October 26, 2015

Soapy Smith's safe? (1/6 scale)

Soapy deposits the days take
(Click image to enlarge)







ne of my Soapy Smith related sub-hobbies
 
has become the building and customization of a Soapy Smith action figure collection. I have been a Soapy reenactor since 1985, so it seem a logical step (up or down?) to move into the huge field of 1/6 scale action figures. This allows me to tell stories of Soapy's adventures through figures.


      The photograph at top is actually show-casing the safe I purchased and customized. That project can be viewed HERE on my blog for the "fun accessories" I have created and purchased to go along with my new hobby. My other blogs relating to this same hobby are as follows...
I believe the two childhood interests that led to this hobby are as follows...
  • G.I. Joe: This 1/6 scale action figure came out when I was a kid. It was all we had and I had my fair share of dolls and accessories. My dad even bought me a small suitcase with my name stenciled on, in which to store my collection. Today's 1/6 figures and accessories are far more detailed and interested to look at. Most come with an assortment of hands in various positions.
  • Mott's Miniatures: A museum inside Knott's Berry Farm (Buena Park, California) of 1/12 scale decoramas showing very detailed rooms, houses and scenes, one complete with a working black and white TV, advertised as the smallest working TV in the world, at the time. I loved going through that museum every time I went to Knott's.    

 



"We put armed guards on all the wharves," Graves continued, with orders to shoot on sight if anyone tried to escape in a boat. Thus escape by land or water was cut off…. Some tried to get away in boats and were caught by our guards. Some tried the Pass, and Heney and Hawkins got them, and the rest we got by an organized search of the town…, except a few who took to the mountains where we shall starve them out. But we got more than we could find jail room for, so we selected thirty-one of the leaders, and let the rest go with a warning to get out of town, and keep out. Now our job is to save the men we have in jail from the infuriated mob, which is clamoring for their blood.
—Samuel H. Graves, president of the White Pass and Yukon Railway
Alias Soapy Smith, p. 562.



OCTOBER 26


1774: The First Continental Congress adjourns in Philadelphia.
1825: The Erie Canal opens in upstate New York. The 363-mile canal connects Lake Erie and the Hudson River at a cost of $7,602,000.
1849: Camp Gates, Texas, the predecessor of Fort Gates, is established by Capt. William Montgomery on the bank of the Leon River. The installation is named for Bvt. Maj. Collinson Gates, who won distinction in the Mexican War. The fort is the first of posts to be abandoned, closing in 1852.
1854: Charles William Post, the inventor of Grape Nuts, Postum and Post Toasties is born.
1858: H. E. Smith patents the rotary-motion washing machine.
1881: The Gunfight behind the OK Corral takes place in Tombstone, Arizona, between the Earp brothers, John “Doc” Holliday and members of the Ike Clanton Gang. Billy Clanton, Frank & Tom McLaury are shot to death. Sometime after the fight, the Earp’s fortify themselves inside that Cosmopolitan Hotel, and during this period, Soapy Smith arrives in Tombstone and stays at the hotel. It is believed he and friends were there to help protect the families.
1882: The bombardment of a Tlingit Indian village in Angoon, Alaska by the U.S. Navy, began on October 22, when a Northwest Trading Company whaling ship harpoon gun exploded, killing Tith Klane, a medicine man from Angoon. The Angoon natives demanded a customary payment of 200 blankets for the life of Klane. When the offer was refused, the Indians took over the whaling station at Killisnoo and took two white employees hostage. If reparations were not met the Indians threatened to kill the white prisoners, as well as burn the company's store, its buildings, and destroy its boats. The Navy Cutter Corwin arrived, obtained the release of the two prisoners, and arrested the ring leaders. Seeking to punish the Indians, the Natives were demanded to give 400 blankets. The villagers offered 82 blankets and the Navy responded by bombarding the village and destroying forty canoes.




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