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Susie Davidson / brookline@wickedlocal.com
If Ken Sacharin s mapping project is as entertaining as he is, it s worth a download for that alone.
After all, his tagline reads If you re not part of the solution, you re in colloidal suspension.
A Memphis native, Sacharin s parents were married in Memphis by Elvis Presley s upstairs landlord in the late 1940s. Their rabbi owned the house, and rented the bottom unit to the Presleys, he explained. Elvis was a Shabbos Goy sometimes. The King even paid one of Sacharin s schoolmates to play racquetball with him at Graceland, Sacharin recalled.
By his own admission, however, none of this explains why Sacharin is qualified to sift and geo-tag Manhattan s past. I m not, really, he maintains. But I have a lot of time on my hands.
Watch: Twin pōhutukawa lifted back to their roots on waterfront street
23 Apr, 2021 06:16 AM
2 minutes to read
While the city was sleeping, Auckland’s urban ngahere / forest welcomed home the first two of seven mature pōhutukawa to Quay Street in a nine-hour crane operation last night. Video / Auckland Council
While the city was sleeping, Auckland’s urban ngahere / forest welcomed home the first two of seven mature pōhutukawa to Quay Street in a nine-hour crane operation last night. Video / Auckland Council
Two 40-year-old pōhutukawa have been returned to their original home on Quay St, Auckland, in overnight crane-lift.
SUMMARY Varina Howell Davis was the second wife of Confederate president Jefferson Davis and the First Lady of the Confederacy during the American Civil War (1861–1865). She was manifestly ill-suited for this role because of her family background, education, personality, physical appearance, and her fifteen-year antebellum residence in Washington, D.C. (She once declared that the worst years of her life were spent in the Confederate capital at Richmond while the happiest were in Washington.) A native of the urban South, she always preferred the city to the country, and after her husband died in 1889, she moved to New York, where she resided until her death in 1906.