Hudson River Piecemakers

Hudson River Piecemakers The Hudson River Piecemakers is a local Quilt Guild offering workshops and seminars. We are located on Route 9N in Lake Luzerne NY.

We hold a Quilt Show biennially , during August, in the even years.

10/06/2023
07/19/2023

On this day in 1779, a fleet of American ships sails north from Boston towards Maine. The so-called Penobscot Expedition would end in disaster—and a court-martial of none other than Paul Revere.

The British were then working to establish a fort at the mouth of the Penobscot River, in Maine. Well, at least, the British were *trying* to establish a new fort. They soon discovered that they’d have to contend with a fleet of ships from Massachusetts. About 40 vessels, including three Continental Navy ships under the command of Commodore Dudley Saltonstall, had been dispatched to put a stop to the British effort.

The fleet arrived in the area on July 25. General Solomon Lovell was in overall command of the land troops, but Lt. Colonel Paul Revere was leading the artillery regiment.

Things were going relatively well at first. Nautilus Island and its four cannon were seized on July 26. The island was quickly fortified, forcing the few British ships in the area to pull back from the mouth of the harbor. Two days later, the militia successfully stormed the heights near the new Fort George, even as they were being fired upon. The British general later wrote that he fully expected to be beaten. “I was in no position to defend myself,” he wrote.

But then the American expedition came to an abrupt (and somewhat inexplicable) halt. Instead of continuing on to attack the fort, Lovell decided to lay in for a siege.

Revere could not understand why Lovell stopped. The successful landing and ascent should have been followed with an immediate attack on Fort George. “[T]hey not knowing our strength, and we being flushed with victory,” Revere wrote, “I have no doubt they would have lain down their arms.”

But Lovell had decided that Saltonstall should launch a naval attack before the land attack was attempted. Unfortunately, Saltonstall thought that Lovell’s forces should go first. The two American officers simply couldn’t agree! Lovell’s second-in-command wrote to his wife that the expedition was taking “longer than was represented to us.” “Harmony between the Fleet & Army,” he noted understatedly, “is not a perfect Unison.”

Believe it or not, this went on for two weeks. On August 13, the decision was effectively taken out of the hands of the Americans. A new fleet of British warships had arrived to reinforce Fort George.

Things turned chaotic as Americans began to flee. The armed Patriot warships tried to leave without staying behind to assist the transport ships. Revere notes that the “Transports found that the Armed Vessels all went ahead of them, they ran on shore and landed their men, in the utmost confusion.” Americans set fire to their own transport ships to prevent them from falling into enemy hands. Then they fled through the woods.

Lovell’s journal records the scene: “To attempt to give a description of this terrible Day is out of my Power . . . . Transports on fire. Men of war blowing up . . . and as much confusion as can possibly be conceived.”

In the end, hundreds of Americans were killed or wounded. Every ship was lost.

Saltonstall and Revere were later court-martialed for their actions. Naturally, that is a story for another day. ;)

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2023 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

07/12/2023

On this day in 1862, a Medal of Honor is authorized for the Army. A similar Medal for the Navy had already been established several months earlier.

Did you know that different versions of the Medal are awarded to each branch of the military? And do you know about the Army officer who hoped that the Medal would never be established in the first place?

The Navy, Army, and Air Force each have their own Medal, although the Air Force version is a fairly recent addition. (It was authorized in 1965). The Marines and Coast Guard don’t have separate Medals; instead, their members receive the Navy one.

Those Medals wouldn’t have been established at all if Winfield Scott, general-in-chief of the Union Army, had had his way. Scott thought that the tradition of awarding such medals was too European. Perhaps you won’t be surprised to hear that when the Army established its Medal in 1862, it was after Scott’s retirement. ;)

More than 3,500 recipients have been awarded the Medal of Honor since 1861, but nearly half of these were awarded to Civil War veterans. Those statistics sound odd at first, but it’s worth remembering that the criteria for the Medal have changed over time.

When the Medal was first authorized in 1861-62, it was the only medal available for valorous military conduct. Thus, the criteria for receiving the Medal wasn’t quite as strict as it was today. It sounds odd to modern ears, but in the 1800s, veterans could simply petition Congress for the award. Other soldiers received the Medal for relatively simple actions, such as extending their tours of duty when called upon to do so.

Today, of course, the requirements are much tougher. A potential recipient must be nominated by someone else. Medals are awarded for an act of “personal bravery or self-sacrifice so conspicuous as to clearly distinguish the individual above his or her comrades.” It must involve “risk of life” and “[i]ncontestable proof” of the act.

Perhaps one simple statistic reflects how much things have changed:

From the Civil War until World War II, only 3 percent of Medals were awarded posthumously. Things changed drastically after the Greatest Generation went off to war. Since then, more than 60 percent of Medals have been awarded posthumously.

Today’s anniversary is about more than just a medal. It’s an opportunity to celebrate the many good men and women who have fought, bled, and died for our liberty.

That liberty is still worth fighting for today.

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2023 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

05/08/2023

Cats make me happy too and yes sometimes humans are another story. ❤️🙏🐈‍⬛

03/29/2023
03/28/2023

On this day in 1990, Jesse Owens posthumously receives the Congressional Gold Medal. Owens is perhaps best known for his stunning performance at the 1936 Olympics, which were played in N**i Germany just before World War II.

“Mr. Owens, who was black, scored a triumph that would come to be regarded as not only athletic but also political,” his obituary noted. “Adolf Hi**er had intended the Berlin Games to be a showcase for the N**i doctrine of A***n supremacy.”

Instead, Hi**er watched as Owens scored victory after victory.

Who would have known that the son of Alabama sharecroppers would turn out to be such a phenomenon?

Owens had spent his childhood helping in the cotton fields, attending school—and running. “I loved [running],” he would say, “because it was something you could do all by yourself . . . . fast or slow as you wanted, fighting the wind if you felt like it, seeking out new sights just on the strength of your feet and the courage of your lungs.”

A move from Alabama to Ohio when Owens was just 9 years old proved life changing: He met two track coaches who recognized his raw talent and worked to nurture it. One even arranged early morning practices when after-school sessions were incompatible with Jesse’s jobs. The other, Larry Snyder, became a mentor at Ohio State.

Under Snyder’s tutelage, Owen shocked the athletic world at the Big Ten Championships in May 1935: He broke three world records and tied another, all within the space of a single hour. Even more impressively, he did it with an injured back! “That has to be the greatest hour in the history of track and field,” one professor wrote for Forbes, “and maybe even one of the greatest hours in the history of sports.”

Owens became a media sensation. By 1936, he was headed to the Olympics. He’d qualified in three events. As a black man—and an American—Owens had been prepared for a cold welcome in the German Olympic stadium. Instead, something unexpected happened: The crowd greeted him with a great cheer!

Hi**er appeared uncomfortable.

The 100-meter competition would occur over the course of two days. Owens ran the final heats in 10.4 seconds (semi-finals) and 10.3 seconds (finals), a stunning feat on a rain-sodden track. Owens had earned his first gold.

“I can’t help wondering, if Herr Hi**er was thinking about the racial superiority of pure A***n strains as he saw the Midnight Express whip past,” one journalist commented.

The broad jump was scheduled for the next day. Owens would forever remember it: He’d made an unexpected friend. His German opponent, Luz Long, offered valuable advice at a critical moment during the qualifying round. It was an incredible act of sportsmanship—and it worked. Owens would go on to win the gold.

Long pumped Owens’s hand in the air after the event. Hi**er watched it all.

You won’t be surprised to hear that Owens went on to shatter a world record for the 200-meter race; he earned another gold. A fourth gold in a relay capped everything off. Owens was an Olympic hero.

The wins weren’t without controversy, of course. Did Hi**er snub Owens at the games? Maybe. And it would be years before a U.S. President formally acknowledged Owens’s accomplishment. But Owens knew what he had to do—and he did it.

“[T]he greatest moment that a person can have is to stand on a victory stand far away from home,” he later said, “and then, from the distance you can hear the strains of ‘The Star-Spangled Banner,’ and then suddenly you make a left turn and you see the Stars and Stripes rising higher and higher . . . . I think that’s the greatest moment of my whole athletic career.”

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2023 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

03/27/2023

With great sadness, we have learned of the passing of our friend and fellow quilter. Jean was a longtime member of the Wings Falls Quilters Guild.

02/27/2023

*** Medal of Honor Monday! 🇺🇸🇺🇸 ***

On this day in 1945, two United States Marines engage in heroic actions at Iwo Jima. One Marine would risk his life, but he would survive and eventually return home. The other would not.

Both men received the Medal of Honor for their bravery in a battle that was once called “as close to hell as you could get. . . . active gunfire all the time and explosions going off. People getting killed right and left.”

William “Red” Walsh had signed up for the Marines immediately after the attack on Pearl Harbor. In fact, his entire baseball team took off for a nearby Marine recruiting office as soon as they heard what happened! On Monday morning, when the recruiting office opened, Walsh was sitting there, determined to sign up.

He was then only 19 years old.

He excelled in the Marines. “Strict, but fair,” one sergeant later recalled. “Honest . . . tough . . . He let you know he was in charge. He wouldn’t take nuthin’ from nobody.”

In February 1945, Gunnery Sergeant Walsh was with the forces at Iwo Jima. He soon found himself in a fight to capture a ridge near Hill 362. Walsh and his men had spent the night before being pounded by enemy fire. It had been a demoralizing night, but Walsh seemed undeterred and he boldly led his men into the fight.

“Hell we can’t stay here!” he reportedly declared. “Let’s hit the sons-a-b*tches again!”

The Marines’ first charge was forced back, as was the second. By then, Walsh was in a hole with several wounded men. The Japanese kept throwing gr***des, but Walsh kept throwing the gr***des back out. Finally, one rolled in with less time to spare. Walsh threw himself on the gr***de, absorbing its impact and killing himself instantly in the process.

“He was protective of his men,” one sergeant later explained. “It was the one thing we had instilled in us because without them you’ve got nothing.”

The other Marine was Private Wilson D. Watson. He’d celebrated his 23rd birthday aboard a ship heading toward Iwo Jima. In the midst of the tough battle on the Japanese island, he surely must have wondered if he’d live to see his 24th birthday?

The fighting was intense, and the Japanese fire was seemingly endless. On February 26, Watson’s battalion was moving forward slowly, but they were being pummeled by machine-gun fire. Finally Watson spotted the pillbox that was the source of the fire, and he made his way toward it. He finally got close enough to shove a gr***de in. Then he did it again, later, with another pillbox.

The next day, Watson’s platoon was attempting to take a ridge, when it came under fire. But Watson was fed up. He charged up the hill, as his citation describes, “under fierce mortar and machinegun barrages and, with his assistant BAR man, charged the crest of the hill, firing from his hip.”

Once he got there, he stayed. He was being attacked from all sides, and he was in an exposed position. But he just kept firing. He would fire all the rounds in one magazine, drop it, then fire all the rounds in the next. He did this over and over again for 15 minutes, killing 60 Japanese. He held that hill until his platoon finally arrived.

“The only thing on my mind was that if you don’t get those J**s they are going to kill all of us,” Watson later said. By the time his platoon joined him, he was covered in his own blood. He didn’t even realize he’d been hit.

Two brave, young men. Only one would return home.

P.S. In the attached photos, Walsh is on the left and Watson is on the right. ;)

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2023 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

02/25/2023

I found this little lady while out antiquing the other day. You know that blue caught my eye! 🐦💙🐦⁣

From here things get interesting - it's in an old Morse case, but this is a Singer 127.🤪⁣

The paint job - including the hand wheel - is ancient, and quite cracked and crazed. I don't recognize the decal at all! ⁣

The machine dates to 1923, and I know Singers did not come in bright blue at that time! And neither did hand wheels! ⁣

I left her behind as she really was a lot worse for wear, but perhaps someone will pick her up and give her a good home! ✂️💟🧵⁣





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Route 9N
Lake Luzerne, NY
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