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...
by Sharon Hall | Nov 13, 2013 | Digging History Magazine, Ghost Town Wednesday
Not only is Moonville, Ohio a ghost town in the classic sense of the term (a once thriving town completely abandoned), stories abound about the haunting of various locales in and around the town. No one seems to know where the town name originated, although some have...
by Sharon Hall | Nov 12, 2013 | Tombstone Tuesday
These two gravestones caught my eye. I suspected they were husband and wife, being the only Gamblins in this cemetery. Both Syl (Sylvester) and Emma also lived into their 90s so I’m thinking they must have led full and interesting lives. Emma was born on May 12,...
by Sharon Hall | Nov 11, 2013 | Military History Monday
Early Mormon History During the early 19th century, a revival movement called The Second Great Awakening was sweeping the nation. One particular area in western New York became known as the “Burned Over District”. The area had been so heavily evangelized and...
by Sharon Hall | Nov 8, 2013 | Feudin' & Fightin' Friday
Horrells and Higgins – Early Lampasas County Settlers John Holcomb Higgins and his wife Hester migrated to Lampasas County, Texas from Georgia with their young family. Their son, John Pinkney Calhoun Higgins was their first male child, born on March 28, 1851. ...