Tuesday, September 30, 2025

The Journal of Johann Georg Kasebier

  • The following is primarily the work of Reba Munger Kemery. Having purchased Ms. Kemery's book, Casebeer's in America, I painstakingly pecked this information into my laptop and posted it several years ago. From that time to this it has appeared on numerous sites. Our thanks to Cousin Reba for her years of research and dedicated efforts.

  • NOTE: The copy I originally transcribed is easily identifiable by the journal entry dated the 25th and 26th. In the original translation one word is illegible and is so noted in Reba's book. In my version I took the liberty of inserting the word leviathan. SC
  • Shannon T, Casebeer

  • The Journal of Johann Georg Kasebier
  • PROLOGUE
  • Johann Georg Kasebier (1693 to 1724)
  • Johann was born in 1693 to Christoph II and Margretha (Kuhn) Kasebier in Kuhnau, a village in the princedom Anhalt Dessau, which is now a suburb of the city of Dessau in the political division of sachsen-Anhalt, East Germany. Johann's father was a tailor by trade. Johann married Maria Elisabetha Mathes in 1714 or 1715, probably in Schwartzenau, Germany. Schwartzenau itself is in an isolated small quaint village, with very few (if any) historical buildings now standing. The village is situated in a grassy pastoral area on the Eder River, which is in the northeast corner of the principality of Sayn-Wittgenstein. One of Johann's brothers, Christian Andreas Kasebier, was an early outlaw of the family, and was an infamous and evidently very successful and reportedly charming thief. Andreas was also an Intelligence Operative for King Frederick II of Prussia prior to his eventual escape and disappearance.
  • Sayn-Wittgenstein is located east of the Rhine Valley, and northwest of the Grand-Duchy of Hesse. Today nothing in the village appears to be more than one or two hundred years old. The old cemetery where Kasebier family members may have been buried has been removed, and now a hospital is situated on the site. The people of Schwartzenau were very religious during the 1700's, and many of the villagers – including the Kasebier family – belonged to the Church of the Brethern. Unfortunately that particular religion was not the "popular" religion during the 1700's, and the members were persecuted for their beliefs. The church's founder, Alexander Mack, gathered together his followers – including the Kasebier family – and took them to America. Permission to leave Wittgenstein was given to Johann by Count and the original document still survives. (See manumission)
  • Johann, along with his wife and their sons Gottfried and Gottlieb, arrived in America at the Port of Philadelphia on October 29th, 1724. After arriving in America Johann and his family proceeded on to the Village of Roxborough, Pennsylvania. Unfortunately Johann died less than two months after his arrival. Even though Johann's death occurred so soon after his arrival in America his name would not be forgotten. Johann kept a journal of the ship's passing and sent it to the Count of Sayn-Wittgenstein. The Count placed the original in the Castle archives, and a translation by Durnbaugh follows.

  • JOURNAL
  • This is a translation of Johann Kasebier's account of his voyage from Germany to Pennsylvania, in 1724,
  • As presented to the Count:

  • Gracious Count and Lord:
  • I report herewith to Your Grace that we departed from Rotterdam on August 3rd, left from Helfor Schleis to cross the sea to England on August 14th, at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, and arrived off Dover at about 10 or 11 o'clock on the afternoon of August 15th. Of the 170 people aboard, only a few were not violently seasick. We remained off Dover for eight days and had continuously strong winds so that many became sick from the great rocking. Two small children from the Palatine group and an unmarried man died. We stayed so long off Dover because they loaded still more provisions, and inspected the commercial goods and put them through customs, though none of the passengers had to take his goods through customs no matter how much commercial goods he might have had. This has certainly not happened before to any other ship, though there was a great deal of goods among the passengers – at least 100,000 sewing needles, not to mention other things.
  • From Dover, we went back along the coast to Tihlen because of the heavy winds. The captain feared that the wind might snap the anchor rope and drive the ship up on a sandbar. It took a long time in Tihlen and no one was allowed to go ashore as had been the case in Dover because they said that the King had forbidden it. The Palatines became very indignant at the captain for this and suspected him of having contrived this in the city. They wanted to make a complaint against him, but it was not done because they could not go ashore. As he gave them very poor victuals, they suffered considerably.
  • We departed from Tihlen on September 6th and had a rather favorable wind for sailing. Soon, however, it shifted so that it came directly against us, and they had to tack continually until toward the evening of the 9th when the northeast wind arose. Then we sailed very rapidly. We went past a tower, which is built in the ocean four hours from land on a small, round rock. A family lives on it who have to make a light in the evenings after sunset so that the sailors see it and do not sail into the rock
  • At 5 o'clock early Sunday morning, the 10th, we left land behind us with an especially favorable wind. During the night of Sunday to Monday a young unmarried woman who had had seasickness died. She had been bled by an English doctor who opened such a large hole in her vein that it burst during the second night. She bled severely and died the following night. She was wrapped in a cloth, stones were tied to her feet, and she was cast overboard from a plank in the morning.
  • On the 11th we had a good wind and on the 12th also. Toward evening we saw entire schools of large fish close to the ship. We had seen them already at Rotterdam, but not so close to the ship. When they show themselves, a strong wind is generally to be expected.
  • On the 13th we had a strong wind and sailed eight English miles in one hour. Six English miles make one German mile. From coast to coast there are 1,100 or eleven hundred German hours according to the sailors' reckoning. If, however, the distance is reckoned which is traveled along the English coast and the similar distance up the river in Pennsylvania, then there are thirty-four hours in England and fifty hours in Pennsylvania, which makes eleven hundred and eighty-four hours from the first departure in England.
  • My wife and Sauer were very ill, although at time worse than others. When she was unable to eat, it so happened that a bird, which was tired from flying over the ocean, landed on the ship. The Palatines chased it over the ship for a long time. It ran past me and I seized it by its long legs. In this way I got a roast fowl for my sick wife. I cannot describe how sick you get if you are sick at sea. Although I experienced it but little, it greatly weakened the constitution.
  • On the 14th we had a mild southeast wind and very pleasant weather along with it. We sailed three or four English miles per hour. Toward evening, however, we got a strong south wind, which lasted all night, and we sailed eight and nine E. M. per hour. During the night two small children of the Palatines died, and were buried as described above. Toward evening of the 15th the wind shifted to the west and we got a strong contrary wind. Nevertheless, in these five days at sea, we had sailed more than two hundred hours.
  • On the 16th my wife was deathly sick the whole night and thought she would die. God, however, heard the prayer and, suddenly, her illness subsided.
  • On the 17th , still a strong west wind. On the 18th, still strong gales, but it seemed as if it would become better. We were driven far to the north by it. On the 19th, the contrary wind still continued with considerable waves on the ocean, until about 3 o'clock in the afternoon. We met then a ship from the West Indies. It's captain spoke with our captain in English. One minute before they spoke the wind shifted to the north, and we sailed more comfortably.
  • On the 20th, the same wind. Sauer and my wife were still sick. I cannot describe how difficult it is for both sick and healthy when there are contrary winds at sea. Even if there is still something to cook and great care is taken, the rocking of the ship can spill it in an instant. When the most skillful thinks that he is standing on one side of the ship, lo and behold, he fids himself on his behind on the other side of the ship. I fell myself very little, whether standing, sitting, or lying.
  • The victuals on board the ship after we put to sea included meat, which had been in barrels for six or seven years and had returned from the East Indies, peas and barley cooked in putrid water, and butter and Dutch cheese, which was best.
  • On the 21st, considerable wind. On the 22nd, toward evening we sailed rather fast, but we got a gale wind at midnight, which continued, on the 23rd. During the night of the 24th, an unmarried woman who had fallen into the ships hold with an iron kettle of soup about four weeks before, died. She lay sick about fourteen days, then got up again, but several days later she took to her bed once more and died. She was sent to the bottom with coal tied to her feet.

  • On the 25th, a north wind and comfortable sailing. On the 26th, in the evening when it was dark we saw a terribly large fish. As it sped through the water it looked to us as if it were a "leviathan" and it spouted water with its' nose.

  • On the 27th we had an east wind, but very mild and good weather. On the 28th a north wind, but we did not sail fast. On the 29th we had clear weather and a good wind. On the 30th clear weather and an east wind. On October 1st we had clear weather with a south wind and saw a large school of fish which leaped from the water like a heard of swine. On October 2nd we had a warm day – it hardly gets this warm in your summers _ and the ocean was completely calm. On the 3rd we had directly contrary winds, but we tacked ahead. Very far away to the south we saw a ship, which was the third that we had seen so far. During the night of the 3rd to the 4th we got a strong north wind, which was rather good for us. A man from among the Palatines, who had severe nose bleeding but had not lain sick very long, died and was buried as the others had been. On the 4th the wind shifted northeast and we sailed eight E. M. in one hour. We saw fish, which flew a bit above the water like a swallow. They had four wings; the front ones were exactly like swallow wings, but the back ones were much shorter.
  • On the 5th we had a strong west wind and sailed rapidly, but toward evening came a west wind. On the 6th we still had a west wind, which was almost like a storm. On the 7th it continued until toward evening, then it shifted to the southwest. On the 8th we also had a contrary wind. On the 9th and 10th, -----? before noon. In the afternoon we got a north wind and sailed eight E. M. in one hour. During the night of the 9th to the 10th, an old unmarried Swiss, who had been ill for three or four weeks, died, was placed in an old sack, and sunk.
  • On the 11th the weather was fair, and we also had a favorable wind. We saw a school of medium-sized fish hopping along the water like mice because a fish of prey could be seen chasing them. On the 12th we had a south wind in the afternoon, but it developed into quite a storm. In the afternoon, it shifted suddenly to the north. We also saw a stoop and spoke with it.
  • On the 13th the same wind, but more favorable. On the 14th east wind and warm weather, also on the 15th. On the 16th also warm and gentle east wind. Toward noon, however, it shifted and came from the south and continued through the night until 4 o'clock in the morning. On the 17th a storm from the north. We gathered much rainwater in our great scarcity of water, as it was a heavy rainstorm.
  • On the 18th a mild west wind. On the 19th a mild southwest wind, but during the night it shifted to the east and blew so strongly that we sailed 153 E. M. in twenty-four hours on the 20th. On the 21st, 154 E. M. with the same wind. On the 22nd, still east wind, favorable for us.
  • On the 23rd, a northwest wind, but not strong. On the 24th still a north wind. We saw land birds and from this we noticed that we were not far from land. Also, great flocks of wild ducks. In the evening at 7 o'clock we sounded bottom. 
  • On the 25th toward evening we approached land, which is called South Island (Suder Eyhland). It was twenty-two hours to the south on our left. That same evening and night we sailed along its' coast quite a distance. On the morning of the 26th we again got a good wind which drove us ahead so strongly that by the evening at dusk we reached the mouth of the river which leads inland to Philadelphia. However, the captain sailed too far from shore, and the terribly large and heavily laden ship ran onto a sandbar. The ship took a great jolt and then another. We all thought the ship had burst open.
  • This lasted for more than a quarter of an hour as if the ship were scraping over sharp rocks. The earnest prayers and cries to God in the highest, which were uttered in the open air, were indescribable. We had thought that we had evaded all danger, but God showed us that he could bring ruin to us and our property close to land as well. Yes, my legs shook so that I could hardly stand, but in my heart I heard a voice saying that there was no danger. I called upon his mercy that he might spare us, and he heard it and helped. When we had sailed away from the sandbar a distance, they cast anchor and remained there over night. If there had been a strong wind, however, the ship would have been smashed to pieces.
  • On the 27th the sailors began their game, for they had a custom that whoever had not traveled on the river had to donate a quantity of brandy. All of the crew who had not yet traveled on it gave something except one Scotchman who could not pay. He was tied, hauled a good twelve feet high with a ship's pulley, and suddenly released so that he fell head over heels into the water. This was done three times, and the first time a shot was fired. When they had finished with the crew, then it was the turn of the Palatines. They all gave something. If someone refused they set about tying him until he promised to give something. About 9 o'clock we took on board two pilots, one from Loisztaun and the other from Philadelphia. They had to guide the ship in the river. It was full of sandbars, but they knew the river. On the 28th we sailed up the river and arrived at Philadelphia safely on the noon of the 29th. Twenty shots were fired. It is a beautiful town because all the streets are laid out at right angles. Many say that there are at least two thousand houses there. The ship lay for three more days in the river.
  • We disembarked on November 2nd, but did not receive our things until November 3rd. On the 4th, one of the Brethern of the congregation (Tauffer Gemeinde) Gumrie by name took us into his home in heartfelt love and evidenced brotherly love to us with plenty to eat and drink, and also a place to sleep to this hour. He wants to shelter us until we find a place somewhere else. John Henry Traut from Germantown, another of the Brethern, hauled our things a distance of four hours to this place without taking pay. (This is written about me and Nicholas for Sauer lives in Germantown.)
  • As far as this country is concerned, it is a precious land with the finest wheat, as well as unusual corn, fine broom corn, maize, and white beets of such a quality as I never saw in Germany, not to speak of that which I have not yet seen. There are apples in great quantities from trees which grow wild without being grafted, so delicate to look at that I have not seen the like in Germany. I saw in Germantown so many spoiled apples in various piles in a garden that a wagon loaded with them could not be budged by four horses. Many trees are full of hanging apples, which are frozen, because there is a shortage of workers.
  • A reaper earns a florin a day in the summer plus "wedding meals" along with it, and the work is not nearly so hard as in Germany. A day laborer earns ordinarily a half florin in the winter, and twenty alben in the summer. Food is cheap compared to Germany. The freedom of the inhabitants is indescribable. They let their sows, cows, and horses run without a keeper.
  • The man in our house came to this country in 1719 and did not bring much with him. Now he has property worth at least one thousand florins, three horses, cows and sheep, hens and sows. (He slaughtered three of the last today, which were as big as donkeys.) There are more people like him who came here in 1719 and now have properties worth two to three thousand florins, and livestock in quantity.
  • The trees, which grow in the forest, are cedar, two kinds of nut trees, chestnut, and many young oaks. They are, however, so easily cleared that it is hard to believe. Deer, rabbits
  • (But not so many of these two as the others), pheasants, wild partridge, and pigeons are plentiful, and all can be shot without limit.
  • One can, to be sure, obtain land in the city, which is more expensive. Ten or twelve hours distant from the city it is much cheaper. Whoever is willing to work can become rich in a short time through God's blessing. Goods, however, which can be brought from Germany, are expensive. For example, gunpowder, for one pound, one florin; a thousand sewing needles, nine, ten, or eleven kopfstuck. Silk and lace are four times as expensive, also shoe nails and other nails.
  • Tailors, smiths, and shoemakers, also weavers, are the best-paid artisans. It costs ten florins in the city for a dress; in the country, six florins and twenty alben. A pair of men's shoes costs seven kopfstuck. It is possible, though, to earn enough, if one just has a will to work. A day laborer does not like to take on two days' work, but rather for a quarter of a year or half a year. I now close, and commend Your Grace, the Count, to the protection of the Most High, and remain, Your Grace, with warm greetings for all the servants, your dear friend, Johann Georg Kasebier
  • I ask Your Grace, the Count, to deal paternally in your country, so that God may deal paternally with you.
  • Ps, I would like to remind Your Grace if someone wishes to come and appeals for a travel subsidy in order to come to this country that you would "open your hand" and share with him according to your ability. People who are willing to work can thus be helped in truth. God is indeed a rewarder of all goodness.
  • Something else remarkable has come to my mind, that the day in summer here is two hours shorter, and in winter two hours longer, and also that it is so safe from thieves here it is not necessary to lock the door at night. My host told me that they often all went away from the house and had often left it unlocked.
  • There are horses here in great numbers. Some have one hundred, some have sixty, some have thirty. They are all English riding horses. The women here ride sidesaddle, unlike a man, and also small boys.
  • There is so much that could be written that it is impossible to write everything. Today we saw more than ten wild partridges in the field of our host, but we could not get to them to shoot because they were wary from much shooting.
  • Closing note from Maria Elisabetha Kasebier
  • After this letter was written my dear husband became ill. He still went threshing for a day with Nicholas despite it. The illness grew worse so that he could not do it the next day. He had chills and fever, and this lasted at least eight days. After this the fever prevailed, and my dear husband became delirious. He kept on working until the illness became so bad that he could not walk anymore. He lay in bed for five weeks, having to be lifted and carried, and died on December 19th, 1724.
  • Children of Johann & Maria (Mathes) Kasebier include
  • Gottfried Christian Kasebier
  • Gottlieb Christian Kasebier
  • Gottfried Kasebier, a.k.a. Godfrey was born around 1718 probably in Wittgenstein, Germany. Godfrey left Germany via Rotterdam on August 3rd, 1724, with his parents and his brother Gottlieb, and arrived at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on October 29th, 1724.
  • Godfrey would have been no more than five or six years old when he and his younger brother accompanied their family to America. Within two months of their arrival Godfrey's father fell ill and passed away. Finding herself hard pressed to provide for herself and her two young sons, Maria Kasebier married Andreas Bossart, and this union produced three additional children.

  • Parents:
  • Spouse:
  • Maria Elisabeth Mathes
  • Children:
  1. Christian Gottfried Casebeer (1718 - 1774)

Sunday, September 28, 2025

Far be it from me to fault Twain.

Far be it from me to fault Mr. Twain, with one notable exception; Twain said God created man because he was disappointed in monkeys, and quite certain it's the other way around. SC




Thursday, September 25, 2025

Here's what I've learned from 70 plus years of faith...

Faith is not the expectation that you will receive everything you ask for. Faith is a state of mind that allows you to find peace, reconciliation, and contentment when you do not. Faith is an achieved state of mind that allows one to temper their desire for everything they want, with the understanding that they are frequently better off without it. Faith is a sense of wellbeing which soothes our ache to be loved, with the heartwarming conviction that we are. It’s a small voice deep in our heart that reassures us that the sense of wellbeing we experienced in our mother’s womb is not lost forever when we enter this world but multiplied exponentially when we enter the next.

When those about us languish in a sullen sea of doubt, and the whole world seems in anguish, and hope, nowhere about; its then faith burns most brightly with conviction’s brilliant glow, while fears retreat contritely, vanquished by the confidence we know. For our hope is not in inner strength, nor conceit at honors won; our valor not doomed to fail at length; our victory not contingent on what we’ve done. Our joy is not reliant on some gallantry we’ve shown. We’ve no need to be compliant to some distant impropriety we’ve known. For our strength is in humility, not some valiant course we’ve trod, but in simply doing justly, loving mercy, serving God.
Shannon Thomas Casebeer

Friday, September 19, 2025

Clara's Best is chockful of all the joys, sorrows, achievements and heart wrenching hardships that confronted America's early immigrants. I'm confident you'll find this read heartwarming and enlightening. S. T. Casebeer


Here is the working cover for Clara's Best. Lord willing, with some assistance, I will self-publish this historical novel in the near future. Based on the life of my great grandma, Clara Stancil, it is my tribute to her and the many other pioneer women who settled the frontier and the American West. While I myself was well acquainted with my great grandma Clara, much of the information contained in this tale is the result of time I spent with Clara's daughter (my mom's mom) Ivy Stancil Daniels. The account begins with the early trials and tribulations of Clara's mom and dad, Mariah and Lidge Kinnie, shortly before and after their arrival in San Francisco, from Ireland, in 1850. I've taken great pains to pen an historically accurate account of Clara's life and times. As such, this narrative is chockful of all the joys, sorrows, achievements and heart wrenching hardships that confronted America's early immigrants. I'm confident you'll find this read heartwarming and enlightening. 
S. T. Casebeer 

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

A government of, by and for a people, unified by their diverse faiths and their mutual pursuit of liberty and justice for all.

 We hear a good deal of talk today about taking America back and making this country great again. Let’s assume this rhetoric implies a rededication to the ideals for which America is best known and respected at home and around the world. What then is the source of that greatness? What then are those ideals? One of the most emblematic symbols of America and her greatness is the Statue of Liberty and the iconic words engraved within her pedestal: "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me; I lift my lamp beside the golden door!" The American ideals of equality, liberty and inclusiveness are at the very heart of America’s true identity and greatness. They are why America became and continues to be a beacon of freedom and justice around the world. We are a country of immigrants. Regardless of whether our families arrived in this country during colonial times or more recently, our ancestors were immigrants. The United States of America is the result of people from all around the world who risked everything in pursuit of a dream summed up quite well in America’s Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” From 1776 until today, American ideals of freedom and opportunity have been personified by our elected leaders, but America’s greatness today and throughout the ages is not the result of elected leaders, but our citizens, common men and women who cherish America’s time-honored principles and dedicate their efforts and their lives to the preservation and advancement of those ideals. Our challenge today is not a belligerent taking back of those ideals, but a rededication to the sharing, promotion and advancement of those ideals for all our citizens. Our challenge today is in many ways identical to that which confronted our country when President Lincoln closed his second inaugural address with the following words: “With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; to care for him who shall have born the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.” America’s greatness is now and has always been the result of our citizens and the principles of Liberty, Equality and Justice as contained in America’s time-honored historical documents and the speeches of our most celebrated statesmen. In November of 1863, President Lincoln addressed those assembled for the dedication of the Gettysburg National Cemetery. According to the President, those whose souls had hallowed that ground had given their lives that the nation itself might life. And he entreated the people to dedicate themselves to the great task before them, that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. That’s a compelling idea: a democratic government, of, by and for a people, unified by their diverse faiths and their mutual pursuit of liberty and justice for all. That’s a proposition worth dying for. That’s why America is great.

Shannon Thomas Casebeer


Monday, September 15, 2025

Or this?


 

Is this cover better in brown?


 

Coming in a limited quantity in the fall of 2025, "Clara's Best", in paperback. Tell our friends!


CLARA’S BEST
INTRODUCTION
The following novel, while historical fiction, is, for the most part, historically accurate. It chronicles the trials and tribulations of my Irish ancestors as told in the words of my great-grandmother, Clara Kinnie Stancil. It encompasses the years from 1850 until the early years of the 1940s. While told with deep sincerity and an eye for humor, it shares, in occasionally painful detail, Clara’s most personal account of her own experiences and our country’s many successes and frequent failures. As such it is, on occasion, deadly serious. I relate it here as faithfully as I’m able and just as it was told to me by my grandmother, Clara’s daughter, Ivy.
PROLOGUE
Ireland was all stony pastures and craggy bluffs and smelled of sea breeze and heather. So said Mither. Then came the famine. Volumes galore have been previously penned chronicling the devastating potato famine that scattered the clans of Ireland. I’ll not prolong the misery with my words.
In the summer of 1850, while the earthly remains of her mom and dad were still leaching into the rocky ground of their beloved Emerald Isle, my mither, Mariah, 15 years of age at the time, along with dozens of other bereft and grieving orphans were loaded onto sailing ships, much like unwanted cargo, and shoved off for the storied shores of America. Most sailed with little more than the tattered garments of their youth which eventually served for many as their shrouds. Fortunately for Mariah, arrangements had been made.

 

S. T. Casebeer


 

Sunday, September 14, 2025

THE HANGTOWN TRILOGY, CLARA'S BEST, Episode Thirty-five


A MOMENT’S HESITATION
In May of 1938, Henry and I each turned 70. Quite an achievement, if I do say so myself. I look at least 70. And I feel at least 70. And I darned sure act at least 70. But It’s still mighty hard to believe that I’m 70! Ralph and Sylvia haven’t aged a day. Oops! I mean Cynthia. One weekend, Ralph and Cynthia surprised us with a birthday extravaganza! They’d arranged a room for all four of us at Camp Richardson at Tahoe, following a sunset dinner cruise on a sternwheeler.
Bright and early one afternoon, around three o’clock, we all boarded the Packard and headed for the lake. None of us had ever been aboard a steamboat. She was a dandy vessel! We strolled the decks feeling quite Twainesque. We took a tour of the boiler room and then stood at the stern, listening to the gentle chugging of the engine and refreshing ourselves in the spray from the churning paddlewheel. She did a wide lap around Emerald Bay and then chugged a tighter circle around the Island and the elegant tea house.
Dinner was served on the upper deck, under the starry sky. We arrived early to be certain of getting a good table. To Henry’s delight, this evening’s menu featured the Hangtown Fry. We enjoyed a bottle of wine, not expensive, but more than adequate, and then settled in to admire the view and prepare our growling stomachs for a treat.
While awaiting our meal, we gathered at the railing and marveled at Tahoe and the majestic snowcapped Sierras. And, high on the mountainside, Ralph pointed out the snow-filled, cross-shaped crevasse known as Tallac, which, In the Washoe dialect, means big mountain. As the sun slipped silently into a crimson haze, the moon began a leisurely climb into a cloudless sky.
Peering over the railing, Cynthia marveled at the clarity of the water and the dizzying twenty-five-foot drop. Tahoe’s frigid snowmelt is renowned for creating a clarity of water which allows a glimpse of the stony bottom to a depth of thirty feet. As we gazed down from the top deck, the distance to the water, and the depth we could see into the water, combined to make it seem like we were flying! Beneath us a procession of gigantic granite boulders passed by as if on parade, occasionally looming up from the depths until it seemed as though they’d surely bump the boat.
Once we were some distance out on the lake, they shut down the engine, so that the steamer drifted motionless in the moonlight. The wind, which had been significant much of the afternoon, became dead calm, and the surface was still as glass. The majestic snowcapped Sierra’s glimmered in the dusk, and the velvet black water cast a perfect mirror image of the moon and its shimmering light.
Between our table and the railing was another table, with a young couple and three children. We briefly exchanged pleasantries as they took their seats. The mother and father sat with their backs to us, with the children across the table against the railing. The boys were quiet and went largely unnoticed. The little girl was probably four years old. She was extravagantly dressed in a frilly white frock. Her shoulder length hair was red as roses and all done up in ringlets. And her eyes were a dazzling green. Cynthia was immediately smitten!
While we ate, Cynthia and the little redhead flirted. The Hangtown Fry was scrumptious, although I have to admit to picking out my oysters. Ralph eyed them admiringly until I offered them to him. The girl’s mother sat directly between her and Cynthia, so, periodically the little child would pop up so that Cynthia could see her, and then she’d grin and giggle and plop back down.
During the evening, this behavior became routine. Eventually the father became a little annoyed. On several occasions he asked her to please sit still. Just as our desserts were being served. The little redhead, having popped up several times unnoticed by Cynthia, craned her neck and stood straight up in her seat. The chair tipped back against the railing, and the little girl went head over heels and disappeared over the side.
We all sat speechless for a second, until we heard the splash, and then the mother let out a lion-like scream and we all jumped up and rushed to the railing. The little sweetheart floated momentarily, face up and eyes wide open, just below the surface, and then spiraled slowly downward into the depths.
Horrified as we were, no one in their right mind would consider jumping overboard from this height. Enter Cynthia. Without a moment’s hesitation, Cynthia sprang up on the railing, kicked off her shoes, tore away her favorite dress, and performed a dive that would have made Johnny Weissmuller proud! She entered the water without the slightest splash and disappeared immediately into the darkness.
Seconds passed while we all stood dumfounded and speechless, peering into the moonlit depths, and then, suddenly, here the two came, streaking for the surface amidst a mass of bubbles. By this time, several men on the lower deck had donned lifejackets and leapt into the water. By the time we’d managed the stairs and assembled near the gangway, they were bringing Cynthia and the little girl aboard. Both were blue-lipped and shivering, but otherwise unscathed.
The tiny, towel-wrapped bundle was passed tenderly to her mother, and Ralph held Cynthia close and wrapped her in a blanket. Before rejoining his family, the girl’s father approached me with tears of gratitude streaming down his face. I introduced Ralph as Cynthia’s husband. The father ignored Ralph’s offer of a handshake, insisting instead on a hug. “I commend you on your choice of wives, Sir.” He told Ralph, patting him affectionately on the back, and Ralph sleeve-groomed his teary cheeks and beamed with pride.  SC

Friday, September 12, 2025

TOGETHER, WE CAN DO THIS.


 Shannon Thomas Casebeer

Welcome, fellow lifeforms from all around the world. Make yourself at home. May God Bless us, each and every one, and grant us peace. SC

According to www.iAsk.Ai - Ask AI: Who is Shannon Thomas Casebeer?

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Shannon Thomas Casebeer is an American author born in Placerville, California, in 1951, whose writings often explore themes of liberty, faith, heritage, and personal reflection.[1][2][3]

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His ancestry includes the Daniels family, who arrived in Massachusetts Bay in 1636, the Camp family in Connecticut in 1640, and the Casebeer (Kasebier) family in Philadelphia in 1724, with descendants from each branch serving in the Revolutionary War.[1] Casebeer's work, such as "Glad Days Long Ago," published by Ozark Breezes in 2018, is described as a fictional parable with autobiographical elements, focusing on youth, innocence, and nostalgia.[2][4] He frequently shares his perspectives on American ideals, the importance of civic participation, and his Christian faith through his blog, where he discusses topics like freedom, justice, and the separation of church and state.[1][3] He currently resides in the Ozarks, Missouri, which he considers his home, though he maintains a deep connection to the High Sierras where he spent his youth.[1][3]

Everthing I ever writ! ;)

 Old Dry Diggins, aka Hangtown | Facebook

My latest book-GLAD DAYS LONG AGO. Get 'em while they're hot!

 Glad Days Long Ago: Casebeer, Shannon Thomas: 9780692109762: Amazon.com: Books

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

THE HANGTOWN TRILOGY, OBIE, Episode Eighty-five, AN IMPASSIONED CHARGE


The final day of this event proved to be one of those glorious occasions which materialize only occasionally, but whose very promise serves to brighten life. The previous evening’s storm had settled the dust and left the old battlefield luxuriously green, and this morning’s pristine freshness and dazzling sun combined to create a truly invigorating day. The morning’s events were a fabulous blur of activity, and the weeklong extravaganza would culminate this afternoon in a reenactment of Picket’s courageous charge up Cemetery Ridge. By two o’clock the humidity was downright tropical, and the temperature was a hundred degrees and climbing fast.

Both sides were well represented for the reunion’s grand finale, and despite the fact that some questioned their ability; these old soldiers were ready, willing, and determined, to make this a culmination worthy of this illustrious affair. As the three o’clock starting time approached, these old veterans were fired up and stoked! Complete with authentic uniforms and much of their original regalia, both sides gathered together in final preparations. The authentic sounds of moaning and groaning rose from the staging area, as the old timers fought feverishly to squeeze into their uniforms, and the fragrances of liniment, mothballs, and hot toddies, hung heavy in the air.
Of the fifty thousand old soldiers who attended this assembly, the youngest, at age 61, would have been just a little shaver during the original conflict, and the eldest among us was alleged to be well over a hundred. This claim however could not be substantiated, as his birth certificate was on a tattered piece of papyrus, and no one could make out the Aramaic!
Shortly after three in the afternoon, the time of the original charge, the Reb’s assumed positions at a predetermined point below the ridge. The Yankee’s took the ridge top, and thousands of spectators looked on from the perimeters. Against our doctor’s advice and our own better judgment, Lidge and I were determined to participate in this event. We’d join the ranks of the bluecoats and face the Rebel onslaught as they took the ridge. It was a bit foolhardy, as advanced age and exorbitant temperatures introduced nine of our fellow patriots to their Maker before week’s end.
Once everyone had taken up positions, a hush fell over the crowd. The hot sun blazed down unmercifully on spectators and participants alike, sweat began to roll, gnats buzzed irritatingly in our eyes, and several moments ticked away, as we awaited our signal and the suspense gradually built. Anxious men stood at the ready, a crow called in the distance, and all at once the stillness was broken by a piercing Rebel yell! Drums rolled, the confederate ranks rose as one, bugles sounded, and as the vintage veterans sprang into their demanding charge, several of the more time ravaged warriors winded abruptly and went down in a moaning heap!
I was already traumatized by a long trying journey and a distressing reunion with my brother, and as the advancing Rebels reached a point some fifty yards below the top of Cemetery Ridge, and the first old soldier crumpled and went down, I was caught up and overcome with emotion! Seeing the fallen patriot collapse in the dust, I sprang to my feet with a commiserating moan, and charged down the hill intent on administering aid. My fellow infantrymen, seeing my distress and equally overcome by emotion, joined simultaneously in my guttural lament, and our primordial groan built as our ranks closed on the Reb’s. Seconds later, the two fronts of ancient veterans met on the field, ran headlong into each other’s open arms, and joined in compassionate embraces and exhausted sobs. Fifty years of pent-up emotions and long restrained passion was suddenly released onto the now benign battlefield, and one hundred plus former antagonists joined in prayer, camaraderie, thanksgiving, and heartfelt affection.
As we trudged slowly back up Cemetery Ridge, each assisting exhausted comrades, the Union Band played Dixie, the Rebel Band broke out in a spirited rendition of the Battle Hymn of The Republic, scars were healed, and brotherhood prevailed.
To be continued?
By Shannon Thomas Casebeer
Copyright © FEBRUARY 14th, 2009