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Breakfast Links: Week of May 23, 2016

Breakfast Links are served - our weekly round-up of fav links to other web sites, articles, blogs, and images via Twitter.
� Arch enemies: a (sometimes uncomfortable) social history of the high heel.
� Unearthing the lost gardens of poet Emily Dickinson.
� Finally: Congress approves Arlington burials for female WWII pilots.
� The extraordinary life of Marianne North, the Victorian gentlewoman who traveled the world.
Image: A mother and young son make flower garlands, c1911-14.
� For better or worse: origins of several popular good and bad luck charms.
� How England's first feline show countered Victorian snobbery about cats, 1871.
� Strange encounter: when Princess Caroline met Empress Marie Louise.
Child actors were kidnapped to order in Shakespeare's day.
� In the days before plastic bags: parcels and boxes for textile purchases in the 19thc.
The New York Times regrets the error, but readers don't.
Image: Hannah Stilley, born in 1746 and photographed in 1840; one of the earliest born individuals captured on film.
� The Jacobite mystery of Cluny's cage.
� The rediscovery of Alexander Hamilton's working papers.
� Reproduction of garments for a young 18thc New England woman, from the 1738 probate inventory for Sarah Williams.
Image: Young women at a domestic training school, 1938.
Agnes Sorel, 15thc mistress of the French king.
� What it's like to be an historical advisor for A-list movies.
� Unearthing the secrets of New York's mass graves.
� Why are there so few knitting patterns in early recipe books?
� How horses helped cure diphtheria.
Image: Sometimes the best pieces in a costume collection come with a story of love attached.
� The New England teachers who invented New Math in 1788.
� Rediscovered photo album shows ill-fated granddaughter of Queen Victoria in happier childhood days.
� The haunted doll of Hokkaido, whose hair won't stop growing.
� "Flower power" to aid 18th-19thc beauty.
� What a difference twenty years makes: two very different 19th trips from Boston to California.
Image: Just for fun: Calvin & Hobbes explain writer's block.
Hungry for more? Follow us on Twitter @2nerdyhistgirls for fresh updates daily.
Above: At Breakfast by Laurits Andersen Ring. Private collection.

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