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Monthly Archives: February 2017

Losing His Glow

Georges Claude, a Frenchman who in 1910 exhibited the first neon sign at the Grand Palais in Paris, had a career of ups and downs. At one time, his Claude Neon company was so ubiquitous that many people thought “neon” was the inventor’s last name, rather than the gas used […]

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Brother, Can You Spare a Cowry?

Americans like to think of the dollar as king, but in the historical context of currency, that honor probably belongs to the humble cowry. A type of mollusk shell widely available in the shallow waters of the Pacific and Indian oceans, the cowry was used as money as early as […]

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Bringing Home the Bacon

“Bringing home the bacon” originally referred not to money but marital harmony. In the 12th century, the church of Dunmow, England, offered a side of bacon to any husband who could swear before God and the congregation that he had not quarreled with his wife for a year and a […]

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The First “Filling Station”

Car buffs might consider a pilgrimage to the corner of Baum Boulevard and St. Clair Street in Pittsburgh, where a historic marker commemorates the “First Drive-In Filling Station.” That breakthrough in automotive convenience made history a little over a century ago, in 1913. Baum Boulevard was then already known as […]

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