Apicius (took the last name Wood in 1916)(d. ca. 1925) was the proprietor of The Kentucky Smoke House, a barbecue restaurant in Covington, Kentucky, which was patronized by both the white and black community. He was also the head of the Marxist underground in Covington, and thus was involved in a three-way fight among the Marxists, the Confederate underground (led by Tom Kennedy), and the Kentucky State Police led by Luther Bliss.
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| - Apicius (took the last name Wood in 1916)(d. ca. 1925) was the proprietor of The Kentucky Smoke House, a barbecue restaurant in Covington, Kentucky, which was patronized by both the white and black community. He was also the head of the Marxist underground in Covington, and thus was involved in a three-way fight among the Marxists, the Confederate underground (led by Tom Kennedy), and the Kentucky State Police led by Luther Bliss.
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- American Front
- Blood and Iron
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| - Confederate States before 1916;
- United States after 1916
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abstract
| - Apicius (took the last name Wood in 1916)(d. ca. 1925) was the proprietor of The Kentucky Smoke House, a barbecue restaurant in Covington, Kentucky, which was patronized by both the white and black community. He was also the head of the Marxist underground in Covington, and thus was involved in a three-way fight among the Marxists, the Confederate underground (led by Tom Kennedy), and the Kentucky State Police led by Luther Bliss. He adopted the surname "Wood" when blacks were allowed to take surnames in 1916 during the short period of U.S. rule, because "you can't make good barbecue without good wood." His son, Lucullus Wood continued to run the barbecue and the Marxist underground during the Second Great War after Apicius Wood's death.
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