Cliffs Riffs

Cliffs Riffs we have guitars for sale.. we customize, renew, and fix guitars... come check us out. plug into one of the amps and play a little. can't wait to meet everyone.

09/03/2022

Provided to YouTube by Rhino AtlanticJuke Box Hero · Foreigner4℗ 1981 Atlantic Recording Corporation for the United States and WEA International Inc. for the...

09/03/2022

Freddie King "The Texas Cannonball" (Guitarist, singer, songwriter; many collaborations, guest appearances) was born on this date in 1934. He died on December 28, 1976, aged 42.

09/03/2022
09/03/2022

Yup

09/01/2022
09/01/2022

For centuries before the arrival of European settlers, the Blackfeet lived across the upper Great Lakes region. But by the 1910s, they had been forcibly relocated to northern and central Montana, where many of them lived in utter poverty. During this time, photographer Roland W. Reed sought to depict members of the nation in portraits that showed them as they once were — before their way of life was all but stamped out forever. In this photo, three men wear traditional ceremonial clothing in defiance of the U.S. government's policy of assimilation.

09/01/2022

Chief Joseph, Native American name In-mut-too-yah-lat-lat, (born c. 1840, Wallowa Valley, Oregon Territory—died September 21, 1904, Colville Reservation, Washington, U.S.), Nez Percé chief who, faced with settlement by whites of tribal lands in Oregon, led his followers in a dramatic effort to escape to Canada.
The Nez Percé tribe was one of the most powerful in the Pacific Northwest and in the first half of the 19th century one of the most friendly to whites. Many Nez Percé, including Chief Joseph’s father, were converted to Christianity and Chief Joseph was educated in a mission school. The advance of white settlers into the Pacific Northwest after 1850 caused the United States to press the Native Americans of the region to surrender their lands and accept resettlement on small and often unattractive reservations. Some Nez Percé chiefs, including Chief Joseph’s father, questioned the validity of treaties pertaining to their lands negotiated in 1855 and 1863 on the ground that the chiefs who participated in the negotiations did not represent their tribe.
When the United States attempted in 1877 to force the dissenting Nez Percé to move to a reservation in Idaho, Chief Joseph, who had succeeded his father in 1871, reluctantly agreed. While he was preparing for the removal, however, he learned that a trio of young men had massacred a band of white settlers and prospectors; fearing retaliation by the U.S. army, he decided instead to lead his small body of followers (some 200 to 300 warriors and their families) on a long trek to Canada.
For more than three months (June 17–September 30, 1877), Chief Joseph led his followers on a retreat of about 1,600–1,700 miles (2,575–2,735 km) across Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Montana, outmaneuvering the pursuing troops, which outnumbered Joseph’s warriors by a ratio of at least ten to one, and several times defeating them in actual combat. During the long retreat, he won the admiration of many whites by his humane treatment of prisoners, his concern for women, children, and the aged, and also because he purchased supplies from ranchers and storekeepers rather than stealing them.
Chief Joseph and his band were sent at first to a barren reservation in Indian Territory (later Oklahoma); there many sickened and died. Not until 1885 were he and the remnants of his tribe allowed to go to a reservation in Washington—though still in exile from their valley. Meanwhile, Chief Joseph had made two trips to Washington, D.C., where, presented to Pres. Theodore Roosevelt, he pleaded for the return of his people to their ancestral home.

08/31/2022

A little jelly for the jam

08/31/2022

dkamillo

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Hunlock Creek, PA
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