Peanut stacks drying in the sun – another postcard acquisition
Month: March 2019
“Political” Postcard
a postcard from when John McCormack was the Speaker of the House, 1962-1971
More Treasures From The Postcard Club Meeting
Modest Musssorgskij

Alaskan Sled Dog
The Beginning (16) – The Reminiscences of Alfred Duryee Guion – 1884 – 1964
"Greatest Generation" Life Lessons
The following memories are quotes from “Reminiscences of Alfred D. Guion, written in 1960 while he was on a four-months “around the world” freighter trip.
Alfred Duryee Guion
This leads me to another episode which happened a few years later during my senior year at N.Y.U., and which, if followed through, might have made a considerable difference in my life – – one of those “opportunity knocks once” things.
My college instructor in accounting, Mr. Wildman, I personally loved very much. One evening he asked me to stay after class and then told me a friend of his, private secretary to John D. Rockefeller, Jr,, had asked him to recommend someone for the job of private secretary to John D. Sr, and he, Wildman, had thought of me and asked if I might be interested. Here was a glamorous opportunity worth looking into, so…
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Soviet Invasion – August 1945
Stalin’s simple purpose for declaring war against Japan was for territorial gain, for which he was prepared to pay heavily. Before launching their assault in Manchuria, the Soviets made provision for 540,000 casualties, including 160,000 dead. This was a forecast almost certainly founded upon an assessment of Japanese strength, similar to what the US estimated for a landing at Kyushu.
Since 1941, Stalin had maintained larger forces on the Manchurian border than the Western Allies ever knew about. In the summer of 1945, he reinforced strongly, to create a mass sufficient to bury the Japanese. Three thousand locomotives labored along the thin Trans-Siberian railway. Men, tanks and matérial made a month-long trek from eastern Europe.
MANCHURIA: RED ARMY, 1945.
A Soviet marine waving the ensign of the Soviet navy as Soviet airplanes fly overhead after the victory over the Japanese occupation troops in Port Arthur, South Manchuria…
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Postcard Day
It was a day for going through boxes and boxes of postcards at the meeting of the Postcard Collectors Club. I found some nice cards to add to my collection.
For example – isn’t he a cutie?

Lithograph by Edouard Manet, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
February Remembered
It was a
funny month, weather-wise. It started
with snow, and became spring-like.


At the
beginning of the month, the days were getting longer, and my dog walking was
happening after sunrise.

Mists and cloud still made for great lighting.

By the end
of the month it was the sunsets which gave the wonderful colours.

The grass
was growing, and the sheep were out.

There were
days where the stormy blue-grey skies, and the low sun, made my stained glass
angel glow.

The dogs
continued to make me laugh! This is
Eilidh reacting to a video of Scottie puppies playing.

Towards the end of the month we had a mild spell, with plenty of sun. The the mixed woodland of the Muddisdale walk was especially colourful – here the silver birch (with Magnus)…

….
ash….


and alder. The verges are beginning to show signs of spring. Snowdrops and crocuses came…
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A Child Is Born
A Happy Beginning
My son and his new born daughter – family history. That new born daughter is now a teenager.


