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How a gold-stibnite restoration in Idaho could add antimony to US supply chain

How a gold-stibnite restoration in Idaho could add antimony to US supply chain
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GET SMART! 3 Cool, Online Events Happening This Week

GET SMART! 3 Cool, Online Events Happening This Week Don t miss these educational, online offerings this week. All the details are right here. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13TH: History Happy Hour - The Bear River Massacre (Online Event) - Free, online event from 6pm to 6:30pm hosted by Idaho State Museum and Idaho State Historical Society.  Listen in as Darren Parry speaks with Alison Espindola (Events and Rentals Coordinator, Idaho State Museum) about his book, his people, and his hope for the future. In the early morning of January 29th 1863, at the Northwestern Shoshone winter village Boa Ogoi by the Utah-Idaho boundary line, Colonel Patrick Edward Connor led the 3rd Regiment California Volunteer Infantry to massacre more than 400 Shoshone men, women, and children. The Bear River Massacre, as it is known today, became the largest massacre of Native Americans in the West.

A look at how east Idahoans handled a pandemic a little over a century ago

A look at how east Idahoans handled a pandemic a little over a century ago Updated at Share This IDAHO FALLS It was December 1918 when a heartbreaking obituary was posted in The Teton Peak Chronicle about two young mothers who had contracted a lethal disease. Pearl Willard, 26, and Myrtle Foster, 24, lay on their death beds in separate homes in St. Anthony, but their last thoughts were of each other. “A peculiar incident occurred just before the death of these two sisters who lived about two blocks from each other,” the newspaper article stated. “Just before she died, Mrs. Myrtle Foster said: ‘Come on, Pearl, and go with me. ”

Noted Idaho historian, longtime Statesman columnist Arthur Hart, 99, dies in Boise home

Idaho Statesman BOISE — It’s fair to say that no Idahoan has been more associated with Gem State history than Arthur Hart. In fact, “he’s known as Mr. History,” said Jody Ochoa, now-retired director of the Idaho State Historical Museum. Hart, an Idaho State Historical Society director emeritus who authored at least 20 books on Ada County and Idaho, died Tuesday afternoon. He was 99. “Dr. Hart was at home with his wife of 78 years and his youngest daughter,” Tobin Hope, Hart’s son-in-law, wrote in an email to the Statesman. Hart, who would have turned 100 in February, shared his love of Gem State history with Idaho Statesman readers from 1970 until this fall in one of the paper’s longest-running columns. His last piece was published in October.

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