Neither Ghosts, Nor Bogeys, Nor Heat, Nor Gloom: Postoffice Workers and the Paranormal May 18, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach came across this reference to postal messengers being delayed the inference being that this was because of a fear of Derbyshire bogeys: we are near the ivy-covered village of Longnor in the deep Peaks (UK 1874). For the guidance of our friends and neighbours we learn that our post-messenger will for the future be […]
Daily History Picture: More Russian Snipers in Skirts May 17, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesWhat Language is Closest to English? May 17, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Ancient, Contemporary, MedievalEnglish is a Germanic language and its closest living relation should be one of the Continental Germanic tongues, German, Dutch and the like. However, try speaking English to a German who knows no English, or try understanding German (with just English) and you will find that they are very distant relations. An Italian listening to Spanish: or […]
Daily History Picture: Wanted, Hitler! May 16, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesEarly Modern Sentries and the Supernatural May 16, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach has previously examined the frequent paranormal experiences of sentries in the nineteenth century: with the help of Chris from Haunted Ohio Books. It has, long-time readers will remember, been suggested that lonely, potentially violent men asked to spend the night, attentive to every noise and movement, might easily conjure up ‘something’. Here are two […]
Surrender, Secret Weapons and the Nazis May 15, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernAnyone but a fool or a wishful (?) thinker would have understood that the Third Reich was doomed by early 1945. Yet, as we all know, the Nazi high command kept shooting. Tanks were sent west for the Battle of the Bulge and German soldiers frequently fought to the last man a week after Hitler […]
New History Books: Full Moon Over Noah’s Ark May 15, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : New History BooksRick Antonson has just brought out Full Moon with Skyhorse. Always intrigued by the Noah’s Ark legend…
Bizarre Regency Toasts May 14, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach recently stumbled upon a small book of early nineteenth-century British toasts: literally hundreds of them, composed in a time where standing an offering a pithy sentence at drinking was a fundamental part of being a gentleman. Of course, toasts went out with the Second World War so it is difficult to compare them with […]
New History Books: America’s War for the Greater Middle East May 14, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : New History BooksAndrew J. Bacevich, America’s War for the Greater Middle East A long military perspective. Greatly looking forward to this one.
Urban Legends: Saved by Thieves May 13, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernAnother in our Victorian Urban Legends series. This looks like the ancestor (or more likely one of the many ancestors) of the modern Mafia Neighbours, story. You know the one, young married couple move into the neighbourhood, all their new furniture is stolen while they are on their honeymoon, but when they tell an elderly […]
Daily History Picture: Castro Meets Hemingway May 13, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesDaily History Picture: Despoiling May 12, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesPlague Oak at Wrexham (and Fairies) May 12, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThere are a number of fairy oaks in Wales, as Chris from Haunted Ohio Books, previously illustrated. But this one, the fairy oak of Wrexham, is particularly interesting because of a curious legend associated with it. This article appeared in a book of Welsh poems in 1837. Apparently the fairy tree had grown on a […]
Daily History Picture: Seeing Jerusalem May 11, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Historical PicturesLee’s Luck May 11, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernRobert E. Lee led the army of North Virginia, the central institution of the Confederacy, for just under three years (1862-1865). In that time he was able to rely on the most important military resource of all: not acumen, not courage, not atom bombs but sheer dumb luck. In Lee’s case the luck was deserved: there […]