Something Else

"I am the AUTHOR. I OUTRANK you." -- Franz Liebkind

Posts tagged american history

Dec 17 '12
drtuesdaygjohnson:

heckyesamericana:

ca. 1861-63, [hand stitched thirty-four star American flag]
via Cowan’s Auctions

snowflakes via civil war-era patriotism

drtuesdaygjohnson:

heckyesamericana:

ca. 1861-63, [hand stitched thirty-four star American flag]

via Cowan’s Auctions

snowflakes via civil war-era patriotism

81 notes (via drtuesdaygjohnson & heckyesamericana)Tags: vintage history american history us history civil war civil war history flag americana american flag stars and stripes patriotism union

Nov 26 '12

thecivilwarparlor:

Chris Rock Gets Emotional as He Discovers that His Ancestor was a Union Soldier.

Searching for your own Ancestor? Try Civil War Soldiers & Sailors System(CWSS) sponsored by the National Park Service. The system features an on-line database of names of soldiers, sailors, and United States Colored Troops who served in the Civil War based on records at the National Archives.The subscription-based U.S. Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles collection at Ancestry.com and the American Civil War Research Database are other excellent resources for online Civil War research. 

83 notes (via thecivilwarparlor)Tags: Chris Rock History Civil War african american african american history soldiers american history black history black soldiers PBS army war genealogy Troops National Park Service Ancestry.com ancestors

Nov 17 '12

collective-history:

The Story of Emmett Till

On August 24, 1955, Emmett Till and a group of teenagers entered Bryant’s Grocery and Meat Market to buy refreshments. What exactly transpired inside the grocery store that afternoon will never be known. Till purchased bubble gum, and some of the kids with him would later report that he either whistled at, flirted with, or touched the hand of the store’s white female clerk—and wife of the owner—Carolyn Bryant.

Four days later, at approximately 2:30 in the morning on August 28, 1955, Roy Bryant, Carolyn’s husband, and his half brother J.W. Milam kidnapped Till from Moses Wright’s home. They then beat the teenager brutally, dragged him to the bank of the Tallahatchie River, shot him in the head, tied him with barbed wire to a large metal fan and shoved his mutilated body into the water. Moses Wright reported Till’s disappearance to the local authorities, and three days later his corpse was pulled out of the river. Till’s face was mutilated beyond recognition, and Wright only managed to positively identify him by the ring on his finger, engraved with his father’s initials, L.T.

Till’s body was shipped to Chicago, where his mother opted to have an open-casket funeral with Till’s body on display for five days. Thousands of people came to the Roberts Temple Church of God to see the evidence of this brutal hate crime. Till’s mother said that, despite the enormous pain it caused her to see her son’s dead body on display, she opted for an open-casket funeral to “let the world see what has happened, because there is no way I could describe this. And I needed somebody to help me tell what it was like.”

In the weeks that passed between Till’s burial and the murder and kidnapping trial of Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam, two black publications, Jet magazine and the Chicago Defender, published graphic images of Till’s corpse. By the time the trial commenced on September 19, Emmett Till’s murder had become a source of outrage and indignation throughout much of the country. Because blacks and women were barred from serving jury duty, Bryant and Milam were tried before an all-white, all-male jury. In an act of extraordinary bravery, Moses Wright took the stand and identified Bryant and Milam as Till’s kidnappers and killers. At the time, it was almost unheard of for blacks to openly accuse whites in court, and by doing so Wright put his own life in grave danger.

Despite the overwhelming evidence of the defendants’ guilt and widespread pleas for justice from outside Mississippi, on September 23 the panel of white male jurors acquitted Bryant and Milam of all charges. Their deliberations lasted a mere 67 minutes. Only a few months later, in January 1956, Bryant and Milam admitted to committing the crime. Protected by double jeopardy laws, they told the whole story of how they kidnapped and killed Emmett Till to Look magazine for $4,000.

Coming only one year after the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education mandated the end of racial segregation in public schools, Till’s death provided an important catalyst for the American Civil Rights Movement. One hundred days after Emmett Till’s murder, Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on an Alabama city bus, sparking the yearlong Montgomery bus boycott. Nine years later, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, outlawing many forms of racial discrimination and segregation, one year later it passed the Voting Rights Act outlawing discriminatory voting practices

Here you can read the confession in Look Magazine given by Bryant and Milam

669 notes (via collectivehistory)Tags: tw racism tw murder tw graphic emmett till 1955 1950s segregation jim crow american history american south african american history african american black history civil rights racism

Nov 4 '12
thecivilwarparlor:

Canvas Hood Worn By Lincoln Assassination Conspirator
The Smithsonian’s Lincoln collection also includes several of the canvas hoods that Secretary of War Edwin Stanton ordered be worn by the seven male assassination conspirators. The hoods were meant to isolate the men and prevent conversation during their incarceration. They were worn 24 hours a day, and had no openings for their eyes or ears and only a small hole that they could eat through.

thecivilwarparlor:

Canvas Hood Worn By Lincoln Assassination Conspirator

The Smithsonian’s Lincoln collection also includes several of the canvas hoods that Secretary of War Edwin Stanton ordered be worn by the seven male assassination conspirators. The hoods were meant to isolate the men and prevent conversation during their incarceration. They were worn 24 hours a day, and had no openings for their eyes or ears and only a small hole that they could eat through.


32 notes (via thecivilwarparlor)Tags: History Abraham Lincoln american history Edward Stanton Lincoln President Washington DC Smithsonian

Oct 20 '12
thecivilwarparlor:

Re-enactors out there who defy all the usual stereotypes — first and foremost, because they’re British.
The main question: why? Check out this short documentary made in which British re-enactors answer that very question. Turns out there are quite a few British folk who are fascinated by the American Civil War, but don’t know a heckuva lot about their own.
Read the full text and see video here: http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/67793#ixzz29tM3Axzo —brought to you by mental_floss! 

thecivilwarparlor:

Re-enactors out there who defy all the usual stereotypes — first and foremost, because they’re British.

The main question: why? Check out this short documentary made in which British re-enactors answer that very question. Turns out there are quite a few British folk who are fascinated by the American Civil War, but don’t know a heckuva lot about their own.

Read the full text and see video here: http://www.mentalfloss.com/blogs/archives/67793#ixzz29tM3Axzo 
—brought to you by mental_floss! 

32 notes (via thecivilwarparlor)Tags: history re-enactors reenactors british history Civil War american history American Civil War

Sep 30 '12
The Body of B. Franklin, Printer
Like the Cover of an old Book
Its Contents torn out
And Stript of its Lettering & Gilding
Lies Here. Food for Worms
For it will be as he believ’d
appear once more
In a new and more elegant Edition
Corrected and improved
By the Author
— tombstone of Benjamin Franklin (via historical-nonfiction)

116 notes (via historical-nonfiction)Tags: Uncle John's Bathroom Reader Plunges Into History american history history

Aug 25 '12
collective-history:

Buzz Aldrin poses on the Moon, allowing Neil Armstrong to photograph both of them using the visor’s reflection.
National Archives

collective-history:

Buzz Aldrin poses on the Moon, allowing Neil Armstrong to photograph both of them using the visor’s reflection.

National Archives

84 notes (via collectivehistory)Tags: history buzz aldrin moon space space history astronauts neil armstrong american history us history space race cold war 19600s apollo 11 nasa

Aug 4 '12
heckyesamericana:

ca. 1896, [McKinley & Hobart and William Jennings Bryan: Jugate Mechanical “Bug” Pins with stinger lever]
via Heritage Auctions

heckyesamericana:

ca. 1896, [McKinley & Hobart and William Jennings Bryan: Jugate Mechanical “Bug” Pins with stinger lever]

via Heritage Auctions

10 notes (via heckyesamericana)Tags: vintage history american history us history politics political presidential americana

Aug 4 '12
heckyesamericana:

ca. 1890’s, [hand-tooled leather cowboy boots with with a floral motif, etched silver mounts and steel spurs]
via Heritage Auctions

heckyesamericana:

ca. 1890’s, [hand-tooled leather cowboy boots with with a floral motif, etched silver mounts and steel spurs]

via Heritage Auctions

39 notes (via heckyesamericana)Tags: vintage history boots footwear fashion western americana american history Westward Expansion cowboy

Jul 12 '12
fyeah-history:

Bust reducing brassiere US Patent 1156808, 1913

fyeah-history:

Bust reducing brassiere US Patent 1156808, 1913

38 notes (via fyeah-history)Tags: Lingerie History Lingerie in history Brassiere US history 20th Century Breasts American history Fashion in history