Snowball Atrocities 7#: Ghostly Snowballs in Illinois June 26, 2017
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach was awfully fond of his snowball tag, and was disappointed when he simply ran out of good snowball stories. Imagine his joy then to run into some ghostly snowballs in Skinner’s Myths and Legends of Our Own Land. The year is apparently 1849 Forty-seven years ago, in the township of St. Mary’s, Illinois, two […]
Snowball Atrocities #6: Snowballs over Glasgow October 24, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernIn Beach’s long and passionate searches through the annals of snowballing, he has come across many descriptions of mass snowball fights. However, this, from February 1865, is perhaps his favourite. It combines reckless youth, police brutality (to not from), and significant property damage: in short it is the essence of the Victorian snow-balling. Glasgow has […]
Snowball Atrocities #3: Geo-Political Snowballing July 24, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernSnowballs were the weapon of choice for young toughs out on the town in a blizzard. But they were also a way that furious crowds could show their contempt for various political or religious speakers. You could hurt and humiliate your enemy without running the risk (or not too great a risk) of finding yourself […]
Snowball Atrocities #2: Snowball Deaths June 24, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, ModernYou can’t go far in snowballing history without dealing with the deaths. European and American newspapers (Beach’s source for most of what follows) are full of snowball fatalities in the nineteenth and twentieth century. For those of us who have perhaps played with snow and lovingly lobbed loose white balls in the direction of family […]
Snowball Atrocities #1: Snowball Bomb May 24, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporarySometimes the blogger finds a newstory that he cannot let go. After a week of wrestling with his conscience Beach has decided that he simply has to give this particular incidence of love between the peoples of Europe wider coverage. We are in 1931. Prague. Thursday. Two schoolboys were killed in the course of a […]