My Little Blacksmith Shop. Make weapons for your customers By Dasius, NINJA. Add to collection. Game Community Devlog. My Little Blacksmith Shop community. My Little Blacksmith Shop Cheats. A topic by ImSh0t3rPT created Feb 14, 2017 Views: 16,054 Replies: 17. Viewing posts 1 to 10. Play the adventures of three curious heroes and the Little Army! Mix and match 'em with 8 unique classes, 48 characters, and 96 weapons to beat dozen of missions in each scenario, and other.
Clara Barton
Clarissa 'Clara' Harlowe Barton is among the most honored women in American history. A groundbreaking example of selfless volunteer service, Barton began her professional life as a Massachusetts schoolteacher, at a time when the field was dominated by men, and she eventually started her own school. In 1854, she moved to Washington, D.C. and became one of the first women to work for the federal government—a job she lost when her abolitionist leanings made her too controversial.
Barton was in Washington in early 1861 when the Civil War began. One of the first volunteers at the city's infirmary, she was shocked to find that many of the soldiers were 'her boys': young men she'd taught back home in New England.
Barton soon realized that supplies and support were most desperately needed on the war's front lines. She convinced government and army officials to grant her the necessary passes and, in August 1862, she began to bring aid to the nation's battlefields. She first appeared at a field hospital in northern Virginia, near the battle of Cedar Mountain. It was past midnight as she steered a mule-led wagon, loaded with supplies, into camp. The army surgeon on duty was overwhelmed. 'I thought that night,' he later recalled, 'that if heaven ever sent out a homely* angel, she must be one.'
From that time on, Barton was known as the 'Angel of the Battlefield.' She traveled from conflict to conflict, nursing the wounded soldiers of both sides, including troops at the battles of Harpers Ferry, Cold Harbor, and Antietam, and elsewhere. It is only through such service to others, she discovered, that one can forget oneself.
After the war, Barton devoted herself to many causes, including women's suffrage, civil rights, prison reform, and spiritualism. She helped establish a national cemetery at the notorious Andersonville Prison in Georgia, insisting that the graves be identified. At the age of 60, she founded the American Red Cross, an organization she would lead for 23 years.
*At the time, 'homely' meant 'domestic' or suited to the home, not unattractive.
I agree with Eprosync, to an extent. As some of you may have seen, I already did a video on this yesterday.
As a YouTuber (you may interpret this as hypocritical or double standards - do as you wish), I'm always looking for new and novel ideas, and trying to push the limits of the games I play to show my audience things that they otherwise wouldn't be able to see anywhere else. Much of the time, this also works in favour of the developer, IF and WHEN, the methods for doing so aren't made readily available to every 6 year old and his dog.
Revealing this kind of information and giving instructions on how anyone/everyone can do it, does ruin the mystique for the community. There's a difference between going to a magic show, spectating, and being amazed by what you see, and then going to a how-to-do magic show and being shown how to replicate the magic yourself.
The first one leaves you with a feeling of awe and inspiration. You can't stop thinking about it. You want to tell your friends about it. It consumes you.
The latter results in every child in the auditorium going to school at lunch time and showing off his new found trick to all of his mates that already know it.
Just my 2c, anyway. I'm not condemning the OP by any means, but I wouldn't have handled the situation like this personally.