Bostondevil wrote:Oh yeah, hey wilson, what are you studying? What's your dissertation topic?
I know the answer to this but it escapes me at the moment.
Moderator: CameronBornAndBred
Bostondevil wrote:Oh yeah, hey wilson, what are you studying? What's your dissertation topic?
...and into the new?ArkieDukie wrote:Hi, all! Just moved the last of my stuff out of my old apartment. Yippee yi yay!
That is correct! I now have lots of boxes to unpack.captmojo wrote:...and into the new?ArkieDukie wrote:Hi, all! Just moved the last of my stuff out of my old apartment. Yippee yi yay!
Congratulations! I hope you enjoy your new home. Have fun decorating.ArkieDukie wrote:Hi, all! Just moved the last of my stuff out of my old apartment. Yippee yi yay!
Let the glorious word now be spreadArkieDukie wrote:That is correct! I now have lots of boxes to unpack.captmojo wrote:...and into the new?ArkieDukie wrote:Hi, all! Just moved the last of my stuff out of my old apartment. Yippee yi yay!
Actually, I was REALLY tempted to saran wrap and then duct tape his two cars together. May still do it. He's parking 2 cars in a 1-car space and insisting that they don't take up any more space than one vehicle, so why not make them one vehicle?captmojo wrote: Let the glorious word now be spread
Ya don't have to worry 'bout kickin' parking lot boy in the head!
Thanks, Tilly! Are you still doing the unpacking/decorating thing, too?TillyGalore wrote:Congratulations! I hope you enjoy your new home. Have fun decorating.ArkieDukie wrote:Hi, all! Just moved the last of my stuff out of my old apartment. Yippee yi yay!
I study early America, with a heavy bent toward Atlantic history (though I'm still trying to avoid totally hitching my wagon to that trend). My dissertation will be about intercolonial commerce through the port of Charleston between roughly the 1730s and 1750s.Bostondevil wrote:Oh yeah, hey wilson, what are you studying? What's your dissertation topic?
Yes, yes I am. My goal Memorial Day weekend is to paint the living room and arrange furniture the way I want it and start hanging things. The weekend after I hope to paint the dining room and get that room settled, then I can finish the back bedroom. It all sounds easy, but I suspect it won't be.ArkieDukie wrote:Thanks, Tilly! Are you still doing the unpacking/decorating thing, too?TillyGalore wrote:Congratulations! I hope you enjoy your new home. Have fun decorating.ArkieDukie wrote:Hi, all! Just moved the last of my stuff out of my old apartment. Yippee yi yay!
Welcome back from Hawaii!
Thanks! I've asked twice now, in two different threads. You can ignore the other one.wilson wrote:I study early America, with a heavy bent toward Atlantic history (though I'm still trying to avoid totally hitching my wagon to that trend). My dissertation will be about intercolonial commerce through the port of Charleston between roughly the 1730s and 1750s.Bostondevil wrote:Oh yeah, hey wilson, what are you studying? What's your dissertation topic?
Shouldn't that be - Yes! Bruins force game 7!!!captmojo wrote:Damn! Bruins force game 7.
By the 1730s, Atlantic piracy had actually more or less died out...that golden age lasted from the extreme late 1600s through 1720 or so. Actually, in the early decades of English presence in South Carolina, pirates were rather important trading partners for some people. Pirates did wreak some havoc in the Carolinas---Blackbeard, for example, famously blockaded Charleston in 1718. He also kept a sizable estate in eastern NC, but he was actually quite well-liked in that area (in fact, he helped give the ECU Pirates their nickname...ask me about that some other time).Bostondevil wrote:
Hmmm, were pirates a problem?
FWIW, the pirate colony of Libertalia is today known as Antsiranana, Madagascar, where I will be reporting from in a matter of a few weeks. The provincial seal sports a pirate ship with drawn swords.wilson wrote:By the 1730s, Atlantic piracy had actually more or less died out...that golden age lasted from the extreme late 1600s through 1720 or so. Actually, in the early decades of English presence in South Carolina, pirates were rather important trading partners for some people. Pirates did wreak some havoc in the Carolinas---Blackbeard, for example, famously blockaded Charleston in 1718. He also kept a sizable estate in eastern NC, but he was actually quite well-liked in that area (in fact, he helped give the ECU Pirates their nickname...ask me about that some other time).Bostondevil wrote:
Hmmm, were pirates a problem?
Don't trust her, I bet she's a hustler!Sue71 wrote:I suck at Scramble, and now I suck at Scrabble. Anyone want an automatic win, invite me on FB.
We shall be celebrating my return to NC in the town next door to Bath. rule.wilson wrote:By the 1730s, Atlantic piracy had actually more or less died out...that golden age lasted from the extreme late 1600s through 1720 or so. Actually, in the early decades of English presence in South Carolina, pirates were rather important trading partners for some people. Pirates did wreak some havoc in the Carolinas---Blackbeard, for example, famously blockaded Charleston in 1718. He also kept a sizable estate in eastern NC, but he was actually quite well-liked in that area (in fact, he helped give the ECU Pirates their nickname...ask me about that some other time).Bostondevil wrote:
Hmmm, were pirates a problem?
It all depends on your point of view. If these bears win, I bow most graciously.Bostondevil wrote:Shouldn't that be - Yes! Bruins force game 7!!!captmojo wrote:Damn! Bruins force game 7.
Go B's!