Well of course they're veggie-burgers - the cattle don't eat meat, do they?I think this ad has been drafted for NW-Arkansas (or for Texas)
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Well of course they're veggie-burgers - the cattle don't eat meat, do they?I think this ad has been drafted for NW-Arkansas (or for Texas)
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That's quite a good map, but it doesn't show Liverpool or Glasgow as a major ports, built like Bristol on the 'triangular trade'.Were they the corporate successors to Middle Passage Cruise Lines?
A map of their extensive cruise choices(?). Most popular Port of Entry was Charleston SC.View attachment 621871
Anywhere near Kirkcudbright, where John Paul Jones tried to take for ransom the Earl of Selkirk, who lived on St Mary's Isle. The Earl wasn't home, so his wife entertained the officers and conducted negotiations. Credit is given to the governess for protecting the young heir and to the butler for filling a sack half with coal, and topping it up with the family silver, in order to fob off the Americans. Jones claimed that he intended to return directly to his ship and continue seeking prizes elsewhere, but his crew wished to "pillage, burn, and plunder all they could". Ultimately, Jones allowed the crew to seize a silver plate set adorned with the family's emblem to placate their desires, but nothing else.That's quite a good map, but it doesn't show Liverpool or Glasgow as a major ports, built like Bristol on the 'triangular trade'.
And in my corner of the world, the Isle of Man was a focal point for smuggling rum, tobacco etc. dropped off there duty-free then across in small boats to small ports on the Solway coast. Ships sailed down through the Irish Sea, usually to Nantes, then on to West Africa to pick up slaves, across to the Caribbean, offloaded the slaves, picked up the rum and tobacco, and back again... I'm looking out even as I type at a house where the owners at that time kept 120 or so slaves in the West Indies. Many - most - Georgian houses in my part of the world were built with the profits of slaving and smuggling.
According to the local version, he returned the silver to the Countess with a polite note apologising for the inconvenience he had caused her!Anywhere near Kirkcudbright, where John Paul Jones tried to take for ransom the Earl of Selkirk, who lived on St Mary's Isle. The Earl wasn't home, so his wife entertained the officers and conducted negotiations. Credit is given to the governess for protecting the young heir and to the butler for filling a sack half with coal, and topping it up with the family silver, in order to fob off the Americans. Jones claimed that he intended to return directly to his ship and continue seeking prizes elsewhere, but his crew wished to "pillage, burn, and plunder all they could". Ultimately, Jones allowed the crew to seize a silver plate set adorned with the family's emblem to placate their desires, but nothing else.
A true American!According to the local version, he returned the silver to the Countess with a polite note apologising for the inconvenience he had caused her!
Yes, most likely version, Jones bought the plate himself when it was later sold off in France, and returned it to the Earl of Selkirk after the war.According to the local version, he returned the silver to the Countess with a polite note apologising for the inconvenience he had caused her!
English and Gaelic are so interesting. Here wad means in English 'would' or 'want', while want means to be 'in want off', 'without'!And some wad eat that want it
Well, a Scotsman actually.A true American!
The best Americans are Scotsmen!Well, a Scotsman actually.
He was born John Paul in Kirkcudbrightshire. He fled to America and took the name Jones to avoid a murder charge.
A true Gallovidian - his father was gardener on the Arbigland estate by the Solway Firth, in this cottage:A true American!
A true American!
And then one the greatest poets:
The Selkirk Grace, is a prayer said afore eatin that's attreebute tae Robert Burns: "Some hae meat and canna eat, And some wad eat that want it, But we hae meat and we can eat, Sae let the Lord be Thankit!"
Burns's language is Scots, not Gaelic -English and Gaelic are so interesting. Here wad means in English 'would' or 'want', while want means to be 'in want off', 'without'!
Genuflect!A true Gallovidian - his father was gardener on the Arbigland estate by the Solway Firth, in this cottage:
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(the distant hills are the Lakeland Fells in Cumbria)
The inn where Burns is said to have composed the Selkirk Grace:
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(the present building is later than Burns's time)
Only really useful is #4
I like the U.S. flag