Posts Tagged ‘history’

Chevrolet Yesterday and Today

Thursday, July 26th, 2012

The most current news concerning Chevy is its moving into a 5-year enterprise with among the world’s preferred football club, Manchester United. Chevy recently turn out to be the club’s official automobile associate which has a pledge to get the club’s admirers and football fans closer towards the game than previously. Right now it’s very visible just how well-known and outstanding Chevrolet is until nowadays. It’s an automotive company working with far more than 140 nations and promoting more than 4 million vehicles and trucks every single year. So now let’s take a quick venture to a new part of car history, the History of Chevy.

The Story and Founders Behind Chevy

It was in November 3, 1911 that Chevrolet was first founded by two car innovators, Louis Chevrolet and William C. Durant in Detroit. The secret to the outstanding beginnings of Chevy had been a great partnership involving a Swiss-born American racecar driver, Louis Chevrolet, and an American automobile innovator, businessman and risk taker, W.C Durant. Durant had been the one who had bought Cadillac and created Common Motors, that’s popular at this time as an American multinational automobile corporation and the world’s biggest car maker.

Nonetheless, Durant ended up being ousted from the administration of the company as a result of monetary problems in 1910. It triggered the fresh partnership of Durant and Chevrolet, that was formed at once. But just as instantly, the two men had a conflict and W.C. Durant ousted Louis Chevrolet and turned to be the sole owner of Chevrolet in Korea.

Chevrolet Versus Ford

The moment W.C Durant quit General Motors, he has one major aim in mind, that’s to emulate Fords Model T yet this did not immediately worked out a planned. Rather, Chevrolet commenced creating racecars and the initial major car they made to be sold for the open market was the Baby Grand with a prize of $ 875. Initially, Chevy had below 14,000 car sales yet this accelerated as much as 70,000 as assembly and innovations were enhanced.

General Motors (GM) had observed Chevrolet’s amazing car sales so the corporation purchased Chevrolet sometime in 1917 or 1918. Chevrolet promptly grew to be GM’s top selling brand.

The author is a huge fan of Chevrolet cars and loves writing about them. He has a blog dedicated to Chevrolet car history. Check out this article for Chevrolet’s History or visit this website for additional facts, dates and videos about the evolution of Chevrolet.

Emeralds – The Green Stones

Monday, April 16th, 2012

The majority of women like jewellery, Many men do as well, but they tend to prefer gadgets and watches. In many countries women store their wealth in jewellery as exemplified by the Fifties song “Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend”. Asian women in particular accumulate gold.

However, precious stones and precious metals are generally perceived to be very valuable. Leaving the value of the piece aside, most people have a favourite colour.

Some prefer yellow gold, others prefer white. Some prefer the clarity and brilliance of diamonds, while others prefer aquamarine, turquoise of green.

In fact, high-quality green gems are among the most expensive of all gemstones including diamonds. Emeralds are the most costly green gemstones weight for weight.

Gemstones are created underground at great pressures and they obtain their colours from the minerals involved in their composition. Gemstones are generally quite hard, because they were fashioned under great pressure.

In olden times, many people believed that gemstones had magical properties. The magical property attributed to emerald was the restoration of vision and the curing of eye illnesses.

In fact, emeralds are a kind of beryl and derive their green colour from the element chromium or sometimes vanadium. Emeralds have a hardness of seven to eight; diamonds are the hardest at 10 on the Mohs Scale.

However, emerald has a great number of inclusions (or faults), so it will shatter fairly easily. These inclusions give emeralds their typical fuzzy look.Nevertheless, the best emeralds are those that have a clear, transparent, even colour of green all the way through.

Weight for weight, an emerald of high quality is more valuable than a diamond of similar quality, which amazes most people. However, good diamonds are easier to find than decent emeralds and hence the difference in price.

Become very suspicious of stones that are called ‘something’ emeralds like Lithia emeralds or oriental emeralds. These are usually cheaper gemstones which are referred to as emeralds in order to boost their value. These stones are not emeralds and not worth much in comparison.

Because of the cost of real emeralds, many ‘cheap emeralds’ are either not emeralds at all or are very poor specimens that are being held together by resin. It is very difficult for a greenhorn to know the difference between the good and the bad, which makes it important to purchase from a reputable jeweller or dealer.

Emeralds have been popular since the times of the pharaohs and there are emerald mines in Egypt. There are also emerald mines in Siberia, Brazil, Zambia, Pakistan, South Africa, India and Australia amongst other places.

In spite of the fact that there seems to be many sources of emeralds, decent quality gemstones are still difficult to get hold of at a good price. However, there are no equivalents to emerald, so if you like the best, you can expect to pay handsomely for it.

As with all costly gemstones, you ought to get a signed certificate of weight and quality when you purchase an emerald.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a variety of topics, and is now concerned with Amber in Poland. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Jewellry and Watches.

Turquoise – The Gemstone

Saturday, April 14th, 2012

Blue and green are two of the most popular colours with people and with nature – the sea, rivers, the sky and plants are all green or blue or turquoise, a greeny-blue. Turquoise is the colour of the open sea. It is not a hard colour to like and it fits into most colour schemes.

Turquoise is not a especially rare gemstone, but it is rare in its finest state. It is mined in many countries including the USA, Iran, India and China. The word turquoise derives from an old French word for Turkey or Turkish, because it was first imported into Europe from Iranian or Persian mines via Turkey.

Turquoise is easily smashed and is only slightly stronger than glass, having a hardness of 6. Turquoise is one of the oldest mined gemstones and still, most of the world’s mines are small and hand-operated.

Some of the Iranian mines are 2,000 years old and still being worked. However, the oldest mines are on the Sinai Peninsular and they are known to be at least 3,000 years old as they were worked in the era of the pharaohs.

The colour varies through greens and blues because of the existence or minerals. If there is more copper present the stone will be bluer and if there is aluminium or iron, it will be greener.

Iranian turquoise is some the best quality in the world and is used mainly in the jewelery industry. Turquoise from some other places, like the south-western states of America, is of lower grade and is too chalky and powdery for this use.

Regrettably, chemists have discovered ways to enhance this gemstone, so that unless you are an expert or buying from a reliable source, you could easily end up purchasing poor grade turquoise that has been treated. This is the case with other gemstones too.

Some of the tricks that they get up to are:

Chemicals can be applied to intensify the natural colour of the gem

Resin can be soaked into the pores of porous, friable, low-grade turquoise to ‘stabilize’ it – ie stop it flaking and falling apart.

Completely untreated, natural turquoise of pleasing appearance is very rare and so very expensive. It would be very hard to impossible for a layman to detect whether a stone has been treated or not, but you are not likely ever to come across any.

Whatever, quality of turquoise you have, you will have to look after it because it is quite soft, easily scratched and fairly easily crushed to powder.

Therefore, do not leave it to rattle about in your bag and store it wrapped on its own in a cool, dark box. Extremes of temperature may harm it as well. Turquoise is naturally porous, even if it has been drenched in resin, so do not permit oils or perfumes to soak into it.

If you have to wash a turquoise, you will need nothing but a soft fabric and warm, but not hot, water. Dry the stone right away after washing with a second soft duster. Be careful not to score the surface with the dirt that you are cleaning off.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a number of subjects, and is now concerned with Baby Birthstones. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Jewellry and Watches.

Saint Croix: One Of The US Virgin Islands

Saturday, March 10th, 2012

Saint Croix is the biggest of the US Virgin Islands although the capital city, Charlotte Amelie, is located on St Thomas. Saint Croix itself has two towns Frederiksted (pop. 830) and Christiansted (pop. 3,000). The name of the island comes from the earlier Spanish name given by Christopher Columbus in 1493 – Santa Cruz or ‘Holy Cross’. As Santa Cruz, Saint Croix gets a lot of mention in swashbuckling stories of pirates and buccaneers sailing on the Spanish Main.

The populace before the Europeans arrived was Arawak and Carib and they had likely been there since about 5000 BC. After 1493 the population of the Caribbean got embroiled in a 100 years war with the Spanish and the kind of people living on the island changed forever.

Saint Croix has been owned and therefore predominantly occupied by the Spanish, The British, the French, the Dutch, the Maltese and the Danish all of whom had slaves and plantations

The slaves were freed in 1848, but many chose to remain on Saint Croix. Descendants of slaves still live on the island. The total population of the island is now roughly 60,000.

English is the official language and is the most commonly spoken, although there is also some Spanish, French Creole and Virgin islands Creole, better known as Crucian, which is spoken by most people in informal situations.

This Hispanic section of the Crucian population is mostly of Puerto Rican lineage. The US bought Vieques from Puerto Rico during the Second World War and evicted its inhabitants. Many moved to St Croix because of its similarity to Vieques. These people have fitted in well, but also kept a few of their old ways. They usually speak a mixture of Spanish and Crucian English in a unique form of Spanglish.

Continental Americans make up about 13% of the population and mostly live on the eastern side of St Croix. Arab Palestinians are also a sizeable minority owning most of the petrol stations and supermarkets on St Croix. Other modern immigrants have come from the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and the Philippines.

There has been some tension between immigrants and those calling themselves ‘real Crucians’, but it has largely evaporated because of to intermarriage. There have been attempts to define a ‘real Crucian’.

The issue seems to have been sorted out when in 2009, the proposed U.S. Virgin Islands Constitution voted by the Fifth Constitutional Convention laid down three definitions of U.S. Virgin Islanders: “Ancestral Native Virgin Islander”, who have ancestral ties (and their descendants); “Native Virgin Islander”, who were born on the island (and their descendants); and “Virgin Islander”, who are any United States citizen who has lived in the region for five years.

Christianity, in the guise of Protestantism is the main religion, although the Hispanic community is Roman Catholic. There are also small groups of Jews and followers of Rastafari, Islam.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on many topics, but is currently involved with St Croix Virgin Islands. If you are interested in St Croix Vacation Rentals in the US Virgin Islands, please click through to our site.

Rare Coins – The Most Precious Gold Coins Today

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

Are you a new coin collector? People who collect coins are not just after its dignitary value in the international market but also because of its beauty and oddity. Gold coins that circulated around 17th and 18th centuries are rare finds. Both coin collectors and investors are obsessive in collecting rare coins. Cited below are some of the most fashionable rare coins today that you may find interesting.

American Buffalo Gold Bullion Coins

The gold buffalo is the other name for the American Buffalo Gold Bullion Coins. It is a 24-karat bullion coin. The United States Mint offered to peddle this coin in June 22, 2006. Why this coin is rare? The gold buffalo is the only 24-karat U.S. gold coins. In 2005, it received the congressional authorization. Then in 2006 it began its production and its dissemination. Another unique nature of the gold buffalo is it represents the United States first large scale distribution of 24 karat .9999 fine gold coin. This is the first ever in the United States Mint’s chronicles.

The gold buffalo has a native American man in its obverse If you take a close look at the gold buffalo there is a native American man on its frontage. The back image then features the image of an American Bison. This image originated from the resourceful mind of the American sculptor James Earle Fraser. He is the student of the famous coin designer Augustus Saint-Gaudens. Augustus Saint-Gaudens is the mind behind the figure of the illustrious American Gold Eagle Coin.

Eagles $10 Gold Pieces 1795-1933

One can see if the coins are rare just by simply looking at the dates. If one can see an eagle, that means it was circulated in 1795 until 1933. If it is a small eagle on its other side, it was distributed until 1797. The large, heraldic eagle replaced the successive coins.

Reich’s Capped Head Proof Half Eagles 1813-1834

The first creator of the half eagles is John Reich. Half eagles are also known as the Capped Eagles. Reich only designed the 1813 to 1815 Half Eagles. The coins distributed from 1818 to 1829 was designed by Robert Scott. He copied Reich’s previous design.

The frontage shows the Lady Liberty facing left. She is dressed in a cap emblazoned with the words LIBERTY. There are thirteen stars which surround her.At the bottom of the coin you could see the date. The copies are coarse and chunky. If you will compare the earlier design of Reich and Scott, you will discover that Scott’s eagle is bolder with its opened mouth and belligerently curved neck. Besides, the coins have a reed edge. The diameter is 25 millimetres. It has 91.76 percent gold and 8.33 percent copper

Indian Head Type 1907-1933

Augustus Saint-Gaudens did not only designed Gold Eagles but the Indian Head Type as well. When it comes to rarity and beauty, this coin is like no other. The frontage eagle shows the head of Liberty. On her head is an Indian war bonnet. The reverse side of the coin is the magnificent eagle. From 1907 to 1911, its edge has 46 raised stars. In 1912, the 46 stars are change to 48 raised stars. The original eagles did not feature the motto IN GOD WE TRUST. However, in 1908, the motto appears on the coin once more by an Act of Congress in 1908.

The precious metals like gold have established its unwavering standard of power and wealth throughout the history. People collect rare gold coins for history, for pleasure and for investment. There is pride and glory in owning rare gold coins. You may invest in historical and rare gold coins to assure your finances in the future.

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