American History

Discover Your Family Member’s Military History — Free until Veterans Day

arlyn-claywellI just received an email from Ancestry.com announcing a promo today through November 11 which lets you search military records free on their site. You will need to create a free account to do it.

I did a couple of searches to see what type of information I could find for free. I did a search for my uncle Arlyn Claywell, a WWII vet, and found out that he :

  • Enlisted in Fort Thomas/Newport, Ky. on March 19, 1944
  • His occupation was farmhand

When I spoke to Arlyn, about six months before he passed away in 2005, Arlyn said he was supposed to participate in the D-Day landing (Normandy), but became ill with chicken pox while in basic training and the illness postponed his deployment. As he was telling me the story, he said, “I was mad I couldn’t go… but it probably saved me.”

Arlyn went on to serve with the Army — making his way across Europe until the Germans were defeated. He was on his way to Japan when the atomic bombs were dropped. After the war ended, Arlyn reenlisted and was stationed in Germany.

Arlyn was my grandparents’ first son, and he was born on Christmas Day in 1925. If my memory is correct, that is why his mother gave him the middle name of Joy.

The Claywells

Arlyn, left, with his brothers: Charles, and my father Bill (far right) holding Shelby.

Categories: American History, Family History, Genealogy | Tags: , , ,

It’s Election Day: Do You Know Why We Vote On Tuesday?

-flagsUnless you live under a rock, you know today is Election Day. You may have already voted. But do you know why we vote on Tuesday, instead of, say Monday or Saturday?

This short video has the answer — and the answer just may surprise you (hint: it’s a really old law and it has nothing to do with a Constitutional mandate).

Time For A Change?

Several groups seeking to make U.S. elections fairer say many of our election laws should be updated to reflect the modern era. Laws that made sense years ago — like the law that has us voting on Tuesdays — no longer apply. If we want to increase voter participation the traditions should be abolished, they say.

Some of the reforms being suggested include:

  • Weekend Voting
  • National Popular Vote for President
  • Publically Funded Elections
  • Abolish Closed Primary System

To learn more about the various changes being proposed visit: FairVote.org or Common Cause.

Categories: American History, Politics | Tags: ,

Civil War Diary Mix of Gossip, News

barnRecently decoded portions of a diary and notebook kept by Confederate Lt. James M. Malbone, show that the officer was inclined to record gossip along with his officials duties. Most of his diary, which includes entries for 1863 and 1864, are about official business, like casualties and expenditures. However his self-created code placed throughout the book includes information about the illicit activities of fellow soldiers.

The AP reports that,

Sprinkled amid entries on camp recipes and casualties are encrypted passages in which Malbone dishes on such juicy topics as a fellow soldier who got caught in bed with another man’s wife.

You can read a transcript of the diary and view his homemade code by visiting the New York State Military Museum website where they have pdf copies of the diary and the transcription of the entries. They also provide this link to a photograph of Malbone.

Malbone was wounded in battle and the diary appears to be written after he was assigned a ‘desk job.’

Besides the gossip that the news article refer to the diary has quite a bit of interesting information in it. The entries include comments about guerrillas fighting the CSA, some of the casualties of war (including a boy who everyone thought was out of harm’s way, but was struck by a stray bullet and killed), and even a fairly long description of a group of inhabitants on ‘blue ridge,’ that Malbone does not describe in a very flattering manner (Oct. 19-20, 1863 entry).

Although the diary is 325-pages long, since it is a transcription, each page is relatively short, and since it has been saved as a pdf,  it can be downloaded to your machine and read at your leisure.

Categories: American History, Civil War History | Tags: ,