Friday, November 7, 2025
From Plymouth to Plymouth
Thursday, November 6, 2025
Lighthouses During World War II
Although more than one thousand lighthouses have been constructed in the U.S. over the years, according to the US Lighthouse Society, there were never more than 850 in operation at the same time. During the colonial period, beacons were primarily used as navigational aids, then lighthouse ships came into being, followed by lighthouses. Initially under the Treasury Department, lighthouse operations moved to the Department of Commerce in 1910. Nearly two decades later on July 1, 1939, the service merged with the U.S. Coast Guard. Keepers were given the choice of staying on as civilians or joining the Coast Guard with a military rank. Additional Coast Guard members were assigned to the lighthouses, living and eating with the keeper’s family.
Along the East Coast, the more than six hundred lighthouses became observation posts where “Coasties” patrolled the shoreline for U-boat activity on foot with K-9 units, horseback, and jeeps. Wireless radios were installed at the top of lighthouses to provide communication with others lighthouses on the coast.
Two lighthouses in Florida had additional responsibilities.
The St. Augustine lighthouse added a training station where hundreds of men and women receivedbasic training. Headquarters was set up in the famous Ponce de Leon Hotel, a luxury hotel built between 1885 and 1889 by Standard Oil co-founder Henry M. Flagler and known as The Ponce.
The Jupiter Inlet lighthouse added naval married men’s quarters and the super-secret Station J, an operation using high-frequency direction finding (HF/DF), AKA “Huff-Duff” designed to intercept U-Boat radio messages and tip off U.S. forces to attack enemy vessels. According to the National Park Service, this highly successful site ended German dominance of the Atlantic.
Do you know of other lighthouses with special duties during World War II?
Linda Shenton Matchett writes happily-ever-after historical Christian fiction about second chances and women who overcome life’s challenges to be better versions of themselves. A native of Baltimore, Maryland, she was born a stone’s throw from Fort McHenry (of Star-Spangled Banner fame) and has lived in historical places all her life. She is a volunteer docent and archivist at the Wright Museum of WWII and a former trustee for her local public library. She now lives in central New Hampshire where she explores the history of this great state and immerses herself in the imaginary worlds created by other authors.
Will their love come at a cost?
Escaping Boston to avoid a marriage of convenience aimed at garnering society’s respect for her family name in the shadow of her father’s war profiteering, Meg Underwood settles in Oregon. Despite leaving behind the comforts of wealth, she’s happy. Then the handsome Pinkerton agent, Reuben Jessop, arrives with news that she’s inherited her aunt’s significant estate, and she must return home to claim the bequest. Meg refuses to make the trip. Unwilling to fail at his mission, Reuben gives her until Christmas to prove why she should remain in Oregon and give up the opportunity to become a woman of means. When he seems to want more than friendship, she wonders if her new-found wealth is the basis of his attraction.
Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4qd3eR2
Photo Credits:
Sources:
https://www.staugustinelighthouse.org/2020/08/11/world-war-ii-on-americass-first-coast-part-two-the-american-response-semper-paratus/
https://monheganmuseum.org/WWII/war-begins-landing-page/war-begins-coast-guard
https://www.jupiterlighthouse.org/blog/station-j-world-war-2/
https://serenewandering.com/2024/06/30/world-war-ii-tower-and-the-cape-may-lighthouse
https://uslhs.org/sites/default/files/articles_pdf/Ponce_de_Leon_WWII.pdf
https://www.coastalgeorgiahistory.org/visit/world-war-ii-museum/
https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/history-of-lighthouses.htm
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
The Frontier Midwife Who Solved the Mystery of a Deadly Illness
By Mary Dodge Allen
From the early 1800s until 1927, a mysterious illness claimed the lives of thousands of Midwestern U.S. settlers, including Abraham Lincoln's mother. It was known by various names - "the trembles" or "the slows" - but most often it was called "milk sickness" because people often died after consuming dairy products. During the epidemic of 1818, Nancy Hanks Lincoln died of milk sickness when her son Abe was only nine years old.
In 1809, Thomas Barbee, a doctor from Bourbon County, Kentucky was the first to document the symptoms of milk sickness in writing. The illness baffled frontier doctors, and the standard treatment, bloodletting, did nothing to help the victims. Its fatality rate was high, often taking the lives of half the settlers in a frontier community. A healthy person could be struck down in a matter of days, progressing from trembling, vomiting and delusions, and ending in coma and death.
It's easy to see how settlers came to fear this mysterious ailment that could kill so quickly. Some blamed the cause on poisoned alkali water, arsenous fumes in the air, and even the work of evil spirits. Nursing animals, like calves and lambs, also died of the illness. Doctors assumed the adult livestock were consuming some kind of poison that tainted their milk, but they were unable to identify the source of this poison.
Enter: Anna Pierce Hobbs - Frontier Midwife:
Anna Pierce was born in Philadelphia in the early 1800s and headed west with her family as a young girl, settling in Rock Creek, an area in southern Illinois. Anna's budding interest in medicine grew as she saw the many illnesses, like cholera, that plagued the early settlers.
As a young woman, Anna went back to Philadelphia to study medicine. Nursing, midwifery and dental extractions were the only areas of medicine a woman was allowed to study and practice in the 1820s. It's unclear exactly where Anna studied, but she returned to Rock Creek after finishing her education.
Anna became the only medical practitioner in Hardin County, serving settlers across the large region. Her patients regarded her with affection, calling her "Doctor Anna." In the early 1830s, Anna married Isaac Hobbs. At this time, milk sickness had become an epidemic in Hardin County, killing many, including Anna's mother and her sister-in-law.
Anna's Mission to Find the Cause:
The deaths of close family members made Anna even more determined to find the source of the poison that caused milk sickness. She observed that the illness occurred mostly in summer and early fall, and she came to believe a seasonal plant was the source of the poison.
In her spare time, Anna began tracking the cattle in the area and observing their grazing habits. They most often grazed in open fields, but in times of drought, they would stray into forested areas to graze.
One fall day in 1834, Anna packed a lunch, took her rifle and set out with her dogs to observe the cattle who were grazing in the nearby woods. While there, she encountered an elderly Shawnee medicine woman, who was hiding to avoid her tribe's forced migration to Kansas. (In 1834, this migration was forced upon the Shawnee tribes in Illinois, as a result of the 1830 Indian Removal Act.)
Anna took pity on the woman and gave her the lunch she had packed. Then she escorted her to her own home, so the woman could rest. When the medicine woman learned about Anna's interest in milk sickness, she declared she knew the source of the poison. The medicine woman took Anna back into the woods and showed her a plant with bunches of fuzzy white flowers.
This plant was a perennial herb called white snakeroot, Ageratina altissima. It is seasonal, flourishing in the summer and early fall and grows mostly in wooded areas. Anna experimented by feeding the plant to calves, and she soon saw the clear symptoms of milk sickness.
She began warning settlers all through the county about white snakeroot. She even grew a few of the plants in her garden, to show people what it looked like. Men in the area went out through the fields and forests abd uprooted this plant. After three years, white snakeroot was largely eradicated in this area of southern Illinois, along with occurrences of milk sickness.
Anna is known to have sent letters informing doctors across the frontier that she'd discovered white snakeroot as the cause of milk sickness. But she got little response. There were no medical journals in these frontier areas, and the male doctors in this era weren't inclined to give much credence to the discovery of a frontier midwife.
As a result, milk sickness continued claiming hundreds of victims. But in the early 1900s, this illness gradually declined, due to industrialization - changes in feeding cattle and the mass production of milk.
It wasn't until 1927, nearly 100 years after Anna's discovery, that researchers at the U.S. Department of Agriculture published a report on the toxic substances in white snakeroot. They confirmed milk sickness was cause by white snakeroot's main toxic ingredient: Tremetol.
It is a poison that is very potent. If tremetol contaminates bales of hay, it can retain its toxicity up to five years. Tremetol is also fat soluble. It concentrates in milkfat, which is why it was so deadly.
Later Life:
When Anna was in her late 50's, her husband Isaac Hobbs died of pneumonia, leaving her a generous inheritance. By this time, Anna had also accumulated a tidy sum from her medical practice.
Eson Bixby, a younger man with an abundance of charm, proposed to Anna. She married him, ignoring warnings that he was a ne'er-do-well interested in her money. But Anna also took the precaution of hiding most of her fortune.
One night, Eson lured her from the house on the pretext that he knew someone who needed medical help. In a remote area, under cover of darkness, he attempted to tie her up so he could force her to reveal the location of her money. But Anna escaped from him, and she gradually recovered from her wounds. Eson ran off and was never heard from again.
It is alleged that Anna hid her money in a cave near a small town called Cave-In-Rock in Hardin County - now known as Anna Bixby Cave. There is a marker in Anna's honor at Cave-In-Rock.
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Mary Dodge Allen is currently finishing her sequel to Hunt for a Hometown Killer. She's won a Christian Indie Award, an Angel Book Award, and two Royal Palm Literary Awards (Florida Writer's Association). She and her husband live in Central Florida. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers and Faith Hope and Love Christian Writers.
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
How A Nineteenth Century Mining Town Became The Most Irish Community between the West Coast and the Mississippi River."
By Donna Wichelman
Over the last year, I’ve written about how the influx of immigrants to find their fortunes settled the western territories of the continental United States. The Territory of Colorado, in particular, saw the population explode due to immigrants who heard there were vast resources of gold and silver in the region. Many African Americans and whites, who’d helped fight for their emancipation, also came from the northern states and wanted to put the Civil War behind them.
In her book, The Rise of the Silver Queen, Historian Christine Bradley speaks about the many ethnic groups who arrived in Georgetown, Colorado, during the town’s silver mining heyday (1868 – 1878). They came “from every point of the globe…,” she says (The Rise of the Silver Queen, p. 88). These included Cornish, Chinese, Germans, French, Welsh, Jewish, and Italians, hoping to make it rich on a large silver lode.
| Ruins of the Terrible Mining Company near Georgetown, Colorado: Donna's Gallery, June 2019 |
Among the many groups who arrived, one could argue that no other impacted the Territory of Colorado more than the Irish, and nowhere is that more evident than in the Alvarez Cemetery in Georgetown and the Evergreen Cemetery in Leadville, Colorado. If one walks the grounds of these two cemeteries, it becomes immediately apparent that a massive amount of gravestones exist engraved with Irish surnames such as Bruce and McHugh, Dougherty and O’Donnell, McHugh and McGuiuggan, and Flannery and O’Sullivan.
| Alvarez Cemetery, Georgetown, Colorado, Donna’s Gallery, October 2018 |
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| Alvarez Cemetery, Georgetown, Colorado, Donna’s Gallery, October 2018 |
In 2023, the Evergreen Cemetery in Leadville, Colorado, completed an Irish Immigrant Miner's Memorial honoring the 1,300 Irish who settled in Leadville in the nineteenth century. The monument stands as a testament to those whose hopes and dreams brought them to America and who struggled to make a life in the new world.
In honor of my Irish protagonist, Anna Sullivan, in my Gilded Age historical romance, A Song of Deliverance, I wanted to visit the memorial. Though I’d seen a picture of it in my research, I didn’t know what to expect. So, when I walked into the area sectioned off for the Irish gravestones and memorial, I wasn't prepared for the heart-wrenching moment that impacted me.
| Donna Standing Next to the Irish Memorial, Evergreen Cemetery, Leadville, Colorado: Donna’s Gallery, June 2025 |
According to one plaque at the
memorial, approximately one-fifth of all residents of Leadville in 1880 were of
Irish heritage, making it the "most Irish community per capita of any
community between the West Coast and the Mississippi River."
Yet, despite their significant presence in Leadville, the Irish, as a whole, could not rise much above the poverty they had experienced in Ireland. Most couldn’t afford a proper burial for their kin. Scanning the names on the tall Plexiglas lists of people who lived and died in Leadville, I noticed the great number of children who died as infants or in early childhood. Most of them were buried in unmarked graves or with a simple wooden marker in the Catholic Pauper section of the cemetery, because their families couldn't pay the $15 that was required for a gravestone.
| Name of Those Who Died in Early Childhood: Donna's Gallery, June 2025 |
| Unmarked Irish Graves in the Catholic Pauper Section of the Cemetery: Donna's Gallery, June 2025 |
Monday, November 3, 2025
The Need for Fireboats - Not What You Might Think
One of my favorite findings while studying the history of Fireboat No. 1 is Robert Fields' assessment in the 1978 nomination form for Tacoma Register of Historic Places Inventory. "Its appearance is, perhaps, as dated as 'antique' firetrucks of this period, but the fireboat has remained almost unchanged because it so completely satisfied the function it was designed to perform, and because its durability has allowed it to remain 'in service' for more than half a century."
Rebecca lives near the mountains with her husband and a rescued dog named Ranger. She is a proud mom of an American soldier and an Aerospace grad student. If it were up to Rebecca, she would be traveling - right now. First up, trips to see their two grown sons. As a member of ACFW and FHLCW, she tackles the craft of fiction while learning from a host of generous writers.
Fields, R. (1978, January 24). Tacoma Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form. Tacoma; CMS City of Tacoma.
Sunday, November 2, 2025
Famous Instruments in History: The Organ of Johann Sebastian Bach
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| Blogger: Amber Lemus |

Johann Sebastian Bach
Public Domain
Johann Sebastian Bach is a household name today. He is known as a masterful musician and a gifted composer. But during Bach's lifetime, he was better known as an organist.
When compiling my list of the most famous instruments in history, I figured Bach's organ had to be on the list. However, I was surprised to find that while Bach owned many instruments, he didn't own an organ, the instrument he was most known for.
Why didn't Bach own an organ?
That was my question as well. Turns out, in those days, they didn't have the small household organs we have today, they only had the massive, piped organs you see built into the walls of churches. These were not considered personal property but rather part of the architecture and infrastructure of the building, so the organ was owned by the institution, such as the church or royalty, rather than by the musician that was hired to play them.
Then, what is considered the Bach organ?
Bach's entire professional career was built around the organ. From his very first appointment, he was playing the organ. So there are several instruments that are attributed to Bach.
The first resides at the Bach Church in Arnstadt. When Johann first came to work there, it was known as the New Church. The previous one had burned down, so a new one had been constructed on the same site. The organ was built by Johann Friedrich Wender, and inspected by eighteen-year-old Bach upon its completion. He was hired shortly afterwards to be the church organist. However, he only served here for a short time. After his term, his cousin took over, continuing the legacy of an organist by the name of Bach. While the organ has been altered and repaired over the centuries, it is the closest to the original that Bach played out of all the organs on record. The church was renamed after Bach in 1935 to honor Bach's connection to that church.
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| Current version of the Wender organ in the Bach Church, Arnstadt Mtag, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons |
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| Johann Sebastian Bach Church Anstadt By Michael Sander - Self-photographed, CC BY-SA 3.0, |
The second would be the organ at the court of Duke Wilhelm Ernst at Weimar. This is the organ Bach used to compose the majority of his organ compositions. It was considered his golden age as an organ composer. However this organ was later destroyed by fire, so it no longer exists.
The third is the organ at St. Thomas Church in Leipzig Germany. This church is often referred to as "Bach's Church" although that is not its official name. Bach was the music director there from 1723 until his death in 1750. The building has been rebuilt or renovated many times and the organ from Bach's time is no longer present. However, they did build a replica of Bach's organ there in 2000. Bach's remains are now buried in the church, although they were not there originally. There is also a statue honoring Bach in front of the church. For these reasons, this is the church and organ most famous and commonly referred to as "Bach's".
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| St. Thomas Church By Dirk Goldhahn - Fotografiert von Dirk Goldhahn., Public Domain |
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| Statue of Bach in front of St. Thomas Church By Eric Pancer - I (Creative Commons) |
Did Bach own any instruments?
While Bach didn't own an organ, he did own many other instruments. The inventory of his estate included five harpsichords, two Lautenwerckes otherwise known as lute harpsichords (which we will have to circle back to, because it is super interesting.), a spinet, three violins, three violas, two cellos, one lute, and several other instruments. These instruments were the ones he took with him and used at home to compose and also teach his students.
Another fun fact is that Bach, in addition to being a masterful musician of many instruments, also had a wonderful voice. In fact, his scholarship to music school was because of his voice, not his instrument playing.
Which of these organs do YOU think should be considered "The Bach Organ"?
*****
Two-time winner of the Christian Indie Award, Amber Lemus inspires hearts through enthralling tales She has a passion for family, faith, facts and fiction. This combination results in what her readers call "historical fiction at its finest".
She lives at the foot of the Rocky
Mountains with her prince charming and two boys. Between enjoying life as a boy
mom, and spinning stories out of soap bubbles, Amber loves to connect with
readers.
Amber is a proud member of the American Christian Fiction
Writers Association. Visit her online at http://www.amberlemus.com/ and download a FREE story by subscribing to her Newsletter!
Saturday, November 1, 2025
Echoes of the Ancient New Testament Cities: Jerusalem
Matthew James Elliott
As I began drafting my thoughts together for this article, I found that I had collected so much information that I could probably write a book on it. Well… you're in for a really long post today…. I’m just kidding… To keep my words decently paced, I thought it would be great to use an analogy so….
Jerusalem was a city shaped like a clay pot in the hands of history’s potter. It was shaped by valleys and kings, prophets and pilgrims, and molded through fire. The walls of the city rose like the rim of a vessel meant to hold it with care and protect what was sacred. But just as clay can crack under intense heat, so too can a city devoted to something greater.
The temple was Jerusalem's pride. It was meant to give the city purpose, just like the hollow of a clay pot gives purpose to its creation. Over time, it became the focal point for pilgrims from all walks of life, drawn to honor their faith.
Jerusalem was divided into multiple sectors. The upper city was home to the wealthy elite and priests. It featured lavish homes with mosaic floors and private baths. The lower city was densely populated with artisans, merchants, and pilgrims. While the Temple dominated the city’s skyline, surrounded by courts and ritual bathhouses, the Antonia Fortress stood as the military stronghold anchoring it all. Sacred sites like the pools of Bethesda and Siloam added to the city’s spiritual rhythm.
Acts 8:1-3 provides a clear image of some of what took place, but between 66 and 70AD, things got worse. With the rising tensions between the Romans and the Jews, Rome retaliated with an even stronger fire. When the revolt erupted in 66 AD, it was fierce and full of hope. Rome responded with crushing force, led by General Titus. He led a brutal siege against the city. By 70 AD, the Temple—Jerusalem’s heart and spiritual center—was gone, consumed by flames that devoured much of the city.
For the early believers, the burning of Jerusalem became a turning point. With the temple gone, the center of faith shifted, and the clay vessel that shattered amid the chaos that erupted, those pieces were carried into a new world, where the pot was reformed into something bigger and better than anyone ever thought possible. Believers found new homes in cities like Antioch of Syria, our next stop on this tour of the ancient New Testament cities, as well as others.
One of the most valuable things I’ve learned about crafting a clay pot is that, to refine and increase its value, sometimes it needs a little heat. In truth, you need that heat, while it may be ever so subtle, to start molding that clay pot in the first place. Though Jerusalem fell into the grip of tension, revolt, and the eventual destruction of its Temple, something more refined and beautiful was born out of it. That, my friends, is something worth remembering.
See you in the pages, M.J.E. (PS, Next month we are heading to Antioch of Syria, the city where Saul/Paul's first missionary journey began with John Mark and Barnabas. There is more to that city than meets the eye, and I can't wait to share more.) (PSS, This month, I'm participating in the Mid-Month Madness Event, Its going to be fun and my newest release, The Hope of Inheritance, is up for grabs.)
~ Biography ~
Find Matthew on Amazon, Goodreads, Facebook, BookBub, and His Website. He has written Devotionals, An Episodic Series, Novellas, and even Commentaries for The Gospel Daily.
~ Highlighted Release ~
My Newest Biblical Fiction Novel, The Hope of Inheritance, came out on Father's Day and has received a ChristLit Book Award for excellence in Christian Literature. Grab it via Amazon. If you enjoy it, please let me know by posting a review.
The city of Rome was a vast and beautiful place-- on the surface. That is, until a great fire burned and destroyed most of it. Deep in a world hidden from those who would strike against them, four unlikely men work together to share a message of truth. This truth was spoken by those who were cut down because of the calling to go forth and preach.
The message has always been clear: The hope of our inheritance is Christ living within each of us. In the echoes of persecution, sorrow, and even death, this message still reigns supreme, but will the people listen? Only time will tell, but before anything, these four men must come together and unite a church separated by fear and suffering.




























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