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Surname Saturday: Blood

Blood This surname was possibly derived from the Welsh name Lloyd.  The original form of the surname was “Ab-Lloyd” with the prefix “ab” meaning “son of”.  From “Ab-Lloyd” the name eventually evolved to “Blud” and then “Blood”. Some sources suggest two additional...
Feisty Females:  The Great Western

Feisty Females: The Great Western

Today’s “feisty female” has been described as “Amazonian” and a “buxom behemoth”.  Some believe she was born Sarah Knight, perhaps of Irish parentage, in 1812 or 1813 in either Tennessee or Missouri –  history is unclear as to exactly when and where.   She has been...
Motoring History:  Henry Ford (Part I)

Motoring History: Henry Ford (Part I)

Henry Ford was a lot of things: industrialist, self-made man, wealthy and successful, maker of men (as he liked to say).  His business philosophy became known as “Fordism” – mass produce inexpensive goods and pay high wages.  It seemed he had an opinion on just about...

Surname Saturday: Gildersleeve

According to Bardsley’s A Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames, the Gildersleeve surname is a nickname meaning “with sleeves braided with gold”.  One source refers to it as an English nickname for an ostentatious dresser.  Originally, the name was derived from the...
Far-Out Friday:  Old Rip the Horned Toad

Far-Out Friday: Old Rip the Horned Toad

Although the term “cornerstone” is referenced several times in the Bible, the exact origin of a ceremony laying a building cornerstone and placing items in it  (a “time capsule”) is vague, but perhaps began to be practiced as many as five thousand years ago.  Time...

Tombstone Tuesday: Lycurgus Dinsmore Bigger

Lycurgus Dinsmore Bigger was born September 19, 1843 in Blue Ball, Warren County, Ohio to parents James and Elizabeth (McCandless) Bigger.  I wouldn’t pretend to know the origin of his first name.  Lycurgus, however, is a common name in Greek mythology and in Greek...
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