Tag Archives: war

Monday August 31, 1936

diary 2The story continues with the second journal.  This is an entry from her personal diary, by Elizabeth Lancaster Carsey 80-years-ago. Click here to read more.

Letter from Ty-Ty says she and Mary Jo will come Thursday – Dr. Smith died in his chair on Saturday morning last.  Seems terrible but he’d been ailing for some time!

Here’s what else was happening 80-years-ago today

Clark Gable is on the cover of this week’s Time Magazine

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A Nationalist radio broadcast from Seville announced that 67 miners at Rio Tinto had been executed for supplying Republican forces with munitions.

Image result for Battle of the Sierra Guadalupe

The Battle of the Sierra Guadalupe ended in a tactical Nationalist victory.

Image result for bochum mine explosion

An explosion at a mine in Bochum, Germany killed 29.

Image result for Radio Prague 1936
: Radio Prague International shortwave broadcasts from the government telegraph office

Radio Prague was launched.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chicago Daily Tribune August 31, 1936
Chicago Daily Tribune August 31, 1936

 

Wednesday April 1, 1936

The story continues with the second journal.  This is an entry from her personal diary, by Elizabeth Lancaster Carsey 80-years-ago.  Click here to read more.

No post today

Here’s what else was happening 80-years-ago today

georgiaweatherhistory.com

At least 44 people die as three waves of tornadic activity  hit the Southeastern United States in a 14 hour time-frame. It became known as the Cordele–Greensboro tornado outbreak.

Germany offered a 19-point peace proposal to the other Locarno signatories. None of the points included Germany withdrawing any troops from the Rhineland.

Britain assured France and Belgium of British support in the event of war with Germany.

 

 

Map of OdishaThe state of Odisha in India forms its own  separate province.   After losing its complete political identity in 1568 following the defeat and demise of the last Hindu king Mukunda Dev, efforts resulted into the formation of a politically separate state under British rule on linguistic basis.

Chicago Daily Tribune April 1, 1936
Chicago Daily Tribune April 1, 1936

Sunday January 5, 1936

(This is an entry from the journal entitled Mexico Summer written by Elizabeth Lancaster Carsey 80-years-ago.  Click here to read more)

Left Van Horn at 4:30. Jamie told me he thought he had a chance at the El Paso office in Chemistry!  Surely hope so!  At Pecos saw Bill MacDonald from Vegas – Rode part of the way with one of our negro teachers.  Got here at 12.  Ate lunch – Slept nearly all the time until 8 – Alyce Claire came then. She had a grand time.

Here’s what else was happening 80-years-ago today

Chicago Sunday Tribune jan 5, 1936 pt 2 pg 4
Chicago Sunday Tribune jan 5, 1936 pt 2 pg 4

 

Second Italo-Ethiopian War: Italian planes bombed Degehabur.

The radio drama Famous Jury Trials premiered on WLW in Cincinnati, Ohio

Science is examining evolution

Chicago Sunday Tribune Jan 5, 1936 part 1 pg 17
Chicago Sunday Tribune Jan 5, 1936 part 1 pg 17

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chicago Sunday Tribune Jan 5, 1936
Chicago Sunday Tribune Jan 5, 1936

 

Tuesday August 28, 1934

(no entry) We know she is spending time with family in El Paso and preparing for the move to Roswell for her second teaching job.

A little bit to look forward to in the coming months – she hopes to get her own apartment in Roswell – it’s harder than you think.  And you’ve heard of school overcrowding – wait until you find out how many students are in her homeroom class!

Here’s what else was happening 80-years-ago today:

Upton Beall Sinclair Jr.jpgMuckraking author Upton Sinclair won the Democratic Party nomination for Governor of California.

The Challenge International de Tourisme aviation contest opened in Warsaw, Poland

In an address to 2,000 Catholic nurses, Pope Pius XI commented on the Abyssinia Crisis by saying, “A war of sheer conquest and nothing else would certainly be an unjust war. It ought, therefore, to be unimaginable – a thing sad and horrible beyond expression. An unjust war is unthinkable. We cannot admit its possibility, and we deliberately reject it … if it be true that the need for expansion and the need for frontier defence do exist, then we cannot forbid ourselves from hoping that the need will be met by means other than war.”

A crowd protests the courts closing  The Caravan Club, a gay friendly club in London.

Some more about the W.A. Carsey Family.

 

Carsey family 1953: From left: Alan, Norman, Elizabeth, Tommy, Arnold, Frank
Carsey family 1953: From left: Alan, Norman Elizabeth, Tommy,
Arnold, Frank

Elizabeth and Arnold married in 1938.  They celebrated 47 wedding anniversaries before Arnold died of a stroke.  They have four children – all boys.  Weldon Alan was born in 1939 and earned a BA in Electrical Engineering from the University of NM.  Norman was born a year later and attended the University of NM before going into business with his father and Alan in Flagstaff, AZ.  Alan went on to purchase a campground in Maine and Norman retired from the Westinghouse Nuclear Facility in New Mexico.   Frank came along in 1943.  He and younger brother Tommy, born in 1946, went on to earn PHD’s.    Frank earned his Doctorate in Physics from UCLA.  He worked on experiments in Antarctica.   Before retiring, he was published in several scientific journals and even appeared in two scientific documentary’s.  Tom has been published in many journals as well for his research for NOAA in the Coastal Ecosystem Group and Ocean Chemistry.   Grandma was so proud of her son’s.  She said she was only waiting for one to receive a Nobel Prize!nobel

 

Obviously intelligence was not on short order in the Carsey household, with two teachers at the helm, it was probably expected.   Please remember, Grandma taught Spanish and English – they were probably the only scientists and engineers with proper grammar!

Throughout their childhood, the Lancaster siblings were also a strong influence for the Carsey boys.   They grew up knowing their aunts, uncles and cousins.   Many keep in touch to this day.   In fact, since I grew up in the same town as my grandparents, I was also privy to the Lancaster’s special connection.   We would often attend celebrations where the group would open up singing “Hallelujah”  at the top of their lungs – often with wine glasses raised in the air for a toast!  Such love and fun!