Wednesday, January 15, 2020
Maud Toomey Memorial, Evansville Wyoming
Maude Toomey was a 33 year old high school Latin teacher, and an oil company bookkeeper, in Casper when she took a ride as a passenger in a plane owned and piloted by Casperite Bert Cole on January 14, 1920. Something went tragically wrong during the flight and Cole's plane crashed near what is now the Evansville water treatment plant, which is not far from what was Natrona County's first airport.
A cement cross was placed in the ground at the spot where the plant crashed. Oddly, no inscription was placed on it, leading to a small element of doubt about its purpose later on when it was rediscovered during the construction of the water treatment plant. Since that time, an inscription has been placed at its base and the location is now an Evansville park.
Evansville has sort of a unique history in that regard as two of its somber memorials are located in areas where children now play, which is perhaps a more appropriate placement than many might suppose, honoring the dead in a way that they might have appreciated.
These photographs were taken near the centennial of the accident, which contributed to very long shadows, even though they were taken near 1:00 p.m.
Friday, January 10, 2020
Lex Anteinternet: January 10, 1920. Gen. Paul Kendall
Lex Anteinternet: January 10, 1920. Germany signs the Protocol and ...:
January 10, 1920. Germany signs the Protocol and the Great War officially ends (except for the U.S.). . .
Kendall had been born in Kansas but raised in Sheridan. He entered West Point in 1916 and graduated in 1918, due to the shortened class cycle World War One caused. He received the Distinguished Service Cross for his action in Siberia on this day.
Kendall would go on to a career in the U.S. Army and rose to the rank of Lt. Gen., commanding troops in World War Two and the Korean War.
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