster kills its victims by crushing them or eating them alive, flesh, and blood.

However, unlike the more modern zombie, the draugr has a variety of supernatural powers. This undead

creature can shape-shift and can also drive someone mad or enter into their dreams.

In China, the Jiang Shi, which is Chinese for “stiff corpse,” combines the attributes of the zombie and the

vampire. The Jiang Shi are often people who had been the victims of suicide or murder. They can look more

or less normal, if recently dead, or their bodies can have mold and decaying flesh on them. The Chinese

zombie moves by hopping.

Norse mythology describes the draugr, which is a revenant or undead creature. The word draugr means

“again walker.”


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The Strigoi is a Romanian zombie that also includes many traits of the vampire. They drink blood and can

transform into animals. People become strigoi if they’ve led troubled or unfinished lives. People who are

illegitimate or die before becoming baptized may also become strigoi. Because those who die without

marrying are also at risk, some communities will marry the corpse to a living person of around the same age

to prevent them from rising as a strigoi.

From Africa to Haiti and America

The history of zombies in Haiti has an African origin. As noted, the word zombie goes back to West Africa,

as does the religion of Voodoo. However, the West African zombie did not have a body; it was formless. In

some South African countries, they believed in physical zombies with bodies. In those countries, children or

witches could turn someone into a zombie. A witch could kill a person and then reanimate the body to use

for her own personal deeds.

Ideas about zombies and the practice of voodoo migrated throughout the world with the slave trade. In just

one example, the French ruled Haiti from 1625 to 1804, and they established sugar plantations. Thus, they

imported slaves from Africa to operate the plantations, and those slaves brought their folklore and beliefs

with them. Likewise, a similar story occurred in America.

Haitian Voodoo Beliefs About the Dead

Haitians, in general, practice Voodoo. Followers of the religion believe that all deaths are categorized as

natural, like old age or disease, and unnatural, like murder. The spirits of people who die from unnatural

causes tend to linger near their grave, for they have to wait for approval from the gods before they can join

their ancestors. Souls in this state are vulnerable to abduction by a powerful bokor or sorcerer who can

imprison the soul in a jar and use it to control their body.


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Interestingly, Haitians find the bokor far more frightening than the zombie, for the zombie is completely at

the bokor’s mercy and has to obey them. Some bokors are benevolent and use the zombie to help them

perform healing magic. An evil bokor, however, might murder someone in order to bind them as a zombie –

and Haitians find the prospect of such servitude terrifying.

History of Zombies in Pop Culture

The history of zombies around the world is a long one, and thus, it has inspired many depictions in popular

culture. One of the very first fictional stories about the undead was Philinnion and Machates, written by

Phlegon of Tralles, the Greek author of the Olympiads. The story tells of a young woman, Philinnion, who

dies, but comes back to life and returns to her parents’ home. She proceeds to have sex with a visitor,

Machates, at the home repeatedly over the course of a few nights. She explains that the gods of the

underworld approved her resurrection, and then she suddenly dies again.

Perhaps the most famous single zombie of all times is Dr. Frankenstein’s monster, the main character in

Mary Shelley’s novel of 1818. Frankenstein reanimated his monster with lightning and the creature had

many of the features of the modern zombie. However, Shelly personified him with human emotion, evident

in the rage he felt as a result of the rejection he faced.

As noted, the first zombie movie ever made was Victor Halperin’s 1932 White Zombie, in which the famous

Bela Lugosi starred as the antagonist. The plot involved a woman in Haiti who an evil voodoo priest turns

into a zombie. The priest uses a magic potion that “kills” her and then allows her to live again.

More Recent Zombie Films

George Romero made Night of the Living Dead in 1968. It is considered one of the most influential horror

movies ever. It arguably introduced the idea of the “zombie apocalypse” and portrayed zombies as

aggressive predators rather than mindless slaves. Living Dead influenced and inspired later portrayals of

zombies like 28 Days Later (2002) and the acclaimed TV show The Walking Dead.


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Generally, the modern zombie has fewer characteristics of the voodoo zombie, which had supernatural

roots. Black magic and possession control the voodoo zombie. However, most modern zombies have a

biological basis. They are the result of a contagious virus that attacks and kills the human. But allows it to

reanimate into flesh-eating creatures. The zombie apocalypse is based on this premise.

The Stone Age to the Information Age

Humans have been preoccupied with the undead for a long time. The history of zombies is a worldwide

phenomenon. Our society, in general, has grown to love the zombie, and today it is a nearly $6 billion

industry. The idea has persisted throughout time, geographic regions, and cultures, and readily found its

way to the information age, where we can’t wait to stream all the best zombie flicks…in HD.

References:

Anthropology MSU

University of Michigan

Bible of Mysteries

Ancient History Encyclopedia

The University of Virginia Magazine

KIMBERLY LIN

Kimberly is a writer and the content manager for Historic Mysteries. If she's not plunging down the SEO

rabbit hole, she's visiting some ancient site in Italy, where she currently lives in the middle of an active

caldera. Kimberly will continue to venture around the world and write about the history she encounters.


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Cahokia Mounds: The

Largest Ancient City in

North America.

Kimberly Lin.

In Southern Illinois, situated along the Mississippi River in Collinsville, an ancient settlement that we call

Cahokia rose to great power between 800-1200 CE. Nicknamed America’s Forgotten City or The City of

the Sun, the massive complex once contained as many as 40,000 people and spread across nearly 4,000

acres. The most notable features of the site are hand-made earthen mounds which held temples, political

buildings, and burial pits. Cahokia Mounds are a testament to the highly organized culture of the early

Mississippian people who built the largest city in pre-Columbian North America.


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The Rise of the Mound Culture

Small villages first emerged along Cahokia Creek beginning around 600 CE. Subsequently, the climate

warmed and more rain found its way to Southern Illinois. Thus, villagers could easily grow an abundance of

food. As a result, thousands of people migrated to the area around the Mississippi River. Then as time went

on, the Mississippians created a unified culture all their own and began building mounds across their land in

the ninth century.

By about 1000 CE, the Mississippians had built the largest civilization in North America. In fact, some

people have referred to it as a kingdom, because the Mississippian culture reached up to the Great Lakes and

down to the entire southeastern region of North America. The city became the pre-eminent center of

religious and political power and may have even controlled a vast trade network from the Rocky Mountains

to the Gulf of Mexico.

Although today we call the site Cahokia Mounds, no one knows the original name of the city. French

explorers in the 1600s named Cahokia after the Cahokia tribe, which lived in the area around that time.

However, they may not have had any relation to the original mound builders.

Culture of the Mound Builders

The Mississippian culture may have originated and, indeed, reached its apex at Cahokia Mounds. The

mound builders lived in the Mississippi Valley, Ohio, Oklahoma, and into the midwest and southeast. They

worshipped the Sun and other celestial beings within a well-developed religion. Additionally, their lives

revolved around warfare, and sacrifices were common. In many ways, however, it was the impressive

Cahokia mounds that defined the culture of the Mississippians.

Contrary to early beliefs, the Mississippian mound-builders had sophisticated farming tools, pottery,

astronomy, and copper-work. Religion, cosmology, and an organized pantheon of gods were central in the

Mississippian life and led to the development of temples within the Cahokia mound complex.

The game of chunkey emerged during the region’s early occupation. This was an important sport in which a

player rolled a stone disc and had to throw a spear as close to the stopped stone as possible. The

Mississippians played this game in the grand plaza surrounded by the largest mounds in the capital.

However, this was not all for fun. The losers and their family members paid with their lives in ritual

sacrifice.


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Building the Cahokia Mounds

- There were three types of mounds: flat-top platform, conical, and ridge-top. The most common was the

platform mound.

- Most of the mounds were built between the ninth and 13th centuries.

- The purposes of the mounds varied. Platform mounds with flat tops supported dwellings, temples, and

stages for festivals and religious/political ceremonies. Conical and ridgetop mounds appear to have served

as burial sites and

landmarks.

- Clay, topsoil, shells, or stones served as the materials in Cahokia mound construction. The largest mounds

contained a high percentage of clay to hinder water seepage and erosion.

- All the mounds were hand-made. Workers dug or gathered building material from one area and carried it

in baskets on their backs to the construction site. They tamped soil and clay one layer at a time to create the

earthen mounds.

Cahokia’s Important Features

Monks Mound

Of the many structures within Cahokia Mounds, the most impressive is Monks Mound pyramid.

Archaeologists believe that fourteen successive stages of construction took place between the years 900 and

1100 (Unesco). Containing over 25 million cubic feet of soil, the mound rises 100 feet into the air and

covers 14 acres. These staggering figures make the Monks Mound pyramid the largest prehistoric earthen

structure north of Mexico.


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Artist’s (Michael Hampshire) interpretation of Monks Mound towering over daily life. Photo: Cahokia

Historic State Park.

Monks Mound is a towering central structure amidst four large plazas in the city. It overlooked the Grand

Plaza surrounded by the stockade. On the top of the mound, a large wooden building sat surrounded by a

protective palisade wall. The purpose of the building is uncertain. However, because few artifacts related to

dwellings existed during excavations, experts believe it may have been a place for the dead or a site of

political and religious council. Additionally, religious ceremonies may have taken place there as well. In

fact, Monks Mound may have held a central place in the cosmos of Mississippian religion that symbolically

connected the “Sky Realm” with the “Earth Realm.” Thus, Mississippians would have regarded the site as a

highly potent religious and political symbol. (Romain).

View of Monks Mound today looking west. Erosion has altered its original form. Photo: Historic Mysteries.


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Visitors can walk the 154 steps to the top of Monks Mound. Photo: Historic Mysteries.

Woodhenge

It was important for the Mississippians to know when to plant, harvest, and celebrate the solstices and

equinoxes. Therefore, they had at least five wood henges strewn around the city that served as calendars at

various times. This allowed them to track the sun and seasons with a high degree of accuracy. Circular

configurations of wooden posts served as the markers. Four equidistant posts marked the solstices and

equinoxes, while posts in between tracked the mid-seasons.

Woodhenge

construction and design

of beaker (bottom R)

with sun symbol found

near a winter solstice

pole. Artist L.K.

Townsend. Photo:

Cahokia Historic State

Park.


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In 1961, Dr. Warren Wittry first discovered a set of 28 poles that stretched 410 feet in diameter. Four

additional circles surfaced later. Of these five circular patterns built out of the red cedar (sacred to Native

Americans), one set contains 24 posts, one has 36, one has 48, one has 60. The last circle, which has yet to

be fully excavated, is made of 72 posts.

Mound 72

The burial complex in Mound 72 is one of the most significant discoveries at the site. Between 1967 and

1971, teams from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee excavated the ridgetop mound. Its length is about

140 feet, while the width and height are 72 feet and 10 feet, respectively. Within the mound, researchers

found several smaller mounds that contained more than 250 skeletons. The Mississippians had covered

those sub-mounds with soil and added another layer to give it its final outer shape.

The most important feature of Mound 72 is the central placement of a man and woman in a grave with a

layer of more than 20,000 shell beads. The shells lay in the shape of a falcon or the “Birdman,” a powerful

Sky Realm symbol and deity. Forensic work by Emerson et al. 2016 determined that a female lay under the

shell bead layer, however, experts originally thought it was two males. Above the beads, the male lay atop

the female. Interestingly, this configuration may allude to themes of cosmogenesis and fertility.

Additionally, other skeletons and highly valuable grave goods accompanied the couple in the grave.

A reconstruction of the Birdman burial from Mound 72. Photo: Latin American Studies.

Within other sub-mounds in Mound 72, researchers discovered numerous sacrificial victims and other

individuals that suffered violent deaths. One of the mounds contained 53 young sacrificial females.

Experts also found that Mound 72 is aligned with Monks Mound along its horizontal axis and may have

been a deliberate connection. Therefore, Cahokia’s people may have held the belief that spirits traveled

along the axis to and from the Upperworld or “Sky Realm” (Romain).

What Happened to Cahokia Mounds?

Cahokia was not destined to last. Its collapse is somewhat of a mystery, however, based on research, the

following three events may have had something to do with it.


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1). Broxton Bird, a climatologist from Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis headed a

study that he published in 2017. By taking ancient calcite samples in Martin Lake, Indiana, he and his team

determined the precipitation levels throughout the years. Their results indicated that beginning around 1250

CE, climate change occurred. Consequently, this was the start of the Little Ice Age, which lasted 500 years.

At that time, a dry period resulted. By 1350 CE, there was a serious drought brought on by dry arctic air.

2). Floods often go hand-in-hand with dry spells when large rainfall occurs during droughts. In another

study, Samuel Munoz and Jack Williams took core samples up to 2,000 years old from two lakes in the

Mississippi floodplain. They saw that prior to 600 CE there were many floods. Then there was a period of

no floods until 1200 CE. During the floodless period, Cahokia flourished. After the flood of 1200, the

population declined until complete abandonment.

3). The changes in the climate and the flood event may have severely affected corn production. Thus,

famine and hunger would have inevitably led to major upheavals in the large population. As a result,

Mississippian societies in the region began to collapse. The destruction of the palisades, an increase in

sacrifices, and intensified warfare occurred after 1250 CE. By the end of the 14th century, residents had

migrated south and east to areas with more stable climates.

Preservation of the Cahokia Mounds

The Historic Site in the state of Illinois protects more than 2,220 acres of the original 4,000 acres. This

includes approximately 70 of the 80 remaining mounds. In 1964 the Federal Government designated the site

as a Historical U.S. Landmark. Additionally, UNESCO named it a World Heritage Site in 1982. It is also

home to the Museum Society which strives to promote the educational and scientific advancements of

Cahokia Mounds.

Due to the vast size and organization of the city, early European settlers didn’t believe that the

Mississippians could build such an astounding urban complex. Archaeology has taught us otherwise, and

little by little, the true depth of their beliefs and way of life are slowly coming to light.

Additional references:

Emerson, T. E., Hedman, K.

M., Hargrave, E. A., Cobb, D.

E., & Thompson, A. R.

(2016).

Paradigms Lost:

Reconfiguring Cahokia’s

Mound 72 Beaded Burial.

American Antiquity.

Pauketat, Timothy R. Ancient

Cahokia and the

Mississippians. Cambridge:

Cambridge Univ. Press, 2006.

Romain, William F. “Monks

Mound as an Axis Mundi for

the Cahokian World.”

Academia.edu – Share

Research. Accessed February

12, 2019.


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7 Ancient Sites Some

People Think Were Built

by Aliens

Nadia Drake

P LA N E T E A R T H I S home to some spectacular relics from bygone eras, constructions that seem to

defy the technological capabilities of their time either because they’re too big, too heavy, or too complex.

As such, some suggest the ancient builders of the Egyptian pyramids, the Nasca lines, and others were

following an extraterrestrial instruction manual. Perhaps the hands that crafted these sites weren’t really of

this world.

To be sure, it’s fun to think about whether aliens have visited Earth. After all, humans are on the threshold

of expanding our reach in space, and places like Mars are in our sight. But the truth is, there’s no evidence

suggesting that aliens have ever been here. And invoking a supernatural explanation for some of the most

monumental of human achievements means skipping over the fascinating ways in which prehistoric

civilizations managed to make some of the largest and most enigmatic constructions on Earth.

Sacsayhuamán

Outside the old Inca capital of Cusco, a fortress called Sacsayhuamán rests in the Peruvian Andes. Built

from enormous stones that have been chiseled and stacked together like a jigsaw puzzle, some say

Sacsayhuamán could be the work of an ancient civilization that had a little help from interstellar friends.


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The 1,000-year-old interlocking fortress walls are made of rocks that weigh as much as 360 tons each, and

which were carried more than 20 miles before being lifted and fit into place with laser-like precision.

More recently, archaeologists have uncovered traces of the rope-and-lever system the Inca used to

transport stones from their quarries to their cities—a system that relied on strength and ingenuity, rather

than alien architects.

Nasca Lines

On a high and dry plateau some 200 miles southeast of Lima, more than 800 long, straight white lines are

etched into the Peruvian desert, seemingly at random. Joining them are 300 geometric shapes and 70

figures of animals, including a spider, monkey, and hummingbird.

The longest of the lines run straight as an arrow for miles. The biggest shapes stretch nearly 1,200 feet

across and are best viewed from the air. Scientists suspect the Nasca drawings are as many as two

millennia old, and because of their age, size, visibility from above, and mysterious nature, the lines are

often cited as one of the best examples of alien handiwork on Earth. Otherwise, how would an ancient

culture have been able to make such huge designs in the desert without being able to fly? And why?

Turns out, it’s rather easy to understand the how. Called geoglyphs, these enigmatic designs are made by

removing the top, rust-colored layer of rocks and exposing the brighter white sand underneath.


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The why is a bit tougher to comprehend. First studied in the early 1900s, the designs were initially

suspected to be aligned with constellations or solstices, but more recent work suggests the Nasca lines

point to ceremonial or ritual sites related to water and fertility. And in addition to being visible from the

air, the shapes can be seen from surrounding foothills.

Egyptian Pyramids

Just outside Cairo, in Giza, the most famous of Egypt’s pyramids rise from the desert. Built more than

4,500 years ago, the Pyramids at Giza are monumental tombs where ancient queens and pharaohs were

buried.

But how, exactly, did the Egyptians build these things? The Great Pyramid is made of millions of precisely

hewn stones weighing at least two tons each. Even with today’s cranes and other construction equipment,

building a pyramid as big as that of Pharaoh Khufu would be a formidable challenge.

And then there’s the astronomical configuration of the pyramids, which is said to align with the stars in

Orion’s belt. As well, alien theorists often point to the fact that these three pyramids are in way better

shape than others built centuries later (never mind the amount of work that has gone into preserving them

over the past several centuries).

So are Egypt’s pyramids artifacts of aliens? Not exactly. It’s true that scientists aren’t quite sure how the

ancient Egyptians build the pyramids—and especially how they did it so quickly—but there’s ample

evidence that these tombs are the work of thousands of earthly hands.


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Stonehenge

A huge circle of stones, some weighing as much as 50 tons, sits in the English countryside outside

Salisbury. Known as Stonehenge, the Neolithic monument inspired Swiss author Erich von Däniken to

suggest it was a model of the solar system that also functioned as an alien landing pad—after all, how else

could those massive stones have ended up hundreds of miles from their home quarry?

No one knows what, exactly, the meaning of Stonehenge is, but, as with all the other sites in this

collection, the explanation is not aliens. Instead, scientists have demonstrated it’s actually possible to build

such a thing using technologies that would have been around 5,000 years ago, when the earliest structures

at the site were built.

And now, it appears as though the stones are aligned with solstices and eclipses, suggesting the Stonehenge

builders were at least keeping an eye on the heavens, even if they didn’t come from above.


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Teotihuacán

Teotihuacán, meaning the "City of the Gods," is a sprawling, ancient city in Mexico that’s best known for

its pyramidal temples and astronomical alignments. Built more than 2,000 years ago, Teotihuacán’s age,

size, and complexity can make it seem otherworldly, but it’s very much the work of humans.

Scientists suspect that over centuries, a mix of cultures including Maya, Zapotec, and Mixtec built the city

that could house more than 100,000 people. With its murals, tools, transportation system, and evidence of

advanced agricultural practices, Teotihuacán is often considered much more technologically developed

than should have been possible in pre-Aztec Mexico.

By far, the most well known of Teotihuacán’s buildings is the massive Pyramid of the Sun. One of the

largest such constructions in the Western Hemisphere, the pyramid’s curious alignment is believed to be

based on calendrical cycles.

Easter Island

The enigmas surrounding the moai, Easter

Island’s fleet of large stone figures, pretty

much follow the same narrative as the other

sites described here: How in the world did the

Rapa Nui make these figures more than 1,000

years ago? And how did the moai end up

on Easter Island? Carved from stone, the

nearly 900 human figures are sprinkled along

the flanks of the island’s extinct volcanoes. The

figures average 13 feet tall and weigh 14 tons

and appear to have been chiseled from the soft

volcanic tuff found in the Rano Raraku quarry.


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There, more than 400 statues are still in various states of construction, with some completed figures awaiting

transportation to their intended resting place.

The reasons for carving the moai are mysterious, though they were likely sculpted for religious or ritual

reasons. It’s also not exactly clear what happened to the stone-crafting Rapa Nui, but a leading theory suggests

their civilization succumbed to an environmental disaster of their own making … which is something that

probably could have been prevented had ancient aliens bestowed their infinite wisdom upon the culture.

The Face on Mars

If Elon Musk has his way, humans will be capable of visiting the “face on Mars” sometime this century.

Spotted by the Viking 1 orbiter in 1976, the so-called face is nearly two miles long and is in a region called

Cydonia, which separates the smooth plains of the Martian north from the more cratered terrain in the

south. At the time, scientists dismissed the “face” as shadow play, but over the decades it has become a

favorite among those who suspect aliens with a penchant for building things have been visiting the solar

system.

In 2001, NASA’s Mars Global Surveyor took another good look at the face—using a much higher

resolution camera—and saw … no face. Turns out that what had appeared to be a face is just another

boring old Martian mesa, kind of like the landforms that litter the U.S. Southwest.

But that doesn’t mean it wouldn’t be fun to visit.

Nadia Drake is a contributing writer at National Geographic with a particular fondness for moons,

spiders, and jungle cats.


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Hanging coffins: China's

mysterious sky graveyards

Katie Hunt, CNN •

(CNN) — A skull pokes out of a coffin made out of roughly hewn planks of wood, its smooth white surface

catching the reflection of the winter light flooding into the dark cave.

It's one of about 30 caskets anchored on a limestone rock about 30 meters (almost 100 feet) up the side of a

cave in Guizhou province in southwestern China. It could date back hundreds of years. The coffins, inside

and out, are littered with fragments of clothes, bones and ceramics.

For three decades, Wong How Man, a Hong Kong-based explorer, has been hellbent on chasing coffins like

these in gravity-defying graveyards across China in an attempt to discover more about this unusual burial

custom.

Wong, who began his career as a journalist with National Geographic, first came across a group of coffins

perched 90 meters (300 feet) up a cliff face in southern Sichuan, to the north of Guizhou, in 1985 during an

expedition to track the Yangtze River from mouth to source.

A life-long obsession was born.

"At first, it was simply how the hell did they get there and then I couldn't stop thinking about why," he says.

"And there're so many theories."

"Hanging

coffins" rest in a

cave in Guizhou,

southwest China.

Katie Hunt/CNN


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Coffin-chasing

Hanging coffins, as they're known, are found across a swathe of central China -- mostly in remote valleys to

the south of the mighty Yangtze River, which flows from the Himalayan foothills to China's eastern coast.

The coffins rest in a variety of formations, sometimes barely visible from the ground below. They're lined

up in the crevices in the cliff face, balanced on wooden cantilevered stakes, placed in rectangular spaces

hewn in the rock face or stacked high up in caves like those Wong saw on his latest coffin-chasing

expedition to Guizhou.

The oldest are said to be in the eastern province of Fujian, dating back 3,000 years. There's no clear reason

why this practice took place.

Ancient literature from the Tang Dynasty suggests that the higher the coffins were placed, the greater the

show of filial piety to the deceased. Others say the reasoning was more practical: It prevented animals from

poaching the bodies and kept land free to farm.

New sites are still being discovered. In 2015, the People's Daily newspaper reported that a total of 131

hanging coffins were discovered in the central province of Hubei, placed in man made caves in a cliff 50

meters wide and 100 meters high.

"Experts haven't figured out how ancient people managed to transport the coffin, body and funeral objects --

together weighing hundreds of kilograms -- to the cliff caves," the report said.

Many questions, few answers

Intent on discovering more about this extraordinary practice, Wong began to amass a library of what little

scholarly research had been carried out on the practice. He published his first paper in 1991 in a US

archeology journal.


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However, it wasn't until 2000, once Wong had founded the non-profit China Exploration and Research

Society (CERS), that he was able to get up close and excavate one of these high-rise cemeteries -- at a site

named Washi in northern Yunnan not far from the first site Wong laid eyes on.

The site in Washi, Yunnan where Wong's organization conducted an archeological excavation.CERS

He and his team rapelled down the cliff face to assess the coffins, which rested on rotting stakes of wood.

They then built bamboo scaffolding to secure the most vulnerable coffins, which also allowed them to

examine and document the contents.

What he found raised more questions than it answered. The oldest coffins dated back to the Tang dynasty

but many contained bones from multiple bodies. Wong believes the bodies would have been buried first and

the bones put in the hanging coffins once the bodies had decomposed.

The coffins, which were dug out of a solid piece of wood, were then packed with sand -- making them

enormously heavy. "They must have known they would eventually fall down," says Wong.

Rapelling down a cliff to get a look at the

coffins. CERS


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Wong's research has tied the burial custom to the Bo people -- a rebellious minority tribe that once inhabited

the border between today's southern Sichuan and northwestern Yunnan provinces.

It's thought they disappeared in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), persecuted by military expeditions led by

China's Imperial Armies. But Wong believes some remnants of the tribe assimilated into other local

minority groups and may have survived secretly until today. His research formed the basis of a 2003

Discovery Channel documentary on the hanging coffins, where they attempted to recreate how the caskets

would have been transported up the cliff face.

Some believe they were lowered down from above while others believe they were raised up via scaffolding.

It's not just the mind-blowing effort it must have taken to erect the coffins that makes the cliff and cave

burials so fascinating. The custom seems so at odds with underground burial and cremation -- the way most

modern societies, including China's, handle death.

But the open-air burials do have something in common with other funerary practices in China's borderlands.

Tibetans and Mongolians practice sky burials -- where bodies are chopped up and offered to vultures or

other animals.

In more recent years, Wong's obsession has taken him to Sagada, Luzon, in the Philippines, where cliff

burials were practiced as recently as 2007.

Cliff burial site in Sagada, Luzon in the Philippines.CERS

No protection?

Earlier this year, I inadvertently rekindled Wang's interest in China's hanging coffins when I shared some

photos of the caskets in a cave in Guizhou I came across unexpectedly during a trip to the province in 2016.


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Never having heard of hanging coffins in this area, Wong set out from his China field office in Kunming in

the neighboring province of Yunnan with a small team to find out more. The cave where the coffins are

located is only accessible by river, which emerges from the spectacular limestone cave where the coffins are

stacked.

"I like when information comes to me like this in a personal way," says Wong. "The Internet, there's so

much information available. It takes away the joy and the reward for big effort. I like the footnotes."

The Guizhou cave with the coffins is only accessible by river, where bamboo rafts are the traditional form of

transport. Katie Hunt/CNN

Li Fei, a researcher at the Guizhou Provincial Institute of Archaeology, says that there were up to 100 cave

coffin sites in the province and the burial practice was followed by Yao and Miao minorities in the region.

Most of the coffins date back to the Ming or Qing (1644-1912) dynasties, he adds, though some date back to

the Tang dynasty.

The Guizhou site Wong and I visited, like others, wasn't well-protected. Reluctant to scramble up the rocky

sides of the caves I didn't get close, but Wong said that while some of the 30 or so coffins were intact, most

were falling apart -- bones and disintegrating clothing visible.

Wong was told that there used to be more than 300 coffins in an elevated part of the cave but a fire

destroyed them.

Banknotes have also been left by more recent visitors to the site, a superstitious offering for the dead,

though not all visitors are respectful -- one skull had a cigarette jutting out of its jaw. In a steep gorge down

river, local tourist authorities have erected fake hanging coffins -- perhaps an effort to satiate tourist

curiosity and preserve the existing site.


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The stunning karst scenary near the Guizhou cave. Katie Hunt/CNN

Looting

In 1999, at one of the most famous hanging coffin sites in Matangba, Sichuan, which Wong had first visited

in the 1980s, he discovered that many of the coffins had been looted -- despite being some 90 meters above

the ground and being protected as "national cultural relics." The swag allegedly included ancient swords

and other valuables, says Wong.

"Going back 20, 30 years, yes China had different priorities and limited funding, but today China has such

influence and (protecting these sites) would be small change. It's about the integrity of the their culture and

cultural identity. "

An event held

by the

Chongqing

Cultural

Heritage

Research

Institute.

Chongqing

Cultural

Heritage

Research

Institute


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94

Xu Jin, a researcher at Chongqing Cultural Heritage Research Institute, studies a hanging coffin site at

Longhe, near Chongqing, where coffins are grouped by families. He's held educational events to teach

people about the coffins.

He says in a karst region where caves and cliffs are plentiful, burying the dead at a height might have

seemed a better option than in land that erodes easily and is prone to sinkholes.

Little studied

Archeology in China is a well-funded and well-regarded field but the study of the suspended coffins

appears to have been neglected.

Anke Hein, an archeologist at Oxford University, who has studied burial customs in western China, says the

phenomenon straddles different time periods, geographical regions and even disciplines -- falling between

archeology and anthropology.

"I'm sure if someone really wanted to do this they could," says Hein. "But you would need the cooperation

of difference provinces and local governments, which is difficult, and requires a lot of energy."

Bamboo scaffolding erected to allow a CERS team to excavate the coffins in Yunnan.CERS

Most expertise seems to be regional, confined to provincial bureaus that focus on individual sites rather than

the practice as a whole.

The earliest mention of them in Wong's library is an account by a US missionary in the 1930s. The most

comprehensive study in Chinese is by a scholar named Chen Mingfang, who was colorfully profiled by the

Los Angeles Times in 2001. Now likely in her seventies, CNN was unable to track her down.


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Wong's spent much of his career exploring, documenting and trying to protect traditions like these in

China's borderlands but he doesn't think the mystery of exactly how or why people chose to bury their dead

in this way will ever be known.

"We can only speculate," he says.

CNN's Serenitie Wang contributed to this report


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7 of the Gutsiest Women

on the American

Frontier

Brynn Holland

96

Spies and scouts, mothers and homestead keepers, women quietly made their mark on America's

changing western frontier.

History and lore of the American frontier have long been dominated by an iconic figure: the

grizzled, gunslinging man, going it alone, leaving behind his home and family to brave the rugged,

undiscovered wilderness.

But as scholars of the American West continue to explore the complex realities of the frontier, two

facts become increasingly clear: It was anything but empty when white men from the east went to

“discover” it; and few frontiersmen succeeded alone. Women were in the picture much more than

traditional histories have told.

The frontier was occupied not only by indigenous people, but also by African Americans, Spanish

colonialists and others of European descent, offering skeletal social networks for white explorers

and settlers from the east. By tapping into these networks, they learned survival skills (like how to

find food) and made alliances, often through marriage. White frontiersmen often wed Native

American women who could act as intermediaries, helping navigate the political, cultural and

linguistic gulf between tribal ways and those of the white men.

In fact, says Virginia Scharff, distinguished professor of history at the University of New Mexico,

men could not have likely succeeded in these unknown lands without connections to indigenous

communities—or or without women, who provided networks, labor and children. Placing

frontiersmen in context of these networks doesn’t diminish their individuality, she says, but adds

much needed dimension to their stories.

Case in point: Daniel Boone, one of the most celebrated folk heroes of the American frontier,

renowned as a woodsman, trapper and a trailblazer. Twice captured by native warriors, he earned

the respect of the Shawnee for his backwoods knowledge, and was even adopted by the tribe’s

Chief Blackfish while being held captive. In several encounters, the tribal connections he had

forged helped him save the lives of white cohorts the Indians wanted to kill. And with Boone

traveling frequently, surveying land and blazing trails, his wife Rebecca ecca provided much-needed

stability and labor: bearing him 10 children, while keeping homefires burning as they moved from

Virginia to ever more rugged settlements in North Carolina, Kentucky and Spanish-

controlled Missouri.


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Families of settlers resting as they migrate across the plains of the American Frontier. (Credit:

Archive Photos/Getty Images)

“If we start to think of these individual heroic men as participants in really rich sets of social

relations, it makes them come to life in ways that are more than just running around with a rifle in

their hand and a knife in their teeth looking for trouble,” says Scharff. “They are people who have

to live in a world and survive day-to-day, doing things besides having to rip flesh with their bare

hands.”

So how does the traditional understanding of the American frontier shift when women’s

experiences are accounted for? Below, a look at several women who—while birthing babies,

managing homes and businesses, and engaging in the political lives of their communities—quietly

made their mark on the American frontier.

1. Molly Brant: Native American Diplomat and Spy

The daughter of a Mohawk chief in upstate New York and consort of a British dignitary, Molly

Deganwadonti went on to become an influential Native American leader in her own right and a

lifelong loyalist to the British crown before, during and after the American Revolution.

Born in 1736 at a time when the Mohawk, part of the larger Iroquois federation of tribes, were

increasingly subject to European influence, Molly grew up in a Christianized family. In 1754, at

the age of 18, she accompanied a delegation of Mohawk elders to Philadelphia to discuss

fraudulent land transactions—a moment that is cited as her first political activity.


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Molly met Sir William Johnson, a British officer during the French and Indian War who had been

appointed superintendent for Indian affairs for the Northern colonies. After his wife died, she

became his mistress. And although her race and class prevented them from being officially wed,

they were common-law married and had nine children together. Johnson had acquired 600,000

acres of land in Mohawk Valley, and Molly, like other women of her time, came to manage a large

and complex household, entertaining dignitaries both European and Indian. Their partnership

proved politically fruitful, giving Johnson a familial connection to the powerful Iroquois tribes

and earning Molly, who hailed from a matrilineal clan, increasing prestige as an influential voice

for her people.

During the Revolutionary War, Molly and her family, like many Indians, sided with the British,

who promised to protect their lands from colonists’ encroachment. Known as a persuasive speaker,

she is credited with convincing Iroquois leadership to fall in with the British camp. Throughout

the war, she acted as a spy, passing intelligence about the movement of colonial forces to British

forces, while providing shelter, food and ammunition to loyalists. When they ended up on the

losing side, Molly and her family fled for Canada, where she and other loyalists established the

town of Kingston. After the war, the British paid her a pension for her services.

2. ‘Mad’ Anne Bailey: Frontier Scout and Messenger

A statue of ‘Mad Anne’ Bailey

along the Ohio River. (Credit:

Nicole Beckett/Wikimedia

Commons/CC BY-SA 4.0)


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Anne Hennis Trotter Bailey, known as “Mad Anne,” worked as a frontier scout and messenger

during the Revolutionary War. Originally from Liverpool, England, Anne sailed to America at the

age of 19, after both her parents died. She eventually married a veteran frontiersman and soldier

named Richard Trotter and settled in Staunton, Virginia.

Richard, who joined the Virginia militia as tensions between frontiersmen and Native Americans

grew, was killed in the Battle of Point Pleasant, West Virginia in late 1774. After learning of her

husband’s death, Mad Anne showed her mettle: She dressed in buckskin pants and a petticoat, left

her son with neighbors—and sought revenge.

With rifle, hunting knife and tomahawk in hand, Anne became a scout and messenger recruiting

volunteers to join the militia and sometimes delivering gunpowder to the soldiers. She couriered

messages between Point Pleasant and Lewisburg, West Virginia—a 160-mile journey on

horseback.

Anne remarried to John Bailey, a member of the Rangers, a legendary group of frontier scouts, in

1785. As the group worked to defend new settlements from Native American attacks, Mad Anne

once again used her skills as a scout and courier. After her second husband’s death, she spent the

rest of her days living a solitary life in the woods.

3. Jemima Boone: A Young Woman of the Woods

Daniel Boone rescuing his daughter Jemima from the Shawnee, after she and two other girls were

abducted from near their settlement of Boonesboro, Kentucky. (Credit: MPI/Getty Images)


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Rebecca Boone wasn’t the only formidable female in Daniel Boone’s family. His daughter Jemima

earned her own spot in the history books on July 14, 1776. That’s when a Cherokee-Shawnee

raiding group abducted Jemima, aged 14, along with two other girls while they floated in a canoe

near their Kentucky settlement. Demonstrating their own knowledge of frontier ways, the quickwitted

teens left trail markers as their captors took them away—bending branches, breaking off

twigs and leaving behind leaves and berries.

Their rescue team, led by Daniel Boone himself, took just two days to follow the trail and retrieve

the girls. The rescuers included Flanders Callaway, Samuel Henderson and Captain John Holder,

each of whom later married one of the kidnapped girls. This event became such an integral part of

frontier lore, author James Fenimore Cooper included it in his classic novel The Last of the

Mohicans.


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4. Sacagawea: Translator and Guide

Sacajawea guiding Lewis and Clark from Mandan through the Rocky Mountains. (Credit:

Bettmann Archives/Getty Images)

One of the best-known women of the American West, the native-born Sacagawea gained renown

for her crucial role in helping the Lewis & Clark expedition successfully reach the Pacific coast.

Born in 1788 or 1789 in what is now Idaho, Sacagawea was a member of the Lemhi band of the

Native American Shoshone tribe. At the age of 12, she was kidnapped by a war party of Hidasta

Indians (enemies of the Shoshone) and taken to their home in Hidatsa-Mandan villages, near

modern-day Bismarck, North Dakota. Around 1803, Sacagawea, along with other Shoshone

women, was sold as a slave to the French-Canadian fur trader Toussaint Charbonneau. She soon

became pregnant, giving birth to son Jean-Baptiste Charbonneau in February 1805.


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Meanwhile, after the U.S. government had completed the Louisiana Purchase, which added

828,000 square miles of “unexplored” territory to America, President Thomas Jefferson dispatched

Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to chart the new land and scout a Northwest Passage to the

Pacific coast. After more than a year of planning and initial travel, the expedition reached the

Hidatsa-Mandan settlement. Here they met Sacagawea and Charbonneau, whose combined

language skills proved invaluable–especially Sacagawea’s ability to speak to the Shoshone.

Sacagawea, along with her newborn baby, was the only woman to accompany the 31 permanent

members of the Lewis & Clark expedition to the Western edge of the nation and back.

Sacagawea proved invaluable to the explorers not just for her language skills, but also for her

naturalist’s knowledge, calm nature and ability to think quickly under pressure. When a squall

nearly capsized a vessel they were traveling in, Sacagawea was the one who saved crucial papers,

books, navigational instruments, medicines and other provisions, while also managing to keep

herself and her baby safe. In appreciation, Lewis and Clark named a branch of the Missouri River

for Sacagawea. Sacagawea died at the age of 25, not long after giving birth to a daughter. Clark

became legal guardian to both her children.

5. Mary Donoho: Southwest Innkeeper

Settlement on the Santa Fe Trail. (Credit: Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG/Getty Images)


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In the west, women were gaining rights more quickly than back east, says Jane Simonsen,

associate professor of history and women’s and gender studies at Augustana College. Despite the

restrictive laws, “Women were still property owners—or sought to be—especially in the west.

Later in the 19th century, with the allotment of land to Native Americans, women are given pieces

of property that they owned in their own right.”

6. Narcissa Whitman: Oregon Missionary

While a woman named Susan

Shelby Magoffin is often credited as

the first white woman to travel the

Santa Fe Trail, Mary Donoho made

the trek 13 years prior. Leaving

Independence, Kentucky in 1833,

Mary and her husband, William

Donoho, headed to Santa Fe,

bringing along their 9-month-old

daughter.

Together, the Donohos created La

Fonda, an inn for travelers at the

end of the trail. It was here that

Mary gave birth to two more of her

five children—all of whom she

eventually outlived.

Because married women of the time

couldn’t legally own property

without significant negotiation, it’s

unlikely that Mary Donoho owned

La Fonda. But with William gone on

frequent trading trips, it’s believed

that she operated the business

largely on her own.

Believed to be one of the first two white women to cross the Rocky Mountains on foot, Narcissa

Whitman left behind accounts of her life as a missionary in the Oregon territory with her prolific

letters home to her family in New York State. She, her husband and others were killed by Indians

in a savage attack on the mission.


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Narcissa Whitman, who was killed during the Whitman Massacre. (Credit: Peter Stackpole/The

LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images; MPI/Getty Images)

Soon after marrying Marcus Whitman, a physician and fellow missionary in 1836, they left for

Oregon Country and settled in what would later become Walla Walla, Washington. She wrote of

the travails of rugged travel, such as fighting the current while fording strong rivers, and getting

all of her belongings soaked each time. And she described learning of Indian ways: “There is a

manner of crossing which Husband has tried, but I have not… Take an Elk Skin and streach (sic) it

over you spreading yourself out as much as possible. Then let the Indian women carefully put you

on the water, & with a cord in the mouth they will swim & drag you over.”

The Whitmans’ mission, officially begun in 1837, ministered to the Cayuse Indian tribe. Marcus

held church services and practiced medicine while Narcissa taught school and managed their

home. Already struggling with the unfamiliar customs of the Native Americans, she fell into a

deep depression after her beloved toddler daughter drowned in the river behind her house. Her

sorrow eased somewhat when she and her husband adopted a family of mixed-race children.

On November 29, 1847, tensions between the missionaries and the local Cayuse turned deadly.

Accounts say that after Narcissa refused to share milk with some tribespeople—and shut the door

in their face—they struck Marcus with a tomahawk in the back of his head, and shot and whipped

Narcissa. In total, nine white people were killed and two more died days later. Scores were held

hostage as the conflict, known as the “Whitman Massacre,” escalated into the Cayuse War.


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7. Susan Shelby Magoffin: Chronicler of the Dusty Trail

Susan Shelby Magoffin, circa 1845. (Credit: Fotosearch/Getty Images)

In June 1846, after just eight months of marriage, 18-year-old Susan Shelby Magoffin and 45-yearold

Irish immigrant Samuel Magoffin set off on a trading expedition along the Santa Fe Trail, a

19th-century transportation route connecting present-day Missouri to New Mexico. After Mary

Donoho, Susan Magoffin was one of the first white women to travel that trail.

Susan, born into a wealthy Kentucky family (her grandfather was Kentucky’s first governor), kept

a detailed travel diary that vividly chronicled the hazards of traveling the rugged byways of the

American frontier. She detailed the plant life and terrain of her journey, as well as her personal

challenges. On her 19th birthday, July 31, 1846, she lost a pregnancy, possibly due to a carriage

accident. She wrote in her diary: “In a few short months I should have been a happy mother and

made the heart of a father glad.”

Susan’s diary also discusses encounters with Native Americans and Mexicans who already

occupied these lands. While initially disinclined toward the unfamiliar people she encountered, she

writes about learning and adapting to their culture, including taking a “siesta” on a “buffalo skin

with the carriage seats for pillows,” which she quite enjoyed.

Throughout Susan’s diary, she recounts the burdens of womanhood on the trails of the American

West. She contracts yellow fever, loses another child, is responsible for setting up and maintaining

homes, and finds herself repeatedly pregnant and uncomfortable. Susan writes, “I do think a

woman emberaso [pregnant] has a hard time of it, some sickness all the time, heartburn, headache,

cramps, etc, after all this thing of marrying is not what it is cracked up to be.”

By July 1847, 13 months after their journey began Susan contracted yellow fever and gave birth to

a son who died shortly thereafter. That September, Susan’s diary abruptly stopped. The Magoffins

eventually abandoned their trading life and settled back in Kirkwood, Missouri. Susan Shelby

Magoffin died in October 1855 at age 28.


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From Witch Hunting to Witchcraft Allegations:

Who Was Giles Corey?

Ofek Hagag

Looking into the Salem witch trials will send you spiraling down a rabbit hole of unbelievable cases,

testimonies, and medieval practices. Most of those trials dealt with women who were accused of witchcraft,

but there were a few men who have also suffered the consequences of the deadly accusation. One of those

men was Giles Corey. This is his story.

A different life

Corey was born and baptized in England in 1611. He was raised Christian and stayed that way even

when he moved to Salem, Massachusetts, and got married. He became a wealthy farmer, was married

three times, and widowed twice. For the most part, he’s lived a quiet farmer’s life. In 1676, at 65 years

old, however, things took a turn for the worst. Back then, it was legal for landowners to use corporal

punishment on their workers. When Corey used force to punish one of his workers for picking apples

from someone e else’s property, the worker didn’t survive. He was badly injured, only sent to a doctor

after 10 days, and died shortly after his arrival. Today, Corey would have faced trial for manslaughter,

but back then the court gave him no more than a slap on the wrist for using accessive force. Karma,

however, caught up with him in the end.


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At 80 years old, Corey and his third wife, Martha, were among the first people to attend the Salem

Meetinghouse at the time of the pre-trial examinations of the Salem witch trials. Martha was the first

to lose faith in the whole process and Corey soon followed her. Once they’ve stopped attending the

proceedings, they were an easy target for witchcraft allegations. Martha was targeted first, and in

March 1692, she was arrested for suspicion of practicing witchcraft. At first, Corey fell for the

allegations and even testified against her, citing that he’s seen her silently praying by the fireplace. A

month later, Corey had to face similar allegations that were made against him. During the preliminary

proceedings, he refused to plead innocent or guilty. His trial was scheduled for September, and he

spent his time waiting for it in prison.

The trial

Corey’s September trial was attended by an unnamed witness who claimed to have been tormented by

Corey’s appearance while the latter was still in jail. Since Corey wouldn’t enter a plea, the court

resorted to extracting one from him by means of torture (again — legal yet brutal). He was stripped of

his clothes, laid on the ground, and had a wooden plank placed on top of him. Then, heavy rocks were

placed on top of the wood, slowly crushing the man underneath. Instead of letting the rocks press a

plea or a confession out of him, Corey is said to have handled the torture bravely.

The only words he reportedly let escape from his lips were “more weight”. After two days of enduring

the crushing weight, Corey passed away. Legend has it that his final words were a curse to both the

sheriff and the village of Salem and that the place is still cursed because of it.


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Devil’s Rope: The Story of Barbed Wire

Barbed wire has a uniquely American history.

Simon Winchester

Central to the concept of owning land is the right to tell others to get off it. One who acquires land

gets to enjoy the right of possession, the right of control, the right of enjoyment, the right of

disposition — and, most relevant here, the right of exclusion. A landowner may exclude others,

may forbid others to stray onto his property, and has a right in law to demand that enforcement

officers compel the person who does so — who trespasses — to leave.

Warning signs themselves do not keep people off another’s land. The American invention that is

most traditionally placed to deter intruders from trespassing — and one which has spread

worldwide since its invention in the mid-19th century — is barbed wire, the devil’s rope.

The idea behind the invention that has at least half a dozen claimants to being its originator is simple: “two

wires, twisted together, with a short transverse wire, coiled or bent at its central portion about one of the

wire strands of the twist, with its free ends projecting in opposite directions, the other wire strand serving to

bind the spur-wire firmly to its place, and in position, with its spur ends perpendicular to the direction of the

fence-wire, lateral movement, as well as vibration, being prevented.”


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The man who, with this elegantly incomprehensible description, lays the principal credible claim to the first

patent for it in late 1874 was the son of English immigrants to the United States and named Joseph Glidden.

His early demonstration of the usefulness of his creation had one unanticipated consequence: It helped in

no small measure to bring about a signal change to the American diet, almost overnight.

The first purpose of the wire was to keep animals in, not to keep people out.

The change derives from the simple fact that the first purpose of the wire was to keep animals in, not to

keep people out. And to display how easy this was, Glidden built himself an enormous ranch on the near

grassless plains of the west Texas panhandle and housed there the near unimaginable number of 20,000

head of cattle. He was able to corral these animals in such numbers and at such relatively low cost by

ringing the entire ranch with his newly made wire — some 120 miles of it, at a cost of some $39,000, far

less than a conventional wooden fence, and far less cumbersome.

Having so many cattle pinioned in one place, conveniently close to a railway line that led ultimately to the

stockyards in Chicago, played into the great “beef bonanza” that was just then gripping the nation. Beef

became all of a sudden both cheap and available, with the result that almost overnight it would replace pork

as the preferred national dinnertime dish. Corralling cattle in such numbers became, from the producers’

standpoint, economically most advantageous — leading to the invention of that current abomination of the

Midwestern agricultural scene, the feedlot. Given the known cardiac health disbenefits of today’s massive

beef consumption — leaving to the side the effects of so unnecessarily large a cattle population on climate

change — one might fairly say that Glidden’s invention of barbed wire led, in time, to the currently high

American incidence of heart attack.

Once Glidden’s famous patent, number 157124, had been approved, and with the appeal of his well--

publicized panhandle demonstration, so it seemed that every farmer west of the Mississippi was determined

to string this newfangled barbed wire along his property lines. The railroads followed suit: Not wanting to

have livestock, or more especially heavy and locomotive-disrupting bison, wandering dangerously onto

their tracks, they also purchased thousands of tons of the wire to spool out alongside their rights-of-way.


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After that, for the barbed-wire industry, it was off to the races — with the result that the devil’s rope, which

over the decades would come in many weights and strengths, with many different designs of barb, leading

to today’s viciously displeasing sibling razor wire, became the world’s default barrier to unwanted

movement. It kept prisoners in; it kept rabbits (in Australia) out. It helped keep North Koreans from

venturing southward, or Pakistanis from attempting sojourns eastward. Coils of it kept Great War soldiers

safe in their trenches. And all types of it are on display in museums and at conventions of the various state

wire collectors’ associations — most notably in California, Kansas, Colorado, and Nebraska — where it is

seen as powerfully emblematic of American pioneering and expansion — also being a vivid and potentially

painful reminder that to trespass is a most foolhardy endeavor.

Once Glidden’s famous patent, number 157124, had been approved, and with the appeal of his well--

publicized panhandle demonstration, so it seemed that every farmer west of the Mississippi was determined

to string this newfangled barbed wire along his property lines. The railroads followed suit: Not wanting to

have livestock, or more especially heavy and locomotive-disrupting bison, wandering dangerously onto

their tracks, they also purchased thousands of tons of the wire to spool out alongside their rights-of-way.

After that, for the barbed-wire industry, it was off to the races — with the result that the devil’s rope, which

over the decades would come in many weights and strengths, with many different designs of barb, leading

to today’s viciously displeasing sibling razor wire, became the world’s default barrier to unwanted

movement. It kept prisoners in; it kept rabbits (in Australia) out. It helped keep North Koreans from

venturing southward, or Pakistanis from attempting sojourns eastward. Coils of it kept Great War soldiers

safe in their trenches. And all types of it are on display in museums and at conventions of the various state

wire collectors’ associations — most notably in California, Kansas, Colorado, and Nebraska — where it is

seen as powerfully emblematic of American pioneering and expansion — also being a vivid and potentially

painful reminder that to trespass is a most foolhardy endeavor.


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KEEP OUT!

The rules to protect private property against trespass vary state by state

In all American states, trespass is seen as a serious violation of personal space, and the trespasser’s failure

to leave when asked or told to is an offense. It is a law most robustly enforced, and in some particular states

— Florida, Louisiana, and Texas — most demonstrably so. It is from states like these that one hears lurid

tales of landowners opening fire on uninvited sojourners, even though the law specifically forbids the

shooting of a trespasser unless he is brandishing a weapon and threatening the life of the owner. Warning

signs declaring “Trespassers Will Be Shot” are to be seen on all sides in states like these, and though the

signs are permissible as a deterrent, they are not to be regarded as a warning of any impending fusillade.

Where I live in Massachusetts, there is a great deal of seasonal hunting — for deer, mainly, though black

bear on occasion, and with a variety of weapons, including crossbows, black-powder muskets, and rifles,

each of which is assigned a specific week in every autumn. Signs at the town limits note that hunters must

have, and must carry at all times, written permission from the landowner to pursue their bloodthirsty

calling, and during the affected weeks nonhunters are advised to stay indoors and to suit up their larger pets

in reflective orange coats, so that they are not mistaken for deer. In addition, though, the owner must

festoon his land’s perimeter with orange signs, stapled to a tree every hundred feet or so, with a wordy

insistence under the warning word “POSTED,” that there be “No Trespassing,” followed by a list of

specific activities — hunting most obviously — that shall not be pursued.

In Texas, studded as it is with ranches, especially in the western ranges, regulations for the landowner who

is concerned with trespassers are strict, detailed, and much enforced. For instance, under Title 7, Chapter

30, of the state’s penal code, which defines criminal trespass as “a person entering or remaining on or in

property … without effective consent,” there are special rules for how such a warning might be presented in

unfenced properties. The caution can be indicated by signs or paint marks at specified heights and intervals

so that they can be clearly seen.

In Massachusetts, it is common for ancient boundary trees to have grown so much since signs were placed

on them by former owners that they have folded themselves around the old metal plaques that once read

NO TRESPASSING but which now are wizened, their lettering conflated to read NOG or NOSING —

which a good lawyer would probably argue renders the boundary invalid, letting any poacher off scot-free.

From the book Land: How the Hunger for Ownership Shaped the Modern World by Simon Winchester.

Copyright ©2021 by Simon Winchester. Reprinted by permission of Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins

Publishers.

This article is featured in the May/June 2021 issue of The Saturday Evening Post. Subscribe to the

magazine for more art, inspiring stories, fiction, humor, and features from our archives.


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“Events on a Halloween Night during the Bicentennial of 1976

in Stone Mount”

Dr. Martha Macdonald

College English instructor (Ret) author,

and performer. doctorbenn@gmail.com

On Halloween Night in Stone Mount, a celebration has taken place for years. After all, who does not

like to wear costumes, trick or treat, dance, and hear ghost stories? Well, some people, for one reason or

another, do not. That particular night, the moon was pale, and a wind stirred in the trees, a few maples

pattering to the ground, portending rain. I wasn’t sure, nor did I know that two rapes would occur while the

crowd gathered on College Avenue to hear music and dance, the choir of Stone Mount Presbyterian singing,

“We Plow the Fields and Scatter, the Good Seed on the Ground,” hoping to drown the chants of witches on

the street and their invitation to partake of the stew with an “eye of newt” bubbling in a black cauldron

Two rapes? One to an octogenarian, the other to a recent college graduate: both teachers, one retired,

the other in her first year. What would we make of them? What would you make of them? Both in the small

college town of Stone Mount in the hills of South Carolina, at twilight?

Hannah Smith had gone to bed early that night, tired from an afternoon tea and a cold, and she’d left

her bedroom window slightly raised to combat the sultry air. Drowsing, she did not hear the intruder, the

wizened garbage collector, enter. But when he began removing her nightgown, she screamed. “I wouldn’t

do that,” he whispered, stuffing her mouth with a dirty handkerchief. She protested, but he conquered.

“Sleep well. “I remember when you didn’t give me no money for shoes at Christmas.” She stared at him, at

his face that reminded of her of a cow in their manger set of long ago, as he crept through the window,

closing it. The air grew stuffier and stuffier. Miss Smith twisted and twisted, finally falling onto the floor

from her antique four-poster bed. She tried to scream, but could not.


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No one found her until late the next afternoon when a doctor’s wife wondered because the newspapers still

lay on the sidewalk. Cathy fished out her key from her purse and unlocked the front door, found Miss Smith

squirming on the floor. Cathy’s husband arrived and pulled out the dirty handkerchief, while, she quickly

put a night gown on the victim. Together, they lifted the old woman to the bed. Lloyd took her vitals. “High

blood pressure, and high fever. She needs to go to the hospital in Rutherford.”

“No, please, let me just rest,” Miss Smith begged. “I remember my mother died when they took her

to the hospital.” Against his better judgment, Lloyd agreed. “Lloyd, she’s had lung cancer,” Kathy

reminded him. He nodded.

They waited, watching Hannah breathing. Within the hour she breathed her last.

Cathy felt anger rising, but resisted saying anything.

Lloyd called 911 and waited for the ambulance to arrive, wondering if other neighbors had figured

out what happened. Cathy would be telling them. He also wondered if the town had learned about the rape

on the other end of College Avenue, not far from the Presbyterian Church. Tolly Brown was the victim.

When her husband, Jamie, a prominent young attorney in town, had come home during the dancing the

evening before, he’d found the window open. Tolly was heaving. Looking at blood all of the sheets, Jamie

vomited. “Who would do this?” He called Tolly’s gynecologist/obstetrician. He agreed to meet at the

hospital. “Call 911,” he had ordered. Tolly resisted. “My baby’s dead,” she sobbed. That brute raped me. I

want to die.” She remembered his laugh, bovine, dull eyes. The medics arrived and took over. Fortunately,

there were no sirens. Tolly cried hysterically as she was strapped to the gurney and lifted into the back of

the ambulance. Jamie rode with her. “Who did this?”

That vile man, the garbage collector, Fergus Whittaker, because our garden club decided not to give

his family money last Christmas. I was the one who told him. He never forgot, the evil man.”

“I never liked him, the wizard. We had trouble with him at the bank.” The medics got Tolly into a

bed and began preparing her for surgery: hooking her up to IV’s, giving her blood, despite Jamie’s

questions. The nurses wheeled her to the operating room where surgical techs gave her what he asked for.

But Tolly died on the table. “She’d lost so much blood, Jamie, and I am very sorry.”

Jamie called the chief of police and the sheriff who arrived. “I want that man dead,” Jamie said, this

time quietly, kissing Tolly good-bye. “We’ll find him. We’ll put out alerts.”

“I am so sorry, Mr. Brown,” one of the officers said, adding that he’d called the Coroner.


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InterpNEWS Market Place

Interpretive planning and self-guiding media for interpretive trails.

John Veverka & Associates – jvainterp@aol.com

We’ve been working to update our interpretation programs, services and

media Market Place as a place for exhibit planners and designers, media

developers and other interpretive related agencies and organizations to

advertise their services. We are happy to offer non-profit organizations

reduced advertising for their memberships or fund-raising as well.

We reach thousands of agencies and organizations in 60 countries!

Our new advertising rates rates for 2021-2022 for 2020:

- Full page advertisement - $200.00

- ½ page advertisement - $100.00

¼ page advertisement - $50.00

For advertising details visit our InterpNEWS Advertising Website:

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For special discounts for multiple ad placements for 2020, send me an

e-mail and we can work out a deal for you.

jvainterp@aol.com


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Do you need a “real” interpretive writer for a project, or would you like

to learn how to do interpretive writing yourself?

Besides offering interpretive writing services I teach interpretive writing courses:

http://www.heritageinterp.com/interpretive_writing_course.html

Questions? John Veverka – jvainterp@aol.com

117

What makes the interpretive writing for museum exhibits, outdoor interpretive panels, self-guiding

trail or tour guides or web site scripting, interpretive vs. just informational? Here are some clues:

1. Interpretive writing follows Tilden’s Interpretive Principles (provokes, relates and reveals).

2. Is based on supporting an interpretive theme.

3. Is based on interpretive objectives (learn, feel, do) the writing should accomplish.

4. Uses tangibles and intangibles in creating relatable memories for the visitors.

5. Paints pictures with words via active language supporting graphics or artifacts.

6. 50-100 words average for panels and museum labels (want to know why?)

7. Tells or reveals the “rest of the story” sleeping in objects, landscapes or artifacts.

If you’d like to know more I’d be happy to send you my course handout on “Real Interpretive Writing”.

The harpoon of death at a snail's pace and the cigarette snail.

Did you know that these beautifully patterned Cone Shells are capable killing machines - killing a

human in less than 30 minutes – with a “poke”!

Instead of teeth these snails use a venomous harpoon for hunting food which is a hollow, barbed and very deadly

tool much like a doctor’s hypodermic needle – but this needle injects death!

Cone shells feed on sea worms, fish and even other Cone shells. Because they are slow moving they use their

harpoons to capture a faster moving prey. The harpoons have to be strong enough to penetrate the scales of fish, but

they can also penetrate the gloves a human might be wearing searching the water for other "edibles". Handling the

live snail can have tragic consequences and be deadly to humans.

The Geographic Cone shell is so poisonous that it has been called the cigarette snail in the belief that the victim

has only enough time left to smoke a cigarette before death. Now you know the rest of the story.

But the venom of the Magician Cone shell seems to be a non-addictive pain reliever one thousand times


118


InterpNEWS

The Heritage Interpretation Training Center

119

The Heritage Interpretation Training Center offers 44 college level courses in

heritage interpretation, from introductory courses for new interpretive staff,

docents and volunteers, to advanced courses for seasoned interpretive

professionals. Courses can be offered/presented on site at your facility or location,

or through our e-LIVE on-line self-paced interpretive courses.

Some of our on-line courses are listed below. You can

start the course at any time and complete the course at

your own pace:

Introduction to Heritage Interpretation Course. 14 Units - 2 CEU

credits. $150.00

http://www.heritageinterp.com/introduction_to_heritage_interpretation_cou

rse.html

Planning/Designing Interpretive Panels e-LIVE Course - 10 Units

awarding 1.5 CEU Credits $125.00

http://www.heritageinterp.com/interpretive_panels_course.html

Planning Interpretive Trails e-LIVE Course - 13 Units - 2.5 CEU

Credits $200.00

http://www.heritageinterp.com/interpretive_trails_course.html

Interpretive Writing e-LIVE Course - 8 Units and 2 CEU Credits

$200.00

http://www.heritageinterp.com/interpretive_writing_course.html

Training for Interpretive Trainers e-LIVE Course - 11 Units and 2

CEU Credits. $200.00

http://www.heritageinterp.com/training_for_interp_trainers.html

The Interpretive Exhibit Planners Tool Box e-LIVE course - 11 Units

and 2 CEU Credits. $200.00

http://www.heritageinterp.com/interpretive_exhibits_course.html

Interpretive Master Planning - e-LIVE. 13 Units, 3 CEU Credits.

$275.00

http://www.heritageinterp.com/interpretive_master_planning_course.html

A supervisors guide to Critiquing and Coaching Your Interpretive

Staff, Eleven Units, 1.6 CEU Credits. $175.00

http://www.heritageinterp.com/critiquing_and_coaching_interpretive_staff.h

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The Heritage Interpretation Training Center/John Veverka & Associates.

jvainterp@aol.com – www.twitter.com/jvainterp - Skype: jvainterp

Our course catalog:

http://www.heritageinterp.com/interpretive_training_center_course_catalogue_.html


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