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HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder is THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where aHISTORY MAGAZINE
The First Cable The manufacture of the cable started in early 1857 and was completed in June. Before the end of July it was stowed on the American Niagara and the British Agamemnon-- both naval vessels lent by their respective governments for the task.They started at Valentia Harbor in Ireland (which was by then connected to the rest of the British Isles) on 5 August.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set outHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder is THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where aHISTORY MAGAZINE
The First Cable The manufacture of the cable started in early 1857 and was completed in June. Before the end of July it was stowed on the American Niagara and the British Agamemnon-- both naval vessels lent by their respective governments for the task.They started at Valentia Harbor in Ireland (which was by then connected to the rest of the British Isles) on 5 August.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set outHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
June/July 2002 Issue: The Decade 1900-09: Jodi Avery looks at a time of major developments. Amusements in Dr. Johnson's London: How the people of London amused themselves in the mid-1700s. When the Stars Fell: John Dorriety reports on one of the most spectacular celestial events in human history. Watch Out for the Water: Danial E. Capano examines how Paris and London tackled theHISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in the SAMPLE ISSUE CONTENTS History Notes Items of historical trivia. The Domesday Book Victoria King tells the story of England's greatest medieval public record. Arsenic Victoria King discovers the history of the infamous element.HISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Notes Locks In England, in 1784, Joseph Bramah received the first patent for a lock, which he claimed to be impossible to pick. Bramah was so sure of the security offered by his lock that he placed the lock in his store window and offered £200 to anyone who couldpick it.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Glittering Misery Nancy Hendrickson describes the lives of Army officers’ wives on the frontier. MARTHA SUMMERHAYES CROUCHED in the bottom of an Army wagon as it bounced towards Sanford Pass. Her husband, Jack, rode alongside, keeping a sharp lookout for maraudingApache.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
Hindsight A look at some books and other items of interest to historians. Civil War Diary of Berea M. Willsey is a three-year account of Willsey’s Civil War experiences. Private Willsey, who was present at most of the significant military engagements of the Civil War, kept a faithful daily record of information such as the weather, troop movements, food, marches, battles, military strategyHISTORY MAGAZINE
Cremation Victoria King details the decline and resurgence of the practice of cremation. CREMATION WAS the chief method of dealing with human bodies in the ancient world except in Egypt (embalming), China (earth burial) and Judea (sepulcher burial). Cremating the body ensured animals and other humans would not desecrate it.HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder is THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where aHISTORY MAGAZINE
The First Cable The manufacture of the cable started in early 1857 and was completed in June. Before the end of July it was stowed on the American Niagara and the British Agamemnon-- both naval vessels lent by their respective governments for the task.They started at Valentia Harbor in Ireland (which was by then connected to the rest of the British Isles) on 5 August.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set outHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder is THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where aHISTORY MAGAZINE
The First Cable The manufacture of the cable started in early 1857 and was completed in June. Before the end of July it was stowed on the American Niagara and the British Agamemnon-- both naval vessels lent by their respective governments for the task.They started at Valentia Harbor in Ireland (which was by then connected to the rest of the British Isles) on 5 August.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set outHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
June/July 2002 Issue: The Decade 1900-09: Jodi Avery looks at a time of major developments. Amusements in Dr. Johnson's London: How the people of London amused themselves in the mid-1700s. When the Stars Fell: John Dorriety reports on one of the most spectacular celestial events in human history. Watch Out for the Water: Danial E. Capano examines how Paris and London tackled theHISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in the SAMPLE ISSUE CONTENTS History Notes Items of historical trivia. The Domesday Book Victoria King tells the story of England's greatest medieval public record. Arsenic Victoria King discovers the history of the infamous element.HISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Notes Locks In England, in 1784, Joseph Bramah received the first patent for a lock, which he claimed to be impossible to pick. Bramah was so sure of the security offered by his lock that he placed the lock in his store window and offered £200 to anyone who couldpick it.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Glittering Misery Nancy Hendrickson describes the lives of Army officers’ wives on the frontier. MARTHA SUMMERHAYES CROUCHED in the bottom of an Army wagon as it bounced towards Sanford Pass. Her husband, Jack, rode alongside, keeping a sharp lookout for maraudingApache.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
Hindsight A look at some books and other items of interest to historians. Civil War Diary of Berea M. Willsey is a three-year account of Willsey’s Civil War experiences. Private Willsey, who was present at most of the significant military engagements of the Civil War, kept a faithful daily record of information such as the weather, troop movements, food, marches, battles, military strategyHISTORY MAGAZINE
Cremation Victoria King details the decline and resurgence of the practice of cremation. CREMATION WAS the chief method of dealing with human bodies in the ancient world except in Egypt (embalming), China (earth burial) and Judea (sepulcher burial). Cremating the body ensured animals and other humans would not desecrate it.HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder isHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where a THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set outHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder isHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where a THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set outHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
June/July 2002 Issue: The Decade 1900-09: Jodi Avery looks at a time of major developments. Amusements in Dr. Johnson's London: How the people of London amused themselves in the mid-1700s. When the Stars Fell: John Dorriety reports on one of the most spectacular celestial events in human history. Watch Out for the Water: Danial E. Capano examines how Paris and London tackled theHISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived. FACTS ABOUT THE 1500S "Facts" About the 1500s? by Halvor Moorshead For the last couple of years an item has been circulating around the Internet about so-called Facts about the 1500s (sometimes 1600s).HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Notes Locks In England, in 1784, Joseph Bramah received the first patent for a lock, which he claimed to be impossible to pick. Bramah was so sure of the security offered by his lock that he placed the lock in his store window and offered £200 to anyone who couldpick it.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Glittering Misery Nancy Hendrickson describes the lives of Army officers’ wives on the frontier. MARTHA SUMMERHAYES CROUCHED in the bottom of an Army wagon as it bounced towards Sanford Pass. Her husband, Jack, rode alongside, keeping a sharp lookout for maraudingApache.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
Hindsight A look at some books and other items of interest to historians. Civil War Diary of Berea M. Willsey is a three-year account of Willsey’s Civil War experiences. Private Willsey, who was present at most of the significant military engagements of the Civil War, kept a faithful daily record of information such as the weather, troop movements, food, marches, battles, military strategyHISTORY MAGAZINE
Cremation Victoria King details the decline and resurgence of the practice of cremation. CREMATION WAS the chief method of dealing with human bodies in the ancient world except in Egypt (embalming), China (earth burial) and Judea (sepulcher burial). Cremating the body ensured animals and other humans would not desecrate it.HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where aHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder isHISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set out THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where aHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder isHISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set out THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history. FACTS ABOUT THE 1500S "Facts" About the 1500s? by Halvor Moorshead For the last couple of years an item has been circulating around the Internet about so-called Facts about the 1500s (sometimes 1600s).HISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Notes Locks In England, in 1784, Joseph Bramah received the first patent for a lock, which he claimed to be impossible to pick. Bramah was so sure of the security offered by his lock that he placed the lock in his store window and offered £200 to anyone who couldpick it.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
Glittering Misery Nancy Hendrickson describes the lives of Army officers’ wives on the frontier. MARTHA SUMMERHAYES CROUCHED in the bottom of an Army wagon as it bounced towards Sanford Pass. Her husband, Jack, rode alongside, keeping a sharp lookout for maraudingApache.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Longbow THE LONGBOW, defined as one over 4ft. in length, was probably first used by the Germans or Scandinavians in about 500AD. In about 1000AD it was being used in Wales but it is not known if it was developed there independently or if it was borrowed from other partsof Europe.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
The First Cable The manufacture of the cable started in early 1857 and was completed in June. Before the end of July it was stowed on the American Niagara and the British Agamemnon-- both naval vessels lent by their respective governments for the task.They started at Valentia Harbor in Ireland (which was by then connected to the rest of the British Isles) on 5 August.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Solution. In 1803 an Act of Congress allocated a part of the revenues from the sale of land in Ohio to the building of a proper road from Cumberland in Maryland (on the Potomac) to Wheeling in what is now West Virginia (on the Ohio). The work began in 1811 and reached Wheeling in 1818. It was known by several names: the National Road,the
A RARE TITANIC FAMILY 8 history magazine october/november 2014 m a r i t i m e d i s a s t e r s a rare titanic family julie hedgepeth williams shares an extract from her book, a rare titanic family, detailing the escape of her great-uncle albert caldwell and hisHISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where aHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder isHISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set out THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
A colorful magazine describing how our ancestors lived.HISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night?HISTORY MAGAZINE
Where They Came From It was extremely difficult to recruit men for this difficult, hazardous and sometimes fatal duty. In some ways, the Plains Cavalry was America’s version ofHISTORY MAGAZINE
Refrigeration is the process of cooling a space or substance below environmental temperature. To accomplish this, the process at first removed heat through evaporation and then later in the 1850s with vapor compression that used air and subsequently ammoniaHISTORY MAGAZINE
The Impact of the Potato Jeff Chapman relates the story of history’s most important vegetable. DURING HIS SCIENTIFIC expedition to Patagonia aboard HMS Beagle, British naturalist Charles Darwin became fascinated by a surprisingly adaptable South American plant.In his log, Darwin wrote: "It is remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains of Central Chile, where aHISTORY MAGAZINE
1000AD Halvor Moorshead describes some of the major events that were occuring at the turn of the last millennium. CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF, there was not widespread panic in Europe as the end of the first millennium approached.As we end the second millennium, there are a few people who are forecasting doom and a lot more just making sure that they have a few extra candles and the larder isHISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Battle of the Little Big Horn Ron Wild relates the story of Custer’s Last Stand. LATE IN 1875 an order went out from President Ulysses S. Grant in Washington to the various hostile Indian tribes that they were to report to reservations and Indian agencies no later than 31 January 1876. The Cheyenne and Sioux tribes disregarded the order and as a result the Yellowstone Expedition set out THE DISCOVERY OF ING TUT S TOMB 05 03 62825 94944 History $5.95 Publication Mail Agreement No. 40062922 • Zero: A Brief History of Nothing March 2008 PAP Registration No. 10629 • The Adventures of Jumbo the ElephantHISTORY MAGAZINE
Bread Bread formed the main part of the average person’s diet for centuries. Halvor Moorshead describes some of the history. IT IS DIFFICULT to overstate the importance of bread in European and North American history. As demonstrated by its inclusion in the Lord's Prayer and its use as slang for money, bread was the essential food for most people for most of recorded history.HISTORY MAGAZINE
After the Sun Went Down Barbara Krasner-Khait describes early 19th-century nights. WE HAVE ALL HEARD Ben Franklin’s famous maxim “Early to bed and early to rise. . . .” While it may have made a man healthy, wealthy, and wise, it begged the question: what else was there to do at night? FACTS ABOUT THE 1500S "Facts" About the 1500s? by Halvor Moorshead For the last couple of years an item has been circulating around the Internet about so-called Facts about the 1500s (sometimes 1600s).HISTORY MAGAZINE
THE COSSACKS ARE A group of Russian military warriors who still exist today, but without the same military power they had in the past. The word "Cossack" is derived from the Turkic term kazak that means "free man" or "adventurer". They consisted of semi-independent Tartar groups - a Turkic-speaking people who lived in west-central Russia - or peasants escaping serfdom in Poland and Russia.HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Notes Locks In England, in 1784, Joseph Bramah received the first patent for a lock, which he claimed to be impossible to pick. Bramah was so sure of the security offered by his lock that he placed the lock in his store window and offered £200 to anyone who couldpick it.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
History Magazine - The Rifle. The Rifle. Halvor Moorshead explains that the rifle was a major improvement over the smooth-bore musket — but it suffered from a serious problem. EARLY FIREARMS had smooth bores: the inside of the barrel was a simple long cylinder, closed at one end. During the 1500s, scoring a gently spiraling groove in theHISTORY MAGAZINE
THE MID-1700S WAS an unusually interesting period. It was just prior to enormous changes that would reshape the world. Most of Europe was still suffering a slowly falling standard of living for ordinary people, a trend that had been continuous for 300 years.HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Longbow THE LONGBOW, defined as one over 4ft. in length, was probably first used by the Germans or Scandinavians in about 500AD. In about 1000AD it was being used in Wales but it is not known if it was developed there independently or if it was borrowed from other partsof Europe.
HISTORY MAGAZINE
The Solution. In 1803 an Act of Congress allocated a part of the revenues from the sale of land in Ohio to the building of a proper road from Cumberland in Maryland (on the Potomac) to Wheeling in what is now West Virginia (on the Ohio). The work began in 1811 and reached Wheeling in 1818. It was known by several names: the National Road,the
HISTORY MAGAZINE
The First Cable The manufacture of the cable started in early 1857 and was completed in June. Before the end of July it was stowed on the American Niagara and the British Agamemnon-- both naval vessels lent by their respective governments for the task.They started at Valentia Harbor in Ireland (which was by then connected to the rest of the British Isles) on 5 August. A RARE TITANIC FAMILY 8 history magazine october/november 2014 m a r i t i m e d i s a s t e r s a rare titanic family julie hedgepeth williams shares an extract from her book, a rare titanic family, detailing the escape of her great-uncle albert caldwell and his COVID-19: PLEASE REVISIT THIS SPACE FOR UPDATES As per the instructions of our local government, our operations will be temporarily shut down until further notice. Our website is operational and you can still call us at 1-888-326-2476 if you have any questions or if you wish to place an order. Immerse Yourself in History! ATTENTION READERS & SUBSCRIBERS: CLICK HERE FOR IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT THE HISTORY MAGAZINESUMMER 2020 ISSUE
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