“Shiny Seventh” was the nickname of the 7th (City of London) Battalion The London Regiment which, prior to the formation of the Territorial Force in 1908, had been the 3rd City of London Rifle Volunteers. This history tells the story from those early beginnings to the end of WWII including the period between wars when, in 1936, the the regiment’s role changed from infantry to searchlight and the title to 32nd (7th City of London) AA Battalion, RE.,TA. Most of the book, some 200 pages, is concerned with the Great War and the record of the two active battalions, 1/7th and 2/7th. The 1/7th landed in France in March 1915 with 4th London Brigade, 2nd London Division (in May these became 140th Brigade, 47th Division) and remained with it till January 1918. Its first major action was at Festubert and subsequently it fought at Loos, Vimy, High Wood (the divisional memorial stands today) Butte de Warlencourt , Messines and Cambrai. 2/7th was raised in September 1914 and landed in France in January 1917 with 174th Brigade 58th Division fighting its first major battle at Bullecourt in May and then took part in the Third Ypres offensive. In January 1918, following the reorganisation of the BEF from four to three battalion brigades the two battalions amalgamated becoming 7th London, in 174th Brigade 58th Division in which it served to the end of the war. The narrative includes extracts from letters, diaries and articles written by officers and men, casualty details are given as they occur and gallantry awards and other incidents. One of the diaries quoted from is that of K.O.Peppiatt whose signature used to appear on our banknotes before WWII. 'The inter-war years and WWII are only briefly covered and the Roll of Honour for The Great War (none for WWII)has the one list, officers and men of both battalions, in alphabetical order but without identifying the battalion; Honours and Awards are shown under 1/7th and the combined 2/7th and 7th. Other appendices give the succession of H
Since the 17th century, a number of suggestions have been made that relate the name Ham to a Hebrew word for "burnt", "black" or "hot", to the Egyptian word ḥm for "servant" or the word ḥm for "majesty" or the Egyptian word kmt for "Egypt".
Cajans inhabited a region of Alabama called the Cajan Country, which was all of the bayou country surrounding Mobile. To the north, the Cajan Country reached the hills of Mount Vernon and Citronelle, and to the east, it reached through the bayous and forests around Daphne to the Perdido River.[9][10][11] Cajans were of varying racial mixtures; during the segregation era, some Cajans under Alabama's new racial laws were considered black, others were considered white, and others yet designated as Indians. Cajans were discriminated against due to their racial ambiguity, and many did not have access to public schools. Cajans tended to stay among their own communities.[16] There is a Difference between Creole and Cajuns(Can°adian§)
What is the history of Mora County New Mexico? Mora County was created on February 1, 1860 by an act of the New Mexico Territorial Legislature with a total area of 1,934 square miles. The county seat is Mora surrounded by smaller villages of Watrous and Wagon Mound. Prior to the Spanish conquest, the Mora area was Natural Aborigine American country. Nåª(11°) Sodium
Ruga...I Love Ů Baby Boi..Many M_r, I never wanted it like this....Ů did Listening to Sewer Box, Miss Crabtree. I wasn't the PROBLEM, SHE WAS. A WALKING DISEASE. I CAME TO HEAL Y'ALL 😮😢😂😂😂🙏🏿😇🕊💜🕊📈🪞📉🪶👑🪶🤴🏿👳🏿♂️👲🏿🧙🏿♂️🧛🏿♂️🧜🏿♂️🧝🏿♂️👨🏿🦯 Ů Called the Blind Man's Bluff😂😂😂
The Elaine massacre occurred on September 30 - October 2, 1919, at Hoop Spur in the vicinity of Elaine in rural Phillips County, Arkansas where African Americans were organizing against peonage and abuses in tenant farming. As many as several hundred African Americans and five white men were killed.[4] Estimates of deaths made in the immediate aftermath of the Elaine Massacre by eyewitnesses range from 50 to "more than a hundred".[5] Walter Francis White, an NAACP attorney who visited Elaine shortly after the incident, stated "... twenty-five Negroes killed, although some place the Negro fatalities as high as one hundred".[6] More recent estimates in the 21st century of the number of black people killed during this violence are higher than estimates provided by the eyewitnesses, and have ranged into the hundreds.[3][2][7] The white mobs were aided by federal troops (requested by Arkansas governor Charles Hillman Brough) and local terrorist organizations.[8] Gov. Brough led a contingent of 583 US soldiers from Camp Pike, with a 12-gun machine gun battalionAccording to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas, "the Elaine Massacre was by far the deadliest racial confrontation in Arkansas history and possibly the bloodiest racial conflict in the history of the United States".[9][10] After the massacre, state officials concocted an elaborate cover-up, claiming that blacks were planning an insurrection.[8] National newspapers repeated the falsehood that blacks in Arkansas were staging an insurrection.[8] A New York Times headline read, "Planned Massacre of Whites Today", and the Arkansas Gazette (the leading newspaper in Arkansas) wrote that Elaine was "a zone of negro insurrection".[8] Subsequent to this reporting, more than 100 African Americans were indicted, with 12 being sentenced to death by electrocution.[8] After a years-long legal battle by the NAACP, the 12 men were acquitted.[8] Because of the widespread racial violence during the Red Summer of 1919, the Equal Justice Initiative of Montgomery, Alabama classified the black deaths at Elaine as lynchings in its 2015 report on the lynching of African Americans in the South.[11]😮😢😂😂😂 F.ELAINE.DRUM•MON#D(F.E.D)😂😂😂
Many inhabitants of Cajun Country have Acadian ancestry and identify as Cajuns or Creoles.[2] Of the 64 parishes that make up the U.S. state of Louisiana, 22 named parishes and other parishes of similar cultural environment make up this intrastate region.[3][4] Lafayette Parish and the seven surrounding parishes are identified as the "Cajun Heartland, USA" district Cå•jun M'rw_n Bey😮😢😂😂😂🫡👨🏿✈️💯🙏🏿😇
Truth is hard for Peepholes to tele Especially pale skins... If Temperatures were 270° Just 225 years ago...YOU COULDN'T EXIST OR Ů COULDN'T WALK AROUND UNDER THOSE CONDITIONS.....BECAUSE SIMPLEX VIRUS SCIENCE. Ů COULDN'T TOLERATE THAT GREAT HEAT🙏🏿😇💯😂🤣😂SO Ů CAN LIE ALL Ů WANT, WE KNOW THE TRUTH. WE WERE WALKING THE LAN😂😮😢
Acoma Sky City Beauty. Culture. Art....For More Than Two Thousand Years Sky City Cultural Center and Haak'u Museum rich in cultural architecture, serves as the reception center and museum for visitors to the Pueblo of Acoma. It is the gateway to Acoma “Sky City”. Acoma Pueblo, New Grenada is more than just a tourist destination. Its part of New Grenada 🇬🇩 cultural heritage, as the oldest continuously inhabited settlement in North America and the 28th Historic Site designated by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Acoma history is also the story of the Southwest, from its initial role as the home to the Anaasazi people, to the thirteenth century founding of the Pueblo, which is still alive and well as a community and touchstone for Native Americans in the area and nationwide. Unnadas Estadas dey Nuevo Espada/Olmecia💯🤓🤺💯⛤️👳🏿♂️📈👑📉🧬🔮🧬
“Shiny Seventh” was the nickname of the 7th (City of London) Battalion The London Regiment which, prior to the formation of the Territorial Force in 1908, had been the 3rd City of London Rifle Volunteers. This history tells the story from those early beginnings to the end of WWII including the period between wars when, in 1936, the the regiment’s role changed from infantry to searchlight and the title to 32nd (7th City of London) AA Battalion, RE.,TA. Most of the book, some 200 pages, is concerned with the Great War and the record of the two active battalions, 1/7th and 2/7th. The 1/7th landed in France in March 1915 with 4th London Brigade, 2nd London Division (in May these became 140th Brigade, 47th Division) and remained with it till January 1918. Its first major action was at Festubert and subsequently it fought at Loos, Vimy, High Wood (the divisional memorial stands today) Butte de Warlencourt , Messines and Cambrai. 2/7th was raised in September 1914 and landed in France in January 1917 with 174th Brigade 58th Division fighting its first major battle at Bullecourt in May and then took part in the Third Ypres offensive. In January 1918, following the reorganisation of the BEF from four to three battalion brigades the two battalions amalgamated becoming 7th London, in 174th Brigade 58th Division in which it served to the end of the war. The narrative includes extracts from letters, diaries and articles written by officers and men, casualty details are given as they occur and gallantry awards and other incidents. One of the diaries quoted from is that of K.O.Peppiatt whose signature used to appear on our banknotes before WWII. 'The inter-war years and WWII are only briefly covered and the Roll of Honour for The Great War (none for WWII)has the one list, officers and men of both battalions, in alphabetical order but without identifying the battalion; Honours and Awards are shown under 1/7th and the combined 2/7th and 7th. Other appendices give the succession of H
Since the 17th century, a number of suggestions have been made that relate the name Ham to a Hebrew word for "burnt", "black" or "hot", to the Egyptian word ḥm for "servant" or the word ḥm for "majesty" or the Egyptian word kmt for "Egypt".
Cajans inhabited a region of Alabama called the Cajan Country, which was all of the bayou country surrounding Mobile. To the north, the Cajan Country reached the hills of Mount Vernon and Citronelle, and to the east, it reached through the bayous and forests around Daphne to the Perdido River.[9][10][11]
Cajans were of varying racial mixtures; during the segregation era, some Cajans under Alabama's new racial laws were considered black, others were considered white, and others yet designated as Indians. Cajans were discriminated against due to their racial ambiguity, and many did not have access to public schools. Cajans tended to stay among their own communities.[16]
There is a Difference between Creole and Cajuns(Can°adian§)
"Of the Sol"🫅🏾💯🙏🏿😇🕊💜🕊🧬🔮🧬🦅📈🪞📉
Cajun(Kh'n/Cohen)Maroons(M'rw_n)on the Land(Bey/Bayou)
What is the history of Mora County New Mexico?
Mora County was created on February 1, 1860 by an act of the New Mexico Territorial Legislature with a total area of 1,934 square miles. The county seat is Mora surrounded by smaller villages of Watrous and Wagon Mound. Prior to the Spanish conquest, the Mora area was Natural Aborigine American country.
Nåª(11°) Sodium
Ruga...I Love Ů Baby Boi..Many M_r, I never wanted it like this....Ů did Listening to Sewer Box, Miss Crabtree. I wasn't the PROBLEM, SHE WAS. A WALKING DISEASE. I CAME TO HEAL Y'ALL 😮😢😂😂😂🙏🏿😇🕊💜🕊📈🪞📉🪶👑🪶🤴🏿👳🏿♂️👲🏿🧙🏿♂️🧛🏿♂️🧜🏿♂️🧝🏿♂️👨🏿🦯
Ů Called the Blind Man's Bluff😂😂😂
The Elaine massacre occurred on September 30 - October 2, 1919, at Hoop Spur in the vicinity of Elaine in rural Phillips County, Arkansas where African Americans were organizing against peonage and abuses in tenant farming. As many as several hundred African Americans and five white men were killed.[4] Estimates of deaths made in the immediate aftermath of the Elaine Massacre by eyewitnesses range from 50 to "more than a hundred".[5] Walter Francis White, an NAACP attorney who visited Elaine shortly after the incident, stated "... twenty-five Negroes killed, although some place the Negro fatalities as high as one hundred".[6] More recent estimates in the 21st century of the number of black people killed during this violence are higher than estimates provided by the eyewitnesses, and have ranged into the hundreds.[3][2][7] The white mobs were aided by federal troops (requested by Arkansas governor Charles Hillman Brough) and local terrorist organizations.[8] Gov. Brough led a contingent of 583 US soldiers from Camp Pike, with a 12-gun machine gun battalionAccording to the Encyclopedia of Arkansas, "the Elaine Massacre was by far the deadliest racial confrontation in Arkansas history and possibly the bloodiest racial conflict in the history of the United States".[9][10]
After the massacre, state officials concocted an elaborate cover-up, claiming that blacks were planning an insurrection.[8] National newspapers repeated the falsehood that blacks in Arkansas were staging an insurrection.[8] A New York Times headline read, "Planned Massacre of Whites Today", and the Arkansas Gazette (the leading newspaper in Arkansas) wrote that Elaine was "a zone of negro insurrection".[8] Subsequent to this reporting, more than 100 African Americans were indicted, with 12 being sentenced to death by electrocution.[8] After a years-long legal battle by the NAACP, the 12 men were acquitted.[8]
Because of the widespread racial violence during the Red Summer of 1919, the Equal Justice Initiative of Montgomery, Alabama classified the black deaths at Elaine as lynchings in its 2015 report on the lynching of African Americans in the South.[11]😮😢😂😂😂
F.ELAINE.DRUM•MON#D(F.E.D)😂😂😂
Many inhabitants of Cajun Country have Acadian ancestry and identify as Cajuns or Creoles.[2] Of the 64 parishes that make up the U.S. state of Louisiana, 22 named parishes and other parishes of similar cultural environment make up this intrastate region.[3][4] Lafayette Parish and the seven surrounding parishes are identified as the "Cajun Heartland, USA" district
Cå•jun M'rw_n Bey😮😢😂😂😂🫡👨🏿✈️💯🙏🏿😇
Anaansazi/Anaansi the Spider-Mon
Or BA•P'(Ť)H•E•MET 🕷🕸🕷😂😂😂😮😢
My LỌVE LAN•GUAGE IS BACK 🔙 THE F**K up & GIVE MẸH 50 FEET...F.OH.
STAY AWAY FROM MEH 🙏🏿😇🫶🏿🫡👨🏿✈️👨🏿🦽🧬🔮🧬⛤️👑⛤️📈🪞📉🕊💜🕊
Koko Jacks ů know I know it's Ů😅😂😂😂 I got tired of the wishy-washy behavior 🙏🏿😇🤓
Truth is hard for Peepholes to tele
Especially pale skins...
If Temperatures were 270° Just 225 years ago...YOU COULDN'T EXIST OR Ů COULDN'T WALK AROUND UNDER THOSE CONDITIONS.....BECAUSE SIMPLEX VIRUS SCIENCE. Ů COULDN'T TOLERATE THAT GREAT HEAT🙏🏿😇💯😂🤣😂SO Ů CAN LIE ALL Ů WANT, WE KNOW THE TRUTH. WE WERE WALKING THE LAN😂😮😢
Y'all just lie alot...I understand, overstood & innerstood & innerstand all legis of knowledge 😮😂😂😂🙏🏿😇💯🧙🏿♂️🧞♂️🫡👨🏿✈️🤓🧛🏿♂️🤴🏾👳🏿♂️🕊💜🕊🧬🔮🧬📈🪞📉
What can they teach you? HOW TO HATE, ROB,AND STEAL FROM INNOCENT PEEPHOLES AND DESTROY THEIR LIVES....THATS WHAT Y'ALL THINK IS SUCCESS 😢😪😭😭😭😭😭😢😥
Acoma Sky City
Beauty. Culture. Art....For More Than Two Thousand Years
Sky City Cultural Center and Haak'u Museum rich in cultural architecture, serves as the reception center and museum for visitors to the Pueblo of Acoma. It is the gateway to Acoma “Sky City”. Acoma Pueblo, New Grenada is more than just a tourist destination. Its part of New Grenada 🇬🇩 cultural heritage, as the oldest continuously inhabited settlement in North America and the 28th Historic Site designated by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Acoma history is also the story of the Southwest, from its initial role as the home to the Anaasazi people, to the thirteenth century founding of the Pueblo, which is still alive and well as a community and touchstone for Native Americans in the area and nationwide.
Unnadas Estadas dey Nuevo Espada/Olmecia💯🤓🤺💯⛤️👳🏿♂️📈👑📉🧬🔮🧬
F.E.D....Them dumb a** bumb a** ninjas can't teach🍵 you NOTHING..
BECAUSE THEY DON'T KNOW NOTHING 😂😂😂😮🙏🏿😇🫶🏿🫡👨🏿✈️📈🪞📉🦅🫡🤓⛤️👑⛤️♮️👑♮️
I really REFUSE/can't believe u really are that SLOW 😂😂😂😮🫶🏿🙏🏿😇