Author Topic: Random pics  (Read 3918345 times)

ukjeff

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36175 on: July 03, 2013, 03:07:32 PM »

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36176 on: July 03, 2013, 03:09:03 PM »

Simeon Hicks, daguerreotype.

Simeon Hicks was a Minuteman from Rehoboth, Massachusetts who drilled every Saturday in the year leading up to the war. When he heard the alarm the day after the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the sparks that set off the Revolution, he immediately joined thousands of other New Englanders in sealing off the enemy garrison in Boston. He served several short enlistments and fought in the Battle of Bennington, August 16, 1777. After the war Hicks lived in Sunderland, Vermont as a celebrity. He was the last survivor of the Battle of Bennington.

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36177 on: July 03, 2013, 03:10:21 PM »

Jonathan Smith, daguerreotype.

Jonathan Smith fought in the Battle of Long Island on August 29, 1778. His unit was the first brigade that went out on Long Island, and was discharged in December after a violent snow storm. After the war he became a Baptist minister. He was married three times and had eleven children. The first two wives died and for some reason he left his third wife in Rhode Island to live with two of the children in Massachusetts. On October 20, 1854, he had a daguerreotype taken to give to a granddaughter. He died on January 3, 1855.

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36178 on: July 03, 2013, 03:12:02 PM »

George Fishley, daguerreotype.

George Fishley was a soldier in the Continental army. When the British army evacuated Philadelphia and raced toward New York City, his unit participated in the Battle of Monmouth. Later he was part the genocidal attack on Indians who had sided with the British, a march led by General John Sullivan through “Indian country,” parts of New York and Pennsylvania. Fishley’s regiment, the Third New Hampshire, was in the midst of the campaign’s only contested battle. After the Battle of Chemung, August 28, 1779, the Americans had devastated forty Indian towns and burned their crops. Later Fishley served on a privateer — a private ship licensed to prey on enemy shipping — and was captured by the British. Fishley was a famous character after the war in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, where he lived. He was known as “the last of our cocked hats” — Continental soldiers wore tall, wide, Napoleonic-looking headgear with cockades. He marched in parades wearing the hat, which his obituary said “almost vied in years with the wearer.” Fishley is wearing the hat in the daguerreotype.

ukjeff

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36179 on: July 03, 2013, 03:20:27 PM »

Childish///AMG

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36180 on: July 03, 2013, 03:21:49 PM »

ukjeff

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36181 on: July 03, 2013, 03:23:28 PM »

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36182 on: July 03, 2013, 03:27:51 PM »

James W. Head, daguerreotype.

James W. Head, a Boston youth, joined the Continental Navy at age 13 and served as a midshipman aboard the frigate Queen of France. When Charleston, South Carolina, came under attack, five frigates, including the Queen of France, and several merchant ships were sunk in a channel to prevent the king’s troops from approaching the city from one strategic direction. Head and other sailors fought as artillerymen in forts and were captured when the Americans surrendered — the Patriots’ biggest and arguably most disastrous surrender of the war. Taken as a prisoner of war, Head was released at Providence, Rhode Island and walked home. His brother wrote that when he arrived, Head was deaf in one ear and had hearing loss in the other from the cannons’ concussion. Settling in a remote section of Massachusetts that later became Maine, he was elected a delegate to the Massachusetts convention in Boston that was called to ratify the Constitution. When he died he was the richest man in Warren, Maine and stone deaf because of his war injuries.

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36183 on: July 03, 2013, 03:42:01 PM »

Rev. Levi Hayes, daguerreotype.

Rev. Levi Hayes was a fifer in a Connecticut regiment that raced toward West Point to protect it from an impending attack. He also participated in a skirmish with enemy “Cow Boys” at the border of a lawless region called the Neutral Ground (most of Westchester County, New York, and the southwestern corner of Connecticut). In the early years of the nineteenth century, he helped organize a religiously-oriented land company that headed into the wilderness of what was then the West. They settled Granville, Ohio, where he was the township treasurer and a deacon of his church. His daguerreotype shows him holding a large book, most likely a Bible.

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36184 on: July 03, 2013, 03:53:15 PM »

Daniel Spencer, daguerreotype.

Daniel Spencer served as a member of the backup troops sent to cover the operatives in a secret mission to capture Benedict Arnold, after he had defected to the British. The maneuver failed when Arnold shifted his headquarters. A member of the elite Sheldon’s Dragoons, Spencer was in a few skirmishes. He sat up all night fanning his commanding officer, Captain George Hurlbut, who had been shot in a fight during which the British captured a supply ship. Spencer’s account of the death of the officer differed markedly from that of Gen. Washington's; Spencer said the wounds of the officer had nearly healed when he caught a disease from a prostitute and this illness killed him, whereas Washington said he died of his wounds. Spencer’s pension was revoked soon after it was granted and for years he and his family lived in severe poverty. Eventually his pension was restored. He was the guest of honor during New York City’s celebration of July 4, 1853.

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36185 on: July 03, 2013, 04:21:03 PM »

Dr. Eneas Munson, daguerreotype.

As a boy, Dr. Eneas Munson knew Nathan Hale, the heroic spy who was executed and said he regretted that he had only one life to give for his country. As a teenager, Munson helped care for the wounded of his hometown, New Haven, Connecticut, after the British invaded. He was commissioned as a surgeon’s mate when he was 16 years old, shortly before he graduated from Yale. He extracted bullets from soldiers during battle. In 1781 he was part of Gen. Washington’s great sweep to Yorktown, Virginia, which led to Gen. John Burgoyne’s surrender and American victory of the Revolution. During the fighting at Yorktown he was an eyewitness to actions of Gen. Washington, Gen. Knox, and Col. Alexander Hamilton. Dr. Munson gave up medicine after the war and became a wealthy businessman, fielding trading ships, underwriting whalers and sealers, and venturing into real estate and banking. But throughout his life, his family spoke of how he loved recalling the exciting days of the war, when he was a teenage officer.

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36186 on: July 03, 2013, 04:22:33 PM »

Samuel Downing, CDV card photo.

Samuel Downing enlisted at age 16, and served as a private from New Hampshire. At the time his picture was made, he as 102 and living in the town of Edinburgh, Saratoga Country, New York. He died on February 18, 1867.

oldtimer1

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36187 on: July 03, 2013, 04:47:47 PM »
Brad you are putting up some seriously interesting stuff on random pictures lately but I need a picture of girl with a thick ass once in awhile.

DroppingPlates

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36188 on: July 03, 2013, 04:50:54 PM »
Without his participations, the interwebz would suck.



Douglas Carl Engelbart (January 30, 1925 – July 2, 2013) was an American inventor, and an early computer and Internet pioneer. He is best known for his work on the challenges of human/computer interaction, particularly while at his Augmentation Research Center Lab in SRI International, resulting in the invention of the computer mouse, and the development of hypertext, networked computers, and precursors to graphical user interfaces.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_Engelbart

biff

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36189 on: July 03, 2013, 04:52:30 PM »

DroppingPlates

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36190 on: July 03, 2013, 04:52:38 PM »
Brad you are putting up some seriously interesting stuff on random pictures lately but I need a picture of girl with a thick ass once in awhile.

http://www.getbig.com/boards/index.php?topic=446184.0

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36191 on: July 03, 2013, 05:00:49 PM »

Rev. Daniel Waldo, CDV card photo.

Rev. Daniel Waldo was drafted in 1778 for a month of service in New London. After that, he enlisted for an additional eight months, and in March 1779 was taken prisoner by the British at Horseneck. After he was released, he returned to his home in Windham and took up work on his farm again.

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36192 on: July 03, 2013, 05:10:07 PM »

William Hutchings, CDV card photo.

William Hutchings enlisted at age 15 for the coastal defense of his home state, New York. Writes Hillard in The Last Men of the Revolution, “The only fighting which he saw was the siege of Castine, where he was taken prisoner; but the British, declaring it a shame to hold as prisoner one so young, promptly released him.”

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36193 on: July 03, 2013, 05:16:16 PM »

Lemuel Cook, CDV card photo.

Lemuel Cook witnessed the British surrender at Yorktown, the event that guaranteed American independence. Of the event, he said, “Washington ordered that there should be no laughing at the British; said it was bad enough to surrender without being insulted. The army came out with guns clubbed on their backs. They were paraded on a great smooth lot, and there they stacked their arms.”

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36194 on: July 03, 2013, 05:17:22 PM »

Alexander Milliner, CDV card photo.

Alexander Milliner enlisted as a drummer boy who served in Gen. Washington’s Life Guard unit. He was a favorite of Washington’s, often playing at his personal request. Milliner was at the British surrender at Yorktown, about which he said, “The British soldiers looked down-hearted. When the order came to ‘ground arms,’ one of them exclaimed, with an oath, ‘You are not going to have my gun!’ and threw it violently on the ground, and smashed it.”


arce1988

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36195 on: July 03, 2013, 05:32:54 PM »

bradistani

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36196 on: July 03, 2013, 05:37:02 PM »
Brad you are putting up some seriously interesting stuff on random pictures lately but I need a picture of girl with a thick ass once in awhile.

haha, don't we all, old man. don't we all !  :)


andreisdaman

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36197 on: July 03, 2013, 10:12:33 PM »


Sasha Grey is so hot :-* :-* :-*...perfectly fuckable

andreisdaman

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36198 on: July 03, 2013, 10:13:27 PM »


cute in a girl-next-door type of way....would destroy so she'd fall in love with me

andreisdaman

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Re: Re: Random pics
« Reply #36199 on: July 03, 2013, 10:18:09 PM »