[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_feed

A dark grey-painted building with a large sign labeled “SSE” visible from the street is located within a rather quiet neighborhood directly across from an athletic field. At first glance, it appears to be a warehouse or storage facility, but the many black-and-white vintage photographs that decorate the exterior give clues to something more.

This is the location of the Samuel Slater Experience, a museum dedicated to an individual most people probably have never heard of yet whose contributions would change not only American history but the entire world. 

Samuel Slater was born on June 9, 1768, in Belper, England, as the fifth of eight children and the son of a farmer. At age 10, Slater entered an apprenticeship under Jedediah Strutt, who operated a cotton mill utilizing the new water frame pioneered by Richard Arkwright. At age 21, Slater wanted to be the owner of his mill, but given his background of not being a member of the gentry, this would be near impossible, and the highest he could hope for was possibly an overseer.

Slater knew the U.S. was eager to acquire textile technology, and the fledgling new republic would pay handsomely to help establish American industry. However, Slater also knew the British had passed laws forbidding the export of textile machinery and the emigration of textile workers to keep their technology secret and protect their economic monopoly. Following his ambitions and with the blueprint of the Arkwright water frame committed to memory, Slater disguised himself as a simple farmer and boarded a ship to the U.S., arriving in 1789.  

Not long after, Slater contacted Rhode Island-based industrialist Moses Brown and offered his services. With Slater’s knowledge and expertise, they replicated the Arkwright water frame and established the first cotton mill and factory within the U.S. in Pawtucket in 1793. Together, they created the Rhode Island System of manufacturing, which became the predominant method for making textiles throughout New England and the Northeast.

When word reached England of Slater’s success and contributions, the British were furious and nicknamed him “Slater the Traitor” for leaving the country illegally and helping their former enemy and colonies. In 1812, Slater moved to Oxford and Dudley, Massachusetts, to acquire a larger workforce and a more plentiful water supply from nearby Lake Chaubunagungamaug, also known by its more famous name, Lake Char­gogg­a­gogg­man­chaugg­a­gogg­chau­bun­a­gung­a­maugg

To adequately meet the needs of his mills and workers, Slater had land from Oxford and Dudley combined to create a new town named after statesman and personal friend Daniel Webster. For over a century, Slater’s mills brought people and prosperity to the community, with its population and development expanding exponentially, becoming one of the first boomtowns in the United States. By the start of the 20th century, Webster had its own trolley network, luxury hotel, silent film theatre, numerous shops, and businesses. The nearby lake also served as a very popular summer destination with steamboat cruises before the widespread availability of cars and the advent of the interstate highway system connecting to the ocean. The diverse community and sizeable immigrant population led to the town nicknamed “Little New York” during its heyday. 

By the mid-20th century, with shifting demographics and a changing American society, the old Slater mills gradually closed, and Webster became a shadow of the bustling community it once was. However, Slater's contributions and legacy can be seen and felt in the United States and globally. He is considered the “Father of the Industrial Revolution” within the United States and American industrial manufacturing would play a critical role throughout important historical events such as the Union victory and abolition of slavery during the Civil War, allied victories during both World Wars, and the rise of the U.S. as a global superpower. 

The Samuel Slater Experience offers an in-depth and interactive look into Slater's life and the history of Webster. Numerous artifacts are on display, recreations of various historical environments, exhibits visitors can interact with, educational films, vintage vehicles, and a replica of downtown Webster from the early 20th century, almost like a miniature trip back in time. Perhaps most importantly, the museum highlights immigrants' prominent contributions to American history and society. Slater himself was an immigrant who left England illegally; many of the workers in his mills were migrants from all over the world who came to the United States seeking a better life. It helped create the foundation of the American Dream and the ethos of the United States being the "Land of Opportunity."

The museum is worth visiting for those interested in early American industrial history who want a truly unique experience. 

How are the horses?

Apr. 23rd, 2025 08:44 am
which_chick: (Default)
[personal profile] which_chick
The horses are fine. They're still shedding out and with the optimism of spring I'm about convinced that I want to go to a (small, local) dressage show to feel bad about myself and my riding and my horse again. What fun!

Read more whining? )

Asparagus

Apr. 23rd, 2025 08:31 am
moonhare: (Default)
[personal profile] moonhare posting in [community profile] gardening
First cutting for 2025!

PXL_20250422_194503975_Original.jpeg

Yummy! Not a large amount, but as these mature at different rates I wanted to cut the higher stalks before the heads opened and supplemented with the shorter ones. I might try storing some cuttings in the fridge to get larger portions; supposedly one can refrigerate these in a plastic bag for a couple of weeks.

Supplementary

Apr. 23rd, 2025 01:31 pm
poliphilo: (Default)
[personal profile] poliphilo
 y4duElHoSmFMVkeCHWXY--0--pf0kn.jpeg
The cover picture on that book I dreamed about looked a lot like this.....
spikedluv: (Default)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I’ve now seen the first three eps, which were all dropped at once. (Future eps will be once a week from here on out.) spoilers )

Salutation Road by Salma Ibrahim

Apr. 23rd, 2025 12:00 pm
[syndicated profile] strangehorizons_all_feed

Posted by Paul Chuks

Salutation Road coverIn what is another instalment in the colloquy of migration, Salma Ibrahim’s Salutation Road arrives with a spirit that livens up its readers, until the reader has completely zipped through the story. It will leave them with delicious metaphors like “her hair is a riot of dried curls,” while pondering the paradoxes the plot tried to unfurl. Salutation Road shimmies its readers into a riverboat journey on which they will rendezvous with a universe that mirrors what could have been and what was, the past and the now, in the lives of a Somalian immigrant family in post-Brexit Britain.

At the start of the book, the reader is made to know that the word “immigration” can be austere, via the dramatization of the tension that Britain’s exit from the European Union spawned amongst migrants. In leaving the Union, the British populace is promised a massive reduction of migration into their country. They are largely sweetened by the promise, and favor the expulsion of “foreigners” through a referendum. Then immigrants begin to tremble at their existence in Britain: Since they were used as bargaining chips by politicians to set aside what has existed since the Second World War, who knows what will happen next? Their fate is in limbo.

The plot avails itself of the theory of the parallel universe. One of its protagonists, Sirad, drops onto the sofa after a long day and begins to sift through abandoned letters, some of which are unpaid bills, available balances, arrears, and urgent notices. The one that piques her interest is a letter embellished with a minimal blue stamp at the corner, with a motto: for light and truth. She is invited to an unnamed London school that is fascinated by technology and migration. The school is concerned about how technology can help salve the wound that Brexit has caused for migrants. It wants to help them have easier lives by inventing something undeniably groundbreaking, in an event reserved for the invited only. She is suspicious of the letter. At first she thinks it is her mother playing tricks on her; but she is surely too steeped in worries and anxiety to try pulling a prank, let alone an elaborate one such as this. The next day, in a sort of trance, she boards a bus going towards her work (or so she thinks), but, as the letter promised, she ends up in Mogadishu, Somalia’s capital. On the way to Mogadishu, she engages in low-spirited conversations with other passengers who are fated for the same destination as her. In Mogadishu, she disembarks from the bus and is unable to compute her next action. She stands on the side of the road where the bus left her and looks around at the soldiers controlling traffic. She politely asks one of them to get her a bottle of water because her insides have become dry as a desert. The soldier obliges. After she gulps the whole contents of the bottle, a woman (her aunt, supposedly) approaches her and offers to take her home.

Apparently, the letter was the door into a parallel universe and this Mogadishu is the parallel scene which contains what could have been. Sirad meets a woman who is a spitting image of her mother back in London, still steeped in worry. This Mogadishu has become a relic of itself because it is mired in an endless war. On getting there, Sirad is coated with survivor’s remorse: She feels guilty for having left at a young age and conceives of herself as different from the rest of its people, since she has not braved the life of a typical Somalian girl, coursing through and surviving war. Britain offers an illusion of safety that has been able to wrap her up safely away from the wrath of this terror, but never its effects. Every time she looks around and sees the devastation sitting in the people’s eyes—and in the environment—she breaks inwardly from the cowardice of migration, which seems to her to bring with it some element of evading destiny.

But was it her destiny to survive the war? Is war ever anybody’s, any country’s, destiny? And, as has happened in Somalia, should people embrace conflict and be proud survivors? Should they castigate those who left for other countries? Who in this dichotomy is in moral deficit? Who is a bona fide citizen with undying love for their country? Does migration highlight the transactionalism that is said to be incompatible with love? Or does it spotlight the depth of the profanity and darkness of the power structures under which we live, when something as evil as war is not enough to stop greed? These questions and more bog down the reader’s mind as Sirad sits in her new home in Mogadishu.

A man walks in who reminds her of her father—a spitting image, too. Aaobo, she later nicknames him. He is older, with gray hair and a slower gait. She is instantly left with a riveting longing for a father, since she was not lucky enough to have experienced one before he abandoned the family. In this parallel universe, her father is around, still married to her mother, aged and full of scars and stories she wishes she had known or witnessed. He treats Sirad to extra chunks of tender lamb and limes as they sit together on the carpet and eat like a family. After the meal, she is prepared to meet her double, Ubah. She is nervous, especially because she later learns that Ubah is not on speaking terms with her parents; she is the rebel version of Sirad. This is evident in how Ubah shuts Sirad down when the former hints at one day leaving her marriage without giving prior notice to her husband or parents.

When the bus returns her to London as mysteriously as it took her, Sirad is entirely uncertain how to explain what just happened. And this is the great thing about the book: its ability to contain complex paradoxes that oust our current understanding of human logic. To tell her real mother in London that she was on a bus to work as usual, but somehow ended up in Mogadishu where she met their alternate selves, is to give the elder woman’s mind another cause for worry. What excuse is tenable enough to justify returning home by dusk? Sirad casually says her work kept her late, and it works due to a preconceived notion of her good behavior. Her younger brother, Ahmed, would have gotten an ass-whooping.

The story peaks when her double informs her that she is in London. Sirad leaps for joy because Ubah is another addition to her scanty set of friendships: Rosie is moving to Rwanda as an expat; Maxine, the librarian, although she makes time for Sirad, is always busy. Sirad and her double develop a complex friendship that ultimately enters grey areas of ethics and morality. After a few outings with Sirad that involve shopping and sightseeing, Ubah develops cold feet towards her, and suspends everything altogether. Sirad is caring: She loses sleep over the condition in which Ubah finds herself. She worries that Ubah has been trafficked into London, that she lives in a camp to which no outsider is allowed entry, and is an unregistered immigrant who won’t be able to get proper care if and when she gets sick. But Ubah does not want to be treated like a lost child, unable to find her way in a desert. She wants autonomy and respect.

It is worth mentioning that the characters in this novel are properly diverse, to illustrate this complexity of human life: Ubah is what Sirad would have been had she not migrated at an early age; Aaobo is the father who left her mother too early; Maxine the friend who solves the puzzle of her friendship with her double, and Rosie the embodiment of the double standard between white and Black migrants; Ahmed is the young truant who was predicted to end up like his father, due to their resemblance, but later turns out to be a computer engineer with photography as a side hobby, travelling the world looking for a wife. White immigrants are called “expats,” an admiring word for a white person living outside their country; while Black immigrants are just called immigrants, a byword for scornful disapprobation.

When does love become too much of a load to carry? When does it lose its respect? When the parties involved fulfil their obligations by being present and offering helping hands to a friend in need? Or when one or the other party has drifted away from the friendship and any little show of love is taken for granted—and in this case seen as “disrespect”? When Sirad is called back by the London school to share details about her double in exchange for cash, she quarrels with them at first, because the school has not lived up to its promise about migration and technology, offering only further mystery, and because the betrayal they request is incompatible with her morality. She eventually gives in after imagining what could be achieved with the money they offer, settling her mother’s outstanding bills the most convincing possibility of all. Given that the friendship has petered out, is selling Ubah’s information a justifiable action? The light that returned to her mother’s face, the weight that sloughed away at the awareness of this new finanicial settlement: Do they excuse Sirad? She lives her days in misery, convinced she’s a bad person, until she talks with Maxine—who admonishes her to learn to forgive herself and start life again, over and over, because clinging onto the past leads to nowhere.


Wednesday Reading Meme

Apr. 23rd, 2025 08:13 am
osprey_archer: (books)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Agnes Hewes’ The Codfish Musket, third and last in her trio of boring 1930s Newbery Honor winners. I can only imagine that the committee felt that the “Rah rah MANIFEST DESTINY” message was good for the Youth, because my God these books are dull. How can books be so dull when there are so many deadly conspiracies?

But maybe it’s because Hewes is actually not great at deadly conspiracies. The best part of this book by far is the non-deadly middle, when our hero Dan Boit goes to Washington and accidentally becomes Thomas Jefferson’s secretary after he finds Jefferson’s lost notebook full of observations about when the first peas come up and the frogs start peeping.

In modern-day Newbery Honor winners, I finished Chanel Miller’s Magnolia Wu Unfolds It All, a short and charming tale in which Magnolia and her new friend Iris try to return orphaned socks from Magnolia’s parents’ laundry to their owners. In the process, they explore New York City and learn more about the denizens of their neighborhood.

I also read Susan Fletcher’s Journey of the Pale Bear, about a Norwegian boy accompanying a captured polar bear to England as a present for the king. If this sounds familiar, it’s because Fletcher wrote a related picture book, but that focuses more on the bear’s experiences, while this is more about the boy and the boy-meets-bear of it all. Who among us has not wished for a bear friend!

What I’m Reading Now

In Our Mutual Friend, Lizzie Hexam’s father has DIED. This may be a lucky escape for him, as he was about to be arrested on suspicion of murder (at the word of his wicked lying former business partner), but I’m very concerned what will become of poor Lizzie.

My suspicion that Mr. Rokesmith is in fact the dead John Harmon has only grown stronger as he has insinuated himself in the Boffin household as an unpaid secretary. What is his ultimate goal here? A more suspicious soul than Mr. Boffin might wonder who on earth would offer himself up as a secretary without pay, and consider the possibility of embezzlement, but blessed Mr. Boffin is not concerned a bit.

What I Plan to Read Next

Onward in the Newbery books! I am ten books from the end of the historical Newberies, and I intend to finish the project while Interlibrary Loan is still alive.

[April: Bingo] Word of Honor Icons

Apr. 23rd, 2025 12:56 pm
tarlanx: Wen Kexing holding fan with text FAN (Cdrama - Word of Honor 4 - WKX Fan)
[personal profile] tarlanx posting in [community profile] sweetandshort
For [community profile] sweetandshort April: Bingo
Fandom: Word of Honor (TV 2021)

THE END MARKET
Zhou Zishu and Wen Kexing in the special ending of the series, sparring on the icy mountain. Wen Kexing using Zhou Zishu's money to buy watermelon in the market
SAD EVIDENCE
Wen Kexing after a verbal fight with Zhou Zishu over the deaths of the four sages Luo Fumeng in background and the handkerchief with Zhao Jing's love poem in foreground



THE END: Zhou Zishu and Wen Kexing in the special ending of the series, sparring on the icy mountain
MARKET: Wen Kexing using Zhou Zishu's money to buy watermelon (and other sweet treats) in the market
SAD: Wen Kexing after a verbal fight with Zhou Zishu over the deaths of the four sages of Anji
EVIDENCE: Luo Fumeng in background and the handkerchief with Zhao Jing's love poem in foreground that proves he betrayed her
 

Silver Surfer #72

Apr. 23rd, 2025 12:32 pm
iamrman: (Squirrel Girl)
[personal profile] iamrman posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Writer: Ron Marz

Pencils: M.C. Wyman

Inks: Tom Christopher


The Silver Surfer and Firelord team-up to look for Nova.


Read more... )

Reading Wednesday

Apr. 23rd, 2025 07:03 am
sabotabby: (books!)
[personal profile] sabotabby
 Just finished: One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El Akkad. I don't know what else to say about this scathing, perfect little book beyond that I wish I could make everyone in so-called Western civilization sit down in a chair with their eyes forced open, Clockwork Orange-style, until they'd read it. Until they make this atrocity fucking stop. It's one impassioned cry in the midst of genocide but it's a very powerful cry.

The Dragonfly Gambit, A.D. Sui. I have mixed feelings about this novella, which is a military sci-fi about a pilot, sidelined after a career-ending injury, who plots an elaborate revenge against the empire that blew up her planet. I first encountered the author at the same event where I first encountered Suzan Palumbo, and this could be a paired reading with her book Countess, only I read Countess first and preferred it. Which is not to say that this book isn't good, because it really is, but it's a bit inevitable to compare two anti-colonialist lesbian revenge fantasy space operas that end in tragedy that came out the same year, y'know?

My main criticism is that it suffers from the same issue that a lot of space opera suffers from, which is that there's a big universe and a limited cast of characters, doing all the things. The genre wants scrappy underdogs with interpersonal drama, but it also wants its protagonists in positions of power, which you can do in longer-form work but is challenging in a first-person novella. The Third Daughter is very hands-on, and it's implied that Mother is as well, but at least the former is ludicrously incompetent for someone running a massive empire. Which is to say that if you've blown up someone's planet, you probably shouldn't promote three young people, all of whom are childhood friends, from that planet into critical military positions. Especially if you're going to fuck at least two of them.

That said, I like the romance in this one more, if you can call it a romance; it's wonderfully toxic. And the ending is a gutpunch.

Currently reading: Undrowned: Black Feminist Lessons From Marine Mammals by Alexis Pauline Gumbs. This continues to be excellent. One thing that I think is really cool about it, among the many things that are cool about it, is that she's decided to capitalize the word Black in all instances, not just where it applies to humans. Which has the intended effect of anthropomorphizing the creatures she writes about in a way that identifies them as the racialized Other, and thus part of the struggle for liberation. Look, this is poetry about marine biology, I'm going to basically love everything about it.

Lost Arc Dreaming by Suyi Davies Okungbowa. I just started this one last night but we have a future Lagos that is mostly underwater, save for five skyscrapers. Which is a cool enough concept that I'll overlook that the book starts with both a dream sequence and the main character dressing for work. I'm into the worldbuilding so far.


FENRIR: Chapter 22

Apr. 23rd, 2025 07:28 am
seawasp: (Default)
[personal profile] seawasp
Stephanie doesn't know there's plotting and scheming...

... but she has problems of her own... )






That's certainly the way to bet...




spikedluv: (summer: sunflowers by candi)
[personal profile] spikedluv
What I Just Finished Reading: Since last Wednesday I have read/finished reading: Mourn Not Your Dead (A Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James Mystery) by Deborah Crombie, Gin and Daggers (A Murder, She Wrote Mystery) by Donald Bain, and Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea (Tomes and Tea Series) by Rebecca Thorne.


What I am Currently Reading: Dreaming of the Bones (A Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James Mystery) by Deborah Crombie (with The Nightmare Before Kissmas (A Royals and Romance Novel) by Sara Raasch on the back burner).


What I Plan to Read Next: I have another book out from the library.



Book 15 of 2025: Mourn Not Your Dead (A Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James Mystery) (Deborah Crombie)

I enjoyed this book. The case was interesting. spoilers )

I have the next book in the series out from the library already, so I'm going to continue reading it for now; I liked this book enough to give it five hearts.

♥♥♥♥♥



Book 16 of 2025: Gin and Daggers (A Murder, She Wrote Mystery) (Donald Bain)

Wow, was this bad. I recall reading a later book in the series for a book bingo square and I didn't remember it being this bad, so hopefully he improves quickly. There were a lot of inconsistencies with the tv series and he really doesn't have a feel for the characters. Yet. (I talked specifics at this week's Monday [Fandom] Madness post, if you're interested in reading more.)

If I weren't reading this series for the sole purpose of seeing what details he adds to Jessica's life, I'd probably quit now. (I read a blog post that mentioned Jessica and Frank living someplace else before they moved to Cabot Cove, which made me curious if it came from the books and what else might be in them.) I'm only giving this book two hearts.

♥♥



Book 17 of 2025: Can't Spell Treason Without Tea (Tomes and Tea Series) (Rebecca Thorne)

I really enjoyed this book!spoilers )

I'm looking forward to reading the next book (when the two libraries that have it take it off the ‘new and popular' list); I'm giving this book five hearts.

♥♥♥♥♥

Mystery Challenge: Babylon 5: Missing

Apr. 23rd, 2025 12:14 pm
badly_knitted: (B5)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks

Title: Missing
Fandom: Babylon 5
Author: [personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Garibaldi.
Rating: PG
Word Count: 300
Spoilers/Setting: Grey 17 is Missing.
Summary: Garibaldi usually loves mysteries, but he could have done without this one.
Content Notes: None needed.
Written For: Challenge 477: Amnesty 79, using Challenge 475: Mystery.
Disclaimer: I don’t own Babylon 5, or the characters. They belong to J. Michael Straczynski.
A/N: Triple drabble.




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