Breakfast Links: Week of June 20, 2016

• Image: Miniature corset , 1890s, most likely used as a salesman's sample.
• Elizabeth Simmonds, who had a lucky escape on the dissecting table , 1826.
• The polyamorous Christian Socialist utopia that made silverware for proper Americans.
• Archibald MacPheadris and his room: a Baroque merchant's house in Portsmouth, NH, 1716.
• How fashion magazines talked in the 1930s.
• The route of Don Quixote : following in the footsteps of one of the greatest novels of all time.
• Image: Edwardian postcard: Suffering to achieve the ideal beauty , yet mocked for the fakery.
• How England became a nation of tea-drinkers .
• Horn and Hardart automats : redefining lunch time, dining on a dime.
• Six New England ghost towns .
• Gout, king's evil, plague in the guts, murder: how people died in 17thc London.
• The Elizabethan garden: plants that Shakespeare would have known well.
• Image: Convenience store in St. James's Park, complete with cow , c1900.
• How two 18thc female pirates became BFFs on the high seas.
• America's obsession with presidential hair .
• A brief history of goldfish globes and goldfish hawkers.
• What she left behind .
• Video: A favorite of dandies: the now-long-lost spat .
• How "domestic" was women's work, 1500-1700?
• A three-year-old's shoes are a powerful monument to the General Slocum tragedy of 1904.
• Image: Judy Garland stood 4'11", but not in these - created for her by Salvatore Ferragamo in 1936 (and still sold today.)
• Fifteen women who deserve their own biopics.
• Be honest: can you really tell left from right ?
• And then there were ten: surviving landmarked Dutch houses in Brooklyn, NY.
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Above: At Breakfast by Laurits Andersen Ring. Private collection.
Published on June 25, 2016 14:00
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