Massive trove of centuries-old undelivered mail seized by British warships going online | CBC Radio

dr-archeville:

Somewhere in the U.K. National Archives in London, there are
4,000 boxes containing more than 160,000 undelivered letters from ships
captured by the British during the naval wars of
the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.

Now those letters — some of
which are bundled in old mail bags and affixed with wax seals that have
never been broken — are about to go online.

“You can
imagine the excitement being confronted with such a treasure,” said
historian Dagmar Freist, director of the Prized Papers project, which
aims to digitize the entire collection.

“These letters have not
been filtered, they have not been censored, nothing has been thrown
away.  Quite a few have not been opened.”

Freist told As It Happens
host Carol Off on Tuesday that her team is diligently working to sort
through the mail, originally kept for martial court records and stored
in the Tower of London until 1850, when they were moved to the Public
Record Office in London, and later the National Archives.

The
mail, sent mostly between 1652 and 1815, is written in 19 different
languages and contains songs, notebooks, packages and personal
correspondence.

“Some of this mail is more than three centuries years old, and it’s from all over the world,” Freist said.

‘A new perspective on history’

The
documents shed new light on world history, with detailed ship logs of
climate conditions, cartography, trade ledgers and correspondence about
major events, including colonialism and the American and French
Revolutionary wars.

There are records from the slave trade, listing the names of enslaved people, their costs, and what slave owners paid for them.

But
what fascinates Freist the most are the personal letters between
ordinary folks — a part of history she says is often overshadowed in
favour of stories about powerful people.

“I think we will have a
new perspective on history, which has been defined as a so-called
colonial history or history of empire building,” she said.

“With
this material, we will be able to lend a voice to people of whom we
usually don’t have any evidence, especially in a colonial context, like
ordinary men, women and children.”

Among the discoveries is a 1765 letter from a woman
named Elizabeth Sprigs, an indentured servant in Maryland writing to her
father at home in England.

“She is very, very poor.  She doesn’t even have anything to wear,” Freist said.

“She
apologizes to her father that she would approach him, apologizing for
whatever she might have done wrong in the past, and she’s desperate and
she asks him that he would send her some clothes because all she has is a
blanket and the food she gets.”

But, of course, her father never got the letter and it’s not known what became of Sprigs.

Madam Dupont from Quebec

Many of the letters are made inherently tragic by having never reached their destination.

A
series of four letters from a Madam Dupont in Quebec between 1702
and 1703 show a woman frantically trying to reach her husband, who is
away on business in France, and growing increasingly despondent by his
lack of response.

“These letters are full of the hazards of the
flu epidemic and chicken pox in Quebec and her tone gets more and more
desperate, because she doesn’t get any sign of life from her husband,”
Freist said.

“She feels utterly neglected and resented and finally
decides not to write anymore. In the letter she says: ‘You can’t love
me anymore if you don’t answer.  I will now stop writing.  I give up.‘  But
then she writes again and she implores her husband once again to come
back.”

Freist said people understood that letters could become lost at sea, and would often make contingency plans.

“They
commented again and again on their letters, ‘In case you don’t
receive this, I will send another one in two weeks time.‘  Or they sent
off four letters of the same kind on four different ships,” she said.

Sorting and digitizing all the mail is expected to take 20 years at a cost of 9.3 million Euros ($14 million Cdn).

The
project is funded by the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and
Humanities and the work is being done in partnership with the German
Historical Institute London and the National Archives in London.

Wow!

Massive trove of centuries-old undelivered mail seized by British warships going online | CBC Radio

When I write outlines, I like to come up with a list of tags I know are going to be needed for the fic. This helps me when it comes time for tagging because I have a list already. Also, it’s a good way of helping me keep track of things that should be warned as I write.

Which is all good fun but sometimes, on tags alone, it looks more intense or bonkers than it actually is. Case and point:

leofgyth:

The Beach House

by @leofgyth

Written for a prompt from @rosemoonweaver for her Ficoween event. Thank you so much Rose for organizing this event! I’m pleased with how my story turned out and I hope you enjoy it.

Three cheers for @lovethemfiercely, who was my beta for this, and @thisgarbagepicker, who did a final read through and assured me it made sense.

Rating: M

Ship: Finnreylo (Finn POV; not part of the Finnreylo Murder AU series)

Content Warnings:

This is a loose mashup between M. R. James’s “Oh Whistle and I’ll Come For You, My Lad” and H. P. Lovecraft’s The Call of Cthulhu and contains elements from the writings of both of them. Beware of psychological horror, dubious consent, and an unreliable POV. There is no serious violence, no character death, and just a tiny bit of blood, but this story is meant to be disturbing. In one scene a character loses their temper but does not turn violent. Lots of mentions of sex but nothing explicit (hence the rating). 

Prompt:

Character A came into possession of a beach house after a distant relative passed away and left it to them. The house is on a mostly isolated stretch of beach, but the water is clear and the weather is mild. It’s nice during the day, but something strange happens at night. It almost seems darker than it should be somehow, and strange noises can be heard out over the water. Also, there’s the fact that Character A keeps dreaming of a strange figure in the surf and they seem to be getting closer and closer to the shore every night.

External Fic Link: https://archiveofourown.org/works/16340294

Length: 11K


It was very clear from the moment they arrived that Rey was displeased with the house. She put on a brave face, but it wasn’t what she’d expected and she was hard-pressed to hide it. Finn could see it in the lines of her body, hear it in the tightness of her voice. He swore to himself to do whatever he could to help make sure she had the best vacation possible, despite her immediate dislike of the house itself.

When Ben had asked Rey and Finn to come along for a week at the beach house he’d inherited from his uncle, that invitation had certain implications: sunshine, creature comforts, lots of together time, and, of course, a nice beach. What they got instead was Grand Manan Island, a Canadian outpost off the coast of Maine. The house was a small cottage, not unpleasant exactly, but built against the side of a cliff with only a very narrow beach between the cliffside and the tideline. It was on the eastern side of the island but faced full south, straight out into the ocean, with a cliff behind it and another cliff beside, running at an almost-90 degree angle from the one behind them to the far southern tip of the island. When the sun was up it would be nice to have relatively unimpeded views out onto the ocean. For most of the day, however, the house itself would be bathed in shadow.

Keep reading

Henry Winchester Appreciation Post

rosemoonweaver:

It’s a shame Henry was around for only a single episode (and later a flashback). He had potential, and his introduction brought forth the most constant home the Winchesters have ever had (not to mention the potential for new conflicts). Outside of that, Henry was fun and a pretty good dude, so here are a few reasons to love and appreciate Henry Winchester. 

  • He’s a snazzy dresser. 
  • He’s introduced to Sam and Dean by falling out of a closet. Not the most dramatic entrance the show’s ever given but probably one of the most humorous. 
  • He was minutes away from being inducted into the Men of Letters when Abaddon attacked. He was a legacy and part of the side of Sam and Dean’s family that had been involved in the academic side of the supernatural (in contrast to Samuel’s side which was all hunting). 
  • It was pretty sad that the first thing he found out about 2013 was that his son was dead. 
  • He’s a huge nerd. 
  • He adapts pretty well to being sent 60 years in the future. His gaffs aren’t even that bad. (The computer thing, for one, is pretty funny.)
  • He didn’t abandon his family. In fact, he was so worried about leaving his son to grow up without him that he nearly abandoned the whole Abaddon mess to be with John and Millie. (Later we find out he was actually afraid of dying and leaving his wife and child without him.)
  • He tried to steal the Impala. 
  • He doesn’t really get along with Sam and Dean at first, but he comes around as they are his grandsons and they aren’t “knuckle dragging hunters” as he first thought. 
  • He still visited his friend, Magnus, after Magnus was banished from the AMoL.
  • He and Dean came up with the plan to trap Abaddon in her vessel by shooting her with a bullet engraved with a devil’s trap. 
  • He died a really gruesome death. He had his guts pulled out. 
  • He was buried in a MoL cemetery. He’s one of only a handful of characters to actually be burried. 
  • Henry was one of the few blood-relatives of Sam and Dean we’ve seen on the show and his entrance not only explained a bit of information about the past, but also may have given us insight into the motivations of other characters. He also introduced a new location and the potential for new plots and I only wish he could’ve stayed around just a little longer. 

cronagorgonzola:

samanddeaninpanties:

cronagorgonzola:

samanddeaninpanties:

friendly reminder that the ao3 comments section isn’t the place for fandom discourse

friendlier reminder that telling a writer they’re disgusting or you hope they get arrested because of what they’ve written isn’t an appropriate reaction and only makes you look bad

friendliest reminder that the back button exists and you could do everyone a favor and not say anything

Kay but there’s straight up child porn on ao3 so maybe f you can’t handle being called disgusting stop writing and publishing child porn

Like the first post on your blog is an incest ship so mayhaps you deserve all of the hate you get 🤔 just my personal onion tho

So what? It’s fiction. The characters I love literally don’t exist. Meanwhile antis harass REAL people with REAL feelings. It’s weird as hell, and, quite frankly, disturbing.

There are plenty of things that squick me out on ao3. But I behave in a mature manner and, you know, don’t read those topics. I also don’t wish bad on the writers who touch on things I’m not into. I don’t harass them, no matter how squicked or triggered I get. Because it’s the decent thing to do. I am in charge of my own consumption of fanfic. I can’t expect writers to hold my hand and take care of me. It’s up to me to take care of myself. Antis don’t seem to grasp these concepts and that’s unfortunate for them and everyone else.

And wow. You think people deserve harassment over fiction? That’s pretty sad. Seek professional help! 🙂

You’re getting off to incest you don’t have a moral high ground to stand on

Excuse me, but what the fuck? What the fuck is your problem dude? You and I both know there isn’t any child pornography on ao3. There is fiction of *fictional characters* on ao3 and some of them are underage, yes, but no real children are being harmed to create it. None of the stuff on ao3 is real. It’s all fictional. You don’t have to like it but it’s not real. Take solace in that fact. No one real person is suffering so like… maybe get over yourself? Moralizing isn’t gonna help anyone, bucko. 

Your own person feelings about a tv show or fictional incest or icky fiction aside, why do you think it’s okay to be mean to real people? Why do you think a person deserves hate because they like fictional things you don’t? Does being a bully on the internet make you feel like you’re accomplishing something? Because the only thing you accomplish is looking like a jackass. 

“Maybe you deserve it” what the hell kind of harassment apologism is that? I don’t even have the words to explain to you how wrong and screwed up that is. Good god, it’s so victim blame-y. Your personal opinion is bullshit. No one, and I mean NO ONE deserves harassment. Really, I wish you would think about the implication of what you’re saying and why it’s so messed up. “Someone who hasn’t broken any laws or hurt any real person did something I don’t like so they deserve to be treated like garbage” is what you’re saying. Like… how is that morally superior at all? How is that doing anyone any good? That causes real harm to a real person who you can talk to and interact with. In what universe is it justified to hurt a real person over fictional content? How can that possibly be a good thing? 

You and I both know it’s morally wrong to hurt a real person or to excuse the harm that comes to a real person just because you don’t like the kind of fiction they like, so maybe take a good long look at what you’re doing and why you’re doing it and re-evaluate. Don’t be so callous towards other people.