Update about blogCa

Who knew all this would happen afterwards! January 31, snow still falling (while cars and walks were "leaf-blown" at 12:30 pm) in Black Mountain NC.

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Another McClure home or two

 This is the McClure house in Southern Illinois. Thomas J. and Caroline McClure, a pioneering couple who married in 1853, turned their 3,000 acres of farmland primarily into a prosperous wheat-growing operation. The couple also managed a store, lumber mill, flour mill, and a blacksmith shop while raising seven children. This red brick beauty features intricate woodwork, stained glass, and patterned shingles.




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And another McClure home... 




THREE VIEWS OF THE THOMAS McCLURE HOUSE AT THE NW CORNER OF PROSPECT AND ELLIOTT STREETS IN KEWANEE, ILLINOIS.

THOMAS McCLURE HAD THE HOUSE BUILT IN 1895. THOMAS McCLURE WAS A FARMER AND REAL ESTATE MAN IN EARLY KEWANEE. McCLURE ALSO BUILT THE FAMOUS KEWANEE OPERA HOUSE AROUND 1898. THE McCLURE FAMILY ALSO HAS A STREET NAMED AFTER THEM IN KEWANEE. THE HOUSE WAS KNOWN AS A "BARBER HOUSE". A BARBER HOUSE WAS A HOUSE DESIGNED BY ARCHITECT GEORGE BARBER OF DEKALB, IL. AT THE TIME. THE PHOTO ON THE TOP SHOWS WHAT THE RESIDENCE PROBABLY LOOKED LIKE WHEN McCLURE OWNED THE HOUSE. THE MIDDLE PHOTO SHOWS HOW MUCH THE HOUSE DETERIORATED BY THE 1980s. BILLY HEBERER ACQUIRED THE HOUSE IN THE MID 1980s. BILLY RENOVATED THE HOUSE AND HAD IT PAINTED THE SALMON COLOR IN PHOTO AT BOTTOM.

JOE WITTMEYER AND HIS FAMILY LIVED IN THIS RESIDENCE FROM 1967-1974.
SHIRLEY SUMBLES ( A KEWANEE HISTORICAL SOCIETY BOARD MEMBER) AND HER HUSBAND PURCHASED THE HOUSE IN 1991 AND HAVE SINCE HAD THE HOUSE SIDED AND ADDED MORE RENOVATIONS.
PHOTOS FROM SHIRLEY SUMBLES COLLECTION...

Posted 2018
by
Prairie Chicken City 1854-2000 on FaceBook

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And there are more McClure homes featured on FaceBook! It's kind of fun to delve into these historic beauties.

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Today's goddess:


Figurine from Georgia (South Caucasus), c.300-200 BCE: this figurine was found buried in a pit beneath the ruins of an ancient temple; it was decorated with gold jewelry, wrapped in a burial shroud, and then carefully buried in its own special "grave".
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Make the ordinary come alive…the extraordinary will take care of itself.

WILLIAM MARTIN

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SKIP the following if you're avoiding reading about our mis-government these days.

FYI: This is my representative in Congress (GOP of course):

Rep. Chuck Edwards’ (NC-11) 
hometown paper awarded the Republican its 2025 “Nothingburger” Award for putting out self-congratulatory press releases, despite failing to secure meaningful relief for his community after it was devastated by Hurricane Helene.
SOURCE: Chop Wood Carry Water newsletter.

AND more FYI details from that link above...

Western North Carolina pulled into the congressional drive-thru after Hurricane Helene, placed a large order and waited. And waited. And waited. 

What Rep. Chuck Edwards finally handed his constituents was an empty paper bag containing a rather large nothingburger — heavy on branding, light on substance and nowhere near the $60 billion recovery order his storm-famished district actually placed. 

Sure, Congress served up a whopping $100 billion continuing resolution/disaster relief bill in December 2024 — Edwards claimed authorship — but for some damn reason, the meat of it wasn’t designated for Edwards’ constituents. Estimates put North Carolina’s piece of the pie at between $9 billion and $15 billion. In fast food terms, that’s like asking for a 10-piece McNuggets but only getting one.

Days ago on social media, Edwards claimed he was “fighting for Western North Carolina” and bragged about the $6.5 billion he says he’s dished out; not exactly a supersized Big Mac meal with large fry — more like a few stray ketchup packets, leaving people who’ve lost their livelihoods and homes asking, “Where’s the beef?”

SOURCE: Not the Asheville citizen times...but

"2025 A Look Back: Nothingburger Award" 

in The Smoky Mountain News 

on Dec. 31.2025

Well done to hide this article on the least read day of the year's news.

Sort of like when Congress published the closed door interview with Jack Smith - also Dec. 31, 2025. But wait, this week there is an announcement that Smith might be publicly interviewed by Jim Jordan (GOP).

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This octagenarian is still learning. My new bread machine made some semblance of a cake...called chocolate sour cream bread. It's about half the height it's supposed to be, and very dense. I think I messed up again. But oh the chocolate parts are delicious, so I'll probably eat it anyway. Fortunately as soon as I get through that, I can make another one, maybe using bread flour. I think I'll throw away the flour that's over 4 years old, perhaps it has something to do with this problem.



20 comments:

  1. Politics have been so discouraging.
    Baking is a good idea. I gave away my bread machine, and I am sorry I did.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Since the kitchen is the coldest room in my apartment, I haven't been able to make bread - how could I knead it, help it rise several times? A Christmas gift from my baking daughter-in-law and son helped me procure a new bread machine...my purchase as well. Now to work again on getting the kitchen warmer for "room temperature" ingredients. I've had one loaf rise enough, using bread flour. Am tossing out the old.

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  2. ...I love the Queen Anne architectural style of the first one. The other Victorians are a bit too fussy for be.

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    Replies
    1. I tend to enjoy Victorian ginger-bread wood decorations. (Mmm, into bread themes today!) Not to mention a tower or two! I always think what fun the carpenters had sawing those designs, and then the many painters who were provided livelihoods over the years of upkeep!

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  3. Those houses are amazingly elaborate! It's like they didn't know when to stop. They assumed an army of servants, I'm guessing.

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    Replies
    1. Lots of care was needed just to keep a home, inside and outside too! Good for the economy (sort of.)

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  4. I hope the bread thing works out. Once upon a time we had a machine, but we didn’t use it for very long.

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    Replies
    1. I had one in the 90s but was working full time. Now I am home to see that the machine behaves itself. Sometimes it beeps saying to remove the paddle before final rise and baking. Gladly!

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  5. What is it with McClures and houses? Never knew there were so many.
    That gingerbread on the second one is really beautiful. Thankfully it wasn't removed. There used to be a show on HGTV called "If These Walls Could Talk". It featured many Victorian homes. The insides were gorgeous too with lots of woodwork.

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    Replies
    1. I'm not sure what started me on McClure houses...something about a cousin ancestor perhaps. And then having lost it, my search on FB took me far and wide. OK this will be the last. I'm still enjoying watching This Old House which has featured the area around my home, working to repair damages from Hurricane Helene still.

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  6. Somehow before covid I had accumulated three bread machines in my pantry. One was mine that I used for a few months years before, one had been my mom's and I have no clue where the third one came from. I donated all 3 in a cleaning spree. And within months really regretted not keeping my original! I am still mad at myself.

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    Replies
    1. Oh dear! That's too bad. I was not happy when I finally found the little paddle wedged inside this loaf of cake-bread. No wonder it was so heavy! But I'll figure out an easy way eventually...just getting the machine to do the mixing is definitely helpful.

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  7. Years ago, before the big covid sourdough obsession, I made my own starter with nothing but time, patience, flour and water. I kept it going for years but recently just let it go. I miss it. I suppose I could do it again. There is yeast everywhere in the air.
    People sure were busy in the old days, weren't they? And they built beautiful houses.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have loved a few sourdough breads, but not enough to make my own starter. As I mentioned before, my kitchen is COLD...so it would mean really heating up the rest of the house to get it warm enough for bread to rise. I do think I'll try just baking in my own oven though. Just another pan to wash shouldn't be too bad.

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  8. Those homes are gorgeous but just imagine the upkeep. As for our nothing burger Rep, I email him regularly and can hardly force myself to read the nothing burger replies.

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    Replies
    1. Oh dear, replies which probably are stamped out just like the nothing burgers! It's been so hard to see him making speeches...or standing with the other repulsifican politicians.

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  9. Remembering a very tenuous connection to the McClures (somewhere) My Ancestry search brought out Confederate Captain John McClure Biggs, husband of my first cousin four times removed. I don't know why his middle name was McClure, haven't gone back in his ancestry...but who knows...

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  10. Love the first house, it is beautiful. I am glad parts of your bread were good, you will try again. Take care, enjoy your day!

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    1. Yes, and hopefully won't get sick from eating this stuff. It's questionable however. I don't plan to post any more McClure homes!!

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  11. Definitely get the fresh flour. It isn’t worth wasting your time with substandard ingredients.

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There is today, more than ever, the need for a compassionate regenerative world civilization.