
Blast from the Past: Revisiting Rick Collins and the Presidio for Tucson’s 250th
Episode Highlights
-
🏰 The Birthplace of Tucson
Discover how the Presidio San Agustín del Tucson became the foundation of the city we know today. -
🎉 Tucson’s 250th Birthday Reflections
Host Tom Heath recounts his experience recording stories from Tucsonans during the city’s anniversary celebration. -
🛠️ Living History in Action
Step inside a Living History Day with Rick Collins: tortilla-making, blacksmithing, cannon fire, and more. -
👨🏫 Education That Connects Generations
Hear how programs like “Friday at the Fort” help local students connect with their ancestors — some even discovering their own roots in the Presidio. -
🧱 Layers of Tucson’s Legacy
From Indigenous pit houses to Spanish forts, Mexican rowhouses to American statehood — the Presidio preserves every chapter of Tucson’s story. -
🙌 The Power of Volunteers
Learn how passionate Tucsonans keep history alive through interpretation, restoration, and storytelling.
Episode Description
In 1775, a red-headed Irishman named Hugo O’Conor decided the Spanish Empire would build a fort in what is now downtown Tucson. That decision gave birth to El Presidio San Agustín del Tucson, and ultimately, the city itself.
This August marked Tucson’s 250th birthday, a celebration not just of years, but of the people, places, and cultures that have shaped the Old Pueblo into what it is today. As part of the commemoration, host Tom Heath led Show Source Studios to record one-minute interviews with Tucsonans, asking them to share their favorite memories or hopes for the city’s future. These micro-stories stitched together a beautiful mosaic of community pride, stories from all walks of life, capturing Tucson’s essence in 60 seconds.
Standing in the very courtyard where Tucson was born, Tom was reminded of an earlier conversation, one that captured the Presidio’s spirit through the voice of Rick Collins, a dedicated volunteer and historical interpreter. What better time to revisit that 2017 interview than now, as Tucson reflects on 250 years of vibrant history?
🔥 Living History Comes Alive at the Presidio
Rick Collins isn’t a volunteer — he’s a time traveler.
In our archived interview, Rick walks us through the immersive experience of the Presidio Museum’s Living History Days, where Tucson’s past is reenacted. From the clang of the blacksmith’s hammer to the smell of handmade tortillas crisping over open flames, every corner of the museum pulses with life. Visitors can interact with Spanish colonial soldiers, peek into adobe homes, watch the firing of an authentic 4-pound Florins howitzer cannon, and even touch the handmade nails forged on-site.
This is an invitation to step into the shoes (and uniforms) of those who lived centuries ago. Rick’s passion is contagious as he describes school kids becoming soldiers, tourists becoming interpreters, and volunteers recreating daily life with breathtaking accuracy.
And while the cannon blasts might shake the ground, it’s the quiet moments, a child handing over a forged nail, a tortilla flipped with care, that remind us how connected we are to the people who walked these streets before us.
🧱 Many Centuries, One City: Tucson’s Layered Legacy
What makes the Presidio so special isn’t just that it marks Tucson’s European founding, it’s that it sits atop thousands of years of Indigenous, Spanish, Mexican, and American history.
Rick reminds us that beneath the museum grounds lie the remains of prehistoric pit houses, whispering stories of the first peoples who lived here long before the Spanish arrived. Inside the walls of the Presidio, you’ll find not only colonial uniforms and cannons, but Mexican-era adobe row houses, American statehood artifacts, and family lineages that stretch back generations.
The Presidio celebrates Tucson’s complexity. Through Living History programs, Mexican-American and Native American interpretation efforts, and educational school visits like “Friday at the Fort,” the museum ensures every layer of this city’s story is honored.
It’s not about where Tucson began, it’s about celebrating who Tucson has always been.
🎯 Come for the Cannon, Stay for the Story
As we celebrate 250 years of Tucson, it’s clear the Presidio is the beating heart in the city’s story.
Whether you’ve lived in Tucson your whole life or just arrived yesterday, a visit to the Presidio San Agustín Museum offers something unforgettable: connection. It’s where the past leaps into the present, where volunteers become storytellers, and where the Old Pueblo’s legacy is preserved with every tortilla flipped and every uniform button fastened.
👉 Plan your visit today: https://tucsonpresidio.com
📍 Located in the heart of downtown Tucson
🎟️ Open to the public with Living History Days and special tours throughout the year
Let’s make sure Tucson’s next 250 years are just as vibrant. Support the museum, bring a friend, or better yet volunteer and become a part of the story yourself.
Transcript (Unedited)
Tom Heath
Good morning. It’s, beautiful Sunday in the Old Pueblo. And you’re listening to Katy Tucson. Thank you for spending a part of your brunch hour with us on your downtown Tucson community. Sponsored, all volunteer powered rock and roll radio station. This week, we’re closing out Tucson’s 250th birthday month with a look back at our seventh episode from November of 2017.
Tom Heath
And that show we interviewed Rick Collins about the Presidio Saint Augustine at Built Tucson Museum. And since the city of Tucson was founded in 1775 with the establishment of the Presidio, kind of felt it was fitting to celebrate the milestone by revisiting that conversation and reflecting on our Spanish roots. Today is August 31st, 2025. My name is Tom Heath and this is life along the streetcar.
Tom Heath
Every Sunday we shine a light on social, cultural and economic forces shaping Tucson’s urban core, from a man to the University of Arizona and all stops in between. You get the inside track right here on 99.1 FM streaming on downtown radio.org. Also available on your iPhone or Android with our Downtown Radio Tucson app to connect with us directly about the show.
Tom Heath
Follow a lifelong Love Streetcar on Facebook and Instagram, or head to life along the streetcar.org, where most episodes are posted with audio and video, and you’re going to find past episodes in our book and an easy way to reach out. Well, last week on the 23rd, we were at the Presidio Museum celebrating the 250th birthday, which technically for the city of Tucson is August 20th of 1735, when Hugo O’Connor, the red headed Irishman, decided this is where the Spanish were going to put their fort and the Presidio became the city of Tucson.
Tom Heath
That’s our birthday. Now we know there’s thousands of years before that, and we’ve talked about that on the show. We’ll continue to do so. But at this particular celebration, we were there with Show Source Studios. James Portis and I were out helping to record stories of people asking them about their favorite Tucson memories, or where they see Tucson in 50 years.
Tom Heath
Places to go in Tucson, really. One minute interviews. It’s a project we’re working on with Show Source Studios called Tell Me About It, and we hope to do that at other events and put together a little fabric of Tucson over the next couple of years as we’re building out these, these little snippets. They were fun to do and some really interesting responses.
Tom Heath
People very creative when you give them a minute to answer a question. And while we’re there, I was thinking, you know, we haven’t really featured the, museum recently. So we came back to this, episode. We did back in 2017 with Rick. And not only is it fun, to talk to hear this interview from Rick Collins, but it was also fun because we captured part of the Living History days.
Tom Heath
In fact, in the first segment, a little spoiler alert or a little trigger warning, they’re going to fire off the cannons. So you’re going to hear the cannon explosion there. In the first segment here in our interview with Rick Collins. But it reminded me, you know, not only was this a historical for the, the Presidio and it’s also historical for the show because we did our interviews differently back then, you’ll hear you’re not going to hear me questioning.
Tom Heath
It’s not a conversation. It was just, an interview that I did with Rick. And then we edited it together, with the background and the excitement and the hustle and bustle, and, you’ll hear trains in the background. And the blacksmith is really a, a fun interview that we did. And, again, back from November of 2017 about the, the Presidio, Saint Augustine of Tucson and, Rick Collins was our guest.
Speaker 1
And yes.
Rick Collins
The museum’s been open since 2007 and is my recollection. And I remember it opened in May. So it was very hot. And it’s it’s been a really, really wonderful success. The North, east corner of the Presidio has been rebuilt on the original ground where the Presidio stood. And in fact, the whole presidio is marked. If you go downtown, then you can walk around.
Rick Collins
So the Presidio neighborhood is a very old section of Tucson. In fact, Tucson Museum of Art, actually has a building called the Catholic Quarter about House that is considered the oldest building in Tucson, dating to the 18 parts of it dating to the 1850s. Old town artisans across the street is a very old building with a traditional open courtyard.
Rick Collins
And of course, the duplex that we have on the corner, which we hope to restore and eventually make a museum, is actually dates to the late 1890s. And then, the row house, like I said, it dates to about 1866 or so. And of course, the Presidio was moved into about 1776. There is dirt from the original presidio inside those walls.
Rick Collins
So it really is does have the soul of where Tucson’s European birthplace at least started. There’s also, the Hakimi House, which is 7 or 18 60s and 70s, Sonoran rowhouse, a perfect representation, and that encloses a museum. And so we’re a living history museum, meaning living history activities take place. So we’re representative of those people, but we don’t stop at the Spanish colonial part.
Rick Collins
We actually are building a Mexican contingent so that we can do the Mexican period. And then, of course, we do the American period, which includes life from after from 1856 when Americans first got here, and we call it until 1912, when we got statehood. That’s kind of our cutoff of interpretation. Part of the Presidio is to interpret the 2000 year old history of this place, when it was just the Native Americans living in a pretty primitive way.
Rick Collins
And what happens beyond that point? Oh, yeah, the second settlers in a month, we actually we’ll do a living history program. We have civilians, doing all kinds of things civilians would do from making tortillas to, making Adobe to to whatever, that kind of thing. We have blacksmiths. Our blacksmith program has turned out to be a premier program.
Rick Collins
We built the forge, a Spanish forge for these guys, and it’s one of the most popular things that happen. They make nails and hand them to kids. They’ll make. They make parts for us. So if we need hooks, if we need if we need, tools for cooking, the blacksmith actually can make them for us in they’re made correctly.
Rick Collins
I’m, part of the internship program, too. And I’m part of the garrison. We call her the Tucson Garrison. And we do. Generally, we do Spanish colonial soldiers. We’re doing drill, and we’re doing interpretation of what we call junk on the bunk, what they actually use. And daily lives. And being a soldier would be pretty tough. But hey, it’s two squares a day and a new set of clothes once a year.
Rick Collins
One of the one of the most exciting things and one of the most sought after things by the public that we do at the Presidio is fire the cannon. We have a 4 pound florins howitzer, which is a reproduction on what was at the Presidio. Optics done. We load that, gun up and shoot her excellent monopole, just love.
Speaker 1
Which is a, freaking swab to make sure there’s no burning embers or anything from the previous shot before it’s clean. I talk, the artillery captain hands the cartridge. I inspect it to make sure it’s okay. It’s. They loaded in, but I’m using the opposite end of Leonardo. They. It’s firmly rooted to the back of the muzzle. They then use a needle to pierce the cartridge.
Speaker 1
Very important job. It has to be properly on. That exposes the powder in the cartridge. And then take a small amount of loose black powder and then pour it down the charging hole. That is what they actually light, which will in turn light the cartridge inside. There you cover up with its have to make sure that none of the black powder blows away.
Speaker 1
Well. And grabs the fuze in place, but he blows on it to make sure that it is well lit. We’re going to go on the air covering our ears.
Rick Collins
What was really neat about interpreting the Spanish colonial aspect is that no one knows about it, that the Easterners don’t learn about this in school. We don’t learn about this in school, but here we are talking about something that people don’t know, which is the most important part of our heritage, or a, a most important part of our heritage was the I mean, did you know that Coronado and the Soto’s expedition were 300 miles apart at the same time?
Rick Collins
Had they just gone that 300 miles away? Be you speaking Spanish right now? The country would have been connected.
Tom Heath
I think we are, listening to an interview recorded back in 2017, with Rick Collins, talking about the Presidio, San Agustin, the Tucson as we wrap up the month of August, which is Tucson’s official birthday month, going back to August 20th of 1775. It was, again, fun to hear some of the living history days in the background.
Tom Heath
We’re going to be back to the second half of that interview in just a couple of minutes. But first, I want to remind you that you’re listening to lifelong the Streetcar downtown radio wear 99.1 FM or streaming on downtown radio.org.
James Portis
This podcast is sponsored by Tom Heath and the team. Another home loans. If you’ve enjoyed this podcast, continue listening or head over to life on the Street Khou.com for current events and information on what to do while visiting Tucson. Tom Heath and MLS number 182420 Nova and MLS number 3087, UK number 0902429. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Tom Heath
If you are just joining us, we have gone back into the annals of time here where or, rebroadcasting an interview from 2017, November of 2017 or talking to Rick Collins. He’s a volunteer who participates in the living history days and dresses in the full authentic Spanish uniforms, wool, heavy uniforms. And they demonstrate life as the Spanish would have experienced it in 1775.
Tom Heath
Not only sold your life, but we also heard in the first segment there they were replicating civilian life. There was a blacksmith and, as part of the, Living History days, they fire off that cannon, which, if you know anything about my history, with life on the streetcar, that cannon fire was what first got me intrigued about, the things in our community that I wanted to learn more about so that that cannon was, a wake up call to me to explore.
Tom Heath
And it started with that cannon. But it’s it’s led into all of this, exciting things that we’re doing here. So we’re going to finish up the second half of the interview with, Rick Collins. And again, it’s from 2017, and the style’s a little bit different. We, we did our shows a little bit differently. Then it was more of an interview.
Tom Heath
And then the interview was edited for the air. So less of the conversational style. But still really good information. Rick Collins from 2017.
Rick Collins
One of the most fun aspects that we do is we do a program called Freddie at the Fort, where schools actually bring their classes out and they do a living history skills day. So they actually learn to be a soldier. They learn to make their own tortillas, they learn about food. We actually have the new tin smithing instead of foraging, obviously.
Rick Collins
They’ll learn chores, which, by the way, if they don’t get to do a chore they complain about, which is really interesting, but so they really get an exposure to what what it would have been like. And one of the most fun things is here in Tucson, a lot of these people can connect to people that were in the Presidio.
Rick Collins
And so these kids are descendants of Presidio soldiers or Presidio families, and they see what their family was about. They see where they came from and at this point, we do have yeah, we have a small museum, and it does contain actual relics found on the property. And the goal, the current goal is to start building a, an exhibit which will take you through time and show you all aspects of all cultures that were involved in the Presidio.
Rick Collins
And it’s going to take some money and some funding and some time and probably but we’ll do it. When the Presidio was being rebuilt, they found walls. They found three pit houses where the prehistoric people lived. One of the clever things that was done in the rebuilding of the Presidio is even though it had to be offset because of modern construction standards, they were clever enough to mark the original wall where it existed.
Rick Collins
So you can actually go, oh, here’s here’s exactly where it was. And if you look at the Tucson Presidio in that northeast corner, you are standing where all of our past has stood at one time before. It’s so rich. One of the wonderful things about the Presidio is we’ve managed to make a thematic gift shop. So it’s not knickknacks.
Rick Collins
And it’s actually things. From there, you can buy, tobacco canteens. And while nobody smokes anymore, you can still collect it like you would a native pot. You’ve got blacksmithing things, items that the blacksmiths made right there on the spot. And we’re trying to get more of it. And it’s neat, too, because you can actually buy, brandy cups that the soldiers would, that the soldiers who are doing interpretation actually carry.
Rick Collins
So there’s all these kind of items and people like that, and they pick it up. So there’s a little staff, the executive director is part time, and then there a couple people get paid a little bit to, to help out, but overall it’s a volunteer effort. It’s it takes a lot of volunteers. Obviously, a lot of the volunteers are retired because that’s the volunteer population.
Rick Collins
But we have a surprising amount of people who who are from the community. We’ve got an engineers from Raytheon, we’ve got, Key West, new security, you’ve got people who were in the Navy, you’ve got people who were in the Army, you’ve got people who’ve been in medical television, just from a hundred different angles. People come, but they have one thing.
Rick Collins
It’s that they’re interested in and they’re interested in history. And the second thing is they’re interested in preserving the community’s history.
Speaker 1
Game exhibit? There’s still some tortillas and bread left. I think we have the food exhibit. We have our musicians playing music from the period down to my left. We have, in the courtyard, we have the buffalo Soldier exhibit.
Rick Collins
And one of the big issues. And the museum has what we really need, the support of the community to keep the Presidio open. And, you know, personally, I consider it involved so much of our community’s history. It would be a shame to ever see it go away. It’s interesting when we talk about community involvement and everything, it’s interesting we get Easterners by the truckloads during the wintertime.
Rick Collins
And the joke, the inside joke we have is we’re the best kept secret in Tucson. I’m on Tucson’s. Normally we don’t see a lot of people from Tucson here, and they don’t tend to come downtown quite yet. They still, and I just think Tucson is aren’t aware of it for whatever reason. And we’re trying to involve the Mexican-American community more.
Rick Collins
And I think we’re doing a good job with that. We’re trying to, and, have more Native American representation in programing. We’re trying concerts. We’re trying a lot of different items to get more people to come in and do something grow a bigger, better, more inclusive audience. It’s always got activities. There’s the living history. The second Saturday, the, the Friday at the For Kids programs over Thanksgiving weekend.
Rick Collins
We’re having blacksmiths for two days doing interpretation there. We have individual interpreters who show up on various days, and you have to check the calendar to find those out. We also do the Turquoise Trail tours. So we actually take you downtown on a tour. And we have other little, a little that we give about downtown history and Presidio history.
Speaker 1
I love the smell of black powder in the afternoon. If you have any questions about what you saw, please do not hesitate to ask. That was our final cannon firing of the day. We.
Tom Heath
Well, that was a fun interview we did with Rick Collins in November of 2017, talking about his role as the live in the Living History Days. He does things all over Arizona, not just at the, Presidio Saint Augustine, but, recreations and history and storytelling across southern Arizona. Fun. A look also at how we used to do our shows back in the day.
Tom Heath
No, I wasn’t in a studio. We did. We did that interview at Living History Day, so we got the, elements behind us. That was a fun, fun, experience and a lot of activity for us to, to put it into that interview. Had fun making it. And honestly, I haven’t listened to that in so long.
Tom Heath
Probably like three years since we brought that interview out, to even listen to. So it was really fun for me to go back and and explore that. So thanks for hanging with me as we took a look at Tucson’s history through the eyes of life, along the streetcar. Well, enough about that. You are listening to life on a streetcar in downtown radio 99.1 FM and or streaming on downtown radio.
James Portis
Dot org support for downtown radio is provided by the Tucson Gallery, located in downtown Tucson. Instead of the proper shops at attended East County Street, the Tucson Gallery offers original work, reproductions, and merchandise from Tucson artists like Joe Pejic, Jessica Gonzalez, Ignacio Garcia, and many more. For information about other artists, including when they will be live at the Gallery, head to the Tucson gallery.com or find them on Instagram and Facebook as Tucson Gallery.
Tom Heath
All right, welcome back. We are coming to the tail end here of, our episode 354. And as we wrap up August in the year of 2025, I think I have to start saying the dates now because, eight years into this, we’ve got so much, material, we can go back and, have fun. Fun, what I call blasts from the past.
Tom Heath
I think that’s a little bit of a pun because of the cannon, but I wanted to call the show blast from the past, celebrating Tucson’s history as a city and celebrating really, our our time on the air with life along the streetcar. Well, coming up in just a few minutes, we’ve got Ted Brazile ski with words and work.
Tom Heath
So you don’t want to go anywhere because he’s going to talk to writers and others from the labor movement. And, next week on life Along the Streetcar, we’ve got a brand new episode with a guest host, Amanda Moore. Later, she is back. She did such a fabulous job and, the topic just spoke to her and sort of, took over and just called to her, and, she’s like, Tom, I need to do this interview.
Tom Heath
And she’s going to be interviewing Sally McGuinness and talking about Tucson’s haunted history, as Sally does the, some of the really good, ghost tours, around the downtown area. So coming into the fall, giving you time to plan ahead for October. And we reached out like, oh, we got to have this. We haven’t had this on the show in a year.
Tom Heath
So, Amanda reached out and then after talk with him was like, kidding. I got to do this interview. Like, absolutely. So another guest host appearance for Amanda. That’ll be next week. On life along the Street car. And two thoughts here that came up. One is if you’ve got topics that you want us to cover, you know, we mentioned this at the end of many of our shows.
Tom Heath
Just reach out to us. We Instagram is, doing well for us, Facebook social media. And you know, it’s ways for people to connect with us. And then on our website life along the street car.org, there’s a button on there. It says contact us and you can email us contact at Life Wall Street Car Talk so you can get Ahold of us.
Tom Heath
It’s not hard. And share the stories, you know, tag us and things. Let us know what we should be covering. We’re really starting to get more and more shows that come from you, and that makes our job, easier and entertaining because we we get to learn things that we don’t know about. So, please keep that happening.
Tom Heath
But this guest host thing. Right. If you want to try it out, if you think, hey, I, I would be a good host for a podcast and maybe you don’t want to do your own podcast. Yeah. You want to see how it goes, but you’ve got an interesting guest that would fit in this urban core setting from around the University of Arizona.
Tom Heath
Hit us up. Maybe you could do the show. We’ll just produce it for you, and we’ll do a whole series of of life along the street car with guest host, I mean, Brittany Battle. Last week, her interview with Ricky Hundley, she just knocked it out of the park I can’t wait. She’s going to her own podcast.
Tom Heath
She’s got to. She’s just so good. And Amanda is just doing really well. She has her own podcast, Amanda’s archives. So, she’s just, expanding her reach a little bit by moving into lifelong street car. But it’s it’s a chance if you want to do it. We’re we’re open to it. James and and I will help produce it.
Tom Heath
And, Amanda, it will help, if need be, and coordinating with the guests. But, yeah, we we got a little support here for you. I’ll make this a real community effort. No. No circus. What else want to talk about? Oh, yeah. This this downtown radio thing. You know, I’m celebrating eight years. I’m all excited. But downtown radio month of September, we’re turning ten as a radio station.
Tom Heath
Ten years of nonprofit. Pretty much that whole time. There’s been some staff here and there. But for for the the recent, most recent memory, it’s been all volunteer run. And that’s fantastic. And I, I challenge you on some of these shows where we’ve got a little bit of time at the end. I always like to talk about things that are on the, on the horizon for Downtown Radio or some of these really cool shows and invite you to go to Downtown radio.org to check out the whole lineup, maybe listen to some music that you’re not as familiar with.
Tom Heath
And while you’re there, maybe celebrate our ten year anniversary by clicking the, the donate button because we are volunteer run, which means money goes to equipment maintenance bills, things of that nature doesn’t go, to people. So encourage you if you’ve got the ability to do so. Maybe make a small donation there.
Tom Heath
Or large one. That’s that’s cool too. But I also thought sometimes at the end of the show, we’ve got time, to talk about the cool music and the cool hosts. And when we do that, I keep, you know, I say, go to the go to the website, check it out and find something. Well, I’m going to start telling you some stuff that I’m learning or things that I’m excited about, and dive in a little bit more deeper into some of these shows.
Tom Heath
To give you a little preview, this is like a very super, super mini condensed version of, the Club Crawl. You know, brother Mark puts out that show where he shows all of the bands that are coming to Tucson during the week, and he plays a little music snippets, little a couple songs from them, so you can get a feel for what’s going to be at the show, and maybe you want to go out and see some live music.
Tom Heath
Well, I’m going to talk a little bit about some of these show host and these these deejays, and see if I can’t get you to tune in to their show and learn a little something about music from them. And I, you know, I’m not going in any specific order except today. I’m super excited because I just found out that Ivan is back.
Tom Heath
Ivan Smith, he is. He’s got this golden radio voice. He’s a professional athlete. He’s like, had he’s been on air in outlets, like he’s done the real gig and he’s here in Tucson volunteering. And he had some fantastic shows from 2019 to 2021. He was really instrumental in getting us through that time during Covid. It’s been a ton of time in the studio making things happen.
Tom Heath
And, the others as well. But he was very instrumental in helping with that. And, they took a break, but he is back and I just found this out. So he is on Saturdays, Saturday mornings, at 9 a.m.. So you missed him yesterday, but you can catch him next week. And, it’s it’s his, his way.
Tom Heath
It’s it’s like that morning show, but with rock music, that Saturday morning field with rock music. So it’s, as he says on his on his page, it’s tagged as bubblegum punk, glam, glitter, new wave and power pop. But he, describes it the best. He said it’s, it’s like a giant bowl of sugary cereal for the soul.
Tom Heath
Power pop, pop punk, new wave, glam guitar, bubble gum, pop rock, pop punk. Oh my gosh, that’s so hard to say. I mean, the show is about cartoons as much as it is about fun and Oasis from all the cruddy stuff happening outside. And, I’m so excited to have Ivan back on Downtown Radio. You can’t miss him.
Tom Heath
Please check him out. And then, maybe next week we’ll we’ll chat about a different, a different, DJ and what they bring to the mix. Well, thanks again for joining us here. I want to remind you that James Portis is our executive producer. Amanda Maltose is our associate producer, and I’m Tom Heath, your host. Opening music is, by Ryan Hood.
Tom Heath
And they’re going to close today with the Rick from a 2025 single, the perfect title for today’s show, Cannon and History. It’s called The song is called blast from the past. I hope you have a great week and join us next Sunday for more life along the streetcar.
