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AOWM-May

The young newlyweds stood before the bride’s father, a senator known for quick flashes of anger and bullheadedness.  The two were there to tell him they had eloped.  The bride was seventeen.  The groom was twenty-eight, a lieutenant in the army with little money and little opportunity for promotion in those times.  Her parents had not approved of their courtship.  Once they forbade the young officer from seeing her and once arranged for him to be stationed far away for a year in hopes of breaking things up.  But it didn’t work.  So now the two stood waiting for the bride’s father to explode.

She was Jessie Benton Fremont.  She and John C. Freemont were married in October.  They broke the news to Senator Thomas Hart Benton, the bride’s father, in November.  As expected, he was enraged and ordered the lieutenant out of the house.  But Jessie defiantly grabbed her husband’s hand and silenced her father with the words of Ruth: "Whither thou goest, I will go, and where thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God."

The senator knew his daughter was stubborn – after all, she was his daughter.  Jessie stayed at home, all right, but John moved in.


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The Show-Me State

by Bob Priddy 05/30/07 9:44 AM

The Congressman fidgeted uncomfortably in his chair listening to a colleague from Iowa poke fun at him in front of a prestigous Philadelphia audience.  When his turn came, he made sarcasm his weapon of retaliation, telling the audience his Iowa colleague was a liar, that Philadelphia was behind the times, and he didn’t believe the [...]

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Trusten Polk

by Bob Priddy 05/29/07 9:34 AM

A new Governor was to be sworn in that day.  The House Chamber was filled with officials of the State and the the spectators that jammed the gallery for the occassion.  Each man was in his place and the ceremony was due to start, but it didn’t. 
The crowd began to grow restless.  Trusten Polk [...]

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The Mansion Is His Monument

by Bob Priddy 05/28/07 9:32 AM

The year was 1856 when two men faced each other on a sandbar in the Mississippi River, ready to fight a duel.  Not only did they disagree over the so-called Know-Nothing movement in St. Louis, but they also disagreed on the conduct of the duel.  Having reached this point – challenge, acceptance, arrival – they [...]

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The Tragic Profecy Of Irl Hick

by Bob Priddy 05/27/07 8:44 AM

Missouri averages about one tornado each year per 10,000 square miles of area.  Ocassionally, despite what might sound like long odds against it, one of those twisters hits a densely populated area.  In the summer of 1895, a St. Louis minister named Irl Hicks predicted a major tornado for the St. Louis area, basing his [...]

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