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History Possibly Lost.

Sorry I ment to say they were running out of whale oil.

Then you need to provide some evidence to back up that claim.

Do you have anything to say about the rest of my post?


So far as I can tell, all you have is a bunch of mis-remembered folk tales and local myths, none of which stand up to even the most cursory of investigation.


ETA: Oh, and occasional links to factually inaccurate websites that would have looked laughably pre-historic 20 years ago. Sorry, I forgot about them.
 
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Nothing in that link about a fire in Buckingham Palace, or a demonstration "to Queen Victoria's Friends and Fellow investors inside Buckingham Palace".



From your link:



Also this one amused me:

Yes the fire did destroy the Coal Mine office, the Coal itself was never shipped only the Oil and Candles made from it. Everyone was looking for a Substitute for the 1.50 cents a gallon Whale Oil, for lighting.
 
Yes the fire did destroy the Coal Mine office, the Coal itself was never shipped only the Oil and Candles made from it. Everyone was looking for a Substitute for the 1.50 cents a gallon Whale Oil, for lighting.


Evidence, please, of the 'Coal Mine Office' in Buckingham Palace being destroyed by fire (or even existing, in order to be destroyed by fire).
 
Evidence, please, of the 'Coal Mine Office' in Buckingham Palace being destroyed by fire (or even existing, in order to be destroyed by fire).

I asked some of my Friends and they said the fire was referenced in,

"A Social and educational history of Hancock County, Kentucky
Author(s)/Publishing Information
Charles A Clinton
Call Number
HN79.K42 H363 1974"

That was part of the experimental Schools program Launched in Hancock County, the book was funded by the United States Department of education.
 
I asked some of my Friends and they said the fire was referenced in,

"A Social and educational history of Hancock County, Kentucky
Author(s)/Publishing Information
Charles A Clinton
Call Number
HN79.K42 H363 1974"

That was part of the experimental Schools program Launched in Hancock County, the book was funded by the United States Department of education.


NO.

We are not doing that dance again. YOU made the claim, YOU provide the evidence.
 
I asked some of my Friends and they said the fire was referenced in,

"A Social and educational history of Hancock County, Kentucky
Author(s)/Publishing Information
Charles A Clinton
Call Number
HN79.K42 H363 1974"

That was part of the experimental Schools program Launched in Hancock County, the book was funded by the United States Department of education.

Also, I'm calling ******** on this. I don't believe that in the six minutes between my post and your response you "asked some of my Friends and they said the fire was referenced in" this book.

Your citation is clearly copied and pasted from here:

https://nkaa.uky.edu/nkaa/items/show/300002229

...and is handily only viewable in situ, after submitting a request to the Special Collections Research Centre of the University of Kentucky, making it practically impossible to verify.


Please show some evidence to support your claims that;


  • Princess Victoria bankrolled coal mines in Kentucky at the age of 14

  • A nine year old Prince Edward invested in a coal oil plant in Kentucky and/or his mother did

  • There was a 'Coal Mine Office' in Buckingham Palace

  • Said 'Coal Mine Office' was destroyed by fire following a demonstration of coal oil "to Queen Victoria's Friends and Fellow investors inside Buckingham Palace"

  • Britain was running out of whale oil in or around 1850
 
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Weren't we tking about Abraham Lincoln's feces and mentioning Russian hookers? Tone is getting a little heavy, here.
 
Not to detract from the memory. And this would actually make a great story, if investigated properly. ...But end of day, this isn't really history per se, is it? More like trivia, if historical trivia. (I mean, if that box of nails perhaps shed light about some key aspect of history, that would be a different matter. This, even if true, makes no difference to anything, does it. So, just trivia. ...Again, though, cool story even so, particularly if it's investigated properly and written up well.)

That detail from 8enetto about the box of nails, and how valuable nails were back in those days, was very interesting! ...Wonder what things about us, and what we consider valuable, will seem impossibly quaint and ...different, to our sons and grandsons 50 years down? (50, because things are changing faster than before, isn't it, some things anyway.)



eta: So why'd your ancestor hand out that very valuable box of very valuable nails to him? Any story/hypothesis in family tradition about that? I mean, if those things were so valuable that they were like money, and people burned down houses and then rooted around in the ashes to get at them, then you wouldn't hand them out to some nondescript rando passing by, would you? )
 
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I think the idea is Thomas was in need of a place to get on his feet, and he stayed at Pates station as a handyman for a bit.
Maybe long enough to wait out a winter or just earn what he could to get on his feet.
I have been that person in my life. A rando that gets a bit of work to get going. Show them value and they can be thankful.

Chances are there was an old cabin there they could use for a while. Slave quarters were mentioned. Any port in a storm.

Just a guess, but I 've been there.
 
No no, no disrespect intended to someone's straitened circumstances. Just wondering why that ultra-precious gift equivalent to a chest of nearly-doubloons.

As you say, maybe he was being paid in kind for his work. Or maybe Chainsaw's ancestor was just a kind man, ready to help some deserving person in need. ...Where I was coning from is, if the idea is to create a historically correct narrative incorporating ans explaining these specifics, then that is a question that probably needs to be asked, and answered factually basis records and investigations. Should that investigation be actually carried out, I mean.
 
Verification of the entire story does require that letter/map be located and authenticated.

Probable and plausible are much easier to imagine.
 
Not to detract from the memory. And this would actually make a great story, if investigated properly. ...But end of day, this isn't really history per se, is it? More like trivia, if historical trivia. (I mean, if that box of nails perhaps shed light about some key aspect of history, that would be a different matter. This, even if true, makes no difference to anything, does it. So, just trivia. ...Again, though, cool story even so, particularly if it's investigated properly and written up well.)

That detail from 8enetto about the box of nails, and how valuable nails were back in those days, was very interesting! ...Wonder what things about us, and what we consider valuable, will seem impossibly quaint and ...different, to our sons and grandsons 50 years down? (50, because things are changing faster than before, isn't it, some things anyway.)



eta: So why'd your ancestor hand out that very valuable box of very valuable nails to him? Any story/hypothesis in family tradition about that? I mean, if those things were so valuable that they were like money, and people burned down houses and then rooted around in the ashes to get at them, then you wouldn't hand them out to some nondescript rando passing by, would you? )

He was able to make more Nails, and he was a Methodist Minister, Thomas Lincoln just didn't have the Money to pay for the Nails. The note was a thank you, and Payment for the Nails, in 1818, 2 years after Lincoln arrived in Indiana. Thomas
Lincoln was destitute, having lost 2 Farms in Kentucky.

The only Question is was the river low, as in the Cloverport story, or was the River high as in the Story told at the Republican Convention in 1860.
If the Ohio was low from a drought then Lincoln could have crossed at Cloverport if the River was high he would have had to have crossed at Hawesville on the Thompson Ferry, where the Lincoln Trail Bridge currently is.
If he crossed at Hawesville he stayed at Pates Station and my Family's story is true. I don't believe the Cloverport story is True because it only appears after 1930, and Tree Ring Data shows local tree rings were fat in the year 1816, so it appears their was no drought in 1816.
However to prove which story is true you would have to look at tree ring data, for the year 1816 from the entire Ohio Valley up stream of Hawesville.

This was the wife of Abraham.
https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-breckenridge-news-nancy-roberts-wif/38764996/
 
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Verification of the entire story does require that letter/map be located and authenticated.

Probable and plausible are much easier to imagine.

Lincoln Built his first Cabin in Indiana in 1816-1817 in winter without nails that wouldn't have been possible. He wasn't allowed to burn his Cabins on the farms he lost, and recover the Nails so broke destitute he had to get Nails Somewhere along the way too Indiana.

You can look it up in thev1967 Department of the interior publication.
Lincoln Boyhood a working Farm, it is available on PDF, on line.
 
Also, I'm calling ******** on this. I don't believe that in the six minutes between my post and your response you "asked some of my Friends and they said the fire was referenced in" this book.

(I used one of those new Fangled Telliophones to Call a friend who works at the Lewisport Library where a Copy of the book is located.

Here is an example of how a Telliophone works.)

https://youtu.be/-dCO0N5kudU?feature=shared


(Your citation is clearly copied and pasted from here:


https://nkaa.uky.edu/nkaa/items/show/300002229

...and is handily only viewable in situ, after submitting a request to the Special Collections Research Centre of the University of Kentucky, making it practically impossible to verify.)

Can I help it that the book is only available at the Lewisport Kentucky Library, it makes Reference to a News article in the Times of London though but I couldn't find that article on line.


Please show some evidence to support your claims that;


  • Princess Victoria bankrolled coal mines in Kentucky at the age of 14
(It was Bankrolled by the Royal Family, Victoria taking over the funding when she became Queen, and in honor of here ascension to the Throne Victoria Crossroads was named after her.)

  • A nine year old Prince Edward invested in a coal oil plant in Kentucky and/or his mother did

( His Mother did, after 1859 the Company died do to oil being a less expensive source of Kerosene.)

  • There was a 'Coal Mine Office' in Buckingham Palace

(No the Office was at Cloverport destroyed in the Cloverport Fire.)

  • Said 'Coal Mine Office' was destroyed by fire following a demonstration of coal oil "to Queen Victoria's Friends and Fellow investors inside Buckingham Palace"

(The Coal Mine office was in Cloverport, they stored wooden Barrels Filled Kerosene in the Warehouse where the Office was located, the Ledgend Is a worker moving Barrels lit a cigarette inside the Warehouse and found out smoking was bad for his health when Gas Vapors went Boom.)

  • Britain was running out of whale oil in or around 1850
[/QUOTE]
That is well noted as the price of whale oil was over $1.00 US a gallon.
Kerosene was .10 cents a gallon, and low sulfur Cannel Coal didn't give off the sulfur smell of Scottish Bog oil Coal Oil.
 
...Can I help it that the book is only available at the Lewisport Kentucky Library, it makes Reference to a News article in the Times of London though but I couldn't find that article on line...

Then why did you quote the University of Kentucky library (in Lexington) catalogue, not Hancock County Public Library, in Lewisport?


...Please show some evidence to support your claims that;


  • Princess Victoria bankrolled coal mines in Kentucky at the age of 14
(It was Bankrolled by the Royal Family, Victoria taking over the funding when she became Queen, and in honor of here ascension to the Throne Victoria Crossroads was named after her.)...

I asked for evidence for your claim, not another unsupported story.


  • A nine year old Prince Edward invested in a coal oil plant in Kentucky and/or his mother did

( His Mother did, after 1859 the Company died do to oil being a less expensive source of Kerosene.)

I asked for evidence for your claim, not another unsupported story.

  • There was a 'Coal Mine Office' in Buckingham Palace

(No the Office was at Cloverport destroyed in the Cloverport Fire.)

  • Said 'Coal Mine Office' was destroyed by fire following a demonstration of coal oil "to Queen Victoria's Friends and Fellow investors inside Buckingham Palace"

(The Coal Mine office was in Cloverport, they stored wooden Barrels Filled Kerosene in the Warehouse where the Office was located, the Ledgend Is a worker moving Barrels lit a cigarette inside the Warehouse and found out smoking was bad for his health when Gas Vapors went Boom.)

Then why did you offer this up in response to a request for evidence of a fire at Buckingham Palace?

  • Britain was running out of whale oil in or around 1850
That is well noted as the price of whale oil was over $1.00 US a gallon.
Kerosene was .10 cents a gallon, and low sulfur Cannel Coal didn't give off the sulfur smell of Scottish Bog oil Coal Oil.

That is not 'running out', it is also not evidence.
 
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Also, I'm calling ******** on this. I don't believe that in the six minutes between my post and your response you "asked some of my Friends and they said the fire was referenced in" this book.

(I used one of those new Fangled Telliophones to Call a friend who works at the Lewisport Library where a Copy of the book is located.

Here is an example of how a Telliophone works.)

https://youtu.be/-dCO0N5kudU?feature=shared


(Your citation is clearly copied and pasted from here:


https://nkaa.uky.edu/nkaa/items/show/300002229

...and is handily only viewable in situ, after submitting a request to the Special Collections Research Centre of the University of Kentucky, making it practically impossible to verify.)

Can I help it that the book is only available at the Lewisport Kentucky Library, it makes Reference to a News article in the Times of London though but I couldn't find that article on line.


Please show some evidence to support your claims that;


  • Princess Victoria bankrolled coal mines in Kentucky at the age of 14
(It was Bankrolled by the Royal Family, Victoria taking over the funding when she became Queen, and in honor of here ascension to the Throne Victoria Crossroads was named after her.)

  • A nine year old Prince Edward invested in a coal oil plant in Kentucky and/or his mother did

( His Mother did, after 1859 the Company died do to oil being a less expensive source of Kerosene.)

  • There was a 'Coal Mine Office' in Buckingham Palace

(No the Office was at Cloverport destroyed in the Cloverport Fire.)

  • Said 'Coal Mine Office' was destroyed by fire following a demonstration of coal oil "to Queen Victoria's Friends and Fellow investors inside Buckingham Palace"

(The Coal Mine office was in Cloverport, they stored wooden Barrels Filled Kerosene in the Warehouse where the Office was located, the Ledgend Is a worker moving Barrels lit a cigarette inside the Warehouse and found out smoking was bad for his health when Gas Vapors went Boom.)

  • Britain was running out of whale oil in or around 1850
That is well noted as the price of whale oil was over $1.00 US a gallon.
Kerosene was .10 cents a gallon, and low sulfur Cannel Coal didn't give off the sulfur smell of Scottish Bog oil Coal Oil.[/QUOTE]

At February 20th 2003, some pyrotechnics started a fire in the Station nightclub, killing 100 and injuring 230 people.
See? I can cite unrelated fires as well. And in my case this one can be checked independently.

So, forgetting the unrelated Cloverport fire.
How about that Buckingham Palace fire you mentioned in post 55?
 
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Then why did you quote the University of Kentucky library (in Lexington) catalogue, not Hancock County Public Library, in Lewisport?




I asked for evidence for your claim, not another unsupported story.




I asked for evidence for your claim, not another unsupported story.



Then why did you offer this up in response to a request for evidence of a fire at Buckingham Palace?



That is not 'running out', it is also not evidence.

I am looking for a PDF that has Information about the Coal Mine and Queen Victoria's Family Financial Involvement, I believe the Company was Incorperated in 1833, and Victoria invested in 1837.
 

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