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Janice A. Brown,
Blog: Cow Hampshire
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Women’s History
"The ongoing invisibility of women and girls is a serious issue for our country, and for the world. The invisibility of our history, heroes, stories, challenges, and success handicaps the future of all Americans, and it deeply affects our economy and our communities."--Megan Smith, U.S. Chief Technology OfficerWhat History Isn’t
“History isn’t about dates and places and wars. It’s about the people who fill the spaces between them.”
— Jodi Picoult, The StorytellerJuly 2026 M T W T F S S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Recent Comments
- Donna Krauss on The Thread That Never Breaks: Why mtDNA Matters to Everyone
- Teresa (fhtess65) on The Best Place to Build Your Family Tree (and Keep Your Sanity Intact) — WikiTree
- Matthias on The Best Place to Build Your Family Tree (and Keep Your Sanity Intact) — WikiTree
- Patrick George Ashwood on The Best Place to Build Your Family Tree (and Keep Your Sanity Intact) — WikiTree
- Nancy on The Best Place to Build Your Family Tree (and Keep Your Sanity Intact) — WikiTree
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New Hampshire Glossary: Nor’easter
nor’easter – the typical New England pronunciation (both seafaring and not), would be “naw-THEE-stuh”
Everyone else usually pronounces it “nôr-ē‘stər.” Continue reading
Posted in New Hampshire Glossary
Tagged gale, hurricane, nor'easter, northeaster, storm, weather, wind
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Much Ado About Merrimack: New Hampshire Spelling Errors
Misspellings [sic] happen…
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and history is rarely straightforward.
THE CHALLENGE:
Chris Dunham of The Genealogue reports on Char Olson’s crusade in Merrimac, Wisconsin to change the town’s name back to Merrimack.
Reportedly the name used to be spelled with the “k” at the end, (named after the county in New Hampshire), but the spelling got changed (the k was dropped) about a hundred years later. Continue reading
Posted in Current Events, History, Humor, Not New Hampshire
Tagged errors, Merrimac, Merrimack, New Hampshire, origin, spelling, Wisconsin
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Merrimack New Hampshire – 1936 Aerial View
Posted in History
Tagged aerial, Merrimack, Merrimack River, New Hampshire, photograph
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Cloning Around in New Hampshire
Lets say someone was able to clone Brigadier General John Stark….
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what do you think he’d be doing right now?
Would he be leading the charge as an officer in Iraq, or would he be a maintenance guy, empowered with the charge of altering the wording on all the New Hampshire welcome signs?
From a genealogical standpoint, would this clone be related in some way to known John Stark descendants, or would he be simply a gene-alike pretender.
If human beings are ever artificially cloned, genealogists will have to create a new “relationship” to define how the clone is related to the original person and their descendants.
I know this is a strange topic to be thinking about.
But I recently read, on more than one genealogy blog, an article entitled, Are you Related To Yourself. It states: “There is 1 of you–unless you’ve got an identical twin.” Hmmm… let me think about that. I’m one of those rare beings who did have an identical twin… (a natural clone). But wow, the last time I checked there is still only one of ME.
Genetic similarities have little to do with our personal histories and how we pass along our genetic matter. In my case, my twin sister did not have children, and I had one. Agreed, in this particular case my sister had a close bond with my son. He actually has more of her personality traits than he does of mine, which was a bit spooky at times. But I’m still his mother, and she remains his aunt.
Speaking of twins.. Peter Coy of BusinessWeek Online, calls Vermont and New Hampshire geographic twins.. Since Maine sits right next to us, I guess that makes the three states triplets?
Doug Powers of The American Spectator, carries the idea of cloning a bit further… “Under the wrong circumstances, Einstein’s clone could be intellectually and physically lazy, getting up off the couch only for “gettink zee beer and zee Prinkle chips.”
General Stark’s clone: “You have 50 more welcome signs to go….”
Janice
P.S. Cloning is not so far away. Read “I Didn’t Know They Could Do That”
Apologies to Brigadier General John Stark. His accomplishments include a pivotal victory at the Battle of Bennington during the American Revolutionary War and writing the words “Live Free or Die” in 1809 which later became New Hampshire’s state motto. The Stark Homestead, located on north Elm Street, is Manchester’s oldest building and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Learn more about his Family Tree and descendants.
Posted in Genealogy, Humor
Tagged clone, funny, General, humor, John Stark, Main, New Hampshire, Vermont
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