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The New American Digest

For Followers of Gerard Van der Leun's Fine Work

  • About American Digest
  • About New American Digest
  • “The Name In The Stone”
  • Remembering Gerard Van der Leun
    • from the website: Through the Looking Glass
    • from the website: Barnhardt
    • from the website: Neo’s Blog
  • Articles
    • The Overland Stage
      • The Holladay Overland Stage: 1 – The Central Route
      • The Overland Stage – 2 Company Operations
      • The Overland Stage – 3 Exploring The Route – An Overview
      • The Overland Stage: 4 – South Platte/Julesburg/Ft Sedgwick
        • Jack Slade
      • The Overland Stage: 5 – Julesburg to Junction Station (aka Ft Morgan)
      • The Overland Stage: 6 – Junction Station to Latham
      • The Overland Stage: 7 – Latham Crossing to Fort Collins
      • The Overland Stage: 8 – LaPorte to Virginia Dale
      • The Overland Stage: 9 – Virginia Dale to Cooper Creek
      • The Overland Stage: 10 – Cooper Creek to Pass Creek
        • Fletcher Family
      • The Overland Stage: 11 – Pass Creek to Bridger Station
      • The Overland Stage: 12 – Bridger Pass to Duck Lake
      • The Overland Stage: 13 – Duck Lake to LaClede
      • The Overland Stage: 14 – LaClede to Almond
      • The Overland Stage: 15 – Almond to Rock Springs
      • The Overland Stage: 16 – Rock Springs to Fort Bridger
      • The Overland Stage: 17 – Fort Bridger to Weber Station

I find I don’t wish to explore new lands, but to explore again those I have already passed through, trying to see what I’d missed in the first hectic rush … Gerard Van der Leun

Home→Published 2025 - Page 25 << 1 2 … 23 24 25 26 27 … 70 71 >>

Yearly Archives: 2025

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Another Damn Tranzie

The New American Digest Posted on August 27, 2025 by DTAugust 27, 2025

An absolutely tragic mass shooting unfolded at a Catholic school in Minneapolis, leaving an 8-year-old and a 10-year-old dead in the pews and injuring 17 others. Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara told reporters that the shooter took his own life in the rear of Annunciation Catholic Church.

"Minneapolis Catholic church shooter Robin Westman was a transgender who "identified as a woman" and legally changed his name from "Robert" in 2020."

Damn your rotten soul to hell.
And the Damnedocrats that try to use this for a political statement.

I hesitated about posting this as it's a topic I wish to avoid. But killing kids in church? Die you SOB!
I also originally wanted to block comments ... but then I figured if I was going to post on a "forbidden" topic. I should let others respond. But I despise tranzies and all that they stand for. They are severely sick people and should never be allowed to obtain positions of authority ... and perhaps should be treated like rabid dogs.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 17 Replies

The Star Theatre – Gunnison, Utah

The New American Digest Posted on August 27, 2025 by DTAugust 24, 2025

Gunnison, Utah is roughly in the middle of the state, north of Salina on US89. The town has a population of about 3500.

Built as the Casino Theatre in 1912, the name was changed to the Star sometime around 1930. It is the oldest theatre in Utah - also known for its tunnel used to move alcohol during the Prohibition era.

Apparently, it has undergone renovation since I took this photo. Judging from the show on the marquee, I must have passed through Gunnison in 2005.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

taken away by a Storm…

The New American Digest Posted on August 26, 2025 by JeanAugust 26, 2025

A post from Jean; originally published 8/23 on "Pondering" (see Jean's site)
Y'all do check out her web site as well as NAD, don't you?

There is only one first time.

Mine was in college when I was 21.

It began at a frat party. No doubt drinking was involved.
Back then I was an even cheaper drunk than I am now.
One bottle of Stroh's got me a nice buzz. Second bottle
got me drunk-ish. If there was a third bottle, I needed help
getting back to my dorm room to find the bathroom.
'Cuz I was gonna puke.

aaanyway…lots of the details are missing from memory but
here is the gist:

Somehow, he and I ended up at his apartment off-campus.
Foreplay? What's that?
I don't remember clothes coming off but they did, somehow.
I honestly had no idea what was going to happen.

It happened quickly. It was disappointing because the only thing
I felt was a sharp pain. Cherry popped.
When he was done he said, "You are taking the pill, right?"
When I stuttered, "uh, no." His eyes got very large and he said,
"I'll walk you back to your dorm."
I had trouble keeping up because he was walking so fast.
I never saw him again.

The next "encounter" I had was much nicer. That man knew what
he was doing and helped me learn the right way. Believe it or not,
the nice man and I are still friends 50+ years later.

To Storm Murray, if you're still out there, I hope you got better with practice.

I know I did.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 5 Replies

Illegals CDL

The New American Digest Posted on August 26, 2025 by DTAugust 26, 2025

"Florida law enforcement will adhere to President Trump’s executive order to remove non-English proficient criminal illegal aliens driving commercial trucks from the roads."

That's nice. Want to actually "solve" the problem?

Arrest those that did the hiring.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

Tunesday – Jeff Beck Group “Girl From Mill Valley/Rice Pudding”

The New American Digest Posted on August 26, 2025 by DTAugust 24, 2025

A sample of some obscure – and some maybe not obscure – tunes from my strange and off-the-wall collection.

Today’s selection: Jeff Beck - "Girl From Mill Valley/Rice Pudding" 1969

A "Two for Tuesday" - from the Jeff Beck Group album "Beck-Ola". One of my favorite albums ...

"Girl From Mill Valley" is a Nicky Hopkins tune and performance; "Rice Pudding" is a group effort (with pre-Rolling Stones Ron Wood on bass). Although Rod Stewart performed the vocals on this album, both cuts are instrumentals of different styles.

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Posted in tunes, Uncategorized | 1 Reply

That Time Of Year

The New American Digest Posted on August 25, 2025 by DTAugust 24, 2025
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Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

Yes. Why Yes I Can …

The New American Digest Posted on August 24, 2025 by DTAugust 24, 2025
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Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Replies

The Change Room

The New American Digest Posted on August 24, 2025 by DTAugust 23, 2025

Miners - bless their hearts - have been known to weigh themselves down with rock while at work. For some reason or another, the owners of the mines frowned upon this practice. One way to prevent such activities was to make the men strip down and change clothes before entering and exiting the mine. While the practice continues today - even in coal mines - modern facilities often include showers and lockers.

Not so much then:

Some of the more remote places where good ore was found are difficult for the casual traveller to get to (or even know about) so souvenir collecting has been less intensive. This is the changing room of a silver mine barely in California just over the state line from Nevada. It's actually not far from well-known mines but requires some degree of effort to hike to (and find - lost behind brush and up a narrow canyon). I stumbled across it by accident long ago (and haven't been back since). There are no obvious roads to it and at the time I was there, the path - such as it was - looked like an animal trail; not a trail one would normally follow. I suppose at one time it was a burro path for hauling sacks of ore out to better opportunities for reasonable transportation. A very dry climate helped preserve some of the construction over the 100 years or so.

The entrance to the diggings is just through the door. Square head nails (aka "cut nails") helped date the workings; they were the primary nail used until about the 1890s when round wire nails became common. A bit of research suggests this mine was probably active for a few years in the late 1870s to early 1880s with fewer than a dozen men working it. The ore was good enough to construct this room and interior bracing but not enough to allow more extensive development and roads. I explored the interior a bit but the timbering was questionable and I decided I wasn't all that interested in exploring the ore face.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 12 Replies

It’s A Dry Heat

The New American Digest Posted on August 23, 2025 by DTAugust 22, 2025

Much preferable to a suffocating lung-drowning sauna; I prefer to take my showers intentionally.

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Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

Cracker Barrel

The New American Digest Posted on August 23, 2025 by DTAugust 22, 2025

I used to like Cracker Barrel. I didn't eat there often but I enjoyed the food when I was there. I enjoyed the atmosphere, I even enjoyed the kitschy gift shop. I haven't been to one since before this kerflufffle - more from lack of opportunity than politics. It was still "Cracker Barrel" last time I visited.

Sometimes just knowing some little piece of my culture is there is enough even if I don't visit often.
I don't think I'll visit again.

Damn the DEI woke ...

Words of Robby Starbuck:

The American people are sick of having our culture and heritage stripped from us.

All these things that are nostalgic Americana are constantly being stomped on, and we're being told that there's something wrong with it, that we should be ashamed of it in some way, that it needs to be replaced with something more inclusive or more driven by these DEI characteristics," he continued. "I think people are just sick of it. We've had enough, and we don't want our whole country stripped down to where we have no semblance of, you know, that sort of nostalgic Americana culture.

I've been watching old late 50s/early 60s TV westerns with Mrs DT - turns out my foreign-born wife likes them (so do I - much better without commercials). Most of these have the advance warning "Outdated cultural depiction" and rated PG (violence, smoking, drinking). I guess good wins over bad, often by use of guns along with no "woke" elements is outdated but these shows were morality plays suitable for children of that era. I was of the later edge of the "hippies" and while some of it sank in, most of it did not (for example, I learned to despise Democrats when I heard McGovern speak). I guess that's me.

So I prefer to be outdated based on nostalgic American culture. It wasn't outdated nor nostalgic in the time I was raised; it's too bad those of today (and apparently so many of my generation as well) feel such morals are inappropriate and obsolete.

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Contact: dt@newamericandigest.org

Gerard Van der Leun
12/26/45 - 1/27/23


Gerard's Last Post
(posthumous): Feb 4, 2023
"So Long. See You All a Little Further Down the Road"

When my body won’t hold me anymore
And it finally lets me free
Where will I go?
Will the trade winds take me south through Georgia grain?
Or tropical rain?
Or snow from the heavens?
Will I join with the ocean blue?
Or run into a savior true?
And shake hands laughing
And walk through the night, straight to the light
Holding the love I’ve known in my life
And no hard feelings

Avett Brothers - No Hard Feelings

The following was posted along with the announcement of Gerard's passing.
Leonard Cohen - Going Home

For a 2005 interview with Gerard


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Blogroll
The New Neo
Jean's Blog - Pondering
The Feral Irishman

Hey, Mr. Tambourine Man,
play a song for me
I'm not sleepy
and there ain't no place I'm goin' to

Hey, Mr. Tambourine Man,
play a song for me
In the jingle jangle morning,
I'll come followin' you

Take me for a trip upon
your magic swirling ship
All my senses have been stripped
And my hands can't feel to grip
And my toes too numb to step
Wait only for my boot heels to be wanderin'

I'm ready to go anywhere,
I'm ready for to fade
Unto my own parade
Cast your dancing spell my way
I promise to go under it


Men who saw night coming down about them could somehow act as if they stood at the edge of dawn.


From Gerard's site. The picture always caught my eye.

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