Author Topic: History Near You  (Read 1313 times)

Offline ROX

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History Near You
« on: July 22, 2008, 12:03:05 PM »
On another thread a guy posted about old USAF/RAF airfields in the UK that were now in ruins, a kind of "local" history that if it's not documented now, it might just be forgotten.

The AETN (Arkansas Educational TV Network) had a GREAT idea to interview as many WWII veterans in the state who would volunteer and tell their story.  My father-in-law volunteered, and his 1:20 interview is eye opening as well as moving.  I wish that kind of technology existed 170+ years ago.  I can only imagine hearing my GGGGrandfather tell how it was to fight in the Civil War--in his own words--in his own voice.

I've already given a copy of the DVD to my daughter with my wishes that as technology evolves to make sure that interview gets passed down and passed down.  Can you even fathom what it would be like for my GGGGrandson to see is GGGGGrandfather's interview about his experiences in WWII?  :O  :O

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Since most of us seem to have an interst in history (read that all kinds of history, not just WWII). 

As we are a world wide forums community, this should be very interesting.

Pick one:

1) A historical event, battle, settlement, exploration that happened in your local area

or

2) One of your ancestors who participated in a historic event, battle, settlement, or exploration

or

3) Ditch the local aspect and tell us why a location somewhere else is historically importaint to you, your family, or your country.

or

4) If you could leave a historic "time capsule" for your future ancestors, what would you put in it?  (Besides a family tree, that's a given)




If you have pictures, feel free to use them.

Once it gets started, I'll include mine.

Please follow forum rules, and have fun! 

We all just might learn something!

Thank you all in advance!






ROX

Offline Furball

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #1 on: July 22, 2008, 12:09:19 PM »
We are lucky enough to be spoilt by history around where i live.  Not many people can say that where they live was destroyed by the infamous Queen Boudica.

By the middle of the 1st century AD, Verulamium – the modern-day St Albans, Hertfordshire – had achieved the Roman status of municipium, the only British city to attain such an honour, which accorded native magistrates and their families the right to Roman citizenship. With such an open indication of its pro-Roman stance, it is hardly surprising that Verulamium was chosen as Boudica's next – and last – target.

However, the presence of Romans themselves was apparently very limited at Verulamium. No fort has ever been found here, which suggests that the population was considered quite tame by the conquerors.

The people of Verulamium had not always been so docile. As members of the powerful Catuvellauni tribe, they had dominated most of south-east England, including their main rivals, the Trinovantes, and had led the ultimately unsuccessful resistance to Claudius's invasion in AD 43. The choice of Verulamium as a target for the Boudican rebels may have derived from the Trinovantes' desire for revenge.

Before she had even left Londinium, the residents of Verulamium received the news that they were to be Boudica's next victims. As a result, by the time the Iceni queen and her followers – who may have numbered 200,000 by now – arrived, the residents had mostly evacuated and taken everything they owned with them. Nevertheless the rebels burned Verulamium and killed all those who remained.

Boudica and her 'army' then began to march north-west, in the direction that the Roman governor Suetonius Paulinus was bound to be travelling down Watling Street with his troops. Why didn't the rebels return to East Anglia with their booty and the memories of their victories? It is likely that, full of their successes, they believed they could eliminate the Romans entirely from Britain with just one more battle. Some 80 miles from Verulamium, they would find out if they could.


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What you can see

Verulamium Museum and Roman Town
www.stalbansmuseums.org.uk/verulamium_museum.htm

Verulamium Museum is on the site of one the major cities of Roman Britain, now an attractive park. Inside there are recreated Roman rooms, hands-on 'discovery areas', an introductory video, touch-screen databases and some of the finest Roman mosaics and wall plasters outside the Mediterranean. Every second weekend in the month, re-enactors demonstrate the tactics and equipment of the Roman army.

Except for pieces of burnt pottery, there is little, if any, evidence of the Boudican attack on Verulamium. What can be seen is the rebuilding that occurred afterwards, including walls up to 3.7 metres (12 feet) high and the only Roman theatre in Britain.

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Offline Motherland

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #2 on: July 22, 2008, 12:11:14 PM »
I'm 20-30 minutes away from Gettysburg, which was the site of the bloodiest battle in the American Civil War. Been over the battlefield several times.

Offline Saurdaukar

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #3 on: July 22, 2008, 12:17:47 PM »
Just about neck deep in it, here.

Offline Banshee7

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #4 on: July 22, 2008, 12:17:59 PM »
During WW2, there was a B17 training base located right here in my hometown of Halls, TN.  This was the hotspot back in the 40s where the majority of our population lived.  This base was known as Dyersburg Army Airfield (now Arnold Field).  After the war the base was basically rundown.  Lucky enough for us we still have a hangar and a few smaller buildings.  We also have the building where Nordyne bombsights were stored.  This base is very dear to me, and is what got me interested in aviation when i was a small child.  We always held AirShows (Which we no longer due since the start of the war in Iraq).  

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veterans'_Museum_(Halls,_Tennessee)


And to the south of me about 15 minutes away..is Alex Haley's house


EDIT....cant find my pix....will upload later

« Last Edit: July 22, 2008, 12:20:22 PM by DickBong »
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Offline avionix

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #5 on: July 22, 2008, 12:25:35 PM »
Work at the Lakeland, FL airport which used to be a B-26 training base during WWII.  If anyone know of any B-26 drivers that may have trained here, please let me know.  I am trying to find some pics and records of it as an Army Air Corps base, other than what is in the local Historical Society.
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Offline macleod01

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #6 on: July 22, 2008, 12:57:35 PM »
I live about 2 hours away from Culloden Battlefield, which was the site of Bonnie Prince Charlies final battle (1746), resulting in no less than 1200 deaths inside of 45 minutes. It was the final battle ever to be fought on British soil. Also rumour has it that there is a battery of AA guns hidden on the hill behind me, used to protect our local naval base in case of bombing, and forget about after WW2. They have yet to be found, and considering the hill is about 10 miles square, It could well be true. Never know
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Offline Vudak

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #7 on: July 22, 2008, 12:58:20 PM »
Farmington, Connecticut, a generally small and unknown town, was once called "Grand Central Station of the Underground Rail Road."

There are a number of old hiding spots still in existence, and at least until the police got the new K9, they still worked like a charm :aok They probably still would...  I can't imagine they didn't have dogs back then.  Some of the hiding spots are really cool.  Most are simple nooks and crannies, but a few are quite elaborate.

Also of interest, for those of you who have seen the movie or are familiar with the whole "Amistad" story, Farmington housed a number of the Africans while people raised the money to send them back home.  One of the guys ("Foone," I believe), drowned in the Farmington River and is buried in the same cemetary as my friend.

Nowadays, we're most famous for being the place some of the world's more memorable jerks have called home.  Ben Sisti, Mike Tyson, and 50-Cent.
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Offline coola4me

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #8 on: July 22, 2008, 02:02:17 PM »
Starting with the civil war.
There is many places in Mississippi that is rich with civil war history but the one battle that stands out was the Siege Of Vicksburg.

45 min from Jackson Mississippi

Siege at Vicksburg Mississippi

http://www.civilwarhome.com/battleofvicksburg.htm
http://www.nps.gov/vick/
U.S.S. Cairo (pronounced Care-o), a Union ironclad commanded by Thomas O. Selfridge, Jr., was named for Cairo, Illinois, and commissioned on January 16, 1862. On December 12, 1862, in the Yazoo River north of Vicksburg, Cairo struck two underwater torpedoes (today called mines) sinking in less than 12 minutes with no loss of life. Preserved by mud and silt, Cairo sat on the bottom of the Yazoo River for 102 years. It was raised in 1964, and later restored. The ironclad is now on display within Vicksburg National Military Park. 

WWII

10 min from Jackson Mississippi

Clinton Mississippi

German Prisoner of war camp
http://www.kilroywashere.org/004-Pages/JAN-Area/04-D-Jackson-POW.html


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Offline Obie303

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #9 on: July 22, 2008, 02:17:01 PM »
Grizzly Adams is buried 2 miles away from where I live.  30 minutes away from from Boston.  Plenty of history there.
I have fought a good fight,
I have finished my course,
I have kept the faith.
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Offline SlapShot

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #10 on: July 22, 2008, 02:27:44 PM »
Nearest city is Waterbury, CT ...

    The city, like the rest of the country, endured hard times during the Great Depression, as industries imploded and thousands were thrown out of work. But all that changed when America began to gear up for World War II, and local factories retooled for war production.

    “Waterbury at that time, during the war — you could almost compare it to a miniature Times Square,” Tom Ciarlo said. “It was never quiet because there were so many factories and each factory had three shifts so they’re going around the clock. You didn’t have cars because there were no gasoline stamps, so you had to take buses. So we had busses running up and down from the center of town to different streets all over the city going constantly. And there was always a humming in the city. There was always something going on, the restaurants downtown were always booming. So were the bars. Theaters were always full. There was always something going on.”

    The Mattatuck Manufacturing Company switched from making upholstery nails to cartridge clips for the Springfield rifle, and soon was turning out three million clips a week. The American Brass Company made more than two billion pounds of brass rods, sheets and tubes during the war. The Chase Brass and Copper Company made more than 50 million cartridge cases and mortar shells, more than a billion small caliber bullets and, eventually, components used in the atomic bomb. Scovill Manufacturing produced so many different military items, the Waterbury Republican reported, that “there wasn’t an American or British fighting man … who wasn’t dependent on [the company] for some part of the food, clothing, shelter and equipment that sustained [him] through the … struggle.”

    “Waterbury was the brass center of the world and we had every factory going full blast,” DeVico said. “Especially because it was the war. The war was going on. So we had factories. Everywhere you looked there were factories. And everybody — when they got out of school — went into the factories.”

    Because of its concentration of war industries, Waterbury was believed to be a strategic bombing target for the German Luftwaffe. Waterbury Clock — which would later be known as Timex — built a new plant in 1942 to accommodate the military’s demands for mechanical time fuses and other aircraft and artillery equipment. The new factory was nestled among the Middlebury hills and could be flooded and covered with water in the event of an invasion. Its roof was painted with a tromp l’oeil mural of trees, water and grass to deceive enemy bombers. In the wake of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Waterbury hurriedly appointed air wardens to coordinate a local response to an air raid. The local barbers’ association volunteered to equip the city’s barbershops as first aid stations.

    More than 12,000 men and 500 women from Waterbury served in the armed forces during the war; the mayor saw them all off at the railroad station. Each man received a prayer book and a carton of cigarettes, courtesy of the Shriners; 282 of those who served lost their lives. The civilian men and women of Waterbury contributed to the war effort in hundreds of ways, large and small. War bonds were sold from “Liberty House,” set up in the middle of the town green on the site where similar bonds had been sold to help defeat Germany during the First World War, and local residents bought $270 million worth. They also collected 68,500 pounds of rubber; 5,097,421 pounds of scrap metal; 8,255,640 pounds of paper; and 150 tons of waste fat.
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Offline 007Rusty

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #11 on: July 22, 2008, 02:31:17 PM »
      I did not know he was a real guy..  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_%22Grizzly%22_Adams                       

Grizzly Adams is buried 2 miles away from where I live.  30 minutes away from from Boston.  Plenty of history there.
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Offline cjdarts

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #12 on: July 22, 2008, 02:43:11 PM »
I work at Dekalb Peachtree Airport (KPDK) in Atlanta. It was originally Camp Gordon, and Army Training base during WWI. It was later Naval Air Station Atlanta from 1942 until the end of the war.

http://www.pdkairport.org/history.asp

Also, on the airport is Epps Aviation. Epps was founded by Pat Epps who was one of those involved with salvaging a P-38 from glacial ice in Greenland now know as Glacier Girl.

http://p38assn.org/glacier-girl.htm

Finally Toccoa, GA is just to the north east of me, which was the home of the 101st Airborne during WWII.
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Offline CAP1

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #13 on: July 22, 2008, 03:47:29 PM »
well, here in south jersey, we have Bader Field, which along with being the vewry first airfield to be designated as an airport(at least in the us), it was also the home of the very first Civil Air Patrol Squadron,. back then they were called the coastal patrol, and did in fact sink two german u-boats off the coast of atlantic city.


 we have lackehurst naval air station, which i think is famous for the hinderburg accident.

there's others which i'll have to look up.......
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Offline saantana

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Re: History Near You
« Reply #14 on: July 22, 2008, 04:16:43 PM »
I'm in Warszawa (Warsaw).

September 1st, 1939; Poland invaded. Warsaw captured four weeks later.
November 16, 1940: Warsaw Ghetto established (100,000 jews died until 1942, after which another 254,000 sent to tremblinka concentration camp and murdered there).
January 18th, 1943: Warsaw Ghetto uprising.
August 1st, 1944: Warsaw Uprising (18,000 soldiers killed, 25,000 wounded, 200,000 civilians dead, 85% of major european capital city destroyed).

Grandfather from mothers side was in Berlin when it was captured.
Grandfather from fathers side was in the AK (Armia Krajowa) and was active during the Warsaw Uprising. He's still alive today but doesn't like to talk about the war.

The closest 'place' or example with history here in Warsaw that comes to my head is the old city center, where the warsaw uprising started. This city is dotted with ww2 battle grounds, there are monuments in many places that you visit.
« Last Edit: July 22, 2008, 04:20:17 PM by saantana »
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