Old Letters – Josephine Park Cranston – Columbus, Ohio in the late 1870s

My great, great Aunt, Josephine Park Cranston, was a prolific writer. She loved writing essays and descriptions of things she greatly admired. This is a short letter about Columbus, Ohio, written in the late 1870s. Her handwriting is beautiful.

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Thirty Years On, the Eight Critical Skills Still Hold—and AI Has Honed Their Edge

You do not learn a critical skill by reading about it. You learn it by practicing it — and that was always the part worth having.
Thirty years ago, I built a list of eight critical skills—not from a survey, but from nearly a thousand executive searches where companies told me what they’d pay real money to find. The skills held. The world they were built for did not.
AI changed everything underneath them. It drafts your memo, builds your analysis, and hands it back polished, confident, and sometimes completely wrong—then defends the falsehood to your face. I’ll show you the studies, with exact numbers, where experts trusted the machine and followed it off the edge.
The eight skills still hold. AI has only sharpened their edge—and raised the price of getting them wrong.
The machine produces. It cannot judge. That part stays with you.

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Courage and Consequence — The Enslaved Pilot Who Stole a Confederate Warship, Steered to Freedom, and Became a Member of Congress

A stolen warship. Five Confederate forts between him and the open sea. A captain’s coat, a straw hat, and the exact signals to blow at each checkpoint — because he was the one the Confederacy had trusted to give them. That was the gamble Robert Smalls made at three in the morning on May 13, 1862, with his wife and children below deck and the harbor guns above. He gave the signals. The sentries waved him through. He ran up a bedsheet and surrendered the Planter, its guns, and a map of Charleston’s minefield to the Union blockade. Then he won the vote, sat five terms in Congress, and wrote free public schooling into South Carolina law. The men who erased him are remembered. He carried himself from a cabin behind a slaveholder’s house to the floor of Congress — and the people who took it all back are the ones in the monuments. Robert Smalls needs to be remembered.

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Courage and Consequence – The Interrogation Transcript That Outlived the Interrogators

One Lincolnshire gentlewoman. Three arrests for heresy. Both shoulders pulled from their sockets by the Lord Chancellor of England. A condemned prisoner racked illegally by two of the highest officers of the realm, with their own hands, to extract the names of the queen’s friends. Anne Askew named no one. From a Newgate cell, with her hands ruined, she wrote down every question and every answer. She got the manuscript out of England. Bale printed it in Wesel under a false imprint. Foxe placed it at the center of his Book of Martyrs. The men who tortured her are remembered today as characters inside her narrative. She turned the mechanics of Tudor coercion into evidence against the regime that used them. Anne Askew needs to be remembered.

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Courage and Consequence — A Miller’s Universe on Trial

A miller in a Friulian mountain village. A wife and eleven children. Eleven books, mostly borrowed. A cosmology of the universe built from cheese and worms. A pope who signed his death warrant in the same year he signed Giordano Bruno’s. They warned him to keep his mouth shut. His own family begged. He could not. He talked through one trial, twenty months in prison, thirteen years marked by a cross-stitched robe, and then a second trial that ended at the stake. Under torture he refused to name anyone — because, he said, he had thought it himself. Bruno is on the syllabus. Menocchio is not. He stood for the right of an ordinary man to use his own mind on the largest questions. Domenico Scandella, called Menocchio, needs to be remembered.

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