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Should have stayed at St. Kitts or Antigua.
#OTD (Feb 14) 1775 Janet Schaw landed in Brunswick on the Carolina coast. Sailing in from the Caribbean (St. Kitts and Antigua), she and her brother had departed Scotland on October 26, 1774. They stayed in North Carolina for 9 months until unrest that grew into the full blown War for Independence caused she and her sibling to return to Europe on November 12, 1775 - alighting at the port city of Setúbal, Portugal on December 12, 1775.
Janet Schaw was a faithful diarist, attentive to detail and descriptive of conversations. Schaw was also a Loyalist as were her Carolina friends and as such she reflected those sentiments and worldview in her chronicle. Her journal is candid enough to have served as a great primary source for historians over the years. Just below is an example if her estimate of the women and men of Brunswick:
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“The difference between the men and the women surprised me, but a sensible man, who has long resided here, in some degrees accounted for it. In the infancy of this province, said he, many families from Britain came over, and of these the wives and daughters were people of education. The mothers took the care of the girls, they were train'd up under them, and not only instructed in the family duties necessary to the sex, but in those accomplishments and genteel manners that are still so visible amongst them, and this descended from Mother to daughter. As the father found the labours of his boys necessary to him, he led them therefore to the woods, and taught the sturdy lad to glory in the stroke he could give with his Ax, in the trees he felled, and the deer he shot; to conjure the wolfe, the bear and the Alligator; and to guard his habitition from Indian inroads was most justly his pride, and he had reason to boast of it. But a few generations this way lost every art or science, which their fathers might have brought out, and tho' necessity no longer prescribed these severe occupations, custom has established it as still necessary for the men to spend their time abroad in the fields; and to be a good marksman is the highest ambition of the youth, while to those enervated by age or infirmity drinking grog remained a last consolation.”
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Her diary was published as ‘Journal of a Lady of Quality.’ Thanks to UNC’s ‘Documenting The American South Project’ in The Southern Historical Collection you can read it at this link: Janet Schaw, ca. 1731-ca. 1801. Journal of a Lady of Quality; Being the Narrative of a Journey from Scotland to the West Indies, North Carolina, and Portugal, in the Years 1774 to 1776.
That's an interesting take that--of course--I knew, but could never have articulated as concisely and clearly as you just did. Nicely done!. . .. When the character of Sheriff Andy Taylor first appeared, in an episode of ‘The Danny Thomas Show,’ aired on February 15, 1960, he was more a bad cop than a good one and in some early episodes of his own show Griffith continued in that role - as an opportunist and slightly mean-spirited trickster. But that’s not the Andy that we love and we know now that Griffith made a conscious move away from that representation by the second season. That’s a good thing for us all - if any of you have seen ‘Face in the Crowd’ you know the kind of malevolence that Griffith could muster up. Thankfully Sheriff Taylor stepped away from that and toward the honest, wise, and thoughtful lawman that we love.
The only problem with that is much of America saw this as sort of reality TV (as with many 50s, 60s, shows) instead of treating it as a fictional portrayal of small southern town as a heartwarmingly wholesome morality play with a comedic twist.
When the character of Sheriff Andy Taylor first appeared in an episode of ‘The Danny Thomas Show,’ aired on February 15, 1960, he was more a bad cop than a good one and in some early episodes of his own show Griffith continued in that role - as an opportunist and slightly mean-spirited trickster. But that’s not the Andy that we love, and we know now that Griffith made a conscious move away from that representation by the second season. That’s a good thing for us all - if any of you have seen ‘Face in the Crowd’ you know the kind of malevolence that Griffith could muster up. Thankfully Sheriff Taylor stepped away from that and toward the honest, wise, and thoughtful lawman that we love.
That pretty much says it all. What. An ongoing cluster it's been over the years.
I agree.Wish Twain was around these days.
For you weapon nuts out there
#OTD (Feb. 20) in 1920 General ‘Black Jack’ Pershing arrived in Asheville. He was on a national tour as a triumphant military hero of World War 1 (not so much for his Mexican foray in 1916-1917, a failure by then long forgotten by the adoring public). No doubt Pershing was doing field work for a potential presidential bid. Warren Harding was the Republican winner later that year. Harding’s two years in office (he died) was scandal-ridden and gave us 10 years of Calvin Coolidge (his V.P.) — small government, hands-off policies — who in turn brought us The Great Depression. Despite a raucous reception - amidst the Pandemic quarantine - Pershing ultimately declined to run.