![]() This heirloom tomato was brought to Ohio by a slave who carried them through the Underground Railroad and shared them with 'Aunt Lou' and they eventually shared them with others. These 4-12 oz juicy tomatoes are dark pink with a nice tangy flavor. John Maruskin is director of adult services at the Clark County Public Library. About Aunt Lou's Underground Railroad Tomato. More colorful than a late October evening in Kentucky. ![]() to 4 p.m., Outside the Lines Adult Coloring meets in the Alice P. Today at 7 p.m., Twist your brain around the trivia challenges Jeff Gurnee serves up at the Engine House Pizza Pub. Early Blight most commonly attacks tomato and potato, but occasionally pepper and eggplant are affected too (though not usually as badly). The story of a bride-to-be trying to find her real father told using hit songs by the popular 1970s group ABBA. So Aunt Lou’s Underground Railroad Tomato seeds contain both future delicious fruit and a narrative. Today at 2 p.m., Kentucky Picture Show presents a 2008 movie. Tomato 'Aunt Lou's Underground Railroad' Lycopersicon lycopersicum 0 more photos VIEW GALLERY View all varieties of Tomatoes 2 members have or want this plant for trade. What a perfect read for the beginning of October. Browse pictures and read growth / cultivation information about Tomato (Lycopersicon lycopersicum) 'Aunt Lou's Underground Railroad' supplied by member gardeners in the PlantFiles database at Dave'. There are copies of Frankenstein available at the circulation desk. John William Polidori (author of The Vampyre) entertained themselves by reading German ghost stories from a book entitled “Fantasmagoriana.” During one of these reading sessions, Byron suggested they all write a ghost story. Aunt Lous Underground Railroad Tomato A black man from Kentucky, traveling through the Underground Railroad, arrived in Ripley Ohio, with the seeds of. (I kid you not.)Ĭompelled to remain indoors most of the summer, Mary, Shelley, Byron and Dr. It was “The Year without a Summer,” a volcanic winter of torrential rains and tempestuous storms caused the eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815. Mary Shelley wrote “Frankenstein” in 1816 when she was 18 and living with her lover (and later husband), poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and infamous Lord Byron at the Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva in Switzerland.
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