From: owner-hist_text-digest@lists.xmission.com (hist_text-digest) To: hist_text-digest@lists.xmission.com Subject: hist_text-digest V1 #13 Reply-To: hist_text Sender: owner-hist_text-digest@lists.xmission.com Errors-To: owner-hist_text-digest@lists.xmission.com Precedence: bulk hist_text-digest Wednesday, February 4 1998 Volume 01 : Number 013 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 10:48:35 -0500 From: "Scott Allen" Subject: Re: MtMan-List: parched corn Jim, Any dried corn will do. Dried white flint corn is probably the most authentic, although yellow is right too. I've done field corn which is actually probably closer to 18th century corn than any other we have today. All work well. Remember to parch in a dry skillet. Grease will make the corn go bad alot quicker. Heat a skillet to medium heat and roast until the kernal has turned a golden to dark brown. It will make a sound like popcorn while parching. Make sure not to burn it. It is ready when it will crush to a coarse powder. I like to mix a little raw sugar and pounded jerky with mine for the perfect trail food. Good luck. Your most humble servant, Scott Allen Hunter and Scout for Fort Frederick Fairplay, MD http://members.tripod.com/~SCOTT ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 11:17:19 -0600 From: jolighthouse@webtv.net (jo tiger) Subject: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides Can any of you mt. men tell me how to tan a deer hide leaving the hair ON? ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 11:41:27 -0500 From: "Scott Allen" Subject: Re: MtMan-List: Iroquois at 1825 rendezvous Dave wrote: P.S. Made an Indian efigy hood yesterday; my wife laughed hysterically and said it is the stranges thing I've ever made. She calls it my batman hat. I'm starting to see why they fell out of fashion. The experimental archeology business is full of risks -- ridicule being one of them. Dave, What fell out of fashion, the hats or wives? Mine laughed histerically at my first attempt at centerseam mocs almost 20 winters ago. Called them my "Peter Pan" shoes. Almost traded her for a gun! Your most humble servant, Scott Allen Hunter and Scout for Fort Frederick Fairplay, MD http://members.tripod.com/~SCOTT ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 14:13:39 -0600 From: WIDD-Tim Austin (WIDD-Tim Austin) Subject: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides Jo Tiger asked if anyone could tell how to tan a deer hide with the hair on. The question I have is why would anyone want a deer hide tanned with hair on? The answer is the same as with the hair off, just omit the de-hair step. Tim Austin ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 19:46:06 -0500 From: "Fred A. Miller" Subject: RE: MtMan-List: Re: Mohawks/Hendrick > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-hist_text@lists.xmission.com > [mailto:owner-hist_text@lists.xmission.com]On Behalf Of CTOAKES@aol.com > Sent: Monday, February 02, 1998 8:48 AM > To: hist_text@lists.xmission.com > Subject: MtMan-List: Re: Mohawks/Hendrick > > > In a message dated 98-01-27 01:23:14 EST,Ted Hart wrote that the address for > the museum (5 Nations) was: > > << > Ganondagon State Historical Site > 1488 Victor-Holcomb Rd > Victor, NY 14564 >> > > The center has expanded and has a new address it is: 7000 County Road 41, > Victor NY 14564. Phone # 716-924-5848, Fax # 716-742-1732. > > The center is in the process of building/reconstructing a Long House on the > property which I believe will be dedicated this coming summer. THANKS for the info! Regards, Fred ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 16:26:50 -0800 From: Dale Nelson Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides > The answer is the same as with the hair off, just omit the de-hair step. > > Tim Austin Have you done it? Dale Nelson ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 17:39:59 -0600 (CST) From: mxhbc@TTACS.TTU.EDU (Henry B. Crawford) Subject: Re: MtMan-List: Iroquois at 1825 rendezvous >Dave wrote: > >P.S. Made an Indian efigy hood yesterday; my wife laughed hysterically and >said it is the stranges thing I've ever made. She calls it my batman hat. >I'm starting to see why they fell out of fashion. The experimental >archeology business is full of risks -- ridicule being one of them. > > >Dave, >What fell out of fashion, the hats or wives? Mine laughed >histerically at my first attempt at centerseam mocs almost 20 winters >ago. Called them my "Peter Pan" shoes. Almost traded her for a gun! > Must be something about hats. I wear my red wool Toque in the winter, and people call me "Santa." It was really bad in December. Adding the Cross of Lorraine didn't help much. I can't remember how many times I uttered the words "...French-Canadian fur trappers." At least a few more people have been enlightened. Thankfully, two of our students already knew (both from Quebec). Another person called it a tobbagan hat. Close enough I guess. Maybe I should have ordered the green one. <:-) Cheers, HBC ***************************************** Henry B. Crawford Curator of History mxhbc@ttacs.ttu.edu Museum of Texas Tech University 806/742-2442 Box 43191 FAX 742-1136 Lubbock, TX 79409-3191 WEBSITE: http://www.ttu.edu/~museum ******** "Eat with gusto and enthusiasm" ******** ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 18:07:18 +0000 From: Forrest Smouse Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides - --------------8528499A2AC6E510D719DCB7 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit jo tiger wrote: > Can any of you mt. men tell me how to tan a deer hide leaving the hair > ON? I have heard several persons asking this same and I have always wondered why anyone would want a deer hide with the hair on. Many years ago I was give a moose hide that was tanned hair on and the tanning was an excellent peace of work. The problem is no matter what I did or where I put it, the hair won't stay in and gets all over everything. I know several people who have deer hides with the hair on and they have the same problem. If you still want it hair on the tanning process is no different than that of tanning without the hair. You just wash the oils out of the hair and don't remove the hair. Forrest Smouse Uintah Basin Applied Technology Center Smouse Geneology - --------------8528499A2AC6E510D719DCB7 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit  

jo tiger wrote:

Can any of you mt. men tell me how to tan a deer hide leaving the hair
ON?
  I have heard several persons asking this same  and I have always wondered why anyone would want a deer hide with the hair on.   Many years ago I was give a moose hide that was tanned hair on and the tanning was an excellent peace of work.  The problem is no matter what I did or where I put it, the hair won't stay in and gets all over everything. I know several people who have deer hides with the hair on and they have the same problem.   If you still want it hair on the tanning process is no different than that of tanning without the hair.  You just wash the oils out of the hair and don't remove the hair.

Forrest Smouse
Uintah Basin Applied Technology Center
 
Smouse Geneology - --------------8528499A2AC6E510D719DCB7-- ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 20:42:17 -0600 From: jolighthouse@webtv.net (jo tiger) Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides Thanks for the info. Why hair on? Well, my deer hunting friend thought it would make a pretty throw rug or wall tapestry if it had the hair. I donno. Kinda like why you leave the "hair" on a fur coat, maybe? ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 22:51:08 -0500 From: Barry Powell Subject: Re: MtMan-List: parched corn At 08:21 AM 2/2/98 -0600, you wrote: >Ok ye old corn parchers, what kind of corn do you parch? Do you dry >sweet corn, use field corn, or grow the old kind of corn. > >Thanks much, > >Jim > > I always used dry sweet corn but field corn will work if the sugar content is high enough. BP ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 23:00:56 -0500 From: Barry Powell Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides At 11:17 AM 2/2/98 -0600, you wrote: >Can any of you mt. men tell me how to tan a deer hide leaving the hair >ON? > > I use 10 gallons of water, 10 lbs. of salt, and 2 lbs. of alum. Mix well in a tank of some sort. Flesh the hide and submerse in the mixture. Turn it and stir it twice a day for 4 or 5 days. Remove from solution and dry, then rub warm vegetable oil into the skin side and work it around a post to soften it. I have one that I did 15 years ago and the hair is still on tight. We use ours as a rug or blanket when in camp. BP ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 20:25:29 -0800 (PST) From: zaslow Subject: Re: MtMan-List: Other guns of the Corp of Discovery Rick, A good resource for the guns carried by the Corps of Discovery is listed in Carl P. Russell's book, "Firearms, Traps, & Tools of the Mountain Men" on pages 37-43 (Rifles with Lewis and Clark), pages 43 & 44 (Pistols) and pages 44 & 45 (Meriwether Lewis's Air Gun.) Hope this helps. Best Regards, Jerry (Meriwether) Zaslow #1488 ________________________________________________________________________________ >: From: Rick Williams >: To: hist_text@xmission.com; hist_text@xmission.com >: Subject: MtMan-List: Other guns of the Corp of Discovery >: Date: Friday, January 30, 1998 2:58 PM >: >: Hail the list! >: >: I've had an interest to determine which arms the Corp of Discovery >: used beside the pre 1803 Harper's Ferry. My personna is that of a >: non-military member of the Corp. Probably one of the so called >: Kentucky "nine." ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 05:52:33 GMT From: rparker7@ix.netcom.com (Roy Parker) Subject: Re: MtMan-List: smoothbore fix On Wed, 28 Jan 1998 13:25:44 -0500, you wrote: >Hello the list, > >Well, found out the trouble with my smoothbore not suckin down those=20 >.600 ball. Considering some of the shotgun/smoothbore topics lately,=20 >some of you are going to get mad at me. I took it back up to Fort=20 >Chambers Gun Shop where I got it and we checked it out. Well, it=20 >turns out it is jug choked! No wonder it was shooting shot so well. >Anyhow, good thing I didn't put a ball thru it. Now here comes the=20 >part that may make some of you mad, I left it to have the jug=20 >choke reamed out. My original purpose was to have something I could=20 >shoot either shot or ball, so I'm having this done. Man, she did=20 >shoot a great pattern though. I hope I can get a decent one=20 >afterwards. We couldn't even get a .570 ball down very easily until=20 >about an inch and a half down the bore and then it just fell in. I'm=20 >afraid the choke would act as an obstruction, so I thought it best to=20 >get it reamed. >That's the scoop. I'm now waiting not so patiently to get it again! Scott, I may have missed several messages from this point on. This is the last message I saw. From my reading (and I stress reading, no personal experience here) my understanding is that a jug-choked bore has essentially no effect on patched ball accuracy once the barrel is properly adjusted. I assume adjustment means judicious filing/relieving of the bore to make the patched ball/shot load fly in the proper direction. Would putting more taper on the jug choke alleviate the flyers found in the patched round ball, or does the choke really need to be totally removed? I don't have one of these smooth-bore types, but would like to know the answers to my questions just in case I hit the lottery or something. A smoothbore or some sort (actually a Bess probably-someone as bad a shot as me needs all the lead he can get) is next on my "needs" list. Much obliged for any info you care to share. Roy Parker, Booshway, 1998 SW Regional Rendezvous, rparker7@ix.netcom.com =46ull SW Rendezvous info available at http://www.sat.net/~robenhaus Buckskinner, Brewer, Blacksmith and other "B"'s, including "BS". ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 23:33:44 -0800 From: Bob Killingsworth Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides WIDD-Tim Austin (WIDD-Tim Austin) wrote: > > Jo Tiger asked if anyone could tell how to tan a deer hide with the hair > on. > > The question I have is why would anyone want a deer hide tanned with > hair on? > > The answer is the same as with the hair off, just omit the de-hair step. > > Tim Austin There can be some really cool coats and such made using hair on leather. There are several uses for hair on. Soaring Eagle ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 22:22:31 -0800 From: tigrbo1 Subject: Re: MtMan-List: Other guns of the Corp of Discovery JON P TOWNS wrote: >I have read and know for a fact that the Corp had Air Rifles Greetings Jon, Many moons ago I paid a visit to Ft. Clatsap a few miles west of Astoria, Ore. on the northern oregon coast, and while there I also toured their museum. They had on display (replica?) air guns used by Lewis & Clark that used a spheariod air tank that attached about where a magizene would go on a modern rifle. Very interesting. To all who are interested, The 21st Annual Muzzle Loading Arms & Pioneer Crafts Show put on by the Cascade Mtn. Men will be held on March 7 & 8 1998 at the King County Fair Grounds in Enumclaw, Wa.. This is a fun little event with at least 100 tables of merchants, organizations, displays, demos and such spanning F&I to cowboy action groups. Hours are 9am to 5pm. Admission is $3.00, 12 and under are free. Info # is 206-763-1698 Best regards, Terry Smith ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Feb 1998 02:12:20 EST From: NaugaMok@aol.com Subject: Re: MtMan-List: parched corn In a message dated 98-02-02 10:44:50 EST, you write: << Do you dry sweet corn, use field corn, Yes < or grow the old kind of corn. >> Would try it if I had seed. NM ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Feb 1998 10:43:08 -0500 From: "Scott Allen" Subject: MtMan-List: Ft. Frederick Rifle Raffle Hello List(s) For those of you who bought tickets for the rifle raffle. Last night's number was 947 and no ticket was sold for that number. Therefore, Maryland's Tuesday evening pick 3 number will be used and so on until we get a winner. So thanks to all who bought tickets and good luck. I'll report when we get a winner. Your most humble servant, Scott Allen Hunter and Scout for Fort Frederick Fairplay, MD http://members.tripod.com/~SCOTT ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Feb 1998 11:07:31 -0500 From: kat Subject: RE: MtMan-List: Iroquois at 1825 rendezvous no, then you would have been an elf. Could you please post your source for the hat? Kat begin 600 WINMAIL.DAT M>)\^(@00`0:0" `$```````!``$``0>0!@`(````Y 0```````#H``$(@ <` M& ```$E032Y-:6-R;W-O9G0@36%I;"Y.;W1E`#$(`0V ! `"`````@`"``$$ MD 8`2 $```$````,`````P``, (````+``\.``````(!_P\!````5P`````` M``"!*Q^DOJ,0&9UN`-T!#U0"`````&AI'1 ;&ES=',N>&UI``(P M`0````4```!33510`````!X``S !````'0```&AI'1 ;&ES=',N>&UIG9O=7,`I@X!!8 #``X```#.!P(` M`P`+``<`'P`"``T!`2" `P`.````S@<"``,`"P`'``,``@#Q``$)@ $`(0`` M`#(Y-S=#0C9!03@S,$)$,3$X,3DX-C(T,30V-C-".3 V`/0&`0.0!@`X`@`` M$P````L`(P```````P`F```````+`"D```````,`+@```````P`V``````! M`#D`8,D7U;TPO0$>`' ``0```"P```!213H@371-86XM3&ES=#H@27)O<75O M:7,@870@,3@R-2!R96YD97IV;W5S``(!<0`!````%@````&],+W5%PD6#62< MQ#%IE@H``!X`'@P!````!0```%--5% `````'@`?# $````/```` M:V%T0&IA;G)I>"YC;VT```,`!A!=6*CB`P`'$$4````>``@0`0```$8```!. M3RQ42$5.64]55T]53$1(059%0D5%3D%.14Q&0T]53$193U503$5!4T503U-4 M64]54E-/55)#149/4E1(14A!5#]+050````"`0D0`0```,@```#$````4 $` M`$Q:1G7TB*0Y_P`*`0\"%0*D`^0%ZP*#`% 3`U0"`&-H"L!S973N,@8`!L," M@S(#Q@<3`H.Z,Q,-?0J ",\)V3L5_W@R-34"@ J!#;$+8&[P9S$P,Q0@"PH4 M(@P!`F,`0"!N;RP@=))H"? @>0A@('<(8 AL9" 1P'9E(&(%">$@`Y%E;&8N M()X@"%$;X1MR"U!E81'PN1W0;W,%0!MQ!8$HJQ+TPO0$>`#T``0````4```!213H@``````R! ` end ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Feb 1998 11:11:22 EST From: J2HEARTS@aol.com Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides Need anyone be cautioned about wearing "fur on" coats in the woods during hunting or even non-huntng seasons. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 11:01:24 -0600 From: WIDD-Tim Austin (WIDD-Tim Austin) Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides -Reply Yes, have plenty that I used for the floor of my tepee, did not finish them entirely since they were going to be a floor and did not need to be real soft on the flesh side. Because of the hair going all the time, it gets everywhere, and thus makes it not a good idea to tan a deer hide with hair on. The stuff gets everywhere, and the crazy thing is that they never look like they have less hair. Have 2 large ones from MN that have had for 15 years, still lots of hair comes off, but not sign of them getting to be less hair. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 11:02:47 -0600 From: WIDD-Tim Austin (WIDD-Tim Austin) Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides -Reply That is true, however, not deer. Have several things with hair on, not deer, bobcat, fox, coyote, skunk, bear to name some, but not deer. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Feb 1998 14:42:08 -0500 From: "Scott Allen" Subject: Re: MtMan-List: smoothbore fix Roy, >From what I understand, I was mistaken in calling what I have "jug choking". A jug choke is where the barrel is cylinder bore to a certain point towards the muzzle end of the barrel and then it flares out for a short distance before returning to cylinder bore for the remainder of the distance. My barrel goes from 20 gauge at the breech and tapers (is choked) down to 24 gauge at the muzzle. To shoot a ball thru a jug choke, from what I'm told, is no problem. To shoot one from a tapered or choked barrel like mine could be an invitation to disaster. A ball quite possibly could wedge itself on the way out and then the barrel would look like a banana peel (along with my head). The fix for my gun is a simple removing or reaming of the taper to make it a cylinder bore. Hope this clears it up. Your most humble servant, Scott Allen Hunter and Scout for Fort Frederick Fairplay, MD http://members.tripod.com/~SCOTT ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Feb 1998 16:24:40 -0800 From: "Jim or Maryellen Majoros" Subject: MtMan-List: smallpox This is a multi-part message in MIME format. - ------=_NextPart_000_0004_01BD30C0.3A5A6A60 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable hello, We are doing a project on smallpox and we were wondering if you had = pictures on smallpox and the history of smallpox. PLEASE WRITE BACK = A.S.A.P!!! Our projects due the 19th of febuary 98' THANK = YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Email me back at cats@ncweb.com - ------=_NextPart_000_0004_01BD30C0.3A5A6A60 Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

hello,
    We are doing a project on = smallpox and we=20 were wondering if you had pictures on smallpox and the history of = smallpox.=20 PLEASE WRITE BACK A.S.A.P!!! Our projects due the 19th of febuary 98' = THANK=20 YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
          &nbs= p;            = ;          =20 Email me back at cats@ncweb.com
- ------=_NextPart_000_0004_01BD30C0.3A5A6A60-- ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 13:57:16 -0800 From: Flying Cloud Subject: Re: MtMan-List: Other guns of the Corp of Discovery tigrbo1 wrote: > > JON P TOWNS wrote: > >I have read and know for a fact that the Corp had Air Rifles > > Greetings Jon, > > Many moons ago I paid a visit to Ft. Clatsap a few miles west of > Astoria, Ore. on the northern oregon coast, and while there I also > toured their museum. They had on display (replica?) air guns used by > Lewis & Clark that used a spheariod air tank that attached about where a > magizene would go on a modern rifle. Very interesting. >> > Best regards, > > Terry Smith Hi terry They now say the air that was on display at the fort is the same type as used by Lewis, the one he used had the air tank in the stock. - -- Jim Ellison, http://www.rosenet.net/~flyingcd ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 16:27:15 -0600 (CST) From: mxhbc@TTACS.TTU.EDU (Henry B. Crawford) Subject: RE: MtMan-List: Iroquois at 1825 rendezvous >no, then you would have been an elf. Could you please post your source for >the hat? > >Kat My red toque (voyageur's hat) came from Jas. Townsend. 16.00 plus shipping as per the Spring 1998 catalog. ***************************************** Henry B. Crawford Curator of History mxhbc@ttacs.ttu.edu Museum of Texas Tech University 806/742-2442 Box 43191 FAX 742-1136 Lubbock, TX 79409-3191 WEBSITE: http://www.ttu.edu/~museum ************** "Make it so!" *************** ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 17:59:15 -0600 From: John Kramer Subject: Re: MtMan-List: parched corn At 01:12 AM 2/3/98 , NaugaMok@aol.com wrote: >< or grow the old kind of corn. >> > >Would try it if I had seed. >NM > Historic seeds for corn, beans, squash, melons and more; are available for free (if you send back fresh new seed from your crop) from: Agricultural Research U.S. Dept of Agriculture National Seed Storage Colo State University Fort Collins, CO John... John T. Kramer, maker of: Kramer's Best Antique Improver >>>It makes wood wonderful<<< - >>>As good as old!<<< http://www.kramerize.com/ mail to: john ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 17:03:49 -0800 From: Dale Nelson Subject: Re: MtMan-List: tanning deer hides -Reply WIDD-Tim Austin (WIDD-Tim Austin) wrote: > > Have several things with hair on, not > deer, bobcat, fox, coyote, skunk, bear to name some Did you brain tan them, and if so how did you go about smoking them? When I do buckskin I force the smoke through the hide. I'm inclined to think that a smoke house only gives a surface smoke and is less than satisfactory. I won a green coyote hide as a blanket prize one time, and I alum tanned it, then made a hat. The alum drew water out of the air, and the inside of the hat would be wet, sometimes actuall dripping water, and I couldn't get it rinsed out good enough to stop it, so had to throw it away. Dale Nelson ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 3 Feb 1998 21:19:58 EST From: HKUSP9410@aol.com Subject: Re: MtMan-List: parched corn In a message dated 98-02-03 10:38:14 EST, you write: << Would try it if I had seed. NM >> Check an issue of the Mother Earth News. They have a seed exchange for people who want to keep the old types of fruits and vegetables alive and prospering. If you don't see what you want they give addresses to write to... Watch yer TopKnot Missouri Mule ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 98 22:14:46 PST From: "Lanney Ratcliff" Subject: Re: MtMan-List: parched corn You can place the corn one kernel deep in a shallow pan and do your parching in a medium oven and wait for the popping sound. As you say, keep away from the grease. I have known folks that ground up Corn Nuts purchased from the snack counter, but these are plenty greasy. I have also used blue corn (which also turns brown when parched). I once traded a man about two pounds of crushed, parched blue corn (pinole) for a pewter "turtle" spoon worth about $15, and he thought he got the best of the bargain. Lanney Ratcliff rat@htcomp.net - ---------- > > Jim, > > Any dried corn will do. Dried white flint corn is probably the most > authentic, although yellow is right too. I've done field corn which > is actually probably closer to 18th century corn than any other we > have today. All work well. Remember to parch in a dry skillet. Grease > will make the corn go bad alot quicker. Heat a skillet to medium heat > and roast until the kernal has turned a golden to dark brown. It will > make a sound like popcorn while parching. Make sure not to burn it. > It is ready when it will crush to a coarse powder. > I like to mix a little raw sugar and pounded jerky with mine for the > perfect trail food. Good luck. > > > Your most humble servant, > Scott Allen > Hunter and Scout for Fort Frederick > Fairplay, MD > http://members.tripod.com/~SCOTT > ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 18:04:30 -0800 From: tigrbo1 Subject: MtMan-List: Re: Air guns Flying Cloud wrote: > Hi terry > They now say the air that was on display at the fort is the same type as used by Lewis, the one he used had the air tank in the stock. Greetings Jim, Perhaps Ft. Clatsop needs to tweek their displays a bit. Have you been there lately? what condition is the fort in these days? Great web site you've got. Do you get to any events up here in washington? Will you be at the M/L Arms & Pioneer Crafts Show in Enumclaw (king cnty Fair Grounds)in march? Best regards, Terry Smith ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 20:21:30 -0800 From: tigrbo1 Subject: MtMan-List: Fort Nisqually Schedule Greetings all, As a public service announcement (baltant plug) here is the list of events at Ft. Nisqually for 1998. Ft. Nisqually is a Hudson Bay Co. trade fort circa 1855. The fort is located at Point Defiance Zoo & Park in Tacoma, Washington. Hours are : Jan. 1 to Apr. 1 open Wednesday-Sunday 11am-4pm Apr. 2 to May 24 Open Wednesday-Sunday 11am-5pm May 25 to Sept. 7 Open daily 11am-6pm Sept. 8 to Dec. 31 Open Wednesday-Sunday 11am-4pm Admission: Adults $1.50 - Children .75 cents Admission charged weekends: Apr., May, Sept., Oct. Admission charged daily: June, July, Aug. All buildings open and staffed. For information: 5400 N. Pearl St.,#11 Tacoma, Wa. 98407 Ph# (253)-591-5339 -Events Are- Feb.21-LECTURE:"Murder at Butler Cove" by Dave Crooks at 2pm Mar.21-LECTURE:"Restoration of the Factor's House" at 2pm Apr.18-LIVING HISTORY DAY: 11am to 5pm Admission May 16-QUEEN VICTORIA'S BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION: 11am to 5pm Admission Jun.27-LECTURE:"Wilkes' Expedition" by Clint Cannon 2pm Free with fort admission Jul.24-LECTURE:"Peter Skene Ogden" by Jerry Ramsey 7pm Aug.8&9-BRIGADE ENCAMPMENT: 11am to 5pm Admission Sep.19-LIVING HISTORY DAY: 11am to 5pm Admission Oct.2&3-CANDLELIGHT TOUR: (Reservations required. Tickets go on sale September 1) 7pm to 11pm Oct.23&24-STORYTELLING:"Bonfires, Beaver Pelts & Bogeymen" 7pm Admission Nov.14-LIVING HISTORY DAY: 11am to 5pm Admission Dec.5-NINETEENTH CENTURY CHRISTMAS:1pm to 4pm Admission Best regards, Terry Smith ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 03 Feb 1998 21:32:37 EST From: tedhart@juno.com (Ted A Hart) Subject: Re: MtMan-List: parched corn Maybe you could check out the Heirloom Hertiage...I believe that's what they're called. They deal primarily with antique vegetables, fruits, and crops that are rare. You could try the Cherokee corn or the Blue Corn which tortillas are made from...or whatnot. Wouldn't be able to help you on the address though. Still am trying to locate the Mohawk address. Forgot to explain that when you inquire of the seeds you are expected to mail back the same amount that you got and keep the rest so that way the seeds can go to some one else. Ted _____________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com Or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866] ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 04 Feb 1998 10:33:54 -0800 From: Flying Cloud Subject: Re: MtMan-List: Re: Air guns tigrbo1 wrote: > > Flying Cloud wrote: > > > Hi terry > > They now say the air that was on display at the fort is the same type as used by Lewis, the one he used had the air tank in the stock. > > Greetings Jim, > > Perhaps Ft. Clatsop needs to tweek their displays a bit. Have you been > there lately? what condition is the fort in these days? Great web site > you've got. Do you get to any events up here in washington? Will you be > at the M/L Arms & Pioneer Crafts Show in Enumclaw (king cnty Fair > Grounds)in march? > > Best regards, > > Terry Smith Yes, Donna and I spent the day at the fort this last summer, the air gun is no longer on display, we where able to pick several books on Clark for our great nephews who are direct decendents of Clark. - -- Jim Ellison, http://www.rosenet.net/~flyingcd ------------------------------ End of hist_text-digest V1 #13 ****************************** - To unsubscribe to hist_text-digest, send an email to "majordomo@xmission.com" with "unsubscribe hist_text-digest" in the body of the message. For information on digests or retrieving files and old messages send "help" to the same address. Do not use quotes in your message.