Today's Winter walk:
the ladies STILL have their coop decorated for Christmas, LOL! |
I carried my embroidery pocketbook to church today. I really like it and the bright colors, but it doesn't hold too much |
this is a sign that Spring is right around the corner!....RIGHT??! lol |
pretty teacups and saucers |
a treasured 1960s ensemble |
baby clothes
a loaded charm bracelet |
I just finished this book below [historical fiction] and it was so good! I loved it.
It's about the sinking of the luxury steamship Pulaski in 1838. I think over a hundred people died and maybe about 50 people survived the sinking. It was known as the "Titanic of the South and The Titanic of it's Time" [76 years before the 1912 sinking of the Titanic] and was found 180 years after the sinking disaster.
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from Steamboat Disasters |
The ship was trying to get from Savannah, Georgia, to up to Baltimore, and had many wealthy people on board, as well as travelling families, businessmen, slaves, and crew. The ship had stopped in Charleston to pick up more passengers before continuing on north, many to Saratoga Springs for vacation and to escape the oppressive heat of the southern summer.
Back then, the wealthy would pack up trunks of their clothes and belongings, including dishes and silverware, coins, and their servants and slaves, and go North for the summer.
After the explosion, Many people floated on wreckage for 3 or 4 days without food or water before they were rescued. Only four women survived. The ship broke in half as it sank.
They found the old ship about 30 miles off the North Carolina coast. Divers recovered so many neat pieces of history from the wreckage, including ladies pretty items like fancy hairpins and combs, china, keys, thimbles, jewelry, silverware, and many gold and silver coins, many from the 1700s.
A men's pocket watch was found and recovered, set to 11:05, when the ship's boiler probably exploded, and Patti weaves a wonderful story around that in her book. This type of pocket watch was a powerful status symbol of wealth in 1838.
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the News and Observer |