(You
MAY need the FREE QuickTime
plug-in to view and hear s90tv) top top
TVInews
- 109
"Disappointments Are Great! Follow the Money -
Capt. Billy" The Smart Daaf Boys / Nathan
Stubblefield" - Book Review: Chapter Nine By Troy
Cory-Stubblefield, Josie Cory. Paperback:
Television International Publishing / October -
2003-2006 / Buy Amazon http://smart90.com/tvimagazine/2006/4006/109NBSBR0901CaptBilly.htm
109NBSBR0901CaptBilly.htm NBStubPrisAClarissa300p.jpg
Nathan
B. Stubblefield The
Smart Daaf Boys Timeline -
Below BOOK
REVIEW http://www.murraystate.edu/cbpa/journal/2001Fall/lochte-5.pdf Nathan's
Early Years - 1864-1869 - No Electricity - No
Telephone - No Wi-Fi Continue02
- Click
to Continue03 - next page 102 / Internet TODAY'S
PUZZLE? THIS WEEK COVER This
Week's
Cover Google
KudoAds
Dear Editor LookRadio 120
PIXELS 3 columns
Nathan's Early Years - 1870-1876 - No Electricity -
No Telephone - No
Wi-Fi
Nathan's Early Years - 1877-1880 - His Legal
Apprenticing. No Electricity, No WiFi, and no
Instant Coffee. After Nathan's 1881 wedding, his 1882 Court
House Square, compass, loadstone signal
demonstration kicked off a scientific development
career with his new bride that spanned almost 3
decades. It was a mix of success that was
intervened with 9 children, and intertwined by
scientific inventions, poems, family happiness and
travails, two major wireless telephony patents,
1898 and 1907, two U.S. regulatory seizures of his
RF frequencies. The Radio Communication Acts
included, 1906, 1910, 1912, 1918, and 1927. The two
major stock exchange crashes, that wiped out his
profits on licensing and franchise fees sold to
company affiliates occurred in 1910 and 1929. /// _________ More
Articles Converging
News 402006 / TeleCom BuyOuts, Spinoffs and Asset
Seizure Boom Respectfully
Submitted
109NBSBR0901CaptBilly.htm top top 40 40+110+570=720
- 102 smart90.com/tvimagazine/2006/4006/
Movies
CLICK
S90
Google
IMAGES
GOOGLE
NB
Stubblefield Telephone Company, 1885. By Robert H.
Lochte,
- MORE STORY
http://smart90.com/tvimagazine/2006/4006
http://smart90.com/tvimagazine/2006/4006/109NBSBR0902Clarissa.htm
http://smart90.com/tvimagazine/2006/4006/109NBSBR0903FireWire.htm
http://smart90.com/tvimagazine/2006/4006/109NBSBR0904NBSTrust.htm
109NBSBR0902Clarissa.htm
109NBSBR0903FireWire.htm
109NBSBR0904NBSTrust.htm
Smart
Daaf Boys -
Products
The
Smart-Daaf Boys -
Main
Stubblefield
Marconi
Ambrose
Fleming
Reginald
Fessenden
Tesla
DeForest
Armstrong
Alexanderson
Farnsworth
(November 22, 1860 - March 28,
1928)
Smart
Daaf Boys - Amazon Products
Disappointments Are Great -- Follow The Money . . .
The InterNet!
Nathan's
Early Years - 1864-1869 - No Electricity - No
Telephone - No Wi-Fi
During the five years period after the war
ended in 1864, before hitting the age of 9, Nathan
started to distinguish himself differently from his
brothers. While they were interested in helping
mother provide foodstuffs, he was melding himself
into the footsteps of his father, tagging along,
imitating his actions and ideas on how to provide
the energy to keep the home fires burning.
As
the tow-headed side-kick of "Capt. Billy," Nathan
considered himself part of his father's legal
practice, meeting his friends, impressing his
clients, and the Mason fraternal crowd. Unknowingly
at the time, six of these Kentuckians were going to
be part of Nathan's "Big Six" team of investors
that were being primed to bring electricity, the
telephone and Wireless telephony, and education to
Kentucky.
During the five years period after the war
ended in 1864, before hitting the age of 9, Nathan
started to distinguish himself differently from his
brothers. While they were interested in helping
mother provide foodstuffs, he was melding himself
into the footsteps of his father, tagging along,
imitating his actions and ideas on how to provide
the energy to keep the home fires burning.
As
the tow-headed side-kick of "Capt. Billy," Nathan
considered himself part of his father's legal
practice, meeting his friends, impressing his
clients, and the Mason fraternal crowd. Unknowingly
at the time, six of these Kentuckians were going to
be part of Nathan's "Big Six" team of investors
that were being primed to bring electricity, the
telephone and Wireless telephony, and education to
Kentucky.
Then Nathan's mother passed away when he was 9.
Victoria Francis Bowman Stubblefield, (1837-1869),
died after contacting Scarlet fever. The next 3
years proved tough on the family, especially the
young children. They were growing up to be like the
Mississippi River Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn
characters described in Mark Twain's novels.
AMAZON
BUY - DVDS
Smart
Daaf
Boys
Troy
Cory
Show
CHINA
MOON
Hong
Kong
Triad
/
"Jockey Club"
Follow
The
Money
SmartDaaf Boys
RadioPlayMusic
1.
Feature Story /
Continue
01
-
What keeps us reading, given the monkey see, monkey
never-do promises that are surrounding the high
profile characters in the book? Raw action, for
sure . . . That fills in the important reasons as
to why we have today, Wi-Fi, the Internet, radio,
television, and the Wireless Telephone.
Part
02 /
Nathan was there when his father met the young
Clara Jones in 1870. It just so happened that her
father, Judge Thomas A. Jones, (1842-1913), was
just putting a group together seeking State
approval for Murray's first Male and Female
Institute. As Nathan's father was being coaxed into
the job as legal advisor and potential investor,
Nathan knew it was love at first sight, when his
father said 'Yes.'
Capt. Billy paid cash for the school, becoming its
sole proprietor. After the deal was affixed by a
handshake and commitment, Nathan pushed his father,
if it would be too much to ask Clarissa, if she
could tutor Nathan and his brothers in spelling and
social studies.
The
next two years speak for themselves. Nathan was 12
years of age when he his father's newly built, Male
And Female Institute - opened its doors in 1872.
With the help of Clarissa, Nathan goals were more
prominent than his brothers, and other classmates.
"He is the most un-teenager-like teenager in the
class because he's a young man first," said
Clarissa on Nathan's thirteenth birthday. Even his
older brother, Walter saw him as the serious
spokesman for the family. When other boys were
playing leap-frog and paddle ball, he was worrying
about the coal oil and logs needed to heat the
school.
One
year later, in 1873, Capt. Billy married
"Clarissa." Nathan for the first time in his life
was embraced by a father's love to protect his
family's future. Capt. Billy commoditized all of
his cash holdings and assets, to create a formal
family trust for his family to draw upon or even
sell periodically, -- as they saw fit.
The
Stubblefield Family Trust cleared the way to
protect his State franchised school legacy, his 85
acre farm real estate, and his various property
liens he owned jointly with Governor Holt against
several defendants. (J. F., and Joseph Curd). The
trustees included local Kentucky businessmen, and
school board member, John C. McElrath, W. H.
Wilkins, R. C. Linn and Kentucky governor
Holt..
One
year forward, (1874), Capt. Billy died of
consumption (pneumonia), leaving Nathan, his 3
brothers, Walter, William, James, and half-sister,
Alene, (1874-1954) -- under the guardianship of
Clarissa, and the Family Trust.
What bothered the 14 year old Nathan most about the
trust, was anything that threatened the educational
process and instructions of the Codes of trust
created by his Papa "Capt. Billy," -- was something
he and the other brothers should be paying
attention to.
Part of the "Big Picture" Capt. Billy and Clarissa
had in mind for the boys when they got married in
1873, was to establish schools of higher learning
on the 85 acre family estate in Murray, that could
give diplomas and academic degrees to the locals,
without leaving Callaway County.
With the loss of Capt. Billy at her side, Clarissa
found herself as the head school Marm at the
Institute. She clearly saw the direction Nathan was
heading -- to be like his father -- his forte being
the natural sciences and the rules of law.
Clarissa, being the good stepmother, as she was,
she encouraged formality in Nathan's dress
code.
Fast forwarding ahead to 1902, the dress code
Nathan subscribed to, can be seen in the various
photos of Nathan in Derby Hat and stiff white
colored shirt with his family and contemporary
inventors. Clarissa helped Ada and Nathan establish
the Stubblefield Industrial School in 1892 as part
of the Male and Female Institute. After the
Institute was destroyed by fire in 1904,
Telephon-delgreen was established to take-on both
middle-high school and NBS trade school students.
The Telephon-delgreen 85 acre campus is now part of
the 11,000 student-body campus of Murray State
University, founded by Rainey T. Wells. More on
that subject shortly, in Part Two.
Meanwhile back on the Stubblefield 85 acres, it was
in 1876, that Nathan's aptitude for invention was
noticed. His science magazine and electric magnet
collection had consumedly blossomed along with his
watermelon and potato patches. Anything and
everything found in print about Thomas A. Edison's
electric light bulb and the recording of sound on
cylinders were neatly folded and creased together
to become bookmarks for future reference. The first
Edison recording of - "Mary Had a Little Lamb" was
on order for the schools library." It was also the
same year 1876, that Dolbear invented the first
permanent magnet telephone/receiver followed by an
electric static (wireless) telephone that could
emit RF signals.
Part
03 /
The
same year Rutherford B. Hayes, became U.S.
President: (1877-1881) - and under the guidance of
his father's former law partners, and business
associates, John C. McElrath, W. H. Wilkins, R. C.
Linn, and Governor Holt, Nathan's legal education
commenced at the law offices established by his
father and his former law partner, Gen. A. P.
Thompson, who met his fate on the battlefield in
near-by Paducah, 1864.
As
Nathan studied a legal case assignment, he was
stunned to find that Telegraphy was recently used
by the Kentucky Supreme court to argue a case in
Washington. He then read that a lecture by Amos
Dolbear on "Telegraphy and the Law" -- was going to
take place at Bethany College during the summer. He
promised his legal professor, A. Thompson, Jr., and
Clarissa that if he could attend the event, he
would come back with solutions - as to why Murray
was in the dark with no electricity or telegraph
connections to the outside world. (A. Thompson,
Esq. in Nathan's late years of life was to
represent him in a bitter legal matter.)
Both Thompson and Clarissa took the challenge.
Within a week the 17 year old legal apprentice was
on his way to Bethany, a 574 mile trip. It was
on the second day of professor Amos Dolbear's
lecture on electrical engineering, that Nathan
witnessed a demonstration of a real magnet
telephone/receiver, Dolbear's electric static
telephone, and a dynamo operating as a motor.
On
the third day of the lecture, Dolbear pointed out,
that it would take three to four decades to provide
enough telegraph poles and copper wires to
electrify the South with an electric telegraphy or
telephony system, that might include to new Edison
light bulb. When Nathan heard that, he
scintillated. He saw in his mind's eye, -- the
Telephone that could send a voice without copper
wires, and the lamp-lighter that could simplify the
lighting of coal oil lanterns.
But
as the story goes, after the Dolbear 1877 lecture
ended, - - Nathan's basic innate senses intensified
beyond any normal human capacity. It was like he
had developed an extra sense, backed-up by a few
magnets and a trusted compass from China. As for
natural soil science, Justus von Liebig (1803
&endash; 1873), was his hero. Nathan considered the
soil around the farm, was nothing more or less
static storage bin for plant nutrients and EMW
energy.
The
soil could be used and replaced with loadstones,
crystals, iron ore particles. Tobacco, watermelons
and potatoes were of particular value to him when
applied within the framework of the distinct and
separate EMW science he was developing to create
enough electricity to operate a Wi-Fi system. His
grounded induction coil concepts were
revolutionary, in that by going directly to the
soil itself, the integrated expression of all these
factors could be seen in the morphology of the
soils to construct an antenna. This concept
required that all properties of soils be considered
collectively in terms of a completely integrated
natural body. In short, it made possible a science
of soil. FOR
MORE SOIL STORY. / MORE
STORY - LOST SCIENCE
He
could sense the mechanics of the compass directing
him to a central motor part, as the coils rotated
in his minds eye, the same way as a bat can see in
the dark. He could communicate with any part of the
earth around him that emitted a magnetic energy
force. He could run a small motor, or worse but
still better 'made' a generator by clamping two
magnets on a shaft and have them pass a coil.
It
was a period in which Nathan claimed he could
emulate and store anything he had learned as a
youth, or ever seen or heard from his father or
teachers.
Nathan returned from Bethany and viewed his life in
Murray as having a purpose for the world at large,
one that was going to take hard work and many years
to bring change. It was the birth of his exact
science to produce electricity from the ground-up,
-- to energize the world.
In
the final year of his law apprenticeship, 1879, it
was Gov Holt that helped Nathan set himself to
become part of the trust and business life in
Murray, and introduced him to the pretty
grand-niece of James Buchanan, Ada Mae Buchanan.
They fell in love, and got married. He was 21 and
she was seventeen.
Nathan
Early Years - 1881-1898 - Electricity created by
Earth Batteries. Wi-Fi borne.
Both of Nathan's schools, the N.B. Stubblefield
Industrial School and the
Teléph-on-délgreen Institute, were
built on Capt. Billy's 85 acre original
Stubblefield farmland. Now the campus of Murray
State University, with a student body of over
12,000, was founded by Rainey T. Wells, one of
Nathan's first students in 1892 at the trade
school. The peaches, apples, watermelons and other
crops that Nathan Stubblefield grew on
Teléph-on-délgreen, were not only a
source of pride, but it was the watermelon that
held special symbolism to his ground energy
batteries and EMW RF inventions, and his 1908
All-in-One Radio Patent, and
Teléph-on-délgreen. CLICK
FOR MORE MSU STORY.
CLICK TO Continued: Go To Book Review Part Two For
MORE STORY
PART TWO Book Review Part Two - Continued:
PART TWO
Quietly Building a NBS Telephony Force, and
marketing of spectrums and the FCC sales of
frequencies, the NBS Wireless Telephone in
today's world of WiFi and VoIP.
Josie
Cory
Publisher/Editor
TVI Magazine
TVI
Magazine, tviNews.net, YES90, Your Easy Search,
Associated Press, Reuters, BBC, LA Times, NY Times,
VRA's D-Diaries, Industry Press Releases, They Said
It, SmartSearch, and Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia were used in compiling and
ascertaining this Yes90 news
report.
©1956-2007.
Copyright. All rights reserved by: TVI
Publications, VRA TelePlay Pictures, xingtv and Big
Six Media Entertainments. Tel - 323
462.1099.
Smart
Daaf Boys -
Products
Troy
Cory Show / DVDs VRA
TelePlay
GOOGLE
KudoADS
109NBSBR0902Clarissa.htm
109NBSBR0903FireWire.htm
109NBSBR0904NBSTrust.htm
We Preserve The Moment
Yes90
tviNews S90 102
Internet
/ Feature
Story / tvimagazine.com/index
/
Smart90, lookradio, nbs100, tvimagazine, vratv,
xingtv, Ddiaries, Soulfind, nbstubblefield,
congming90, chinaexpo, vralogo, Look Radio, China
Expo, Soul Find, s90tv, wifi90, dv90, nbs 100,
Josie Cory, Publisher, Troy Cory, ePublisher, Troy
Cory-Stubblefield /
Kudoads,
Photo Image665, Movies troy cory show
duration:medium:free - 4
min
- Television With No Borders
How
Do We Do Business?
Tel
323 462-1099
SEND
E-MAIL
Return
To
Top