Willow Saloon (Formerly – The Willow Steak House)
#California #Jamestown #UnitedStates

The Willow Steak House, historically known as The Willow Hotel, has reportedly been haunted since the 1800s. According to legend, an old gold mine collapsed beneath the building, killing 23 miners whose spirits now haunt the location.

https://hauntedlineage.com/directory/willow-saloon-formerly-the-willow-steak-house/

#accident #cave-in #hotel #mine #miners

Willow Saloon (Formerly - The Willow Steak House) - Haunted Lineage

The Willow Steak House, historically known as The Willow Hotel, has reportedly been haunted since the 1800s. According to legend, an old gold mine

Haunted Lineage
The United States was built on #genocide, #slavery, and #DrugTrafficking (i.e., the tobacco trade). On #ThisDayInHistory in 1607, #Jamestown was founded in Virginia as the first permanent English colony in North America. It survived through mass-murder, exploitation, and #racism.

“Turkey: A large bird whose flesh, when eaten on certain religious anniversaries has the peculiar property of attesting piety and gratitude”*…

Your correspondent is hitting the road, so (Roughly) Daily will be in hiatus for ten days ro so. Regular service should resume on (or about) May 24…

Tal Lavin devotes the latest installment of The Sword and the Sandwich, the wonderful newsletter he co-authors with David Swanson, to the quintessentially-American fowl, the turkey…

There are very few occasions in life in which someone gets to choose their own name: confirmation, conversion, or, in my case, transition from female to male. Out of all the names in the world, I chose my own; I wanted to pick something that would allow me to present as my male self, that would erase confusion, that would say something essential about me. Choosing your own name is not to be taken lightly.

In the case of the turkey—that busty bird whose thinly-sliced meat is a ubiquitous filler for club sandos, Thanksgiving-leftover feasts and deli lunch-hour specials—the ability to choose its own name might have been a mercy, and avoided a tremendous amount of confusion. The etymological journey of why a turkey is called a turkey makes the fraught rite of transgender name-choosing seem like a cake walk (or bird strut).

The turkeymeleagris gallopavo, is a big galumphing bird indigenous to the Americas, famous for its huge breast, commanding carriage, and bland but abundant meat. In English, it is named after Turkey, which is a country across an entire ocean from its native stomping grounds. In Turkish, the language of Turkey, a turkey is called a hindi, which means “from India.” In Hindi, the language of India, a turkey is called a टर्की (Ṭarkī). In Slovak and Albanian, its name means “chicken from overseas.” In Scandinavian languages and Dutch, it’s named for Calicut, a major trading post along India’s Malabar Coast. In Welsh, it’s twrci. In Polish, Russian and Ukrainian, it’s indyuk, indyk or indeyka—Indian bird.

In other words, languages across the entire world are eager to praise (or blame) the wrong country for this entirely American bird. And they can’t even agree on what wrong country to attribute it to. Linguists and historians have put their heads together on why this is, and it seems to come down to a fowl case of mistaken identity.

What’s undoubtedly central to this geographical misunderstanding is the role the Ottoman Empire played in trade to Europe around the period of the Columbian Exchange…

Read on the rest of the fascinating story: “Turkey,” from @swordsjew.bsky.social.

* Ambrose Bierce, The Devil’s Dictionary

###

As we gobble, we might recall that it was on this date in 1607 that a group of 104 colonists from England arrived in what we now know as Virginia and established the first permanent English colony in America. They named the settlement Jamestown in honor of King James I.

We might also recall that we have this group (as it grew)– not the New England pilgrims– to thank for Thanksgiving.

The first documented English Thanksgiving in North America happened in Virginia in 1619, one year before the Pilgrims even arrived at Plymouth Rock. This first Thanksgiving lasted “10, 15 minutes,” according to Graham Woodlief, the president of the Virginia Thanksgiving Festival. No Native Americans were invited, no women were present, and there’s scant evidence of turkeys or yams.

source (see also)

Captain John Woodleaf conducts the first American Thanksgiving in Virginia (source)

We might also note that it was on this date in 1968 that Frank Zappa released his debut solo album, Lumpy Gravy on MGM’s Verve Records label (an early version of the album had been issued by Capitol Records on 4-track cartridge in August 1967).

source

#culture #etymology #Food #history #Jamestown #OttomanEmpire #sandwich #TalLavin #Thanksgiving #Turkey #turkeySandwich
English colony of Jamestown in North America
The #VirginiaCompany was chartered by #KingJamesI of England (and VI of Scotland) on #ThisDayInHistory in 1606. Being a #JointStockCompany helped to ensure the colonies it launched, notably #Jamestown, would succeed, though at a horrific death rate & through #Indigenous genocide.
Conanicut Island Lighthouse, Jamestown, RI 4/4/2026. One of the few remaning Rhode Island lighthouses I had yet to visit. It was first activated on April 1, 1886 featuring a fifth-order lens in a decagonal lantern room that shone a fixed red light at a height of sixty feet above the water. It was deactivated in 1933 and its lantern and lens were removed. It is currently a private residence and not open to the public. #conanicutislandlighthouse #lighthouse #phare #faro #leuchtturm #灯台 #todai #newengland #rhodeisland #jamestown #jamestownRI
Today's Flickr photo with the most hits: the interior of the church at the fort in Jamestown, Virginia.

#jamestown #fort #church #virginia
Post by @ukdamo

💬 0  🔁 0  ❤️ 0 · The Starving Time, Jamestown, 1610* · Henry Hart Only the moon saw him lick blood From snow beneath the palisade, hold Crystals to his lips like a priest Steadying a chalice of…

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🔔#Earthquake M2.2 strikes 4 km N of #Jamestown (#Australia) 16 min ago. More info: https://m.emsc.eu/?id=1965982
The #SecondAngloPowhatanWar (aka #PowhatanUprising) was a brutal decade-long fight between the #Jamestown colony and its #Indigenous neighbour the #PowhatanConfederacy. It began #ThisDayInHistory in 1622 with the massacre of 350 English settlers who were destroying their lands.