Genealogy Research, Family Stories and Photographs, Archival Resources, historical articles, antique origin,
Showing posts with label 1925. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1925. Show all posts
Monday, December 23, 2019
South End Christmas Celebration St Phillips Church 1925
Labels:
1925,
Christmas,
Clara Robinson,
Clementine Robinson,
Delphine Coleman,
Dorothy Love,
Eva Moulton,
Palmyra de Rose,
Philomena de Rose,
Rode D Argyle,
South End Boston,
St Phillips Church
Location:
158 Mammoth Rd, Lowell, MA 01854, USA
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
Blood Legacy The True Story of the 1925 Snow Ax Murders
In 1925 a young man’s severed head was found in an abandoned farmhouse near the town of Stephenville. What is discovered next will shock you.......To Read More Click Link to my article Blood Legacy A True Crime Story
Labels:
1925,
Bernie Connally,
Blood Legacy,
executions,
James Pylant,
Maggie Snow,
Murders in Texas,
Samantha Olds,
Snow Axe murders,
Stephenville Texas
Location:
Stephenville, TX 76401, USA
Saturday, April 18, 2015
Smallest Auto in the World "Hoot Gibson Special" driven bt Gus Prezel
October 1925 The Decatur Herald
To Read More check out The Old Motor Blog
Metro history: 'Midget runs 52 miles on a gallon of gas'
June 27, 1926: F. S. Townsley, chief ranger, officially handed a permit to Guz Petzel, allowing him to drive his “four-cylinder, home-made product” through Yosemite National Park -- the smallest automobile to enter it. But it was a harbinger of bigger things: “Nature lovers, old-timers” and their allies had been working to keep a road out of the Yosemite Valley. As The Times reported a few weeks later, a new road built by convicts was opened, “so broad and level that it brings the valley within seven or eight hours of easy driving from the Golden Gate.” Officials expected a ten-fold increase of visitors to the park. (The New York Times)
To Read More check out The Old Motor Blog
Metro history: 'Midget runs 52 miles on a gallon of gas'
June 27, 1926: F. S. Townsley, chief ranger, officially handed a permit to Guz Petzel, allowing him to drive his “four-cylinder, home-made product” through Yosemite National Park -- the smallest automobile to enter it. But it was a harbinger of bigger things: “Nature lovers, old-timers” and their allies had been working to keep a road out of the Yosemite Valley. As The Times reported a few weeks later, a new road built by convicts was opened, “so broad and level that it brings the valley within seven or eight hours of easy driving from the Golden Gate.” Officials expected a ten-fold increase of visitors to the park. (The New York Times)
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