This book is a great reproduction of a mail order catalog from Peck & Snyder for the year 1886.
This
surprisingly thick, more than 300 pgs, densely illustrated, catalog is a
wonderful look at the amazing quantity of "stuff" available by mail in
the US of the late 19th c.
From the introduction;
"This
book is a secret attic on a rainy day, a gentle reminder of the days
when baseball was two words and a bicycle was $12.50. Whatever these
days were like, they could boast Peck & Snyder's Electro Radiant
Megascopes, ventilated lunch satchels,nose amputation knives, battery
operated scarf pins, electric sleeve buttons and magic bolognas."
Title
Nineteenth Century Games & Sporting Goods
American Historical Catalog Collection
Peck & Snyder
1886
Author
Peck & Snyder (their staff presumably)
Publisher
The Pyne Press
Princeton
Date
1886
Re-print 1971
ISBN:0-87861-094-4
Keep your sight glass full and your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
Nineteenth Century Games & Sporting Goods Catalog
Resurrecting Dr. Moss
This book is a biography of Edward Lawson Moss MD, A Royal Navy Surgeon
on the last great British north polar expedition of the nineteenth
century. Compiled by Paul Appleton from Moss' own letters this book
chronicles his travels in the Caribbean, the Arctic, and on Canada's
Pacific coast (he created one of the first medical establishments on the
coast at Esquimalt). He died at the young age of 38 when the HMS Atalanta was lost on the way to Bermuda in 1880.
A fascinating look at a very interesting man, he could have been a model for Patrick Obrien's iconic doctor Steven Maturin.
This
book is published by the University of Calgary as part of their Northern Lights
series. It includes lots of maps and photographs as well as 15
watercolour plates by Dr. Moss himself.
Highly recommended.
Title
Resurrecting Dr. Moss
The life and letters of a Royal Navy Surgeon,
Edward Lawton Moss MD, RN, 1843-1880
Author
Paul C. Appleton
Publisher
University of Calgary Press
Date
2008
ISBN:978-1-55238-232-5
Keep your sightglass full and your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
1912 Police Code
Forwarded to me by my brother.
Thanks Ross!
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
===============
From: Marcus Rowland
To: wheeze-l
Sent: Sat, Feb 4, 2012 09:53:23 MST
Subject: [WZL] Sir Howard Vincent's Police Code - Resource for Victorian / Edwardian gaming
I've put the complete text of Sir Howard Vincent's Police Code on my
web site. It's the 15th (1912) edition of a compact guide to law,
conduct, etc. for London policeman, by the man who founded Scotland
Yard's CID (Criminal Investigation Department). It was used as a
reference by all of the UK's police forces, and adapted to many
Commonwealth forces. It should be useful to anyone researching or
writing about the UK police or gaming in this period, and much of it
undoubtedly applies to British police forces from the Victorian era
well into the 1920s-30s. To make it easier to use I've adapted the
index which now has several THOUSAND links to entries, and put several
hundred links into the text.
POLICE CODE AND GENERAL MANUAL OF THE CRIMINAL LAW BY SIR HOWARD VINCENT, K.C.M.G., C.B. FIFTEENTH EDITION. 1912![]()
I've had a lot of help correcting this, but undoubtedly some OCR and
formatting errors etc. remain, if you spot anything that looks wrong
please let me know.
--
Marcus L. Rowland
www.forgottenfutures.com
www.forgottenfutures.co.uk
The Great Steampunk Timeline
Stephen Hunt, author of Court of the Air wrote an article for TOR books in Oct 2010:
The Great Steampunk Timeline by Stephen Hunt
In this article he included a timeline of literary and social events in which the Steampunk movement that we know has evolved.
Click here for his timeline.
From the article:
But look where steampunk accelerates, look where it starts to take wing. It’s the buildup of millennial angst towards the dawning of the new century. You know the one, the century that should have been the Age of Aquarius—the end of history, the death of faith, the dawn of super-science, and our long march towards Singularity.
Instead, the boiler was lit. Not by the gentle hand of a stoker measuring out spadefuls of coal, but with all the violent ignition of a multi-stage Apollo rocket: wars, terrorism, global warming, bird flu, crime, hoodies knifing granny, economic shock after economic shock. Careers and industries withering under the force of technological innovation, the internet upturning lives with the force of a superstorm.
And this, gentle reader, is the real whip cracking above steampunk’s hansom cab.
Steampunk isn’t true Victoriana. It’s not five-year-olds crying as they were shoved starving up chimneys; it’s not having to have seven children so you can watch five of them die from pandemics before the age of ten. It’s not a decade of pain from a crumbling tooth because you’re living in an age where cutting-edge dentistry means a long swig of whisky and a short pair of pliers.
It’s faux Victoriana. It’s elegant smoking jackets and flounced petticoats rather than two quid jogging bottoms from Lidl. It’s manners and wit rather than trash-talking curses. It’s understanding and stripping and rebuilding your gadgets, rather than trading in yesterday’s iPhone for tomorrow’s Google Nexus One. It’s comfortable tweed and refined salons, rather than a punch-up in Cardiff City centre because you disrespected some moron by watching him vomit for two seconds too long.
That’s how you understand steampunk.
Indeed Stephen, indeed!
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
Steampunk Culture
Some videos showing the Steampunk scene.
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ
Victorian Newspaper Stories
A fascinating blog filled with stories taken directly from Victorian newspapers.
Enjoy!
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed an your water iced
KJ
An Extraordinary Incident is a collection of news
stories from Victorian publications (and a few earlier ones). It
features the unusual, the amusing, the macabre, the tragic and the
hair-raising. You’ll find accounts of daredevil aeronautics, dastardly
crimes, encounters with wild beasts and all manner of pith-helmeted
heroics. All the stories were printed in real newspapers but that, of
course, is no guarantee of their veracity. They are presented verbatim
for your interest and enjoyment.
An example from the The Dundee Courier and Argus, Tuesday 7 June 1898
THE LADY AND THE PARACHUTE
Mysterious Airship Losses Explained
Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and a good lookout!
KJ



