Handlebar_Historian

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Handlebar_Historian

Handlebar_Historian

@HandlebarHist

Historian of Civil War/Reconstruction. History of experience/emotions and senses. Avid book reviewer! Podcast and blog in the works; the good, bad, ugly, & fun

United States เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2024
758 กำลังติดตาม117 ผู้ติดตาม
cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
First trailer for CAPE FEAR remake series. Executive produced by Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg.
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Knickerbocker1664
Knickerbocker1664@OldNewYork1664·
This makes sense: given the different peoples and reasons for settlement, the resulting cultures produced different forms of societal organization. The Scots-Irish, who poured over the Appalachians starting in the early 18th century, had their homelands devastated and dismantled. They were then shipped across the ocean, often to serve as little better than indentured laborers on the early plantation systems taking shape. After Bacon’s Rebellion and the wider availability of imported African enslaved labor, many of these settlers moved inland, away from the grip of coastal centralized government. They sought homesteads and fiercely defended their claims against all interlopers. These communities produced Regulators in places like western North Carolina and fueled rent rebellions in the Hudson Valley. They scoffed at the Proclamation of 1763, supported the Revolution, and later resisted federal tax collectors at the barrel of a gun. German migration was both earlier and more centered in Pennsylvania, though many later moved west and congregated in river cities throughout the Midwest. New York also served as a conduit for migration through the western tier and along the Great Lakes. The colony received large-scale Palatine Germans migration, initially intended to staff the patroonship estates of the Hudson Valley. Many became organized around their faith communities, Quakers and other dissenting sects that flourished in colonial Pennsylvania and eventually moved westward along the Great Lakes corridor. Scandinavian farmers who later organized the Midwest into tidy, orderly plots were often driven by foreign wars and land scarcity in their homelands. They tended to transplant entire village structures, along with familiar civic institutions, to anchor communities in the upper Midwest facilitated first by the Erie Canal and later by rail connections from the East Coast to Chicago. Colin Woodard reminds me of Jared Diamond in that the real value lies in the broad interpretive lens he introduces. Neither work is a perfect piece of scholarship, but both offer a compelling framework for understanding causation. Scholars like Alan Taylor have taken Woodard’s concept of fractious “nations” and elevated it to a much higher level of rigor and nuance.
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History Reclaimed
History Reclaimed@History_Reclaim·
In this article, Richard Longfoot examines the influential role of Captain Alexander Clunie in the conversion of John Newton from a slave captain to a Christian minister and later supporter of abolition. The author explains how a painting prompted research into Clunie’s life and Newton’s spiritual journey in the 1750s, and discusses Newton’s friendships, letters, and correspondence with Clunie. Read the full article here: historyreclaimed.co.uk/john-newton-co… #History #JohnNewton #AlexanderClunie #Conversion #ChristianHistory #Abolition #SlaveryHistory #HistoricalResearch #FaithAndHistory #HistoryReclaimed #RichardLongfoot
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Jose Luis Belmonte
Jose Luis Belmonte@Belmonteenredes·
Pues llegó la siguiente lectura!
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American Battlefield Trust
American Battlefield Trust@Battlefields·
⭐ Park Day Spotlight: Tipton-Haynes State Historic Site ⭐ Have you picked a site to volunteer at for #ParkDay2026? If not, see if the Tipton-Haynes State Historic Site is right for you! When: Saturday, April 25, 2026 @ 9:00 AM - 3:00 PM EDT Where: 2620 S. Roan St., Johnson City, TN 37601 What: Trail Maintenance, site cleanup, fence mending, Visitor Center assistance, etc. Check out more details here: bit.ly/47Xiv0M Want to explore other sites? Check them out at Battlefields.org/ParkDay
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Joshua D Phillips
Joshua D Phillips@JoshPhillipsPhD·
“War and Peace” is 1,400 pages long. But once you read it, you realize that every word was necessary.
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theknightirish
theknightirish@theknightirish·
Been meaning to buy Dempsey’s other book on Albuera for awhile - the definitive book on the battle (or so I’m told!). 🇬🇧 🇫🇷 🇪🇸 📚
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BooksandBattlefields
BooksandBattlefields@BooksnBattle·
@HandlebarHist @SavasBeatie I see. The Yorktown NPS worker in the bookstore today really helped with this find. It’s on the shelf and since I’m familiar with ECW books, I know it’s gonna be good.
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BooksandBattlefields
BooksandBattlefields@BooksnBattle·
Got a proper book for next time I want to visit Yorktown for a Civil War video.
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Handlebar_Historian
Handlebar_Historian@HandlebarHist·
@BooksnBattle @SavasBeatie Even if it’s a battle/campaign I’m intimately familiar with, I will still pick up an ECW publication about it because I feel it helps keep me grounded and that I will still learn something.
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The Civil War Monitor
The Civil War Monitor@CivilWarMonitor·
In the Voices department of our Spring 2026 issue we highlighted quotes by Union and Confederate soldiers about the importance of religious faith in helping them navigate the challenges of war. Read those we didn’t have room to include here: tinyurl.com/yeu5j3rv
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Wars
Wars@wars·
Some of the most common types of trenches used during World War I. (1914-1918)
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American Battlefield Trust
Join Tom Saielli at the site of the former Gettysburg Military Museum, where volunteers helped plant seeds to create a new pollinator habitat on Thursday, March 19. Check out more volunteer events at Battlefields.org/Events
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