Tuesday, February 10, 2026

The ""Electric" Physician

 Post (C) Doris McCraw

aka Angela Raines

Image (C) Doris McCraw

The following is taken from an earlier post.

I have spoken of Dr. Harriet Leonard before, but I felt she deserved for folks to know more about her.

She was born in New York in 1829 and died in Colorado in 1907 at the age of 79 (?). She was married to John Leonard, and they had seven children, four of whom survived to adulthood, according to the 1900 census. John died in 1895/6.

Along with Julia E. Loomis, the first woman doctor in Colorado Springs, Harriet Leonard was the first woman doctor in Manitou Springs, Colorado. Her advertisement appears as early as July of 1878. Her ad read: "Mrs. H. A. Leonard M.D. ELECTRICIAN. Special attention given to nervous and chronic diseases. Office in the Mineral Bath House. Manitou." This form of treatment was not that unusual in the 1870’s. You can read more at: http://blog.nyhistory.org/electric-medicine/

Dr. Leonard was the proprietor of the Bath house in Manitou Springs, a rather unusual position for a woman. Nonetheless, Harriet was constantly working and learning. There is some indication she may have gone to Truth or Consequences, New Mexico (originally known as Hot Springs) for a time, but no definite proof has been found. It would not be out of the question, as the town has numerous hot springs. The springs in Manitou are mineral, not hot springs. It would make sense, given her history, that she would spend time there. She was in Denver when she first arrived in the area, according to Denver City Directories.

Another difference between Dr. Leonard and the other female physicians was that she was an allopath, whereas Dr. Loomis and others were homeopaths. Dr. Leonard graduated from the Keokuk College for Physicians and Surgeons. Dr. Loomis, a graduate of the Cleveland Homeopathic College for Women, as were the two other women doctors who joined these two early pioneers.

When she fell and broke her leg, she declined quickly and passed away in September 1907, and is buried in Evergreen Cemetery in Colorado Springs, CO.

If you want to learn more about Harriet and the other women doctors, you can check out the ebook "Under the Stone" at this link: "Under the Stone"  

Until Next Time,
Stay Safe and Enjoy Life

Doris



Monday, February 9, 2026

Book 6 - Circuit Judges: Death Comes To Town - Rhoda By Amanda A. Brooks

My Circuit Judges Website – circuitjudges.site123.me

My amazon Author’s Page – amazon.com/author/aab


Here is an excerpt from Book 6 - CIRCUIT JUDGES: DEATH COMES TO TOWN - RHODA.


PRETENDED TO BE ASLEEP

My Models Inspiration for

Circuit Judge Lucas "Luke" Stiles - Luke Perry ❤️

Circuit Judge Adam Stone - Paul Greene 

Circuit Judge Nicholas "Nick" Reese - Tyler Hynes

Rhoda Fenton - Maria Bello

My Song Inspiration

RIDERS ON THE STORM by THE DOORS

Tucson, Arizona

May 4, 1882

“Is everyone asleep?” Luke asked.

“Everyone except us,” Adam sarcastically said. “It’s almost midnight and we need to be up at the crack of dawn.”

“You can sleep when you’re dead, Adam,” Luke pointed out. “What we need to discuss is more important than your beauty sleep.”

Glaring at both Luke and Adam, Nick exclaimed, “You two are acting more like boys than men! Stop arguing and let’s get on with this!”

Luke sighed.

He then said, “I’m planning on turning Rhoda over to Velma. She’s way too dangerous to have around.”

“She’s a very dangerous and very loose cannon,” Adam pointed out. “I’m tired of sleeping with one eye open every night.”

“And I’m tired of all of you thinking that I’m going to murder you in your nice, warm beds. I told you that I’m not going to. When are you going to start trusting me?”

Luke, Adam, and Nick quickly turned around to find Rhoda standing behind them!

Due to the moonlight, they could see hurt written all over her face.

Long moments of very intense silence passed before Luke finally said, “We thought that you were sound asleep.”

“Did you now?” Rhoda bitterly asked. She then just stared intently at Luke, Adam, and Nick for a long moment before finally saying, “I pretended to be asleep. As you know all too well, I barely sleep. If I let down my guard, I’d no doubt be dead.” And then, suddenly laughing a dry, bitter laugh, she added, “I’ll sleep when I’m dead. Isn’t that right, Circuit Judge Stiles?”

Luke just stared intently at Rhoda for a long moment before finally asking – despite the fact that he already knew the answer to his question - “How much did you overhear?”

Suddenly glaring at Circuit Judge Stiles, Rhoda said, “I am leaving for Mexico right this very minute to murder Aloysius Ryan in cold blood. Once I do, I will disappear off the face of this earth. Neither you nor Velma will be able to find me. And if you even dare to try, you will end up six feet under!”

She then quickly hurried towards her waiting horse, climbed up onto it, and quickly rode towards Mexico!

When Adam and Nick started to hurry back towards the campfire and their horses to go after her, Luke simply said, “Let her go. For now.”








HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY!!! 🤠💌🤗

Friday, February 6, 2026

Red’s Enemy Cowboy blends fiery enemies-to-lovers tension with heartfelt small-town charm.


 I’m excited to release a new contemporary western romance.

Red’s Enemy Cowboy blends fiery enemies-to-lovers tension with heartfelt small-town charm.

 

Autumn Hood and Pete Wolfe have one thing in common—they can’t stand each other.

Lifelong neighbors and sworn rivals. Autumn is sharp-tongued, stubborn, and unapologetically herself. Pete finds her infuriating… and impossible to stop thinking about.

 

Then the two rivals are forced to work together. What starts as nonstop bickering quickly ignites into undeniable attraction. Every argument carries a spark. Every glance lingers just a little too long.

Soon, rivalry gives way to something deeper.

 

Autumn and Pete must face the one thing they never expected: falling for the person they swore they’d never love. The question is—are they brave enough to risk everything for it?


https://www.amazon.com/Enemy-Cowboy-Cowboys-Sunrise-Ridge-ebook/dp/B0FMQQCVX8

 

Happy reading,


Niki J. Mitchell

 


Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Dime Novel Romance ~ Julie Lence

Ah, February. The month dedicated to love. Sweethearts gift each other with flowers, candy, and dinner. Students address cute Valentine’s Day cards to hand out to classmates while snacking on anything from cupcakes to heart-shaped candies. Parents may surprise their kiddos with a small trinket, and Hallmark continuously airs romance movies geared to tug at your heartstrings. But neither Hallmark nor the movie industry were the first to draw your attention (and your purse strings) to sweetheart’s month. Books did that, to include the dime novel.

When I think of dime novels, the first thing that comes to mind is a short stand-alone paperback from the 1800’s featuring dashing heroes from the old west. While some of what I imagine is correct, there was more than one story in a dime novel and not all centered around action, adventure, and intrigue. Some were romances. Selling for 10 cents a copy (some for 5 cents) and averaging 100 pages in length, with their brightly illustrated covers and slimness, dime novels were easy to carry and often marketed toward the working class.

While one person isn’t credited with creating the dime novel romance, Erastus and Irwin Beadle were the first to publish the dime romance, under the imprint Beadle’s Dime Novels. Malaeska, the Indian Wife of the White Hunter was the first title.  Check out this dime novel and a few others below.


Malaeska, the Indian Wife of the White Hunter by Ann S. Stephens, is often cited as the first American dime novel. Malaeska includes works from authors Charles Garvice and Laura Jean Libbey, to include Only a girl's love and Daisy Brooks; Or, A Perilous Love, respectively Other stories  include The Girl He Loved by Adelaide Stirling and Forrest House by Mary Jane Holmes. 

 




Belles & Beaux: A Home Weekly for Winter Nights and Summer Days. [1874]

Belles & Beaux was one of the very first story papers devoted exclusively to young women and marked publishers Beadle & Adams’ first attempt to reach an all female audience. Launched in  January 1874 for ten cents per copy, it was a mixture of serialized love stories, (usually with two stories running at a time) short stories, poems, and reader’s letters. The first issue featured a poem entitled “Belles and Beaux, Greeting”, and included a large illustration detailing the phases of courtship and marriage.          

 


Waverly Library. “The Only Young Ladies Library of First-Class Copyright Novels Published. Complete and Unabridged. Price but Five Cents Each.” [1879-1886]

The Waverly Library was Beadle & Adams most significant contribution to women’s dime novel romances. This series began in November 1879 and was one of the first sustained and successful attempts to reach a woman’s market in cheap, mass-produced fiction. It promised to cover “the field of Love and Society Romance” with a complete story in each issue. Advertisements promised “Wholesome, Vigorous and Fresh” stories avoiding tedious narrative… nothing but good strong stories of today.  (Source: https://chnm.gmu.edu/dimenovels/wp/romance-series-and-story-papers.html)

 

My favorite romance stories are Double Standards by Judith McNaught and Gentle Rogue by Johanna Lindsay. What are some of your favorite romance stories?  

 

 

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Roped Into Paradise

 


Picture a snowy central Oregon ranch, with several feet of snow on the ground in mid-January. Envision a handsome rancher up in the wee hours of the morning, scraping the windshield of his pickup so he can drive to the airport. 

This cowboy is heading to Florida, as he does every year, to spend two weeks with his grandmother at her condo, completing her honey-do list and celebrating her birthday. 

JJ travels light, just two changes of clothes in his duffle bag. Grams has a washing machine, and he's left the paint clothes he's worn on previous visits there anyway. 

When he arrives at the condo, hours later than he planned due to ice on the runway and missing his connecting flight, he finds his grandmother's hot pink luggage piled just inside the door of her condo. 

Too tired to consider what it means, he heads to bed, only to be awakened early by Grams, who informs him they need to do some shopping for him before they leave to catch their 11-day cruise to the Caribbean. 


My new release, Roped Into Paradise, is the story of JJ, Grams, her wacky friends, and a cruise that will change his life forever when he unexpectedly falls in love with the horticulturist on the ship. 



A cowboy, a cruise, and a meddling grandma.
What could go wrong?

JJ McKade expected to spend two weeks with his grandmother at her condo in sunny Florida, celebrating her birthday. Instead, he got shanghaied by his mischievous grandma on a Caribbean cruise—complete with hot pink luggage, a gaggle of giggling octogenarians, and a humiliating childhood nickname haunting his every move.

Between meddling matchmakers, unexpected friendships, and the endless chaos of cruise life, JJ can’t help being drawn to Kinsley Kline, the ship’s enchanting horticulturist. There’s just one catch: crew fraternizing with passengers is strictly forbidden.

With only a few months left in her contract aboard The Affinity, Kinsley can’t let anything rock her boat or derail her plans. Then the arrival of a hunky cowboy on the ship makes her question if some rules are meant to be broken, and a little boat rocking is a good thing.

From sun-drenched beaches to moonlit strolls, JJ and Kinsley must decide if an onboard romance can last on land, and if love is worth risking their hearts.

Packed with laughter, longing, and a grandmother who refuses to play by the rules, Roped Into Paradise is a heartwarming romantic comedy about family, hope, and finding love where you least expect it. Perfect for fans of witty banter, slow-burn romance, and cruise ship escapades that sweep you off your feet.




Today is National Take A Cruise Day, 
and to celebrate it and the release of the book, 
I'm giving away a fun prize pack.
Just click the button below and enter for a chance to win!






USA Today Bestselling Author Shanna Hatfield is a farm girl who loves to write character-driven romances with relatable heroes and heroines. Her sweet historical and contemporary romances are filled with sarcasm, humor, hope, and hunky heroes.

When Shanna isn’t dreaming up unforgettable characters, twisting plots, or covertly seeking dark, decadent chocolate, she hangs out with her beloved husband, Captain Cavedweller.

Shanna is a member of Western Writers of America and Women Writing the West.

Connect with her on her website or through social media.

Monday, February 2, 2026

Monclova, Mexico

By Kristy McCaffrey

The city of Monclova sits in the northern state of Coahuila in Mexico near the Sierra Madre Oriental mountain range. Established in 1577 by Spanish colonists, it was later the capital of Nueva Extremadura provincial. It was also the first colonial capital of Texas.

In 1836, the state of Coahuila y Tejas was divided into Coahuila and Tejas (or Texas). During this time the Texas revolution occurred—a rebellion by Anglo-American immigrants as well as Hispanic Texans against the centralist Mexican government. Mexico believed the United States had fomented the insurrection with the goal for annexation. Only the province of Texas succeeded in breaking from Mexico, creating the Republic of Texas. A decade later it was added to the U.S.

Monclova is known for silver, lead, zinc, and copper mining, and today is one of Mexico’s largest iron and steel works.

* * * * *

THE FALCON opens in Monclova, Mexico, as Matt Ryan faces his past with his youngest daughter, Josie.


The Falcon by Kristy McCaffrey
Wings of the West: Book 12

Coming July 3, 2026

Mexico
December 1899 

Josie Ryan’s connection to Texas runs deep, from the land to an almost preternatural kinship with the animals in the wild. This bond has led her to the edge of life and death, from saving a boy caught in a fire when she was eleven years old to being struck by lightning to a mountain lion attack that almost ended her life. The discovery of an abandoned falcon chick leads to a fierce attachment, but with only intuition to guide her, Josie struggles to train the wildest creature she’s ever encountered. When she learns of a man who could help, she’s determined to gain an introduction. 

Mateo Almirón, El Halconero—The Falconer—and Argentine gaucho, is tasked with delivering two prized purebred Criollo mares to Matt Ryan, a man whose reputation casts a long shadow. Years ago, Ryan saved the life of Mateo’s father, and the horses will settle the longstanding debt, but when the exchange goes wrong, Mateo is entrusted with protecting Ryan’s daughter, Josie. Now Mateo and Josie must hide in the mountains of Northern Mexico where stories abound of Josie’s mother, a woman who lived among the Comanche and rose from the dead. 

But in a place alive with superstition, Josie and her untamed falcon will give rise to a new legend …

Josie is the youngest child of Matt and Molly from THE WREN.

* * * * *

Available for pre-order from Amazon, Nook, and Apple Books.

(It will also be available at Kobo, Google Play Books, and in paperback on release day.)



Connect with Kristy



Saturday, January 31, 2026

The Other Old Sow Cannon by Zina Abbott

 

While recently teaching a Daughters of Utah Pioneers lesson on the discovery of Iron County, Utah, I learned of a story that caught my fancy and tickled my funny-bone. It was about a cannon named the “Old Sow.”

There are two historical cannons that were given that name. When I started researching for more details online, the majority of references dealt with a Revolutionary War cannon captured in a 1775 raid on Fort Ticonderoga by a militia made up of settlers from present-day Vermont called the Green Mountain Boys. they were led by Ethan Allen. Among the two hundred cannons captured—many of them twelve-pounders and eighteen-pounders—was a huge twenty-four pounder cannon they nicknamed “Old Sow.” This cannon played an interesting role during that conflict.

The other cannon named “Old Sow” that is featured in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint history was not nearly as large physically. However, it very possibly covered more ground than its cousin by the same name.

It is possible that this cannon saw military action during the War of 1812 and then landed in New Orleans. It is identical to the black carronades found on board the U.S. naval vessel Hamilton, a ship that sank in 1813 on Lake Ontario during the War of 1812.

There is more than one story of how the cannon was discovered by the members of the church and received its name.

In one version, when Illinois Gov. Thomas Ford disarmed the saints in June 1844, several women buried the cannon in a field to hide it from the mobs, and an old sow and her litter discovered it.

The version I read for my lesson on Iron County, Utah, was as follows:

In Far West, Missouri, sometime around 1836 to 1839, which was a time of intense persecution of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (known then as Mormons), a mob appeared at the McAllister home.  After grabbing the arm of nine-year-old John, the men threatened the mother that they would kill the boy unless she told them where they could find her husband. She responded by grabbing an axe and swinging it at one of the men. The axe barely missed rendering a killing blow, but only because the man managed to jump out of the way. The mobsters left the home and returned to their camp. Angry, they attacked a group of Mormon militia. As a result of the battle, three men in the militia, including their captain, were killed. As that was happening, a terrific storm arose, which forced the mob to retreat.

The members of the mob gathered their equipment, but left their cannon behind. They buried it in the ground. The next day, after the storm passed, a sow and her brood of piglets foraging for food rooted it out of the ground. When the Mormon militia returned to the area, they saw brass protruding out of the soil. After carefully digging up the cannon, once they realized what they had found, they kept it and took it with them when they departed for Nauvoo, Illinois, the next gathering place for members of the church.

abt. 1908-Veterans of the Nauvoo Legion with the Old Sow Cannon

Nauvoo blacksmith James Lawson purchased the cannon for scrap. After the cast-iron carronade was cleaned up and made operable, it was requisitioned for the Nauvoo Legion. An existing carriage was altered to accept it. Because of its origins, it was given the name of Old Sow Cannon. It, along with its well-worn carriage, was often used for ceremonial purposes and to call the Nauvoo Legion—the local, state-authorized militia unit—together. The Nauvoo Legion fired it to celebrate American Independence Day and other events.

When Governor Ford of Illinois and several others turned against the church, and the members were forced to leave behind the homes and farms they had built in Nauvoo, they took the cannon with them. The Old Sow Cannon traveled across the plains with Brigham Young, then president of the church, as part of the first wagon train of Mormon pioneers. They traversed uncharted territory which had been crossed by only a few wagon trains bound for Oregon. Although prayerful consideration led them to believe they should settle in the area near the Great Salt Lake Valley, they relied on the few maps created by John A. Frémont during his expeditions. They were unsure of the reception they might receive at the hands of the Native American tribes living in that territory. Having the cannon along gave them a sense of security.

Old Fort, Great Salt Lake City, 1848

Once they arrived in the Salt Lake Valley, the Old Sow Cannon became a makeshift speaker's platform. Apostle George A. Smith preached the first sermon in the Salt Lake Valley while standing on top of the cannon. For protection from the Native Americans in the region, the first homes in Great Salt Lake City were log houses built in a square and surrounded by a mud wall to create a fort. The Old Sow Cannon was mounted on the wall to provide protection.

Not only was Brigham Young a leader of a church growing in numbers amounting in the thousands, he was a great colonizer. As new members of the church from all over the world came to the North American continent, he recognized the Salt Lake Valley would not hold them all. Therefore, he sent exploration parties throughout the West to find suitable land for settlement.

After one exploration party in 1848-49 led by church leader Parley P. Pratt found iron ore and land suitable for farm in what is now Iron County, Utah, a large party of settlers were sought for and called on a mission to develop this land, which was originally named Valley of the Little Salt Lake. Because it was in Indian country, and they were uncertain of the reception they would receive, when the initial group of settlers left in 1850, the Old Sow Cannon went with the vanguard company. They traveled the route which took them over Beaver Ridge.

Hieroglyphics, Pass opposite Parowan 1872

An advance party of fifty people started into the valley on January 10, 1851. Upon hearing gunfire coming from the camp behind them, and fearing their friends had been attacked, they grabbed their weapons and rushed back to the top of the pass to come to their assistance.

As it turned out, it was a false alarm. The second group, upon seeing for the first time the valley that would be their new home, decided to celebrate by firing a salute of three discharges from the Old Sow Cannon.

The Little Salt Lake City was renamed Parowan, a Native American name. It remains the county seat of Iron County to this day. The Native Americans in that region had a healthy respect for that cannon. They called it Pe-up-carbine, meaning Big Gun. It was used to salute state occasions for many years.

Days of 1897 Parade-Old Sow Cannon's 50th anniversary of first arriving in the Salt Lake Valley

After the cannon was returned to Salt Lake City, it was again placed near the Southeast corner of the Old Fort. The walls crumbled over time and fell into disrepair, and the cannon became buried in the dust. Fifty years later when excavation began to build the Hotel Utah, the Old Sow Cannon was unearthed.

abt. 1908, Nauvoo Legion Artillery Veterans

Since the Old Sow Cannon's active service with the Utah militia was at an end, it became a mascot of the militia's veterans association. Sometime around the turn of the century, the carronade found a home in the Deseret Museum, and later, in the old Bureau of Information on Temple Square. It is now housed in the Church Historical Museum of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

At the time it was prepared for an exhibition in the 1990s, the museum invited Jess McCall, curator at the Fort Douglas Museum in Salt Lake City, to conserve the Old Sow Cannon. He identified the piece to be a short-barreled, low-muzzle-velocity carronade built for shipboard use rather than a full-size cannon. The bore will carry a twelve-pound solid shot. It was probably built between 1790 and 1810.

As for the wooden carriage, it was made between 1812 and 1820 for another artillery system and later modified to hold the carronade. Its original paint color—which has been restored—was blue-gray.

Since very few carronades of this size were cast, and only a few have survived, the Old Sow Cannon currently in the Church History Museum is extremely rare.

 


I am still working on my next book, The Bride Who Step Dances.  It is not on pre-order. The best way to learn when it is published and available it to friend me on Facebook or sign up for my newsletter.





One book that is available is my Stollen by Stella. Although it references the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays, it is the kind of romance that is an enjoyable read all months of the year. For the book description and purchase options, please CLICK HERE.




Sources:

Jeppson, Ellen Taylor, “Early Exploration and Settlement of Iron County,” Tales of Triumph, Volume Eight. (Salt Lake City, Utah: International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 2025), 178-180.

https://www.thechurchnews.com/1990/3/17/23262023/cannon-was-first-pulpit-in-salt-lake-valley/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nauvoo_Legion#/media/File:Nauvoo_Legion_12_pound_carronade.jpg

https://www.sltrib.com/religion/2019/05/05/kirby-joseph-smiths/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nauvoo_Legion

Association of Veteran Artilliarymen of the Nauvoo Legion, photograph by Johnson Photography Studio, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1908

https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/guns-ticonderoga