deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com
Dead Memphis Talking: January 2015
http://deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com/2015_01_01_archive.html
Bawdy, sometimes gruesome, and by the standards of today politically incorrect Dead Memphis Talking uses period sources to bring back a time in history many people prefer to forget. Wednesday, January 28, 2015. Revolting Discovery. Paupers Buried in Nude Condition 1888. Memphis Appeal, March 25 1888. Paupers Buried From the City Hospital in a Nude Condition. The opportunity of Supt. McCarney came yesterday. On Thursday J. Sullivan. The doctor was asked. Wednesday, January 21, 2015. Was interred January 2...
deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com
Dead Memphis Talking: Joseph S. Dean, 1st Lieutenant and Aide De Camp
http://deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com/2014/01/joseph-s-dean-1st-lieutenant-and-aide.html
Bawdy, sometimes gruesome, and by the standards of today politically incorrect Dead Memphis Talking uses period sources to bring back a time in history many people prefer to forget. Saturday, January 25, 2014. Joseph S. Dean, 1st Lieutenant and Aide De Camp. Joseph S. Dean,. Joseph S. Dean was born about 1837 in Kentucky. He moved to St. Louis and became a merchant. Prior to the war he traveled through the new territory of Kansas and recorded some of his thoughts in a letter to his sister. William G....
deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com
Dead Memphis Talking: Our Colored People. Were They Fairly Treated & Dealt with During the Epidemic? 1873
http://deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com/2013/11/our-colored-people-were-they-fairly.html
Bawdy, sometimes gruesome, and by the standards of today politically incorrect Dead Memphis Talking uses period sources to bring back a time in history many people prefer to forget. Friday, November 29, 2013. Our Colored People. Were They Fairly Treated and Dealt with During the Epidemic? Originally published in the Memphis Daily Appeal Nov. 29 1873. Freedmens Savings and Trust Company. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Shop at Dead History Talking. Like DMT on Facebook for even more Memphis History.
deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com
Dead Memphis Talking: February 2015
http://deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com/2015_02_01_archive.html
Bawdy, sometimes gruesome, and by the standards of today politically incorrect Dead Memphis Talking uses period sources to bring back a time in history many people prefer to forget. Friday, February 6, 2015. The Memphis Hospital Medical College, 1880. Professor of surgery- clinical, operative and genito-urinary; B.G. Henning, M.D., principles and practice of surgery; Heber Jones. MD, professor of theory and practice of medicine and clinical lecturer on disease of the throat; F. L. Sim. The Sad Story of S...
deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com
Dead Memphis Talking: The Memphis - Boston Confederate Battle Flag Connection, 1898
http://deadmemphistalking.blogspot.com/2015/07/the-memphis-boston-confederate-battle.html
Bawdy, sometimes gruesome, and by the standards of today politically incorrect Dead Memphis Talking uses period sources to bring back a time in history many people prefer to forget. Saturday, July 18, 2015. The Memphis - Boston Confederate Battle Flag Connection, 1898. Cheered to the Echo in a Theater in Boston- Remarkable Demonstration. Boston Telegram to the Chicago Inter Ocean). About ten years ago, when Manager Magee was paying a visit to Memphis, Tenn., he was entertained by the Chickasaw Guards...
posterityproject.blogspot.com
The Posterity Project: About Us
http://posterityproject.blogspot.com/p/about-us.html
Gordon Belt and Traci Nichols-Belt are a husband and wife team of authors and public historians. Together, they have collaborated on two books. Traci Nichols-Belt is the author of Onward Southern Soldiers: Religion and the Army of Tennessee in the Civil War. Her book explores the significant impact of religion on the Army of Tennessee, C.S.A., on every rank, from generals to chaplains to common soldiers. Gordon Belt is the author of John Sevier: Tennessee’s First Hero. Gordon T. Belt. Gordon T. Belt.
posterityproject.blogspot.com
The Posterity Project: Who's your daddy, Tennessee?
http://posterityproject.blogspot.com/2015/06/whos-your-daddy-tennessee.html
Who's your daddy, Tennessee? Over on the Tennessee State Library and Archives blog. For Father's Day, I penned a brief, lighthearted post. Inviting reader comments on who best deserves the moniker of "Father of Tennessee." Is it James Robertson, founder of Nashville, or John Sevier, "Tennessee's First Hero". And first governor of Tennessee? Many chroniclers of early Tennessee history have proclaimed James Robertson. My opinion is somewhat biased on the matter. So I invite readers to visit the TSLA Blog.
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