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The FReeper Foxhole Remembers Peter Francisco: A One Man Army (1760-1831) - Apr. 7th, 2005
American History Magazine | October 1998 | Joseph Gustaitis

Posted on 04/06/2005 9:41:34 PM PDT by SAMWolf



Lord,

Keep our Troops forever in Your care

Give them victory over the enemy...

Grant them a safe and swift return...

Bless those who mourn the lost.
.

FReepers from the Foxhole join in prayer
for all those serving their country at this time.


.................................................................. .................... ...........................................

U.S. Military History, Current Events and Veterans Issues

Where Duty, Honor and Country
are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.

Our Mission:

The FReeper Foxhole is dedicated to Veterans of our Nation's military forces and to others who are affected in their relationships with Veterans.

In the FReeper Foxhole, Veterans or their family members should feel free to address their specific circumstances or whatever issues concern them in an atmosphere of peace, understanding, brotherhood and support.

The FReeper Foxhole hopes to share with it's readers an open forum where we can learn about and discuss military history, military news and other topics of concern or interest to our readers be they Veteran's, Current Duty or anyone interested in what we have to offer.

If the Foxhole makes someone appreciate, even a little, what others have sacrificed for us, then it has accomplished one of it's missions.

We hope the Foxhole in some small way helps us to remember and honor those who came before us.

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click on the books below.

Peter Francisco: A One Man Army


A six-and-a-half-foot-tall Hercules who wielded a six-foot-long broadsword, Peter Francisco was arguably the most remarkable soldier of the Revolutionary War.

It is somewhat surprising that Hollywood has never made a movie based on the life of Peter Francisco. His story would seem to have all the ingredients for box-office success--mystery, romance, and swashbuckling action. Perhaps the problem is in casting the role; it would require a swarthy, Mediterranean actor who is also the size of a house and has a light tenor singing voice.


Peter Francisco, giant member of the American forces at Guilford, who slew 11 men with his oversized sword during the battle.


If such a film were made, one can imagine the opening scene: in the foreground a wooden pier juts out into a misty harbor, where the stillness is broken only by the cries of a few gulls. Gradually, the sound of splashing oars becomes audible. A longboat emerges from the fog; then, as the scene brightens, the silhouette of the merchantman from which it came appears in the distance. The boat pulls alongside the dock; sailors' rough voices mutter unintelligibly as the form of a small person is lifted from the bobbing craft and set on the pier.

A shout is heard and the boat quickly departs. The bewildered castaway turns toward the camera. He is a young boy, no more than four or five years old, dressed in a once-fine suit that now is dirty and worn. On his shoes expensive silver buckles spell out the initials "P.F."

At daybreak the pier begins to come to life. Waterfront residents gather curiously around the waif, asking questions. Unable to speak their language, he simply repeats the words "Pedro Francisco." Eventually a woman comes along, takes the child by the hand, and leads him away, saying "I'll take him to the poorhouse. They'll know what to do with him."

This scenario, though a bit romanticized, is roughly what happened at City Point (now a part of Hopewell), Virginia, on June 23, 1765. The boy later grew up--and up--to become the most remarkable fighting man of the Revolutionary War, a giant of a soldier of whom General George Washington is reputed to have said: "Without him we would have lost two crucial battles, perhaps the War, and with it our freedom. He was truly a One-Man Army."


Diorama of Col. William Washington's cavalry attacking British regulars. Peter Francisco, left foreground.


Soon after young Pedro Francisco was taken to the Prince George County poorhouse, his plight came to the attention of Anthony Winston, a local judge and uncle to Virginia firebrand Patrick Henry. Winston took the lad in and taught him to speak English.

Once the boy could communicate with his new guardian, he recounted what he remembered of his past, but it wasn't much. He had lived in a mansion near the ocean, he said. His mother spoke what he thought was French; his father spoke another language--what, he couldn't say. One day, when Pedro and his younger sister were playing in the garden, rough men seized them. The girl fought and got away, but Pedro was bound, blindfolded, gagged, and carried to a ship. After what seemed an endless voyage, he was put ashore at the City Point dock.

Winston never learned anything more about the boy's past, but later investigators have been more successful in piecing together what appears to be a likely, if partial, solution to the Peter Francisco mystery. In 1971, Virginia researcher John E. Manahan, reporting on studies he had carried out while teaching overseas, argued convincingly that Francisco's original home had been at Porto Judeu, on Terceira Island in the Portuguese-held Azores, and that he was the same Pedro Francisco born there on July 9, 1760.

Why Francisco was abducted remains a mystery. Manahan theorized that the child had been kidnapped by sailors who intended to sell him in the New World as an indentured servant, but the researcher offered no explanation of why they abandoned their captive instead. An Azorean legend has it that the Francisco family, fearful of political enemies, engineered Pedro's abduction as a means of protecting him from some grisly form of reprisal planned against his parents. While this may be true, evidence is lacking. But that Peter Francisco was a Portuguese (which he himself suspected) seems almost certain, and Portuguese-Americans have eagerly accepted him as an illustrious forebear.


Peter Francisco's shoe. The shoe is equivalent to a size 10 1/2 D. "Mr. Francisco" is written in lining.


Whether or not the sailors in fact intended to sell the boy into indentured servitude, that more or less became his fate. Rather than provide Peter with formal schooling, Judge Winston put him to work doing chores around his plantation, a 3,600-acre estate in Buckingham County, Virginia, known as "Hunting Tower."

In adulthood Peter was destined to attain the then-prodigious height of six-feet-six-inches--nearly a foot taller than the average man at the time--and weigh at least 260 pounds. Already of surpassing stature by his early teens, the youth was instructed in the brawny trade of blacksmithing--an obvious calling for a person of his size and amazing strength. It was the latter rather than his height that got him noticed.

In March 1775, when he was not yet fifteen, Francisco went along with Judge Winston to Richmond for a meeting of the Virginia Convention. Tempers flared as delegates hotly debated the colony's relationship with Great Britain.Young Peter contributed to the excitement when he broke up one tavern dispute by lifting the combatants into the air and banging them together until they ceased their argument.


Francisco's strength, bravery, and size made him one of the most famous soldiers of the American Revolution.
Virginia Historical Society


It was during this convention that the lad stood outside St. John's Church and heard through the window the renowned speech by Patrick Henry that ended: "I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!" Peter, as the story goes, was ready right there to take up arms against the British oppressors, but Judge Winston prevailed upon him to wait: though large enough to go to war, he was not quite old enough. In 1776 Winston relented, and at the age of sixteen Peter enlisted with the 10th Virginia regiment as a private.

Although Francisco was not at Bunker Hill or Saratoga, in many other respects his military career closely followed the course of the War of Independence. After a stay of several months in New Jersey following his enlistment, Francisco received his first taste of action in September 1777 at Brandywine Creek in neighboring Pennsylvania, where General Washington, the commander in chief of the Continental Army, attempted to halt the advance toward Philadelphia of some 12,500 British troops under the command of General William Howe.

Outflanked by Howe, the Americans suffered a defeat in the ensuing battle, and Washington's army was forced into a disorderly retreat. The regiment of which Francisco was a member held the line at a narrow defile called Sandy Hollow Gap for a crucial forty-five minutes, allowing the rest of the force to withdraw and preventing an all-out rout. The young soldier suffered a gunshot wound to his leg during this hard-fought rear-guard action.



TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: americanrevolution; freeperfoxhole; guilfordcourthouse; militia; peterfrancisco; portugal; veterans
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To: SAMWolf

On This Day In history


Birthdates which occurred on April 07:
1506 St Francis Xavier Jesuit missionary to India, Malaya, & Japan
1534 José de Anchieta Spanish jesuit/missionary (Brazilian Tupi-Indians)
1629 Juan José of Austria, Spanish General/Governor of Netherlands
1632 MoJo2001 aka "Queen of the WooHoo" "Marchioness of Godiva". Nutritional scientist (Discovered that chocolate eaten late at night is devoid of calories).
Note: it's not my fault. AZamericonnie made me do it! HEY I'M THE VICTIM HERE!!! IT'S NOT MY FAULT!
1648 Ferdinand van Kessel Flemish painter
1770 William Wordsworth England, poet laureate (The Prelude)
1775 Francis C Lowell founded 1st raw cotton-to-cloth textile mill
1786 William Rufus DeVane King (D) 13th US Vice President (1853)
1801 Henry Eagle Commander (Union Navy), died in 1882
1805 Francis Wilkinson Pickens (Governor-SC, Confederacy), died in 1869
1822 Gershom Mott Major General (Union volunteers)
1837 J. Pierpont Morgan (J.P. Morgan, d.1913), American financier, born Hartford, Conn
1859 Walter Camp Connecticut, father of American football (Yale)
1860 W K Kellogg a real corn flake
1878 Jozef C Bittremieux Flemish theologist (Virgin & Mother of God)
1882 Kurt von Schleiger German chancellor (12/2/32-1/28/33)
1884 Charles Dodd English new testament authority
1890 Marjory Stoneman Douglas environmentalist (1st Lady of Everglades)
1893 Allan W Dulles US diplomat/CIA head 1953-61 (Germany's Underground)
1893 Irene Castle dancer (leader in anti-vivisection movement)
1897 Walter Winchell Harlem New York NY, newscaster/columnist/muckracker (Untouchables)
1908 Le Duan Vietnamese politician
1915 Billie Holiday(Lady Day) [Eleanora Fagan] Philadelphia PA, singer (Ain't Nobody's Business)
1915 Henry Kuttner US, sci-fi author (Dark World, As You Were, Startling Worlds of Henry Kuttner)
1920 Ravi Shankar Benares India, sitar player (Sounds of India)
1920 Terence Edward Armstrong polar geographer
1928 James [Scott Bumgarner] Garner Norman OK, actor (Rockford Files, Bret Maverick)
1928 James White UK, sci-fi author (Star Surgeon, Star Healer)
1930 Andrew Sachs actor (Manuel-Fawlty Towers)
1931 Daniel Ellsberg whistleblower (Pentagon Papers)
1933 Wayne Rogers Birmingham AL, actor (MASH, House Calls, Chiefs)
1935 Hodding Carter III press secretary (Jimmy Carter)
1935 Bobby Bare Irontown OH, country singer (Detroit City)
1938 Freddie Hubbard Indianapolis IN, jazz trumpeter (Art Blakey)
1938 Yvonne Lime Glendale CA, actress (Father Knows Best, Dobie Gillis)
1938 [Edmund G] Jerry Brown Jr San Francisco CA, (Governor-Democrat-CA, 1975-83)(governor moonbeam)
1939 David Frost Tenderdon England, TV host (That Was the Week That Was)
1939 Francis Ford Coppola Detroit MI, film maker (Godfather, Apocalypse Now, American Graffiti)
1949 John Oates guitarist/vocalist (Hall & Oates-Rich Girl)
1951 Janis Ian [Janis Eddy Fink] New York NY, folk singer (Society's Child, At 17)
1951 John Dittrich Union NJ, country singer (Restless Heart-Wheels)
1954 Jackie Chan martial art actor (Rumble in the Bronx)
1954 Tony Dorsett NFL running back (Dallas Cowboys, Heisman Trophy)
1966 Teri Ann Linn Honolulu HI, actress (Kristen-Bold & Beautiful)
1967 Steve Wisniewski NFL guard (Oakland Raiders)



Deaths which occurred on April 07:
0030 Jesus crucified by Roman troops in Jerusalem (scholars' estimate, according to astronomer Schaefer)
0924 Berengarius I Emperor of Italy, murdered
1498 Charles VIII King of France (1483-98), dies at 27
1614 El Greco Spanish painter (View of Toledo), dies (birth date unknown)
1719 Jean-Baptiste de la Salle French priest/theory/saint, dies at 67
1783 Ignaz Jakob Holzbauer composer, dies at 71
1789 Abdül-Hamid I 27th sultan of Turkey (1774-89), dies at 64
1803 [François Dominique] Toussaint L'Ouverture Haitian revolutionary, dies
1881 Pierre Napoleon Bonaparte Corsican MP, dies at 65
1891 P[hineas] T Barnum US circus promoter (Barnum & Bailey), dies at 80
1932 Erv A Kelley US policeman, shot to death by Pretty Boy Floyd
1947 Henry Ford (Auto pioneer) dies at age 83.
1950 Walter Huston dies at 66
1955 Theda Bara actress (Camille, Cleopatra, 2 Orphans), dies at 62
1961 Marian Jordan radio comedienne (Fibber McGee & Molly), dies at 62
1968 Jim Clark of Scotland, former world driving champion, dies in race car at 32
1972 "Crazy" Joe Gallo mobster, killed at his 43rd birthday party
1983 Gavin Gordon television actor (Romance, Lone Cowboy), dies at 82
1984 Frank Church (Senator-Democrat-OH, 1957-81), dies at 59


GWOT Casualties

Iraq
07-Apr-2003 8 | US: 8 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Lance Corporal Andrew Julian Aviles Central part Hostile - hostile fire
US Corporal Jesus Martin Antonio Medellin Central part Hostile - hostile fire
US Staff Sergeant Lincoln Daniel Hollinsaid Baghdad airport Hostile - hostile fire - RPG attack
US 2nd Lieutenant Jeffrey Joseph Kaylor Baghdad Hostile - hostile fire - grenade
US Private 1st Class Anthony Scott Miller Baghdad (south of) Hostile - hostile fire - mortar attack
US Specialist George Arthur Mitchell Jr. Baghdad (south of) Hostile - hostile fire - mortar attack
US Major William Randolph Watkins III Tikrit (near) Hostile - jet crash
US Captain Eric Bruce Das Tikrit (near) Hostile - jet crash

07-Apr-2004 6 | US: 6 | UK: 0 | Other: 0
US Sergeant 1st Class William W. Labadie Jr. Camp Cooke (Taji) Hostile - hostile fire - rocket attack
US Sergeant 1st Class Marvin Lee Miller Samarra?/Balad? Hostile - hostile fire
US Captain Brent L. Morel Fallujah [Al Anbar Prov.] Hostile - hostile fire
US 2nd Lieutenant John Thomas "J.T." Wroblewski Ramadi Hostile - hostile fire
US Staff Sergeant George S. Rentschler Baghdad (Diala Police Sta.) Hostile - hostile fire - RPG attack
US Specialist Tyanna S. Felder Balad Hostile - hostile fire - IED attack


Afghanistan
A Good Day

http://icasualties.org/oif/
Data research by Pat Kneisler
Designed and maintained by Michael White


On this day...
0451 Attila's Hun's plunder Metz
1118 Pope Gelasius II excommunicated Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor
1348 Prague U, 1st university in central Europe, formed by Charles IV
1498 Crowd storms Savonarola's convent San Marco Florence Italy
1509 France declares war on Venice
1521 Inquisitor-General Adrian Boeyens bans Lutheran books
1625 Albrecht von Wallenstein appointed German supreme commander
1645 Michael Cardozo becomes 1st Jewish lawyer in Brazil
1652 Dutch establish settlement at Cape Town, South Africa
1655 Fabio Chigi replaces Pope Innocent X as Alexander VII
1712 Slave revolt (New York NY)
1724 Johann S Bach's "John Passion" premieres in Leipzig
1788 1st settlement in Ohio, at Marietta
1798 Territory of Mississippi is organized
1818 General Andrew Jackson conquers St Marks FL from Seminole Indians
1827 English chemist John Walker invents wooden matches
1862 Union forces led by Gen. Ulysses S. Grant defeat the Confederates at the battle of Shiloh in Tennessee. Gen. Ulysses Grant after the Battle of Shiloh said: “I saw an open field... so covered with dead that it would have been possible to walk across... in any direction, stepping on dead bodies without a foot touching the ground.” More than 9,000 Americans died.
1862 Island #10 falls
1863 Battle of Charleston SC, failed Federal fleet attack on Fort Sumter
1865 Battle of Farmville VA
1888 Start of Sherlock Holmes adventure "Yellow Face" (BG)
1891 Nebraska introduces the 8 hour work day
1902 Texas Oil Company (Texaco) forms
1922 Naval Reserve #3, "Teapot Dome", leased to Harry F Sinclair
1923 1st brain tumor operation under local anesthetic performed (Beth Israel Hospital in NYC) by Dr K Winfield Ney
1923 Workers Party of America (NYC) becomes official communist party
1926 Mussolini's Irish wife breaks his nose
1927 Using phone lines TV is sent from Washington DC to New York NY
1933 Prohibition ends, Utah becomes 38th state to ratify 21st Amendment
1933 University Bridge, Seattle opens for traffic
1933 1st 2 Nazi anti-Jewish laws, bar Jews from legal & public service
1934 In India, Mahatma Gandhi suspends his campaign of civil disobedience
1939 Italy annexes Albania
1940 1st black to appear on US stamp (Booker T Washington)
1941 British Generals O'Connor & Neame captured in North Africa
1942 Heavy German assault on Malta
1943 British/US troops make contact at Wadi Akarit, South-Tunisia
1943 Lieutenant Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg seriously wounded in allied air raid
1945 US planes intercept Japanese fleet heading for Okinawa on a suicide mission; superbattleship Yamato & four destroyers are sunk
1946 Part of East Prussia incorporated into Russian SFSR
1947 Arab students, influenced by national socialist movements in Europe, founded the Baath Party. Satia al-Husri, father of Ba’athism, was a disciple of German philosopher Johann Fichte. This became a holiday in Iraq until abolished in 2003.


1947 Mont Pelerin, Switzerland, Friedrich A. von Hayek invited a group of classical liberals to discuss the threat of freedom posed by the expansionist governments of the day. The group founded the Mont Pelerin Society to continue meetings and discussions in the future. They viewed central planning as the single most important threat to liberty


1948 World Health Organization established by UN
1949 Rogers & Hammerstein's "South Pacific" opens at Majestic Theater (for 1928 performances)
1951 American Bowling Congress begins 1st masters tournament
1951 US performs atmospheric nuclear test at Enwetak
1953 1st west-to-east jet transatlantic nonstop flight
1953 Dag Hammarskjöld of Sweden elected 2nd UN General-Secretary
1954 German government refuses to recognize DDR
1954 President Dwight Eisenhower fears "domino-effect" in Indo-China
1956 Spain relinquishes her protectorate in Morocco
1957 Last of New York's electric trolleys completes its final run
1959 Radar 1st bounced off sun, Stanford CA
1959 Oklahoma ends prohibition, after 51 years
1963 Public stock offering of 115,000 shares in Milwaukee Braves withdrawn after only 13,000 shares are sold to 1,600 new investors
1966 US recovers lost H-bomb from Mediterranean floor (whoops!)
1967 Israeli/Syrian border fights
1967 Tom Donahue, San Francisco dj begins new radio format - Progressive (KMPX-FM)
1969 Supreme Court strikes down laws prohibiting private possession of obscene material
1969 Ted Williams begins managing Washington Senators, they lose to Yankees 8-4
1970 Milwaukee Brewers (former Seattle Pilots) 1st game, lose to Angels 12-0
1971 Dismissal of Curt Flood's suit against baseball is upheld by Supreme Court
1971 President Richard Nixon orders Lieutenant Calley (My Lai) free
1976 Chinese Politburo fires vice-premier Deng Xiaoping
1977 Consumer Product Safety Commission bans the flame-retardant chemical "TRIS"
1978 President Jimmy Carter defers production of the neutron bomb
1978 Guttenberg bible sold for $2,000,000 in NYC
1978 US Court of Appeals upholds Commissioner Kuhn's voiding of attempted player sales by A's owner Charlie Finley in June 1976
1979 Henri La Mothe dives 28' into 12 3/8" of water
1980 Jimmy Carter breaks relations with Iran during hostage crisis
1981 Willem Klein mentally extracts 13th root of a 100-digit # in 29 seconds
1982 Iran minister of Foreign affairs Ghotbzadeh arrested
1983 STS-6 specialist Story Musgrave & Don Peterson 1st STS spacewalk
1983 Oldest human skeleton, aged 80,000 years, discovered in Egypt(Doesn't look a day over 79,992)
1984 Detroit Tiger Jack Morris pitches no-hitter against Chicago White Sox, 4-0
1985 New Jersey General Hershel Walker runs for USFL record 233 yards
1988 Russia announces it will withdraw its troops from Afghánistán
1989 New York Supreme Court takes America's Cup away from San Diego Yacht Club for using a catamaran against New Zealand; Appeals court eventually overrules
1989 Soviet sub sinks in Norwegian Sea, with about a dozen deaths (Kursk)
1990 John Poindexter (National Security Advisor) found guilty on Iran-Contra scandal
1990 Michael Milken pleads innocent to security law violations
1991 "Shadowlands" closes at Brooks Atkinson Theater NYC after 169 performances
1996 Monica Lewinsky informes pres. Clinton that she was to be transferred from the White House. He promised to bring her back following the elections and they had another sexual encounter.
2000 AG Janet Reno met in Washington with the father of Elian Gonzalez; Reno later told reporters that officials would arrange for Juan Miguel Gonzalez to reclaim his son, but she gave Elian’s Miami relatives one more chance to drop their resistance and join in a peaceful transfer.
2002 Saddam Hussein pledges to defeat the US if attacked and promised to continue supplying Palestinians to defend against Israel.
2003 19th day of Operation Iraqi Freedom US forces in tanks and armored vehicles stormed into the center of Baghdad, seizing Saddam Hussein's Sijood and Republican palaces.
A US warplane dropped 4 precision-guided 2,000-pound JDAMs and left a smoking crater 60 feet deep in the upscale al-Mansour section of western Baghdad, where Saddam Hussein was believed to have been in a meeting with top officials
Capt. Harry Alexander Hornbuckle on the road to Baghdad led 80 US soldiers against 300 Iraqi and Syrian fighters. 200 enemy were killed with no US casualties.
2003 SF Chronicle ran a $45,000 full-page ad that called for the impeachment of Pres. Bush. Former US Attorney Gen’l. Ramsey Clark led the ad sponsors.
2004 In Germany a court in Hamburg released Mounir el-Motassadeq (30), the only man convicted so far of involvement in the Sep 11, 2001, attacks
2004 A Moscow court sentenced Russian arms control researcher Igor Sutyagin to 15 years in prison for spying on behalf of the United States


Holidays
Note: Some Holidays are only applicable on a given "day of the week"

China : Ching Ming - families gather at graves of ancestors
Haiti : World Health Day (1948)
Yugoslavia : Republic Day (1963)
US : National Laugh Week Ends
US : National Publicity Stunt Week Ends
US : National Reading a Road Map Week (Day 4)
National Welding Month


Religious Observances
Orthodox : Annunciation of Mary (3/25 OS)
Roman Catholic : Memorial of St John Baptist de la Salle, priest, patron of teachers


Religious History
1541 Spanish founder of the Jesuits Francis Xavier, 35, and three friends set sail from Lisbon, Portugal for Goa. They became the first Roman Catholic missionaries to travel to India.
1628 Jonas Michaelius, 51, arrived in New Amsterdam (New York City), the first minister of the Dutch Reformed Church to come to America.
1884 Birth of C. H. Dodd, English clergyman and Bible scholar. Dodd became the most influential British New Testament scholar of the mid-20th century, and penned over a dozen books, including "The Parables of the Kingdom" (1934).
1953 Swedish statesman Dag Hammarskjld, 47, was elected Secretary General of the United Nations. Hammarskjld endeared himself to Christians, after his death in 1961, through the 1964 publication of his spiritual journal, "Markings."
1968 In a letter penned during his 83rd and final year of life, Karl Barth wrote: 'How one learns to be thankful for each day on which one can still do something.'

Source: William D. Blake. ALMANAC OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Minneapolis: Bethany House, 1987.


Thought for the day :
"Cheap things are of no value, valuable things are not cheap."


21 posted on 04/07/2005 7:33:23 AM PDT by Valin (The Problem with Reality is the lack of background music)
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To: alfa6

Hey that is a great run-down! Thanks.


22 posted on 04/07/2005 7:46:33 AM PDT by Wneighbor
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To: Wneighbor

Almost any thing you would want to know about the IJN is on that website.

Good luck with the move, I haven't had to do that in over 25 years :-) Although when Mrs alfa6 and I were first hitched i think we moved 5 time in about 6 years.

Regards

alfa6 ;>}


23 posted on 04/07/2005 7:51:35 AM PDT by alfa6 (Memebr loyal order of F.O.G.)
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To: alfa6

Heh, the last 2 moves I thought were my last. In 1984 I moved to my home area - never intended to leave. Then I got a nice job opportunity in 2001. Decided to go for it. *sigh* now gotta go somewhere else. I'm too old to do this very much more.

Thanks for the good luck wishes. I am sure it will work out. I'd just rather be spending this spring fishing! :-)


24 posted on 04/07/2005 8:08:58 AM PDT by Wneighbor
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To: snippy_about_it; All
GM, snippy, et.al.!

duckie is off to Pine Bluff, AR (AGAIN!!!!! !@#$%^&*!) today.

free dixie HUGS,sw

25 posted on 04/07/2005 9:33:24 AM PDT by stand watie (being a damnyankee is no better than being a racist. it is a LEARNED prejudice against dixie.)
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To: Wneighbor

LOL!

Okay, last week bittygirl unscrewed her bottle in her crib. I thought maybe I had not screwed it on tight enough or something. Tuesday, this week, she did it again, this time in the car on the way to grandma's. I thought, okay, maybe it is a fluke. Last night, she unscrewed the mentholatum and stuck her spoon in it, ready to take a bite, YIKES! We decide, it ain't a fluke. Today, she unscrewed the lid to the kitty litter jug.

elf-boy ~never~ tried anything like this. I am sure he could have if he had tried, but that is just it... he never thought of it. I am suddenly having a new appreciation for childproof caps.


26 posted on 04/07/2005 9:35:20 AM PDT by msdrby (Freedom, by its nature, must be chosen and defended by its citizens.)
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To: msdrby; Professional Engineer
We decide, it ain't a fluke. Today, she unscrewed the lid to the kitty litter jug.

Hmmm... I'm thinkin' that this time you ain't got a wizard on your hands. I think bittygirl may grow up to be more like me - a mechanical junkie! She's a motorhead! :-) She's gonna love muscle cars - we already know she has an affinity for Harley's. :-D

27 posted on 04/07/2005 10:02:54 AM PDT by Wneighbor
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To: Wneighbor
Wanna come to Texas to work real hard and help me with this packing-to-move?

Be right there, after I get the spring cleaning and yard work done. ;^)

28 posted on 04/07/2005 10:08:03 AM PDT by Samwise (The sentence formerly known as tagline.)
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To: Samwise

Girl, could I ever use the help *and company*

At least I've got my out-of-the house errands done now. They were some things I'd been needing to do since I left for spring break. Obviously not critical - but really needed. LOL

Now, I've got some packages to pack up and send to 3 soldiers, get to physical therapy and then I can think about packing some more for a couple of hours before work.


29 posted on 04/07/2005 10:20:01 AM PDT by Wneighbor
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To: Wneighbor
There's too much blood in my caffeine system this morning.

I have an IV straight from the coffee maker to alieve this problem.

30 posted on 04/07/2005 10:24:34 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (I still want a Lunar globe.)
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To: Valin
1930 Andrew Sachs actor (Manuel-Fawlty Towers)

Que?

31 posted on 04/07/2005 10:26:54 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (I still want a Lunar globe.)
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To: E.G.C.
Folks, I just found out about this month's updates from Microsoft.

There will be five updates for Windows. and one each for Microsoft Office and a couple of other applications.

Also, an update the April version of the malicious software removal tool will be coming down on Tuesday.

If you like to find out more go to

"http://www.microsoft.com/technet".

32 posted on 04/07/2005 10:34:49 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: Wneighbor; msdrby
Hmmm... I'm thinkin' that this time you ain't got a wizard on your hands. I think bittygirl may grow up to be more like me - a mechanical junkie! She's a motorhead! :-) She's gonna love muscle cars - we already know she has an affinity for Harley's. :-D

That thought had already occured to me. BG loves to play with wires and such in my ham shack. I have an old microphone with one end of the cord clamped into a hobby vise. The mic itself dangles just above the floor. OH nirvana!

33 posted on 04/07/2005 10:42:43 AM PDT by Professional Engineer (I still want a Lunar globe.)
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To: Professional Engineer
I have an IV straight from the coffee maker to alieve this problem.

~must have~ ~must have~ ~must have~

Well, actually, I'm awake now. Unusual. Usually at this time of the afternoon I'm ready for my pre-work nap.

34 posted on 04/07/2005 11:10:46 AM PDT by Wneighbor
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To: Professional Engineer
Bet she'd like one of these for her birthday. :-)


35 posted on 04/07/2005 11:16:57 AM PDT by Wneighbor
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To: SAMWolf


VICTORY AT YORKTOWN by Richard M. Ketchum


This new book represents excellent narrative history. If you liked Ketcham's Saratoga, you'll love this volume. He breifly discussed the British Southern campaign.

36 posted on 04/07/2005 12:04:06 PM PDT by society-by-contract
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To: Wneighbor; msdrby

Spiderboy too!


37 posted on 04/07/2005 12:56:54 PM PDT by Professional Engineer (I still want a Lunar globe.)
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To: Professional Engineer

*SURELY* you don't think that looks like a boy's bike do ya? I mean - it has chick machine written all over it IMO. ~smirk~

(sorry spiderboy, just teasing)


38 posted on 04/07/2005 1:25:33 PM PDT by Wneighbor
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To: Professional Engineer

I don't know. Can you make them any bigger?


39 posted on 04/07/2005 2:37:10 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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To: alfa6

Nice painting. Thanks alfa6.


40 posted on 04/07/2005 2:37:30 PM PDT by snippy_about_it (Fall in --> The FReeper Foxhole. America's History. America's Soul.)
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