by Sharon Hall | Nov 20, 2013 | Digging History Magazine, Ghost Town Wednesday
Once upon a time this ghost town came within three votes of becoming the capital of Mississippi. Native Americans found it a good place to cross the Mississippi River long before the area was settled by the French in 1763, who named it “Petit Gulf”. In 1781 the...
by Sharon Hall | Nov 19, 2013 | Tombstone Tuesday
I normally write Tombstone Tuesday articles about ordinary, everyday people who lived economically and physically challenging lives out on the American frontier somewhere. Today’s article is related to tomorrow’s Ghost Town Wednesday article, and since I ran across...
by Sharon Hall | Nov 18, 2013 | Military History Monday
President James K. Polk was on a mission to expand the country westward. The term “divine destiny” had been used by journalist John O’Sullivan in 1839, later evolving into what came to be known as “Manifest Destiny”. Part of Polk’s plans for westward expansion...
by Sharon Hall | Nov 16, 2013 | Home Remedies and Quack Cures
I’ve recently been performing a lot of historical and ancestral research by combing through digitized newspapers. Inevitably, in the newspapers of the mid-1800’s until the early 1930’s, I am reading advertisements extolling the benefits of so-called...
by Sharon Hall | Nov 15, 2013 | Feudin' & Fightin' Friday
This little war fought in Fort Bend County, Texas had nothing to do with birds, but could very well be described as a race war. Background In the early 1820s, the area which comprised Fort Bend County was settled as a so-called “plantation district”. By 1861 when it...