User:Pat Palmer/sandbox
macrobiotics
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/Macrobiotics
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/Macrobiotics_wikiped - from Wikipedia
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/Macrobiotics_notes
Write-A-Thon ideas
- John S. would prefer first one around New Years
- Larry and several others like Sundays
- possible SCHEDULE:
- start 1 pm England time (6 am EST / 3 am PST)
- end 11 pm Pacific time (2 am EST / 11 pm PST)
- possible themes:
- safe entertainments during a COVID-19 pandemic: such as: books, writers, films, actors, hobbies
- from John S: animals/pets? Film (actors, directors...)? Planets?
- from Roger Lohmann: Mysteries; not only the huge (and hugely popular) novels that go by that name, but all the other things that could conceivably come under that heading, from the trivial to the profound, from current affairs to deep history. (What happened to Amelia Earhart? Are there really UFO’s? Orson Welles’ radio broadcast. Who and What is God? Are there miracles? Who were the Neanderthals?)
== CZ ad blurb
User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/CZ ad blurb
quotes
Pull some of the chaff from this list?
Paris, TN
- African Amer Geneology has link to:
- Slaves in Henry County, TN with names of owners from wills 1848-1864 on ancestry.com
- Online book fr UTX: The Negro in Tennessee, 1790-1865 - sad, important; published in 1922, author Caleb Perry Patterson (prof. of government, UTexas)
- Capitol Theater - this was around during my childhood
- scroll an inch from the bottom, and there is a personal testimony about segregation back in the day: edalch on January 27, 2014 at 3:00 pm wrote:
- In the two pictures I posted, there are the main doors to the left of the box office. In those days, the 50s and 60s, white patrons used those doors to enter the theater and were seated on the ground floor. Black patrons, because of segregation, were forced to use the doors to the right of the box office, and to sit in the balcony.
- scroll an inch from the bottom, and there is a personal testimony about segregation back in the day: edalch on January 27, 2014 at 3:00 pm wrote:
- https://www.radionwtn.com/2020/02/20/gray-to-speak-about-local-integration/
- here was a DAR meeting in Feb. 2020 where Barbara Tharpe Gray spoke about school integration
- Vocational school "TN College of Applied Tech"
- list of public schools now and their grade levels
- PARIS, TN: Former Lee school building gets name change Aug 28, 2020
- Robert E. Lee School (Paris, Tennessee) in Wikipedia
- Arts and Heritage page by Chamber of Commerce
- Landmark Hunter listings for Henry Co., TN
- History of Paris Special School District (since 1919)
Archaeology:
- [https://capone.mtsu.edu/kesmith/TNARCH/CRITA/CRITA_Abstracts.html
- Bissett, Thaddeus (University of Tennessee, Knoxville). 2013. RE-ASSESSING BIG SANDY, AN EARLY MIDDLE ARCHAIC SHELL MIDDEN IN HENRY COUNTY, TENNESSEE. Big Sandy was one of several Archaic shell middens excavated in the lower Tennessee Valley during the Great Depression. In the decades since, it has been mostly relegated to footnote status, but recent work suggests that Big Sandy is unique among Middle Archaic shell-bearing sites in the Midsouth. New radiocarbon dates and analyses of artifacts and original field documentation indicate that intact strata at the site (previously thought to represent sequential occupations) were in fact contemporaneous, and that Big Sandy contains clear evidence for both residential occupation and an associated, but spatially segregated, cemetery during the early Middle Archaic period.
Draft of User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/Paris, Tennessee
The history of this town and this county is missing. Oh, we know a few random facts, but most of what heppened in the past has been deliberately forgotten, not recorded, actively discouraged from being talked about, or plain old ignored. And that ignoring happened so consistently that most of it can now no longer be recovered. Still, I want to try to find out what there is that can still be determined. Because without knowing what was, we're basically living a kind of lie, that pretends that things in the past were okay, things in the present are okay, and things in the future will be okay without our needing to make any course corrections.
It's not just this town and this county where that happened. It happened in lots of towns and counties all over the country, and nowhere was history buried and forgotten and glossed over more fully, with more active enthusiasm, than in the Southern United States.
In American, the history of racism is taught like this: "There was slavery and then there was Jim Crow and then there was Martin Luther King Jr. and now it's done." (from Trevor Noah's "Born a Crime", p. 183)
Images:
- Wikimedia Commons James D. Porter, gov. of TN 1875-1879; born in Paris
- Wikimedia Commons Cornerstone at the Henry County Courthouse, Paris, Tennessee. (2011) - shows 1896 as date
- WC has a photo of the courthouse around 1900
- Wikimedia Commons Location of Henry in Henry County, Tennessee. (2017)
- Wikimedia Commons Eiffel Tower in Paris, TN. The tower is a 60-foot tall scale model of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, France. It is located in Memorial Park and was build in the early 1990s. (2013)
- Wikimedia Commons Eiffel Robert E. Lee School, formerly known as the Public School or City High School, Paris, Tennessee. From a photo postcard dating circa 1900. (2014)
- Wikimedia Commons Mule Day 1939, Town Square, Paris, TN. (1939)
- Wikimedia Commons Mule Day 1939, Cemetary in background, Paris, TN. (1939)
- Wikimedia Commons Mule Day 1939, businesses of H.A. Mc Elroy, Charles and Woolworths. (1939)
- Wikimedia Commons Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Paris, Henry County, Tennessee, July 1896. (1896)
- Sanborn 1886 - includes Chickasaw Mills; one exists also for 1891
- View of all 6 images in Lib. of Congress
- Wikimedia Commons Third Henry County (Tennessee) Courthouse, built 1852, demolished 1895. Camera is facing northwest.. (before 1895)
- Wikimedia Commons General land use map, Henry County, Tennessee (1981)
NOTES for this article: (I *think* from the Van Dyke article, but must verify all facts)
- even before the Civil War, there were pockets of free negroes in the county
- 1/2 the population were slaves before the war (?)
- 33% of the local farms had slaves
- tobacco and cotton farm work were almost all done by slaves
- 1839: cost of a male slave $900 to $1000
- 1839: cost of a female slave $700 to $900
- 1839: cost of a child slave $600 to $800
- by 1860: $5,000,000 of slaves were in Henry Co.
- Nat Turner insurrection (Aug 31 - what year?)
- 1855: first bank
- 1825: first Masonic Lodge #55
- 3 general stores, 3 hotels, courthouse
- "Free and Accepted Masons" #108 in 1845 #96, #130 (???)
- 1833: 800 people; 12 lawyers, 12 doctors, 2 clergy, 1 church etc
- Paris historical markers
- From Chamber of Commerce website: Henry County History
- Per TN River Valley (w/NatGeo), Paris is a historic site
- Per the hospital ("Medical Center"), here is the hospital history
Native Amers:
- From McClung Museum of Nat'l Hist & Culture: Prehistoric American Indians in Tennessee (2009)
- TN history link from on McClung site: Tennessee4me
State refs:
- From TN SOS (Sec'y of State) site, here's a Bibliography of Tennessee Local History Sources > Henry County
Major sources:
- google "Paris, TN" history and look at what-all pops up
Notes
- Cottage Grove: 10 mi NW
- Buchanan: 11.5 mi NE
- 1850's: Henry, 8.5 mi SW of Paris
- Henry Station
- Memphis and Ohio railroad
Tosh says there were lots of:
- Tharpe names
- There were also Palmer names
cryptography
- Draft of User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/Cryptography
ISBN's
OLD: Citizendium
NEW: User:Pat Palmer/sandbox/Citizendium
Neutrality (old)
pat palmer
- OLD: CZ:Neutrality policy
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/Proposed Neutrality Policy - REDIRECTED
- User:Pat_Palmer/sandbox/Impartiality_Guidance
Lead author template examples
Ten examples of the Authors or Contribs template:
'1' yields "and another author"; anything else (such as a 'y') yields "and other authors"
Authors [about]:
join in to develop this article! |
Authors [about]:
join in to develop this article! |
Authors [about]:
join in to develop this article! |
Authors [about]:
join in to develop this article! |
Authors [about]:
join in to develop this article! |
Authors [about]:
join in to develop this article! |
invisible unless at least 5 contributors
Contributors [about]:
CZ is an open collaboration. Please join these people in developing this article! |
Contributors [about]:
CZ is an open collaboration. Please join these people in developing this article! |
Contributors [about]:
CZ is an open collaboration. Please join these people in developing this article! |
Mary Baker Eddy
Gill, Gillian (1998). Mary Baker Eddy. Perseus. DOI:10.1086/ahr/105.2.551. ISBN 0738200425.
https://doi.org/10.1086/ahr/105.2.551
ISBN 0-7382-0042-5