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Poster Comment:
When I worked for the State of Illinois, we were breaking out a depression in the concrete road. We found a void under the concrete. The Foreman said it was a blowdown. I asked him "What in hell is a blowdown?" He said, "It's the opposite of a blowup." So they filled the hole with gravel and called in the Vactor to soak the gravel with water to settle it in the hole. You could look into the manhole and see cream color water running thru it. There was a broken pipe down there and you know they had to come back later and excavate so the pipe could be repaired. That Foreman is likely dead now since he was in WW II.
I think it was Jefferson that warned against that.
Remember, Jefferson was the Ambassador for the U.S. in France during the Revolution. He convinced the King to send the French Navy to America. The French ships blockaded the British at Lexington which prevented Cornwallis from being supplied and reinforced. This forced Cornwallis to surrender to Washington.
But I hear that Cornwallis claimed illness and sent his second in command the surrender. I think Washington then sent his second to accept. I believe that was Lafayette.
I know my history pretty well, even considering the meningitis which wiped out so much memory. ;)