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70mackMB

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Everything posted by 70mackMB

  1. lt didn't all happen in Massachusetts, we started it here in New Hampshire April 14, 1772. .....Hippy The Pine Tree Riot A millstone marks the site of the Pine Tree Riot where Quimby's Inn once stood. It is located on Rte. 114, South John Stark Byway on Eastman Hill. Site of Pine Tree Tavern where took place April 14, 1772 THE PINE TREE RIOT one of the first acts against the laws of England The Pine Tree Riot occurred at Quimby's Inn in South Weare on April 14, 1772. The event that spring morning was precipitated by men from Weare and surrounding towns illegally cutting white pine trees reserved for masts for the Royal Navy. But there was much more to it. "The story of the English need for ship's masts, ship's timber, and naval stores and young New Hampshire's ability to provide these commodities is a tale of market dynamics, imperial politics, ecological shortsightedness, and crafty survival tactics…." 1 In short, timber was to the world at that time what oil is to the world today--a finite resource for which nations competed. When the first shipment of masts from Portsmouth to England occurred, in 1634, England had already suffered deforestation. In order to dominate the high seas, new sources of abundant timber for shipbuilding were needed. "No ships, after all, could catch the wind without as many as twenty-three masts, yards, and spars varying in length and diameter from the bulky mainmast to its subordinate parts." 2 Although New Hampshire's white pine was not as hard as Europe's, its height and diameter were superior. It also weighed less and retained resin longer, giving the ships a sea life as long as two decades. When granting lands in America in 1690, King William prohibited the cutting of white pine over two feet in diameter. In 1722, under the reign of George I, parliament passed a law that reduced the diameter to one foot, required a license to cut white pine, and established fines for infractions. This law was basically ignored until John Wentworth became governor in 1767. Appointed Surveyor of the King's Woods, he recognized the revenue potential and appointed deputies to carry out the law. He conducted his own inspections of mill yards in the Piscataquog valley by having a servant drive him around in his coach. Before settlers could clear the land or build cabins, barns, or meetinghouses, the king's sanction, a broad arrow mark, was required on trees reserved for the Royal Navy. The deputies charged them a "good, round sum" to mark the trees and for the license required to cut the rest. No wonder the law became unpopular. The consequences involved arrest and fines. Contraband white pine already sawed into logs could be seized and a large settlement required; if not paid, authorities sold them at public auction. In the winter of 1771-72, a deputy Surveyor of the King's Woods found and marked for seizure 270 mast-worthy logs at Clement's mill in Oil Mill (now called Riverdale), in South Weare. He fined the log-cutters from Weare and those from nearby towns where illegal logs were also found. Men from other towns paid the fines, but those from Weare refused. Consequently, the Weare men were labeled "notorious offenders." The county sheriff, Benjamin Whiting, Esq., of Hollis, and his deputy, John Quigley, Esq., of Francestown were charged with delivering warrants and making arrests in the king's name. On April 13, 1772, they galloped into Weare and found major offender Ebenezer Mudgett, who promised to pay his fine the next day. The officials then retired to nearby Quimby's Inn for an overnight stay. News that they had come for Mudgett flew through town, and a plan was hatched. The following morning more than twenty men with blackened faces and switches in hand rushed into Whiting's room led by Mudgett: As for Deputy Quigley, the Weare men wrested the floorboards from the room above his and proceeded to beat him with long poles. Nor did the officials' horses escape the men's wrath. They cropped the animals' ears and sheared their manes and tails. To "jeers, jokes and shouts ringing in their ears" the sheriff and deputy rode toward Goffstown and Mast Road, named for the logs that were moved overland to the sea and off to England for the king's ships. The Weare men were ultimately arraigned and paid a light fine, but their rebellion against the crown, which preceded the Boston Tea Party (1773), helped set the stage for the Revolution. People in New Hampshire were probably more offended by the pine tree law than the Sugar Act of 1764; the Stamp Act (a rebellion that took place in Portsmouth, NH, in 1765); and the duty on tea, passed in 1773, which precipitated the Boston Tea Party. According to Weare's 1888 history, "The only reason why the 'Rebellion' at Portsmouth and the 'Boston tea party' are better known than our Pine Tree Riot is because they have had better historians." 4
  2. My '70 MB had a Farr on it. l believe we got the replacement element from NAPA. .....Hippy
  3. Trump admin to install 17 miles of buoys in border river: The Trump administration will soon take a proven barrier concept and apply it to a 17-mile stretch of the Rio Grande along the Texas-Mexico border. That concept is a floating buoy barrier, which Texas deployed along a mile-long stretch of the river near Eagle Pass. Border Patrol "was studying their use at the end of Trump 45 and thought they were an excellent method to secure the border and save lives," explained Border Czar Tom Homan. "They were not deployed because the administration changed hands. Gov. Abbott deployed them soon after and proved that they were very effective." When Texas first deployed its buoy wall in 2023, the Biden administration took the state to court. Now, under Trump, the DOJ is in the process of dropping its case against Texas.
  4. Joey, You mean this one that started out in NH? .....Hippy
  5. I need to stay off YouTube. lt's another one! (Also macktrucks.com/trucks/pioneer ) .....Hippy
  6. “Shut Your F*cking Mouth!” – Tim Walz Heckled and Booed by Military Veterans in Minnesota Over His Stolen Valor (VIDEO) https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2025/04/shut-your-fcking-mouth-tim-walz-heckled-booed/
  7. What are those "wings" over the doors of the Pioneer, cameras? And what are on the doors, half size mirrors? 🙈 .....Hippy
  8. Tom l surprised you don't have any young wimmin washing and waxing that truck yet! .....Hippy
  9. lt took a moment but l found it across the tracks (3054 Moselle Rd.) at the cat lady's house. I'm sure a SPAAMFAA member would like to have that truck. .....Hippy
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