This is a Wikipedia user page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user in whose space this page is located may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Hurrmic/Article_creation_workpage. |
This is not a Wikipedia article: This is a workpage, a collection of material and work in progress that may or may not be incorporated into any of several articles I'm working on. It should not necessarily be considered factual or authoritative. |
“ | Civility, Maturity, Responsibility | ” |
I have not logged into my account in just over four years.
Willard Bunnell House
Willard Bunnell
Bunnell, his brother (wikilink) | Bunnell's wife and child (children?) | Bunnell (and brother) were from upstate New York |
American Indian Wars (from "On this day")
(Study for Bunnell and for MB book)
Year | Events | |
---|---|---|
Willard Bunnell timeline (in progress) | 18xx | Willard Bunnell is born in Homer, New York |
18xx | Willard Bunnell meets Chief Wapasha |
Lafayette Bunnell | Wapasha | Sioux | Homer, Minnesota | Winona, Minnesota | Winona County | Mississippi River | Driftless area | Southeast Minnesota | Minnesota (history) | Trempeleau, Wisconsin | New York State
(see above)
National Register of Historic Places | Winona County Historical Society | www.winonahistory.org | Do Bunnell Google searches
Bunnell died just before completion of house | Bunnell's brother and his Yosemite connection
Go here to submit a new article for DYK consideration, and be sure to suggest a few hooks.
For all NRHP articles-in-progress
Winona County, Minnesota NRHP list (Work on red links first)
(list ends here)
Reference sources, templates, and more
For Minnesota, there is a 2003 book available, The National Register of Historic Places in Minnesota by Mary Ann Nord - (Nord, Mary Ann)' (2003), (Minnesota Historical Society}' (ISBN: 0-87351-448-3}.
At time article is created off of the 'redlink', be sure to summarize that the article is being created for [WP:NRHP] (and any other relevant Wikipedia Project) before saving the page.
Use Elkman's template to create NRHP infobox on each article page
(End of NRHP section)
Meredith effect (red link - create article after searching for similar content under a different title)
During the development of the P-51 Mustang aircraft during World War II, specifically while re-working a Curtiss-designed radiator, something known as the Meredith effect, which provides a small power increase, was a factor. I was intrigued, and I want to learn more about it. I noticed the redlink, and ran a Google search [1] on October 25, 2008. I will find some sources to cite, write something and start an article - unless someone beats me to it. Will that someone be you?
Jean-Marc Borot
(red link - create article after searching for similar content under a different title)
Borot is a French artist known for caricatures. Some of his work has recently been featured on MSN.com [2], and here are the results of a Google search [3] run on October 26, 2008.
Charles H. Olmstead
(red link - create article after searching for similar content under a different title)
I don't know anything about this Olmstead, but I am researching the Olmstead surname and variants such as Olmsted, which is more commonly known because of Frederick Law Olmsted and his son. I'm tracing the naming of various streets, buildings, parks, etc., using the Olmstead or Olmstead name. -October 27, 2008
Lawrence Block section
(Most LB novels and collections are red links - no article on Wikipedia as of yet.)
Matthew Scudder novels
Bernie Rhodenbarr novels
There are also Bernie Rhodenbarr short stories: "The Burglar Who Dropped In On Elvis" and "The Burglar Who Smelled Smoke".
Evan Tanner novels
Chip Harrison novels (as Chip Harrison)
"As Dark As Christmas Gets" (1997) is a Chip Harrison short story written specifically for customers of the Otto Penzler owned Mysterious Bookshop. It was printed in booklet format for the 1997 holiday season.
Keller novels
Paul Kavanagh novels
Other fiction
Books for writers
(End of Lawrence Block section)
Copy-edit section (move to a 'copy edit' subpage when quantity dictates)
How to copy-edit Copy editing is to make formatting changes and improvements to an article to make it clear, correct, concise, comprehensible, and consistent, that is: make it say what it means, and mean what it says. In Wikipedia, this is done via the Manual of Style, often referred to as "MoS".[1] The numerous subsidiary pages of MoS are listed in the sidebar on that page. A particularly important subsidiary page is Manual of Style (dates and numbers), often referred to as "MOSNUM".
Refer to:
Copy edit skills improvement
(External links - all of these links are free.)
Other notes and reminders
Transform your Wikipedia experience: attractive new wikilink formatting Linking, which is often overused on Wikipedia, looks seriously messy in densely linked text and makes reading more difficult. You can very easily change the display colour of links on your monitor from the current gaudy blue to a more subtle shade. Try it and see. It will take two minutes; here's how.
(1) First, choose how subtle you want your links to look: here's a comparison over whole paragraphs of the current default colour with four other, decreasingly bright colours. (2) Create your own user stylesheet, if you haven’t done so already: User:YourUsername/monobook.css. Mine is User:Tony1/monobook.css); take a look. (3) At the top of that page, paste in the following, starting with “a” and ending with the curly bracket: a { color: #003366 } (this one is for midnight blue, the second darkest—simply replace that code with the one that suits you on the comparison page). (4) Then go to your user preferences. Make sure that you’ve selected “MonoBook (default)” under Skin, and “Never underline links” under Miscellaneous. Empty your cache, and you're done. To use another colour, simply replace “midnightblue” with the name of your choice; remove the pasted text to return to the default. Feedback on this is welcome on my talk page. I'd like to see WikiMedia adopt this as the default colour, and decouple the date-autoformatting and linking functions: it's ridiculous that dates have to be blue links to activate the formatting mechanism.
Go HERE to submit your new article for consideration in "Did you know..." on the Main Page. Be sure to suggest a few hooks.