History Deputy History @ MindSay


 

   
collected things: scraps from the fabric of my days
SUBE A NACER CONMIGO, HERMANO


Om Mani Padme Hung


"Only if God can be revealed in the rising of the sun in the sky can he be revealed in the rising of a son of man from the dead; only if he is revealed in the history of the Syrians and the Philistines can he be revealed in the history of Israel; only if he chooses all men for his own can he choose any at all; only if nothing is profane can anything be sacred."

-William Temple
 
 
   
 

A Native Perspective on Virginia Tech Headlines
I didn't write this, but thought it made some interesting points and thought I would share it.


A Native Perspective on Virginia Tech Headlines
 by Kat Teraji; April 26, 2007

Bury my heart at Wounded Knee, Deep in the Earth, Cover me with pretty lies - bury my heart at Wounded Knee. Didn't we learn to crawl, and still our history gets written in a liar's scrawl. They tell 'ya "Honey, you can still be an Indian d-d-down at the 'Y' on Saturday nights."
    - lyrics to "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee," written by Buffy St. Marie

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"The worst shooting rampage in American history." "Massacre and Mourning, 33 die in worst shooting in U.S. History," and "Rampage called worst mass shooting in U.S. history." "What first appeared to be a single shooting death unfolded into the worst gun massacre in the nation's history." You've seen and heard these headlines and reports all week as the media provided non-stop coverage of the tragic shooting of 33 people at Virginia Tech University on Monday. "The worst in U.S. history."

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Really? It is certainly the worst shooting on a college campus in modern U.S. history. But if we think it is the worst shooting rampage in U.S. history, then we are a singularly uneducated nation. "I can't take one more of these headlines," said Joan Redfern, a member of the Lakota Sioux tribe who lives in Hollister. We met at First Street Coffee to talk while we scanned Internet stories. "Haven't any of these people ever heard of the Massacre at Sand Creek in Colorado, where Methodist minister Col. Chivington massacred between 200 and 400 Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians, most of them women, children, and elderly men?"
Chivington specifically ordered the killing of children, and when he was asked why, he said, "Kill and scalp all, big and little; nits make lice."

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At Wounded Knee Creek in South Dakota, the U.S. 7th Cavalry attacked 350 unarmed Lakota Sioux on December 29, 1890. While engaged in a spiritual practice known as the "Ghost Dance," approximately 90 warriors and 200 women and children were killed. Although the attack was officially reported as an "unjustifiable massacre" by Field Commander General Nelson A. Miles, 23 soldiers were awarded the Medal of Honor for the slaughter. The unarmed Lakota men fought back with bare hands. The elderly men and women stood and sang their death songs while falling under the hail of bullets. Soldiers stripped the bodies of the dead Lakota, keeping their ceremonial religious clothing as souvenirs. To say the Virginia shooting is the worst in all of U.S. history is to pour salt on old wounds-it means erasing and forgetting all of our ancestors who were killed in the past," Redfern said. "The use of hyperbole and lack of historical perspective seems all too ubiquitous in much of the current mainstream media," Redfern said. "My intention is not to downplay the horror of what has happened this week in any way. But we have a 500-year history of mass shootings on American soil, and let's not forget it." This is only the most recent mass shooting massacre in a long history of mass shootings in America.
 
 
 

   
A Piece of History
check_-_front.jpg hosted for free by ImageShack check - back.jpg hosted for free by ImageShack


I never know what sort of treasures I'll find at my grandparents' house. Old pictures, letters, (ooh!! I'll have to scan a few. They're really funny), books... There's always something fascinating to discover. Earlier this week I found this old check lodged between the pages of a very old and musty book of poems.

It was written by my great-great-grandma, Ella McClanahan, on December 7, 1929. Just a few weeks after Black Tuesday. Written in pencil!!!  Obviously she owed the Indiana Mutual Cyclone Insurance Company a grand total of $2.20. It was quite a sum at the time, I'm sure. (I wish my insurance was that cheap) For once Wikipedia has failed me... I can't find a bit of information on the insurance company. I plan to dig a bit further into that at work tomorrow if I have time...

Eighty or so years ago Deputy was a pretty hopping town. There was an old Champion station... a high school... stores... even a bank!!! I know that some of you think this is not at all a big deal but... you've never seen Deputy. You have no idea how small it is. I'll have to take a picture of it someday. Just one. One picture will show it all.

Deputy relied on the railroad and with the coming of the Great Depression the town was deadened. It's never recovered. There is a humbling air about the place... The remnants of the railroad tracks cruelly dissects the street, reminding the elders of what it was like to be living in a time of prosperity. The lead paint on the houses is chipping away and fading, their gables falling and porches lowering with age and rot…

And to think... I hold a piece of it's history!!
 
 
   
 

 
Latest Comment
Re: Steady as she goes. - rly!!! Does she really work at a whore house now 'cause that would be so sweet lol

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