Tuesday, September 27, 2011
800-mile journey honors family patriot
From Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel: 800-mile journey honors family patriot
Jeremy Morris made an 800-mile road trip with his wife and baby daughter from near Roanoke, Va., to Racine County - all in the name of family history.
Morris came north to see the dedication of a historical marker Saturday for his ancestor Maj. Andrew Lytle Jr., who fought in the Revolutionary War.
He borrowed a replica uniform from a friend and unintentionally became part of the color guard during the ceremony held at United Presbyterian Cemetery near Union Grove. He said he was humbled to attend.
"To me it's all about patriotism," said Morris, 30. "Knowing that my great-great-great-great-great-grandfather fought for our freedom - that's where I draw my source of patriotism for this country."
The Wisconsin Society, Sons of the American Revolution organized the dedication of Lytle's historical marker, which now stands at the cemetery's entrance.
Brian McManus, a member of the Sons of the American Revolution, said the event marked the culmination of the Wisconsin chapter's efforts to place a plaque in the cemetery of every known Revolutionary War veteran buried in the state.
That endeavor, which began in the 1970s, has now recognized all 40 veterans who've been identified and documented. The number of veterans from that war is low because Wisconsin didn't become a territory until after the American Revolution.
"I can only imagine the sacrifices that all of these veterans made for our freedom today," McManus said. "These markers are kind of like a beacon to travelers."
Along with Morris, several dozen descendants of Lytle were on hand Saturday morning to recognize their forebear. One of them, Jeff Minton of Somers, has researched Lytle's life in recent years.
Lytle was born in Ireland in 1762, immigrated to Pennsylvania and then moved to New York, where he served as a major in the New York militia.
Lytle's father and brother also served in the Revolutionary War.
His son, Adams, who is buried next to him, fought in the Mexican-American War, and three of his grandsons served in the Civil War, Minton said.
Lytle moved to Wisconsin in 1838 and became a farmer. Minton said that Lytle refashioned his battle sword into a pruning hook for apple trees on his farm. Lytle died in 1855 at the age of 93 and was buried at the quiet cemetery in the Town of Yorkville.
As puffy clouds floated over Lytle's grave marker 156 years later, Ed Pierog reflected on the day.
"I think it's just a patriotic thing to do," said Pierog, of West Bend, a member of the Sons of the American Revolution. "It's important to recognize the sacrifices these men made for our country."
Water balloon revolution
From the Georgia Daily: Water balloon revolution
The American Revolution made its way to campus on Saturday morning in an unusual reenactment of the historic war.
Assistant history professor Solomon Smith and his class reenacted the war with a game of capture the flag.
Students from Smith’s American Revolution class got an early start Saturday at about 10:15 a.m. Stationed in front of the Newton Building, each team took off in pursuit of the other team’s flag.
“It’s the most effective assignment I’ve created yet,” said Smith.
Smith got the inspiration for the educational game from a friend of his who works as a professor at Appalachian State University.
The students from App State responded very well to this game, so Smith decided that it would be beneficial to his students as well.
This project was a learning experience for a majority of the people involved.
Junior Victoria Crane, history major said it helped her to realize what the revolution was really like.
Capture the flag is a game in which there are two teams and two flags placed in two obvious stations. It is the objective of each team to capture the other team’s flag and win.
The interesting thing about this particular battle was the sight of students pelting each other with water balloons. If a team member were to get hit with a water balloon, then they were considered automatically dead.
“I wanted students to get an overall experience of the chaos that happens during a battle like this,” said Smith.
Contrary to the actual war that lasted for eight years, this game lasted for about 15 minutes, but some students claimed it felt like it lasted an hour.
Team One, technically known as the Americans, won the game while the British were defeated.
Smith’s purpose for this assignment was to get students to experience the basic concepts of an army battle that were used during the American Revolution.
“Students get a chance to learn how to be historians,” said Smith.
The students have been preparing a collection of documents about themselves and their thoughts before the battle.
Now, they must finish up by writing about their overall experience and history of the revolution.
The American Revolution made its way to campus on Saturday morning in an unusual reenactment of the historic war.
Assistant history professor Solomon Smith and his class reenacted the war with a game of capture the flag.
Students from Smith’s American Revolution class got an early start Saturday at about 10:15 a.m. Stationed in front of the Newton Building, each team took off in pursuit of the other team’s flag.
“It’s the most effective assignment I’ve created yet,” said Smith.
Smith got the inspiration for the educational game from a friend of his who works as a professor at Appalachian State University.
The students from App State responded very well to this game, so Smith decided that it would be beneficial to his students as well.
This project was a learning experience for a majority of the people involved.
Junior Victoria Crane, history major said it helped her to realize what the revolution was really like.
Capture the flag is a game in which there are two teams and two flags placed in two obvious stations. It is the objective of each team to capture the other team’s flag and win.
The interesting thing about this particular battle was the sight of students pelting each other with water balloons. If a team member were to get hit with a water balloon, then they were considered automatically dead.
“I wanted students to get an overall experience of the chaos that happens during a battle like this,” said Smith.
Contrary to the actual war that lasted for eight years, this game lasted for about 15 minutes, but some students claimed it felt like it lasted an hour.
Team One, technically known as the Americans, won the game while the British were defeated.
Smith’s purpose for this assignment was to get students to experience the basic concepts of an army battle that were used during the American Revolution.
“Students get a chance to learn how to be historians,” said Smith.
The students have been preparing a collection of documents about themselves and their thoughts before the battle.
Now, they must finish up by writing about their overall experience and history of the revolution.
Monday, September 26, 2011
New Jersey: Washington Crossing State Park center has Revolutionary War-era guns, artifacts stolen during hurricane power outage
From NJ.com: Washington Crossing State Park center has Revolutionary War-era guns, artifacts stolen during hurricane power outage
HOPEWELL TOWNSHIP — Two local teens used the recent post-hurricane power outage to break into the visitors center at Washington Crossing State Park and steal more than a dozen American Revolutionary War weapons and other historic artifacts, state officials confirmed yesterday.
Timothy Davis-Napier, 18 of Wilfrid Avenue and a 17-year-old juvenile, whose name was not released, were charged with burglary and theft in the Aug. 30 break-in at the park. All of the items have been recovered, officials said.
The pair gained entry into the visitor center while the alarm system was down because of the power outages that plagued the region after Hurricane Irene, state police said.
“I don’t know how they found out that the system was compromised but somehow they ended up over there and broke in,” said State Police acting Captain Frank Davis. “They took various pieces from within the museum.”
Stolen were eight flintlock pistols, eight knives and other items from the renowned Swan Collection of the American Revolution, which is on long-term loan to the museum, said Larry Hajna, a spokesman for the state Department of Environmental Protection, which oversees state parks.
He could not estimate the value of the stolen items.
“They’re important artifacts from the American Revolution, Hajna said. “They’re our heritage. It would have been a big loss but fortunately, the items were recovered.”
The collection is owned by 82-year-old Harry Kels Swan, a Somerset resident who once worked in the museum and continues to visit regularly. Started in 1795 by Swan’s great, great grandfather, the collection has been passed down through 18 generations of the Swan family. It now contains more than nearly 900 authentic Revolutionary War-period items, including muskets, side arms, swords, clothing and maps.
Park police discovered the burglary during a morning check of the museum on Aug. 30, Davis said. Working closely with Hopewell Township Police, state police arrested Napier and the 17-year-old the following day. Two other juveniles were allegedly involved in the heist but not charged, according to a source close to the investigation.
The artifacts were recovered in the woods behind the home of one of the four individuals, the source said.
Hajna said the state is seeking to try the 17-year-old in adult court.
According to police records published online, Davis-Napier was arrested by Hopewell Township Police in August and charged with underage drinking.
We the People
From Herald Gazette: We the People
We are in the middle of Constitution Week, and it is a great time study and discuss one of the bedrock documents of the United States.
The Daughters of the American Revolution originally petitioned for a Constitution Week to promote the study and education of the Constitution. Presidents Dwight Eisenhower and George W. Bush both took actions to make the week official.
Our lives are affected every day by the Constitution when we exercise freedom of religion, the right to keep and bear arms, enjoy freedom of speech, are secure from unreasonable searches and seizures, and vote. But the week of Sept. 17 to Sept. 23 is a dedicated time of reflection.
“The United States of America functions as a Republic under the Constitution, which is the oldest document still in active use that outlines the self-government of a people,” notes the Daughters of the American Revolution. “This landmark idea that men had the inalienable right as individuals to be free and live their lives under their own governance was the impetus of the American Revolution. Today, the Constitution stands as an icon of freedom for people around the world.”
Several websites offer Constitution Week quizzes. We invite readers to check out constitutionfacts.com to test their knowledge.
Here are a few sample quiz questions:
Invoking the Fifth Amendment means an accused man:
A — Refuses to testify against himself.
B — Refuses to be tried again
C — Demands a grand jury.
D — Wants to appeal his case.
The answer is A. "No person shall... be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation."
Prior to the ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920, what was true?
A — Women did not have the right to vote for president.
B — Women in certain states had the right to vote for president.
C — All women had the right to vote for president.
D — Women married to landowners had the right to vote for president.
The answer is B. Women in certain states had the right to vote for president. Arizona, Alaska, Oregon and California had given women the right to vote before 1920.
The Constitution enumerates our rights, but if we want to fully exercise them and challenge those who would infringe upon them, we must take refresher courses and remember:
“We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”
Sunday, September 25, 2011
West Virginia: Festival starts with dedication
This story is several days old, but I thought it was worth sharing.
From the Journal-News.com: Festival starts with dedication
CHARLES TOWN - A Washington family descendent, local politicians, residents and more than 100 schoolchildren were present for two events that kicked off the Charles Town Heritage Festival Friday morning.
The day started with a wreath-laying ceremony at the grave of Charles Washington, who was an American colonel in the American Revolution, was George Washington's half-brother and also was the founder of Charles Town. Friday's event was in commemoration of the 212th anniversary of his death.
This was the first time there has been a wreath-laying event by the town because the property has only been in Charles Town's possession for about a year, said Mayor Peggy Smith.
Charles Town is celebrating its 225th anniversary this weekend, and the wreath ceremony was an appropriate way to start the festival, Smith said.
"We felt that it was only fitting to start this celebration by honoring the founder of our city, Col. Charles Washington," she said.
Smith and Walter Washington, a direct descendent of the Washington family, later dedicated a freshly planted American elm tree at Jefferson Memorial Park.
They also spoke to schoolchildren about the Washington family in Jefferson County and the history of the American elm tree.
George Washington came through when he was a teenager as part of a survey team, and the Washington family later established themselves in the local area, Walter Washington said.
"He was so impressed by the land here and how fertile it was and how much water there was that he encouraged his brothers to start buying land here," he said.
"It's great that everyone recognizes the heritage here," he added after the tree dedication. "We have so much history in the county, it's wonderful to celebrate it."
In dedicating the tree, Smith said the Liberty Tree was a famous elm tree in Boston before the American Revolution started, and it served as a rallying point for colonists.
"Let this be our Liberty Tree," Smith told the crowd at Jefferson Memorial Park.
The Charles Town Heritage Festival will continue today and Sunday, and a schedule of events can be found at www.historiccharlestownwv.com.
From the Journal-News.com: Festival starts with dedication
CHARLES TOWN - A Washington family descendent, local politicians, residents and more than 100 schoolchildren were present for two events that kicked off the Charles Town Heritage Festival Friday morning.
The day started with a wreath-laying ceremony at the grave of Charles Washington, who was an American colonel in the American Revolution, was George Washington's half-brother and also was the founder of Charles Town. Friday's event was in commemoration of the 212th anniversary of his death.
This was the first time there has been a wreath-laying event by the town because the property has only been in Charles Town's possession for about a year, said Mayor Peggy Smith.
Charles Town is celebrating its 225th anniversary this weekend, and the wreath ceremony was an appropriate way to start the festival, Smith said.
"We felt that it was only fitting to start this celebration by honoring the founder of our city, Col. Charles Washington," she said.
Smith and Walter Washington, a direct descendent of the Washington family, later dedicated a freshly planted American elm tree at Jefferson Memorial Park.
They also spoke to schoolchildren about the Washington family in Jefferson County and the history of the American elm tree.
George Washington came through when he was a teenager as part of a survey team, and the Washington family later established themselves in the local area, Walter Washington said.
"He was so impressed by the land here and how fertile it was and how much water there was that he encouraged his brothers to start buying land here," he said.
"It's great that everyone recognizes the heritage here," he added after the tree dedication. "We have so much history in the county, it's wonderful to celebrate it."
In dedicating the tree, Smith said the Liberty Tree was a famous elm tree in Boston before the American Revolution started, and it served as a rallying point for colonists.
"Let this be our Liberty Tree," Smith told the crowd at Jefferson Memorial Park.
The Charles Town Heritage Festival will continue today and Sunday, and a schedule of events can be found at www.historiccharlestownwv.com.
Group uncovers soldier’s grave: Benoni Goldsmith
From News and Sentinel.com: Group uncovers soldier’s grave: Benoni Goldsmith
FEARING TWP. - The local Sons of the American Revolution chapter is working to make sure the grave site of a Revolutionary War soldier doesn't have to be rediscovered again.
The final resting place of Benoni Goldsmith was recorded by local historian and author Owen Hawley in 1971. But when two members of the SAR's Marietta chapter attempted to find it this summer on the Fearing Township farm of David Spindler, they were initially unsuccessful.
"We spent all afternoon ... probing around and we couldn't locate it," said David White, vice president of the chapter.White and Jean Yost, chapter president, knew from Hawley's account that Goldsmith's marker and two others had been located on a point in the field but the landmark used was a large elm tree that was no longer there. It was Dean Zimmer, who lives nearby, that recalled the general spot overlooking Duck Creek where the markers had once stood, they said.
Plunging pointed sticks into the ground, White and Yost located about half a dozen large pieces and several smaller fragments of the markers and unearthed them. Only a single letter, "G," was legible on one of the pieces. White said it was likely that cattle or farm equipment had knocked the stones over and then they were covered with grass. According to Hawley's account, Goldsmith's stone and his wife Angelina's stood at the site, along with a third one that was illegible. White said he expects they will be able to find more fragments in the area.
"We'll try to reap as much information here as we can," he said.
FEARING TWP. - The local Sons of the American Revolution chapter is working to make sure the grave site of a Revolutionary War soldier doesn't have to be rediscovered again.
The final resting place of Benoni Goldsmith was recorded by local historian and author Owen Hawley in 1971. But when two members of the SAR's Marietta chapter attempted to find it this summer on the Fearing Township farm of David Spindler, they were initially unsuccessful.
"We spent all afternoon ... probing around and we couldn't locate it," said David White, vice president of the chapter.White and Jean Yost, chapter president, knew from Hawley's account that Goldsmith's marker and two others had been located on a point in the field but the landmark used was a large elm tree that was no longer there. It was Dean Zimmer, who lives nearby, that recalled the general spot overlooking Duck Creek where the markers had once stood, they said.
Plunging pointed sticks into the ground, White and Yost located about half a dozen large pieces and several smaller fragments of the markers and unearthed them. Only a single letter, "G," was legible on one of the pieces. White said it was likely that cattle or farm equipment had knocked the stones over and then they were covered with grass. According to Hawley's account, Goldsmith's stone and his wife Angelina's stood at the site, along with a third one that was illegible. White said he expects they will be able to find more fragments in the area.
"We'll try to reap as much information here as we can," he said.
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Ruritans mark 30 years of lighting Yorktown Victory Monument
From the Daily Press.com, Yorktown, VA: Ruritans mark 30 years of lighting Yorktown Victory Monument
YORK—— Paying the light bill is a big commitment for the York Ruritan Club.
On Sept. 13, the group made its 30th annual payment to keep the Yorktown Victory Monument lit from dusk to dawn 365 days a year. This year's check to the Colonial National Historical Park was for $850.
The monument honors the decisive 1781 American and French Allied victory over the British in the Revolutionary War. The story behind the monument's darkness and relighting in 1981 comes from club treasurer Tom Olsavicky.
During World War II in the early 1940s, the U.S. War Department required the National Park Service to remove the light so Nazi submarines could not use it as a beacon to sink naval and merchant ships as they entered the Atlantic Ocean from Hampton Roads harbors, he said.
The monument remained dark for decades until 1981, when York Ruritans installed new, high-intensity lights and held a formal ceremony to unveil them. At that time, they started a fund to pay the electric bill each year, according to Olsavicky.
The Ruritans hold barbecue sales and other fundraisers throughout the year to fund the project.
Jim Funk, who has been with the club since 1984, said the details are passed down from older club members to younger ones. He got most of the story from a member who has since died, but said arrangements are in place to insure the payment always gets made.
"I don't think they realized what a commitment they made, but we've honored that promise and made sure when we do fundraising every year that's at the top of the budget," Funk said. "That's the largest expenditure that we make toward any community project, because we consider it an honor to have that national monument in Yorktown."
The park service keeps a separate budget line item for the amount so the Ruritans' money doesn't go elsewhere. But occasionally new employees will suggest turning off the lights at midnight as a money saver, and someone tells them it's paid for by the Ruritans, Funk said.
Dan Smith, park superintendent, said in a statement the Ruritans' effort to light the monument 30 years ago was "truly a remarkable undertaking."
"Although most residents take the monument being illuminated for granted and never give it a second thought, the lighting tremendously enhances the power of the landmark and helps create a majestic and inspiring site," Smith said. "Although the annual cost to the Ruritans has more than doubled in the past 30 years, they insist on continuing to provide this important service to the park and to the community."
The Sept. 13 annual ceremony featured several Ruritans handing a check to Smith in front of the monument, complete with a handshake and posing for photos. It's the same thing every year.
"It is a unique monument, and Yorktown is known for that particular phase of the Revolutionary War," Funk said. "That's why we think it's so important to keep it lighted."
To make a donation Checks can be made to York Ruritans and mailed c/o Jim Funk, 112 Laura Lane, Yorktown, VA, 23692.
Did you know?
Yorktown played a role in not only the American Revolution, but also the Civil War. In 1862 it was the site of the first siege operations of the Civil War. In May, 1862 Confederates abandoned Yorktown and Union troops occupied it for the remainder of the war.
YORK—— Paying the light bill is a big commitment for the York Ruritan Club.
On Sept. 13, the group made its 30th annual payment to keep the Yorktown Victory Monument lit from dusk to dawn 365 days a year. This year's check to the Colonial National Historical Park was for $850.
The monument honors the decisive 1781 American and French Allied victory over the British in the Revolutionary War. The story behind the monument's darkness and relighting in 1981 comes from club treasurer Tom Olsavicky.
During World War II in the early 1940s, the U.S. War Department required the National Park Service to remove the light so Nazi submarines could not use it as a beacon to sink naval and merchant ships as they entered the Atlantic Ocean from Hampton Roads harbors, he said.
The monument remained dark for decades until 1981, when York Ruritans installed new, high-intensity lights and held a formal ceremony to unveil them. At that time, they started a fund to pay the electric bill each year, according to Olsavicky.
The Ruritans hold barbecue sales and other fundraisers throughout the year to fund the project.
Jim Funk, who has been with the club since 1984, said the details are passed down from older club members to younger ones. He got most of the story from a member who has since died, but said arrangements are in place to insure the payment always gets made.
"I don't think they realized what a commitment they made, but we've honored that promise and made sure when we do fundraising every year that's at the top of the budget," Funk said. "That's the largest expenditure that we make toward any community project, because we consider it an honor to have that national monument in Yorktown."
The park service keeps a separate budget line item for the amount so the Ruritans' money doesn't go elsewhere. But occasionally new employees will suggest turning off the lights at midnight as a money saver, and someone tells them it's paid for by the Ruritans, Funk said.
Dan Smith, park superintendent, said in a statement the Ruritans' effort to light the monument 30 years ago was "truly a remarkable undertaking."
"Although most residents take the monument being illuminated for granted and never give it a second thought, the lighting tremendously enhances the power of the landmark and helps create a majestic and inspiring site," Smith said. "Although the annual cost to the Ruritans has more than doubled in the past 30 years, they insist on continuing to provide this important service to the park and to the community."
The Sept. 13 annual ceremony featured several Ruritans handing a check to Smith in front of the monument, complete with a handshake and posing for photos. It's the same thing every year.
"It is a unique monument, and Yorktown is known for that particular phase of the Revolutionary War," Funk said. "That's why we think it's so important to keep it lighted."
To make a donation Checks can be made to York Ruritans and mailed c/o Jim Funk, 112 Laura Lane, Yorktown, VA, 23692.
Did you know?
Yorktown played a role in not only the American Revolution, but also the Civil War. In 1862 it was the site of the first siege operations of the Civil War. In May, 1862 Confederates abandoned Yorktown and Union troops occupied it for the remainder of the war.
YourNews: DAR commemorates anniversary of signing of U.S. Constitution
From KnoxNews.com: YourNews: DAR commemorates anniversary of signing of U.S. Constitution
The Mary Blount Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Elizabeth Paxton Houston Society of the Children of the American Revolution held the sixth annual Constitution Week Bell Ringing on 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 18, on the grounds of the Blount County Courthouse near the Revolutionary War Marker.
Those in attendance brought bells to ring in the commemoration of the 224th anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution. The mayors of Blount County, Maryville and Alcoa signed a proclamation declaring Sept. 17-21 Constitution Week in Blount County.
Judy Rollins, Mary Blount Constitution Week Chairman, read the proclamation signed by the mayors, followed by Constitution highlights given by Charlotte Miller. The children in attendance led the group in reciting the Preamble to the Constitution prior to the ringing of the bells.
The Mary Blount Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Elizabeth Paxton Houston Society of the Children of the American Revolution held the sixth annual Constitution Week Bell Ringing on 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 18, on the grounds of the Blount County Courthouse near the Revolutionary War Marker.
Those in attendance brought bells to ring in the commemoration of the 224th anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution. The mayors of Blount County, Maryville and Alcoa signed a proclamation declaring Sept. 17-21 Constitution Week in Blount County.
Judy Rollins, Mary Blount Constitution Week Chairman, read the proclamation signed by the mayors, followed by Constitution highlights given by Charlotte Miller. The children in attendance led the group in reciting the Preamble to the Constitution prior to the ringing of the bells.
Friday, September 23, 2011
Graphic Heroes Of The American Revolution by Gary Jeffrey and Nick Spender
From the blog What WOuld The Founders Think: Graphic Heroes Of The American Revolution by Gary Jeffrey and Nick Spender
After reading through all of the graphic novel series, Graphic Heroes of The American Revolution, by Gary Jeffrey, I’ve noticed something they all have in common: they all seem to be the whole story of a part of the American Revolution that is often misconstrued. I am a freshman in high school currently taking an American History class, so it’s been interesting to see how these books work. Jeffrey did a great job and paid enormous attention to detail in making sure that commonly misunderstood facts were clear.
The series consisted of a book about the Boston Tea Party (reviewed earlier), Washington and Valley Forge, Paul Revere, Thomas Jefferson’s writing of the Declaration, Thomas Paine’s writing of Common Sense, and John Adams’ defense of the soldiers in the Boston Massacre. They all were in similar form to the first one I read. They each started and ended with a few pages of historical facts about what was going on at the time. My favorite was probably Paul Revere and his Midnight Ride, because of how little I knew about him, before I read the book. Of course, he’s the guy that rode the horse, “One if by land, two if by sea,” and all that, but I didn’t know much else. Who really does at my age? Jeffrey tells us the whole story and does a great job making it interesting while doing it. Revere was the one responsible for readying the colonists for the Battles of Lexington and Concord.. Really, without him, the war would have probably been much shorter and ended less favorably for the colonists. I feel like I might not have ever known that if it hadn’t been presented to me in a manner that kept me interested long enough to want to learn about it.
The books all seem to share that ability to maintain one’s interest, and it may or may not be because they are in graphic novel form. The artwork is all very accurate and vibrant, and the text is succinct enough to keep one’s attention. Although, as I said before, the typical “speech bubble” format almost seems out of place for something like this, but it fits in with the form of the books.
Each of the books focuses on a particular character whose importance in the Revolution is outlined in the novel. They provide insight into little-known (by me, anyway) topics such as the writing of Common Sense and The Declaration of Independence, and about particular people who did unexpected things, such as Washington’s survival with his troops at Valley Forge or the fact that John Adams defended the British soldiers after the Boston Massacre. Since popular history always defines John Adams as a true American patriot, it was really interesting to learn that he played a part in the defense of British soldiers. And while I always knew Washington was “the indispensable man,” I don’t know if I ever really knew all the trouble he went through with his men at Valley Forge. In addition, I never realized the influence all the Founding Fathers had on the Declaration of Independence; I always assumed that Jefferson was the only one who worked on it. To top all of this, I never knew anything about Thomas Paine other than the fact that he wrote Common Sense.
The series provides a lot of insight into all of these things, and manages to do it rather beautifully. The artwork is great, and the books end with a well-drawn, close-up of the character they focus on. These pictures are all historically accurate and portray the likeness of the men well. The books have a few different illustrators who each focus on different things. Nick Spender seems to focus more on capturing the likeness of the person and puts a lot of effort into skin tone and texture. Emanuelle Boccanfuso’s artwork looks more like the line-art of popular comics, but he does an incredible job with shading and colors, especially evident in Thomas Jefferson and the Declaration of Independence, with its different lighting tones. The last illustrator is James Field, whose work focuses a lot on the landscape and making the horses look very realistic with muscle tone and color.
Overall, I really like these books. They look very nice, they offer a lot of little-known information, while being able to maintain the attention of someone like me. I feel like I came away from this experience knowing a lot more about the people involved in the foundation of America than I did before, and how all of their actions led up to our country now. This is the way American History textbooks should be made, in my opinion.
After reading through all of the graphic novel series, Graphic Heroes of The American Revolution, by Gary Jeffrey, I’ve noticed something they all have in common: they all seem to be the whole story of a part of the American Revolution that is often misconstrued. I am a freshman in high school currently taking an American History class, so it’s been interesting to see how these books work. Jeffrey did a great job and paid enormous attention to detail in making sure that commonly misunderstood facts were clear.
The series consisted of a book about the Boston Tea Party (reviewed earlier), Washington and Valley Forge, Paul Revere, Thomas Jefferson’s writing of the Declaration, Thomas Paine’s writing of Common Sense, and John Adams’ defense of the soldiers in the Boston Massacre. They all were in similar form to the first one I read. They each started and ended with a few pages of historical facts about what was going on at the time. My favorite was probably Paul Revere and his Midnight Ride, because of how little I knew about him, before I read the book. Of course, he’s the guy that rode the horse, “One if by land, two if by sea,” and all that, but I didn’t know much else. Who really does at my age? Jeffrey tells us the whole story and does a great job making it interesting while doing it. Revere was the one responsible for readying the colonists for the Battles of Lexington and Concord.. Really, without him, the war would have probably been much shorter and ended less favorably for the colonists. I feel like I might not have ever known that if it hadn’t been presented to me in a manner that kept me interested long enough to want to learn about it.
The books all seem to share that ability to maintain one’s interest, and it may or may not be because they are in graphic novel form. The artwork is all very accurate and vibrant, and the text is succinct enough to keep one’s attention. Although, as I said before, the typical “speech bubble” format almost seems out of place for something like this, but it fits in with the form of the books.
Each of the books focuses on a particular character whose importance in the Revolution is outlined in the novel. They provide insight into little-known (by me, anyway) topics such as the writing of Common Sense and The Declaration of Independence, and about particular people who did unexpected things, such as Washington’s survival with his troops at Valley Forge or the fact that John Adams defended the British soldiers after the Boston Massacre. Since popular history always defines John Adams as a true American patriot, it was really interesting to learn that he played a part in the defense of British soldiers. And while I always knew Washington was “the indispensable man,” I don’t know if I ever really knew all the trouble he went through with his men at Valley Forge. In addition, I never realized the influence all the Founding Fathers had on the Declaration of Independence; I always assumed that Jefferson was the only one who worked on it. To top all of this, I never knew anything about Thomas Paine other than the fact that he wrote Common Sense.
The series provides a lot of insight into all of these things, and manages to do it rather beautifully. The artwork is great, and the books end with a well-drawn, close-up of the character they focus on. These pictures are all historically accurate and portray the likeness of the men well. The books have a few different illustrators who each focus on different things. Nick Spender seems to focus more on capturing the likeness of the person and puts a lot of effort into skin tone and texture. Emanuelle Boccanfuso’s artwork looks more like the line-art of popular comics, but he does an incredible job with shading and colors, especially evident in Thomas Jefferson and the Declaration of Independence, with its different lighting tones. The last illustrator is James Field, whose work focuses a lot on the landscape and making the horses look very realistic with muscle tone and color.
Overall, I really like these books. They look very nice, they offer a lot of little-known information, while being able to maintain the attention of someone like me. I feel like I came away from this experience knowing a lot more about the people involved in the foundation of America than I did before, and how all of their actions led up to our country now. This is the way American History textbooks should be made, in my opinion.
Marker honoring Admiral Farragut removed from landowner's property
A Civil War story rather than an American Revolution story, nevertheless of interest, I think, as it illustrates the danger our history faces.
From KnoxNews.com: Marker honoring Admiral Farragut removed from landowner's property
From KnoxNews.com: Marker honoring Admiral Farragut removed from landowner's property
The owner of what's widely considered to be the birthplace of noted U.S. naval figure David Farragut says she has given away a 111-year-old marker honoring the admiral.
Lylan Fitzgerald, who owns the Stony Point property off Northshore Drive, said she had no other choice but to have the marker removed.
Fitzgerald said she has had problems with vandals and trespassers, both official and unofficial, ever since a group of local historians started to discuss the historic significance of the site a few years ago. She felt compelled to act.
"It's a relief to me that it's gone," she said.
The Daughters of the American Revolution installed the stone in 1900, honoring America's first admiral amidst much fanfare.
The marker is in the hands of a historic collector who appreciates it and will take good care of it, Fitzgerald said. Rumors that the marker was moved to Texas are "a distinct possibility," she said.
West Knox County resident Margot Kline has been advocating development of a park or memorial at the site, which was deeded in 1796 to Farragut's father, Spanish immigrant and Revolutionary War veteran Jorge Farragut.
Kline said she was very disappointed to learn the monument had been moved.
"It's a big loss for our community," she said.
Kline said a friend of hers noticed the missing marker when he was boating off Stony Point on Fort Loudoun Lake in August.
The site and the marker are extremely historic, worthy of recent consideration by the National Park Service for inclusion as a National Historic Landmark, she said.
"Farragut is one of the most important military figures in the history of this country. He is known around the world." she said.
Farragut served during the Civil War. He died in August 1870 and is buried in the Bronx, New York.
At the dedication of the monument in 1900, parades were held, schools were closed and paddleboats carried visitors from Knoxville to the ceremony, attended by Admiral of the Navy George Dewey.
For at least 90 years, the public was allowed to visit the monument, possibly creating a "presumptive easement" that has since been disputed by Fitzgerald, Kline said.
Fitzgerald, who said she once tried to give the monument to the county, said historians have had over a hundred years to make proper arrangements for the preservation and display of the marker.
"They don't even have proof he was born here," she said.
TVA deeded to the county the land 50 feet above the waterline for recreational use. The length of the easement inland is about 25 feet short of where the marker stood.
The Bonny Kate chapter of the DAR recently voted to create a memorial park within the easement. The DAR is preparing to take steps to maintain public access to the park. Kline said.
An old boat ramp that could be used to access the site through a strip of land along the water has been closed due to safety issues. Fitzgerald lives on the property and controls all other access through the locked gates at the entrance to the Stony Point subdivision, Kline said.
The monument was about 4 feet tall by 3 feet wide and 2 feet thick and weighed as much as several tons, Kline said.
Kline said the DAR is very concerned about the marker and will try to establish historical ownership in order to have the memorial returned to Knox County or placed at a proper historic venue such as a museum.
New Boston DAR Celebrate 100th Anniversary
From Examinoer.com, Manchester,NH: New Boston DAR Celebrate 100th Anniversary
The New Boston Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution celebrated their 100th Anniversary in 2011 with a birthday cake for members and layers of stories they shared with the community.
The National DAR was chartered in 1890 by eighteen women who were rejected by the Sons of the American Revolution. Not to be outdone, Mrs. Mary S. Lockwood wrote a letter to the Washington Post asking “Were there no mothers of the Revolution?”
Just over 20 years later, New Boston native Florence Atwood gathered together 13 women, most of her own kin and cousins, and created the New Boston Chapter on March 11, 1911. The DAR now boasts 170,000 members in all 50 states, and eleven countries.
Membership in the organization is limited only to women over the age of 18 who can prove lineal, bloodline descent from an ancestor who aided in “achieving American Independence.” Mary Ann O’Neill, the NB Chapter Registrar, explains that, “If somebody contacts me interested and thinks they have an ancestor, I’ll go over the documentation with them. Then I’ll help them send it to the National society genealogist to either accept or reject. Every fact has to be documented.”
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Genealogy is one of the most popular hobbies in America, and the DAR find even the smallest fact captivating. The original patriots were strong and independent people who literally built a nation, and their descendants take great pride in their revolutionary history.
Heidi Pope, of the NB Chapter, states, “We are all descendants of rabble rousers!”
“It’s genetic,” says Maria Contessa. “There weren’t that many families and they all intermarried. My family, the Byrams, stretched from Cape Cod to New Jersey, Pennsylvania to Ohio, and Kansas to Iowa, California, and New Hampshire. Along the way Ebenezer Byram opened a NJ Inn that is still in operation over 270 years later! You can clearly trace our families growth with the countries growth.”
Every DAR daughter has their own family archive in Washington, DC. Janet Coughlin’s ancestors signed the Declaration of Independence, Ruth Lyon’s ancestors hail from Canada, Marie Saitz traces her DAR membership back to her Great-Grandmother, and Ruth Dussault counts 23 Revolutionary ancestors.
“The DAR is the largest women’s volunteer organization in the country”, explains Contessa. Supporting soldier’s is the primary mission, by sending care packages and supplies to deployed soldiers. They also maintain monuments and cemeteries, and Dussault proudly states that, “The DAR has a big job with immigrants being sworn in as citizens!” The Constitution Hall headquarters in D.C. features an Attic Children’s Room maintained by the NH state organization.
The 20 ladies of the New Boston chapter welcome new members and will gladly assist in researching their lineage. Many members are connected to the DAR through relatives, and many more came to the organization later in life, through a need to connect with history. If you believe you qualify for membership, please call Mary Ann O’Neill at 487-3140.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Rare painting related to American Revolution at Scottish auction
From ArtFix Daily: Rare painting related to American Revolution at Scottish auction
A rare 18th century painting with close connections to the American War of Independence will be one of the star attractions in a sale of fine art at McTear's Auctioneers in Glasgow, Scotland, this September.
The auction house has stated that the stunning work by Scottish portrait painter Allan Ramsay (1713-1784) is the only known painting of the artist’s daughter, Amelia, who was married to General Sir Archibald Campbell of Inverneil, one of the most prominent British officers in the American War of Independence.
Ramsay is considered one of the finest portrait painters of the 18th Century and the oil on canvas, which was painted circa 1770, is expected to fetch between $50k and $80k when it comes up for auction on Tuesday 27th September.
Campbell was a key figure in the War and led a successful expedition against the state of Georgia. He was also held as a prisoner of war and after correspondence between George Washington and King George III he was eventually the subject of a prisoner exchange for American Revolutionary War patriot, Ethan Allen.
Sir Archibald and Lady Amelia Campbell are buried in Poets Corner, Westminster Abbey, next to Handel's Memorial.
Commenting on the work, Brian Clements, Managing Director at McTear’s Auctioneers, said: “This painting by Allan Ramsay has not been seen in public for a very long time and bearing in mind its subject matter and close connections with the American War of Independence it is likely to attract considerable attention from both sides of the Atlantic.”
Also appearing in the McTear's sale will be a stunning work by English artist, Sir Alfred Munnings (1878 – 1959) - one of the world’s greatest equine painters and a long time favourite amongst US art collectors.
The 24 x 20 inch oil on canvas, Zennor Hill, is a classic Munnings work, featuring horse and hounds in a traditional English hunting scene. The painting has been valued at between $130k and $200k.
Munnings has enjoyed huge popularity in the United States with a number of his paintings achieving several million dollars at auction. The world record auction price for the artist was established in New York in 1999 when a collector paid almost $8 million for one of his paintings.
Brian Clements, added: “Sir Alfred Munnings is considered one of the most accomplished British artists of the 20th Century and examples of his work can be found in many of the most prestigious galleries in the world and in numerous high profile corporate and private collections. The condition of both these paintings is quite exceptional and we’ve deliberately valued them conservatively to attract maximum interest.”
Both the Sir Alfred Munnings and Allan Ramsay works were part of the estate of wealthy Scottish businessman and philanthropist, Charles Hepburn, who died in 1971.
The McTear’s Autumn Fine Paintings sale will take place in Glasgow, Scotland, UK on Tuesday 27th September at 6.00pm (UK time). Further information can be found at http://www.mctears.co.uk.
Monday, September 19, 2011
Book Review on Ethan Allen: A fuller picture of a fabled American
From Kansas City Star: A fuller picture of a fabled American
By ADAM TSCHORN
Los Angeles Times
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Ebert autobiography a charming remembrance Teen support: New books aim to help baffled parents This week's best sellers from Publishers Weekly Decemberists' Colin Meloy tunes into book world with 'Wildwood' Scott Phillips' taut and vicious vision is intact in his fourth novel A fuller picture of a fabled American A compelling narrative from an unlikely source A deeper look into the Wendy chronicles 'Train Dreams' travels terrain of American conquest The facts behind the Constitution A political sex scandal 'is a topic that is eternal,' says thriller's author The Romance Reader: 'Prey' Dazzling fiction takes cues from reality The Young Library: Boy's tale of terror is all too real Revisiting the demons of Vietnam Pelecanos returns to form with a new, ex-Marine gumshoe Hollywood notebook Nonfiction book lists are filled with real-life drama Five essential books about 9/11 NPR's top sci-fi and fantasy books "Ethan Allen: His Life and Times" by Willard Sterne Randall; W.W. Norton (619 pages, $35)
As any student of Vermont history can tell you - and the recent flood devastation in that state underscores all too well - water has played a huge role in shaping what would become the 14th state to join the Union. The Connecticut River forms Vermont's eastern border with New Hampshire, and Lake Champlain forms the majority of the state's western border with New York.
But the boundary lines of current-day Vermont were hardly the result of riparian randomness: The future state was carved out of competing colonial claims asserted by New York and New Hampshire, and if there were a single individual who was as much a force of nature as the waters themselves at shaping the Green Mountain State, most historians would agree it was Ethan Allen. The exploits of this rebel, philosopher, land speculator and early hero of the American Revolution in defense of the property interests of Vermont's earliest settlers made the lesser-known founding father a nearly saint-like figure to anyone growing up in Vermont (as I did).
Whether "Ethan Allen: His Life and Times" will change the Allen who is introduced to Vermont schoolchildren remains to be seen, but Willard Sterne Randall - a Champlain College professor and biographer of Thomas Jefferson and Benedict Arnold - takes great pains to paint a more nuanced, multidimensional (and far from flattering) portrait of Allen, intimating that he was as much of a terrorist, turncoat and narcissist as rebel patriot.
Randall is quick to acknowledge the Ethan Allen of legend, describing him as "part Davy Crockett, part Paul Bunyan and two parts Jack Daniels." His book hits on all the requisite tales of the Ethan Allen story. We're told how he represented Bennington landowners against the hated "Yorkers," organized a ragtag militia known as the Green Mountain Boys and had a crucial role in the taking of Fort Ticonderoga - which Randall calls "the first offensive military action" in U.S. history.
But the bulk of the book mines the lesser-known periods in Allen's life, and Randall paints a vivid picture of everything from what clothes Allen favored (a beaver tricorn hat would become his sartorial signature) to what the streets of Philadelphia would have looked like during Allen's first visit there. The book is subtitled "His Life and Times" for a reason.
To explain Allen's well-known contempt for authority and his attitude toward religion, Randall spends some time focusing on the forces that shaped his early years. Born in Litchfield, Conn., in 1738, Allen grew up amid a religious revival that bitterly divided towns and congregations throughout New England. His decision to get a smallpox vaccination - banned at the time - made him a pariah, a string of failed business endeavors left him strapped for cash, and Allen's move from Connecticut north to what was then known as the New Hampshire Grants was an act of desperation.
Curiously, the actual raid on Ticonderoga on May 10, 1775, is covered in just a handful of pages - many of which also involve Allen's contentious relationship with Arnold, who accompanied Allen in the assault. It's after that event that most accounts of Allen tend to fast-forward, fragment or both; some stories focus on his ill-fated raid on Montreal and capture by the British, others mention it only in passing and focus instead on his extensive land dealings and philosophical writings. Regardless of where they meander, most accounts converge around the time of Allen's death at age 51 - two years before Vermont's statehood.
But it's during this period - May 1775 to February 1789 - that Randall's book feels like it's charting territory as unexplored as the acreage that Allen and his brother Ira (who would found the University of Vermont) snapped up as part of their Onion River Land Co. The author details the way Allen was perceived in the aftermath of Ticonderoga by everyone from his Bennington contemporaries (not well) to George Washington and Thomas Jefferson (much better), and he makes a pretty strong argument that Allen's actions could just as easily have been motivated by greed, revenge or a sense of inflated self-importance.
The most notable assertion Randall makes is that Allen's treatment during, and repatriation after, 952 days as a British prisoner of war for his assault on Montreal served "as a precedent for... how to think about the troublesome intersection of prisoner-of-war negotiations and diplomatic recognition of a state or union in rebellion." So at the same time that Randall makes the mythical Ethan Allen more human, in a way it also makes him more important - even to those who don't know or care about his role in shaping Vermont.
One oft-observed fact about Allen (and one repeated in this biography) is that despite the long shadow he cast over the early chapter of Vermont's history, there were no portraits painted of him during his lifetime - and precious few afterward. What Randall has managed to do, some 222 years after Allen's death, is provide the most detailed and unvarnished, snapshot of Allen to date.
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Anderson, South Carolina: Upstate to honor Gens. Pickens and Anderson
Another article from an event that took place a couple of weeks ago. But they're going on my calendar and will be noted in good time for next year. (I'm assuming this event will take place every year.)
Upstate to honor Gens. Pickens and Anderson
The event, hosted by the General Andrew Pickens chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution, will mark the 272nd anniversary of Pickens’ birth.
A brief memorial service is planned as well as the placing of wreaths at the patriots’ graves. A color guard in Revolutionary War era dress plans to attend.
The public is invited to take part in the activities.
The Sons of the American Revolution is an educational, nonprofit organization.
Upstate to honor Gens. Pickens and Anderson
The Sons and Daughters of the American Revolution will gather Sunday to celebrate the life of Gen. Andrew Pickens and 11 others.
The event is set to start at 2:30 p.m. at Old Stone Church, which is at Old Stone Church Road and U.S. 76 in Clemson.
The group will also honor other patriots, including Gen. Robert Anderson, who like Pickens are among those buried in the churchyard.
The event, hosted by the General Andrew Pickens chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution, will mark the 272nd anniversary of Pickens’ birth.
A brief memorial service is planned as well as the placing of wreaths at the patriots’ graves. A color guard in Revolutionary War era dress plans to attend.
The public is invited to take part in the activities.
The Sons of the American Revolution is an educational, nonprofit organization.
Saturday, September 17, 2011
SC: Battle of Eutaw Springs remembered at ceremony marking 230th anniversary
Several days late for this 3 Sept event, but it'll be announced earlier next year.
From The Times and Democrat, South Carolina: Battle of Eutaw Springs remembered at ceremony marking 230th anniversary
EUTAWVILLE - On the bright, warm morning of Sept. 3, a large group joined the South Carolina Society Sons of the American Revolution, Battle of Eutaw Springs Chapter, to observe the significant battle that occurred over a five-hour period during the three-week campaign in 1781, which was termed as "clearly a victory" by scholar David Reuwer.
Reuwer, editor of Patriots of the American Revolution magazine and an attorney from Camden, was the featured speaker in the morning program held at the Historic Church of the Epiphany in Eutawville.
"A memorial is a promise to the future from the past," Reuwer said.
American and British forces comprised just over 2,000 troops each during the fight on Sept. 8, 1781. Both sides took severe blows, with the number of soldiers listed as killed, wounded, captured or missing totaling 579 of 2,200 troops for the Americans and 882 of 2,000 troops for the British.
The engagement was the culmination of a three-week campaign that covered 120 miles, Reuwer said. Continental Army Gen. Nathanael Greene actually occupied the area after the battle while the British troops retreated, indicating that most battles were hit and run.
Reuwer said that although the battle doesn't get the credit it deserves, Eutaw Springs was the only major victory in South Carolina besides the Battle of Cowpens. The United States Congress established the memorial site on June 26, 1936, but never followed through with the financial support.
State President SCSSAR Mark C. Anthony spoke at the wreath-laying held at the memorial immediately after the service. Attendees and participants included representatives from SAR chapters from North Carolina and Georgia, as well as the State Regent of the South Carolina Daughters of the American Revolution Marilyn Altman.
From The Times and Democrat, South Carolina: Battle of Eutaw Springs remembered at ceremony marking 230th anniversary
EUTAWVILLE - On the bright, warm morning of Sept. 3, a large group joined the South Carolina Society Sons of the American Revolution, Battle of Eutaw Springs Chapter, to observe the significant battle that occurred over a five-hour period during the three-week campaign in 1781, which was termed as "clearly a victory" by scholar David Reuwer.
Reuwer, editor of Patriots of the American Revolution magazine and an attorney from Camden, was the featured speaker in the morning program held at the Historic Church of the Epiphany in Eutawville.
"A memorial is a promise to the future from the past," Reuwer said.
American and British forces comprised just over 2,000 troops each during the fight on Sept. 8, 1781. Both sides took severe blows, with the number of soldiers listed as killed, wounded, captured or missing totaling 579 of 2,200 troops for the Americans and 882 of 2,000 troops for the British.
The engagement was the culmination of a three-week campaign that covered 120 miles, Reuwer said. Continental Army Gen. Nathanael Greene actually occupied the area after the battle while the British troops retreated, indicating that most battles were hit and run.
Reuwer said that although the battle doesn't get the credit it deserves, Eutaw Springs was the only major victory in South Carolina besides the Battle of Cowpens. The United States Congress established the memorial site on June 26, 1936, but never followed through with the financial support.
State President SCSSAR Mark C. Anthony spoke at the wreath-laying held at the memorial immediately after the service. Attendees and participants included representatives from SAR chapters from North Carolina and Georgia, as well as the State Regent of the South Carolina Daughters of the American Revolution Marilyn Altman.
Fayetteville, NC: Pitts: History should be saved, not stripped
From Sept 4
From Fay Observer: Pitts: History should be saved, not stripped
by Myron Pitts
From Fay Observer: Pitts: History should be saved, not stripped
by Myron Pitts
Some history you cannot save.
Fire twice destroyed hotels downtown bearing the name of Lafayette, namesake for Fayetteville and a hero of the American Revolution who will be celebrated next weekend.
Then there is the history we can save.
I've come to learn, unfortunately, that a building's location in a historic district is no guarantee its history will be preserved.
Which brings us to the former Capitol department store, founded by the Stein family in 1921 and closed in 1990. The Hay Street store carried back to the days when downtown enjoyed a thriving retail, before Cross Creek Mall came in the 1970s.
The Capitol building's iconic letters and marble facade were stripped recently during what the city says is repair work, and the difference to downtown is noticeable.
An entertainment complex owned by Mel Henderson failed in that spot, and the building is in the hands of an out-of-town bank.
I have a feeling that the facade as we know it will not return; the city seems evasive as to its fate.
To my direct queries about whether the letters and marble would be replaced, spokeswoman Jennifer Lowe emailed: "Marble will be removed from the face of the building in order to allow the correction of facade stability issues. The owners are aware that they are required to obtain a Certificate of Appropriateness from the Historic Resources Commission."
She said that Bruce Daws, the city's historic properties manager, signed off on that interpretation.
Lowe said the city's development director cited "too many variables" to know whether the letters or marble would stay, including the commission's ruling, "condition of the existing marble for re-use, the availability of replacement marble, etc."
These clinical responses don't sound like a city fighting to preserve one of its unique facades.
Now, for those who say "it's just a sign," remember Pete Skenteris thought a sign was just a sign, too. In 1999, he sought permission to add a "Y" to the word "Hamont" in his famously misspelled sign above his restaurant, which was meant to recognize the Haymount area. (Why he did not also want a "U," I don't know). But the commission said no. It didn't want him to mess with history.
Will it show the same concern for the Capitol?
Developer John Malzone, a former member of the resources commission who has properties downtown, says an inconsistency would not be new.
He said builders were allowed to remove and not replace carrera glass from the front of a former jewelry store that now houses computer business N2. The glass, which makes up the veneer of Horne's Deli, is manufactured in very few places, though it was once ubiquitous, he said.
"I've slowly watched the iconic images disappear," he said. "It's very sad."
Malzone was part of a group that in 2001 had an idea of putting town houses in the Capitol building. They were planning on keeping the facade. But he also believes the Capitol letters and marble might now be gone for good.
Shame.
That's history we can save, if we choose.
Friday, September 16, 2011
Revolutionary War's end in Georgia covered in new book
From Atlanta Journal Constitution (AJC): Revolutionary War's end in Georgia covered in new book
Mary Bondurant Warren has just published the ninth volume in a series on Georgia's governor and his council during the 18th century.
With "Georgia Governor and Council Journals 1782″ she brings the series to the end of the American Revolution in Georgia. In this volume, she has compiled material from numerous original sources in Georgia, other U.S. sources, as well as from several British archival depositories.
If you've wondered how the last royal governor, Sir James Wright, and his council of advisers fared, and what went on after the Battle of Yorktown in October 1781, this is the book to read.
Actually, you would not read this in the conventional sense, since it is a compilation of material presented chronologically by source, rather than everything interwoven. Here you can see in their own words what the people of that era were writing and thinking.
The book also includes material from the patriot or rebel governor, so you have the writings from both sides, as Georgia essentially had two governors until Wright departed Savannah on July 11, 1782.
The newspaper accounts also allow you to read what the public of that era read.
This a treasure trove of data for historians, much of it never before gathered together in a single source. Genealogists will find the section on the King's Rangers and the various muster rolls a valuable source, as well as the section on confiscated estates of loyalists. This is certainly an important work for anyone interested in Georgia history.
The book has an index of personal names, military units and ships, as well as place names. It was published with a grant from the R.J. Taylor Jr. Foundation, and is available for $45 plus $8 shipping and $3.15 sales tax from Heritage Papers, P.O. Box 7776, Athens, GA 30604-7776. A full set of all nine volumes is available, or each separately. Three more volumes in this series are planned.
Revolutionary War research guide
Craig R. Scott has written "Revolutionary War Genealogy Research Guide," the latest edition in the "Genealogy at a Glance" series. It consists of four laminated pages giving a quick overview of how to research the war's sources.
Scott, a well-known speaker on military research, has synthesized the information into major sources from lineage societies to pensions, and compiled service records and muster rolls, among other sources.
The guide is available for $7.95 plus $4.50 postage from the Genealogical Publishing Co., 3600 Clipper Mill Road, Suite 260, Baltimore, MD 21211. Check www.genealogical.com to order online or to see a list of other topics in the series.
Genealogy buff
An avid reader has suggested checking www.genealogybuff.com. It's another of the many websites out there that have material worth checking out.
Mary Bondurant Warren has just published the ninth volume in a series on Georgia's governor and his council during the 18th century.
With "Georgia Governor and Council Journals 1782″ she brings the series to the end of the American Revolution in Georgia. In this volume, she has compiled material from numerous original sources in Georgia, other U.S. sources, as well as from several British archival depositories.
If you've wondered how the last royal governor, Sir James Wright, and his council of advisers fared, and what went on after the Battle of Yorktown in October 1781, this is the book to read.
Actually, you would not read this in the conventional sense, since it is a compilation of material presented chronologically by source, rather than everything interwoven. Here you can see in their own words what the people of that era were writing and thinking.
The book also includes material from the patriot or rebel governor, so you have the writings from both sides, as Georgia essentially had two governors until Wright departed Savannah on July 11, 1782.
The newspaper accounts also allow you to read what the public of that era read.
This a treasure trove of data for historians, much of it never before gathered together in a single source. Genealogists will find the section on the King's Rangers and the various muster rolls a valuable source, as well as the section on confiscated estates of loyalists. This is certainly an important work for anyone interested in Georgia history.
The book has an index of personal names, military units and ships, as well as place names. It was published with a grant from the R.J. Taylor Jr. Foundation, and is available for $45 plus $8 shipping and $3.15 sales tax from Heritage Papers, P.O. Box 7776, Athens, GA 30604-7776. A full set of all nine volumes is available, or each separately. Three more volumes in this series are planned.
Revolutionary War research guide
Craig R. Scott has written "Revolutionary War Genealogy Research Guide," the latest edition in the "Genealogy at a Glance" series. It consists of four laminated pages giving a quick overview of how to research the war's sources.
Scott, a well-known speaker on military research, has synthesized the information into major sources from lineage societies to pensions, and compiled service records and muster rolls, among other sources.
The guide is available for $7.95 plus $4.50 postage from the Genealogical Publishing Co., 3600 Clipper Mill Road, Suite 260, Baltimore, MD 21211. Check www.genealogical.com to order online or to see a list of other topics in the series.
Genealogy buff
An avid reader has suggested checking www.genealogybuff.com. It's another of the many websites out there that have material worth checking out.
Thursday, September 15, 2011
.....Octagon Church monument rededicated 100 years later
From Sept 5, 2011
From Little Falls Times: Octagon Church monument rededicated 100 years later
From Little Falls Times: Octagon Church monument rededicated 100 years later
Little Falls, N.Y. — The first church erected in the city of Little Falls was the Octagon Church, built on the hill in the area of Church and School streets.
There is a memorial near the location today, placed by members of the Astenrogen Chapter of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution on Sept. 5, 1911.
The dedication of the stone and bronze tablet monument was part of an event referred to as “Old Home Week” and the centennial celebration of Little Falls.
One hundred years later, the rededication of the Octagon Church monument was part of the city’s bicentennial celebration.
“A good number of people don’t know the monument is here or what it’s for. Most people just pass by this location without taking a moment to stop and look,” chapter Regent Elizabeth Mosher said Monday morning. “Hopefully, this ceremony and rededication will call a little more attention to the monument and the history behind it.”
The Octagon Church, erected in 1796, was used by many denominations until they built churches of their own.
“The denominations who worshipped there didn’t always get along, but for the most part they made it work,” said chapter Secretary Nancy Cioch. “It must have been something to see, as one denomination would use the church in the morning, another in the afternoon and a third in the evening. Each denomination could hire their own preacher.”
Reading from notes she compiled during Monday’s rededication ceremony, Cioch said the church was first known as the Octagon Church because it was an eight-sided building. The building, which would later be called Columbia Church, she said, had a weather vane, but no tower. When the Columbia Church was disbanded on Dec. 31, 1804, the Concord Society was organized to manage the church, rebuilding the steeple and adding a tower in 1818, she said. The church was torn down in 1842, with the Catholics and Universalists the last to call it home.
“Eventually the denominations became larger and needed churches of their own,” said Cioch. “The Octagon Church wasn’t needed after that.”
The monument originally cost the members of the Astenrogen Chapter $200.
“I would say it was money well spent,” said Cioch. “It’s in remarkable condition.”
The bronze tablet on the stone monument reads, “This memorial erected by Astenrogen Chapter, daughters of the American Revolution of Little Falls, New York, aided by patriotic citizens of this city, was dedicated Sept. 5, 1911, and marks the site of the old Octagon Church, the first church in Little Falls, in which all denominations worshipped. Built in 1796, demolished in 1842.”
“Historic preservation is one of the pillars of the Daughters of the American Revolution, so the dedication and rededication of this marker go hand-in-hand with that,” said Mosher.
Adding to their preservation efforts on Monday, Mosher said prior to the rededication of the Octagon Church monument, the chapter dedicated a new stone, donated by Humphrey Memorials, to the heroic efforts of the John Christian Shell family. The stone is on Shells Bush Road and stands where the family’s blockhouse stood.
It was at that location the family defended their house during the Revolutionary War, said Mosher.
The original monument was marble and the effects of time and road spray caused the deterioration of the stone and the words carved on it.
Humphrey Memorials ordered a new granite stone and cut the original words on the monument.
“Our chapter has a number of monuments and memorials throughout Little Falls and the surrounding area,” said Mosher after Monday’s rededication ceremony at the corner of Church and Prospect streets. “There is a lot of history here that is worth preserving. As a chapter, we are happy to call attention to places like the Octagon Church to promote local history.”
DAR members meet in Waterville
From 9/7/11
From Kennebec Journal: DAR members meet in Waterville
WATERVILLE -- Fort Halifax Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution met recently at the home of Barbara Healy.
Guest speaker Lani Stites of the Silent Howard Hayden Chapter gave a talk, Women of the American Revolution.
Matthew Rumsey was announced the recipient of the Jenny Paine Howard History Medal.
Members are reminded to collect Old Spice products for veterans, including trial size products. Members are also encouraged to provide pictures of members doing conservation projects and using recycled DAR bags.
The group has material on display at various locations in honor of Constitution Week, Sept. 17-23.
From Kennebec Journal: DAR members meet in Waterville
WATERVILLE -- Fort Halifax Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution met recently at the home of Barbara Healy.
Guest speaker Lani Stites of the Silent Howard Hayden Chapter gave a talk, Women of the American Revolution.
Matthew Rumsey was announced the recipient of the Jenny Paine Howard History Medal.
Members are reminded to collect Old Spice products for veterans, including trial size products. Members are also encouraged to provide pictures of members doing conservation projects and using recycled DAR bags.
The group has material on display at various locations in honor of Constitution Week, Sept. 17-23.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
DAR partners with Native Americans
From South Charlotte News: DAR partners with Native Americans
In elementary school, Ione Dawson's teacher announced to the class one day that she was going to call on a "real American."
"I knew that wasn't me," said Dawson, who was born in Denver, Colo., in the mid-1920s to American parents of English and Mongolian descent.
She knew the teacher was referring to her many Native American classmates, whose families, along with Dawson's, had come to the Teapot Dome oil field in Wyoming for work.
Decades spent in the American West instilled a lifelong love for Native American people and culture in Dawson.
Decades later, it has fueled her to forge a rare partnership between a Charlotte chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Metrolina Native American Association.
The Revolutionary War connected the two groups hundreds of years ago.
"Patriots" of the American Revolutionary War typically are thought of as white men, but Native Americans and African Americans - referred to on the DAR website as "forgotten patriots - fought by their side.
Dawson, who is now 86, moved to Waxhaw 40 years ago with her late husband George, a physicist. She filled their log cabin with a huge collection of Native American artifacts, everything from blankets to baskets to more than 100 Navaho rugs.
She joined a local DAR chapter in the early 1990s "for the Native Americans,"she says, and soon began showing off her artifacts and giving free talks to "anyone who would listen."
But Dawson is a woman with a "head filled with trivia," a detailed knowledge of American history and a longstanding passion for helping Native Americans, and talking about artifacts wasn't enough.
She said audience members did like the artifacts, often asking where they could buy the baskets or jewelry.
"It's just an entertainment thing," she said. "They are not inspired to do anything."
Dawson recently was installed on the organizing committee of the Metrolina Native American Association, a group that organizes an annual Pow Wow in the Charlotte area to educate people about Native American culture. She's the only non-Native American on the committee.
At the same time, she began working on her peers at the Mecklenburg Chapter of the DAR.
Dawson had long presented an "Indian Minute" at the meetings, usually showing off one of her artifacts. Now, she uses that time to push the Pow Wow.
Her efforts have paid off. The group has raised almost $600 for the Pow Wow, and Dawson said many DAR members plan to attend the Pow Wow with their families.
Dawson believes it's the only partnership of its kind between a DAR chapter and a Native American group.
She's helped the MNAA secure new sponsors for the Pow Wow, and MNAA board of directors chairman Jessie Jacobs said they are expecting as many as 10,000 people this year at the three-day event in Indian Trail.
"She's added quite a lot of energy to the Pow Wow (committee)," James said. "She made a difference. She gives us insight on where to go and who to talk with for support.
"And she's always right. I wish we had her 10 years ago."
She's told the group where to hand out fliers - and keeps a stack in her car to hand out herself - and given them ideas on things to change and who to ask for help.
"She's good," Jacobs said. "I love her to death. We all do."
Carol Clark, an MNAA member who has become a friend of Dawson's, described the relationship with the DAR as "not one we expected or had ever heard of before."
"They have shown us an acceptance that was totally unexpected," Clark said. "They have given us a new appreciation of who they are and their desire to be involved.
"Through this precious little lady with such a huge heart, we have formed this amazing relationship."
Dawson already is moving ahead on another front. She keeps a thick hardbound book in her car, a DAR publication that contains documentation for more than 6,500 Native American and African American "forgotten patriots."
"I will meet up with anybody so they can look at it and determine their lineage with it," she said.
Looking into her own ancestry years ago brought a revelation that Dawson said helped her better understand her deep connection to Native Americans.
She learned some of her father's ancestors were Mongolians who crossed the Bering Straight from Asia to North America - and became the first Native Americans.
"I no longer wonder why I'm so attracted to Native Americans," Dawson said.
Kansas: Sons of the American Revolution donate Washington portrait
From the Leavenworth Times: Sons of the American Revolution donate Washington portrait
Leavenworth, Kan. — Henry Leavenworth Elementary School seemed a fitting place for a donated portrait of George Washington from the local chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution.
The chapter also is named after Henry Leavenworth, who established Fort Leavenworth. And Henry Leavenworth’s father was a captain during the Revolutionary War.
“So Henry Leavenworth is a true son of the American Revolution,” Brooks Lyles said Friday during an assembly at the elementary school.
Lyles is a president of the Henry B. Leavenworth Chapter of the Kansas Society of Kansas Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.
The chapter donated a portrait of the Washington to Henry Leavenworth Elementary School as part of the group’s education program, according to chapter member Vernon Welkner.
The picture was unveiled during the assembly.
Principal Stacy Graff said the picture will hang in the school’s library.
Welkner said members of local Sons of the American Revolution chapter want to make similar donations to other schools that don’t have portraits of George Washington.
“We’ll do it as the money becomes available,” he said.
A color guard of men dressed in Revolutionary War style uniforms were featured during Friday’s ceremony. David Comer, the state president of the Sons of the American Revolution, as well as past state president Peter Grassl also were on hand for the presentation.
Members of the Sons of the American Revolution are descendants of people who fought in the Revolutionary War or people who supported the Revolution. The local chapter was established three years ago and has about 25 members.
Leavenworth, Kan. — Henry Leavenworth Elementary School seemed a fitting place for a donated portrait of George Washington from the local chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution.
The chapter also is named after Henry Leavenworth, who established Fort Leavenworth. And Henry Leavenworth’s father was a captain during the Revolutionary War.
“So Henry Leavenworth is a true son of the American Revolution,” Brooks Lyles said Friday during an assembly at the elementary school.
Lyles is a president of the Henry B. Leavenworth Chapter of the Kansas Society of Kansas Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.
The chapter donated a portrait of the Washington to Henry Leavenworth Elementary School as part of the group’s education program, according to chapter member Vernon Welkner.
The picture was unveiled during the assembly.
Principal Stacy Graff said the picture will hang in the school’s library.
Welkner said members of local Sons of the American Revolution chapter want to make similar donations to other schools that don’t have portraits of George Washington.
“We’ll do it as the money becomes available,” he said.
A color guard of men dressed in Revolutionary War style uniforms were featured during Friday’s ceremony. David Comer, the state president of the Sons of the American Revolution, as well as past state president Peter Grassl also were on hand for the presentation.
Members of the Sons of the American Revolution are descendants of people who fought in the Revolutionary War or people who supported the Revolution. The local chapter was established three years ago and has about 25 members.
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Exquisite Charles Willson Peale miniature portraits at Heritage Auctions Gallery in Beverly Hills
From News-Antique.com: Exquisite Charles Willson Peale miniature portraits at Heritage Auctions Gallery in Beverly Hills
News-Antique.com - Sep 06,2011 - BEVERLY HILLS, CA – Nine original portrait miniatures by Charles Willson Peale (1741-1827), known as “The Artist of the American Revolution,” along with five more attributed “in the manner of” Peale, are currently on display and available for private treaty purchase at Heritage Auctions Beverly Hills. They will remain on display until the end of September.
“We believe this is the largest, and certainly one of the finest collections of Peale miniatures that currently exists in private hands,” said Jim Halperin, Co-Chairman of Heritage Auctions. “There is no artist more directly associated with the American Revolution than Charles Willson Peale, making him one of the most important painters in our nations’ history. The chance to see, and possibly acquire, such a significant grouping at one time is not likely to come again anytime soon.”
The nine miniature portraits directly attributed to Peale include images of John Beale Bordley (1727-1804); Richard Cary, and aide to Washington during the Revolution; British General Sir Henry Clinton (1738-1795); Catherine Alexander (Lady Kitty) Duer (1755-1826); Robert Livingston (1746-1813); Mary Riche Swift , Mrs. Charles Swift; Elizabeth Digby Peale; Mrs. Robert Polk (1744-1777); Mary Cox Morris, wife of General Jacob Morris (1759-1827), and General Jacob Morris himself (1755-1844).
Peale was born in Queen Anne’s County, MD. By a chance encounter with artist John Singleton Copley, Peale became his student during the years 1768-1769. In 1770, Peale moved to London, bearing a letter to Benjamin West, who received him and accepted Peale as his student at the Royal Academy, where he studied modeling in wax, casting and molding in plaster, engraving in mezzotint and miniature painting.
In 1774, after studying with West, Peale returned to Annapolis and began painting portraits. In 1776, on the eve of American Independence, he established himself in Philadelphia on the estate of what is now the campus of La Salle University. In short order he became one of the most important painters in the American colonies. Among his portraits are many famous Americans such as George Washington, John Hancock, Benjamin Franklin, Robert Morris, Alexander Hamilton, and his friend Thomas Jefferson.
“He commanded his own company of volunteers during the American Revolution, and shouldered a musket at the battles of Trenton and Germantown,” said Halperin. “Peale’s diary of day-to-day accounts as a militiaman in the Continental Army of George Washington is now found in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution.”
During the war Peale began painting portrait miniatures of American patriots and soldiers, both in camp before and after battle. His most famous subject was George Washington, whom he first painted in 1772 while Washington was a Colonel in the Virginia militia. Peale is believed to have completed more than 60 portraits of Washington, including the full length Washington at Princeton (1779), which sold in 1995 for more than $20 million, a record amount for any American portrait.
Peale possessed a great interest in natural history and, in 1785, began collecting and preserving objects for the purpose of establishing a museum. By the following year, he realized his dream and opened the first American public museum, eventually renamed the Peale Museum. In 1791, he began an earnest effort to create an art academy in Philadelphia which eventually bore fruition as the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts.
Heritage Auctions, headed by Steve Ivy, Jim Halperin and Greg Rohan, is the world’s third largest auction house, with annual sales more than $700 million, and 600,000+ online bidder members. For more information about Heritage Auctions, and to join and gain access to a complete record of prices realized, along with full-color, enlargeable photos of each lot, please visit HA.com.
Save the date, 9/17 in Houston, TX: Luncheon in River Oaks to honor Constitution Week
From Ultimate Montrose.com: Luncheon in River Oaks to honor Constitution Week
The Daughters of the American Revolution, Houston Area Regents Council, will be holding its annual luncheon on Saturday, Sept. 17, to commemorate the signing of the Constitution of the United States and celebration of Constitution Week.
The luncheon will take place at the Houston Junior League Building, located at 1811 Briar Oaks Lane in Houston.
The Daughters of the American Revolution encourage everyone to organize and support programs that honor the Constitution. The Houston Area Regents Council is made up of the following chapters: Alexander Love, Brazos Valley, Heritage Trails, Sam Houston, San Jacinto, Tejas, John McKnitt Alexander, Jane Long, James Hardage Lane 1, Samuel Sorrell, Captain Gilbreth Falls/Absolom Hooper, Lady Washington and Ann Poage. Other chapters included in the celebrations are George Washington, Elisha Roberts, Fort Bend, Star of Destiny and Alexander Hodge.
The HARC Regents are Dr. Jan Garrison, Barbara Petrov, Pat Spackey, Susan Sheeren, Alice Braud-Jones, Ginny Evan, Mary Rustay, Jean Abernathy, Dianna Rudolph, Mary-Dpdd Dubbert, Susan Devenney, Margaret Mitchell and Virginia Kinzer. Cindy Rucker serves as the Texas DAR Division V chairman.
The Daughters of the American Revolution, Houston Area Regents Council, will be holding its annual luncheon on Saturday, Sept. 17, to commemorate the signing of the Constitution of the United States and celebration of Constitution Week.
The luncheon will take place at the Houston Junior League Building, located at 1811 Briar Oaks Lane in Houston.
The Daughters of the American Revolution encourage everyone to organize and support programs that honor the Constitution. The Houston Area Regents Council is made up of the following chapters: Alexander Love, Brazos Valley, Heritage Trails, Sam Houston, San Jacinto, Tejas, John McKnitt Alexander, Jane Long, James Hardage Lane 1, Samuel Sorrell, Captain Gilbreth Falls/Absolom Hooper, Lady Washington and Ann Poage. Other chapters included in the celebrations are George Washington, Elisha Roberts, Fort Bend, Star of Destiny and Alexander Hodge.
The HARC Regents are Dr. Jan Garrison, Barbara Petrov, Pat Spackey, Susan Sheeren, Alice Braud-Jones, Ginny Evan, Mary Rustay, Jean Abernathy, Dianna Rudolph, Mary-Dpdd Dubbert, Susan Devenney, Margaret Mitchell and Virginia Kinzer. Cindy Rucker serves as the Texas DAR Division V chairman.
Monday, September 12, 2011
The Remarkable Marquis de Lafayette
From The Moral Liberal: The Remarkable Marquis de Lafayette
by Phyllis Schafly
by Phyllis Schafly
Today [from Sept 6] is the birthday of one of the genuine heroes of the American Revolution, who was also one of history’s most unique and remarkable individuals, the Marquis de Lafayette. Born September 6, 1757, his father died before he was two years old, his mother died when he was 12, and he inherited a fortune. He joined the French military at age 14, became a Captain at age 16. At age 19, despite the contrary advice of everyone he knew, he bought a ship and sailed across the Atlantic to fight in the American Revolution. Lafayette reported straight to General George Washington and the two men became good friends. Lafayette endured the freezing winter at Valley Forge, distinguished himself in several battles, and was wounded.
In the middle of the Revolution, Lafayette returned to France and petitioned the French government to send ships, arms, troops and supplies to the Americans. While home, he named his son George Washington Lafayette and his daughter Virginia after the new state of Virginia. He even gave a large share of his own fortune to help the Americans. Lafayette then sailed back to America to give Washington the good news about the essential aid coming from France.
In 1824, many years after the American Revolution, Lafayette returned to the United States as the guest of a grateful nation, and traveled to every one of the then 24 states. He received a hero’s welcome everywhere. In New York City, 50,000 people turned out to stand along the roads and cheer him. In a ceremony at Bunker Hill, Massachusetts, Secretary of State Daniel Webster was the speaker and he said: “God … has allowed to us in the name of the present generation … in the name of liberty to thank you!” Many U.S. cities are named after him, from Maine to Wisconsin to Fayetteville, Arkansas.
SCHOOLS DIGEST: Essay contest, War of 1812
Okay, it is the War of 1812, not the American Revolution. But history students should check it out.
From the Niles-Herald Spectator (Chicago) SCHOOLS DIGEST: Essay contest
The Twenty-First Star Chapter of NSDAR (National Society Daughters of the American Revolution) is looking for students to compete in this year’s annual American History Essay Contest.
All fifth- through eighth-grade students in a public, private or parochial school, and those who are home-schooled are eligible. This contest is conducted without regard to race, religion, sex, or national origin. This year’s topic is “The War of 1812.”
Students are to pretend they were alive during the War of 1812 and had a friend who has become famous in history because of standing up for America during that exciting but dangerous time. Describe the person and how he or she stood up for America. Explain why it is important to honor such heroes as the 200th Anniversary of the War of 1812 is celebrated.
One essay at each grade level is selected as the chapter winner and forwarded to the district American History chairman for further competition. Judging will be based on historical accuracy, adherence to topic, organization of material, interest, originality, spelling, grammar, punctuation and neatness. (Pictures, maps, drawings, graphics and other such additions will not be considered in judging and should not be included.)
Deadline for submission is Dec. 2. To participate contact Twenty-first Star Chapter co-historian Gail Enault, at (773) 774-5998 or gail@enaults.com, for the details and specific guidelines for this year’s contest.
From the Niles-Herald Spectator (Chicago) SCHOOLS DIGEST: Essay contest
The Twenty-First Star Chapter of NSDAR (National Society Daughters of the American Revolution) is looking for students to compete in this year’s annual American History Essay Contest.
All fifth- through eighth-grade students in a public, private or parochial school, and those who are home-schooled are eligible. This contest is conducted without regard to race, religion, sex, or national origin. This year’s topic is “The War of 1812.”
Students are to pretend they were alive during the War of 1812 and had a friend who has become famous in history because of standing up for America during that exciting but dangerous time. Describe the person and how he or she stood up for America. Explain why it is important to honor such heroes as the 200th Anniversary of the War of 1812 is celebrated.
One essay at each grade level is selected as the chapter winner and forwarded to the district American History chairman for further competition. Judging will be based on historical accuracy, adherence to topic, organization of material, interest, originality, spelling, grammar, punctuation and neatness. (Pictures, maps, drawings, graphics and other such additions will not be considered in judging and should not be included.)
Deadline for submission is Dec. 2. To participate contact Twenty-first Star Chapter co-historian Gail Enault, at (773) 774-5998 or gail@enaults.com, for the details and specific guidelines for this year’s contest.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Pennsylvania Pacifists and the American Revolution
From a blog entitled The Way of Improvement Leads Home, posted Sept 6: Pennsylvania Pacifists and the American Revolution
ABC News is running a story about a July 11, 1775 broadside written by the Lancaster County Committee of Correspondence, urging German immigrants, many of whom were pacifists with religious objections to the American Revolution, to give money to support the patriot cause. (HT: Tom Van Dyke). Those whose "religious scruples" prevented them from taking up arms were urged to contribute toward the "necessary and unavoidable" expenses of the town.
There were several broadsides of this nature published in Pennsylvania at the time of the Revolution. The commonwealth, of course, was filled with German immigrants of the Anabaptist persuasion.
For example, On May 29, 1775, the Lancaster committee published a warning for those who were persecuting their pacifist neighbors:
The Committee having received information, that divers persons, whose religious tenets forbid their forming themselves into military associations, have been mal-treated, and threatened by some violent and ill-disposed people in the County of Lancaster, notwithstanding their willingness to contribute chearfully to the common cause, otherwise than by taking up arms: This Committee duly considering the same, do most heartily recommend to the good inhabitants of the County, that they use every possible means to discourage and prevent such licentious proceedings, and assiduously cultivate the harmony and union so absolutely necessary in the present alarming crisis of public affairs.... (accessed at Early American Imprints).
A few years ago I had a student write a very good paper on one of these broadsides. They provide a very different window into the way the Revolution played out in local communities, especially those with large numbers of religious pacifists.
Marker will honor Revoluntionary War leader
From Newark Post: Marker will honor Revoluntionary War leader
New Castle County Executive Paul Clark and representatives from the Delaware Historical Society, Delaware Public Archives, Hale-Byrnes House, and Delaware Society Sons of the American Revolution will gather at noon Saturday, Sept. 10, at the Kirkwood Highway Library to dedicate a historical marker in honor of Capt. Robert Kirkwood Jr., the Revolutionary War officer from Delaware for whom the Kirkwood Highway is named.
The marker replaces the original Kirkwood marker that stood on the north side of the highway at Polly Drummond Hill Road near White Clay Creek Presbyterian Church, Newark. That marker has been missing since at least 1985, according to the state archives.
Born in 1756, Robert Kirkwood Jr. spent his youth on the family farm on Polly Drummond Hill. He eventually enrolled at the Newark Academy, later to become the University of Delaware. When the American Revolution began, Kirkwood was commissioned a first lieutenant in the Delaware Regiment under the command of Colonel John Haslet. He was promoted to captain in December 1776.
In the early years of the war Kirkwood distinguished himself at such battles as Long Island, Brandywine, and Germantown. During the latter part of the war the Delaware Regiment was sent to participate in the southern campaign. Under Kirkwood’s leadership, the Delaware troops earned a reputation for discipline and hard fighting through their key roles at the battles of Cowpens (South Carolina) and Guilford Courthouse (North Carolina).
In 1782 Kirkwood returned to Delaware and married Sarah England. Following his wife’s death in 1787 he was granted land in the Northwest Territory and moved to southeastern Ohio. Land disputes in the area led to armed conflict between the new settlers and Native Americans. Kirkwood re-entered the army and was killed in action at St. Clair’s Defeat near the Ohio-Indiana border on Nov. 4, 1791.
The marker dedication will be held rain or shine. In conjunction with the dedication, the Hale-Byrnes House and the Delaware Historical Society will open the “Delaware and the Revolutionary War” exhibit in the lobby of the Kirkwood Library, 6000 Kirkwood Highway. The exhibit will be displayed through September.
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Spirit of America U.S. Army multi-media show at Verizon Center this weekend
From the Washington Times: Spirit of America U.S. Army multi-media show at Verizon Center this weekend
WASHINGTON, September 9, 2011—What can some-300 active-duty U.S. Army Soldiers do besides guarantee our freedoms and protect our borders? They can sing, dance, act, precision march, play instruments in a top-notch orchestra - they provide world-class entertainment.
In an amazing feat of “can do,” the soldiers who perform and support the Spirit of America create a two hour, multi-media journey through American military history, from the Revolutionary War to the conflicts in the Middle East today.
Spirit of America
The shows presents Soldiers in historic uniforms reenacting key moments in military history, bringing battle scenes, including simulated gunfire, to life.
The first half of the show is composed of vignettes from The American Revolution, Civil War, World Wars One and Two, Korea, Vietnam, and our present day conflicts in the Middle East. While soldiers perform in historically accurate costume, a large video screen displays era-appropriate images, helping to set the time and place.
The U.S. Army Drill Team performs in full military dress blues, working with shiny, very pointed, bayonet-tipped 1903 Springfield rifles. They take one step every second, creating the slow, gliding cadence that we see at the Tomb of the Unkown Soldier and at some formal military events.
It is quite impressive to see the Drill Team, under the command of COT Robert Baird and Drill Master, Sergeant First Class Jose Trevino, toss the 10 pound rifles over their heads and back across multiple rows to be caught in the air by soldiers standing behind them.
The show also features performances by the Caisson Platoon and the Commander-in- Chief’s Guard. If you are unable to attend the show, it will be live streamed at the Spirit of America web site.
2011 Performance Schedule
Verizon Center, Washington, D.C.
Friday, Sept. 9, 10:30 a.m.
Friday, Sept. 9, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 10, 2 p.m. - SOLD OUT
Saturday, Sept. 10, 7:30 p.m.
North Charleston Coliseum, North Charleston, S.C.
Friday, Sept. 16, 10:30 a.m. - SOLD OUT
Friday, Sept. 16, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 17, 2 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 17, 7:30 p.m.
Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena, Jacksonville, Fla.
Friday, Sept. 23, 10:30 a.m.
Friday, Sept. 23, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 24, 2 p.m.
Saturday, Sept 24, 7:30 p.m.
Spirit of America performances are open to the public and admission is FREE, but tickets are required. For ticketing information, please visit the Ticketing page.
WASHINGTON, September 9, 2011—What can some-300 active-duty U.S. Army Soldiers do besides guarantee our freedoms and protect our borders? They can sing, dance, act, precision march, play instruments in a top-notch orchestra - they provide world-class entertainment.
In an amazing feat of “can do,” the soldiers who perform and support the Spirit of America create a two hour, multi-media journey through American military history, from the Revolutionary War to the conflicts in the Middle East today.
Spirit of America
The shows presents Soldiers in historic uniforms reenacting key moments in military history, bringing battle scenes, including simulated gunfire, to life.
The first half of the show is composed of vignettes from The American Revolution, Civil War, World Wars One and Two, Korea, Vietnam, and our present day conflicts in the Middle East. While soldiers perform in historically accurate costume, a large video screen displays era-appropriate images, helping to set the time and place.
The U.S. Army Drill Team performs in full military dress blues, working with shiny, very pointed, bayonet-tipped 1903 Springfield rifles. They take one step every second, creating the slow, gliding cadence that we see at the Tomb of the Unkown Soldier and at some formal military events.
It is quite impressive to see the Drill Team, under the command of COT Robert Baird and Drill Master, Sergeant First Class Jose Trevino, toss the 10 pound rifles over their heads and back across multiple rows to be caught in the air by soldiers standing behind them.
The show also features performances by the Caisson Platoon and the Commander-in- Chief’s Guard. If you are unable to attend the show, it will be live streamed at the Spirit of America web site.
2011 Performance Schedule
Verizon Center, Washington, D.C.
Friday, Sept. 9, 10:30 a.m.
Friday, Sept. 9, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 10, 2 p.m. - SOLD OUT
Saturday, Sept. 10, 7:30 p.m.
North Charleston Coliseum, North Charleston, S.C.
Friday, Sept. 16, 10:30 a.m. - SOLD OUT
Friday, Sept. 16, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 17, 2 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 17, 7:30 p.m.
Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena, Jacksonville, Fla.
Friday, Sept. 23, 10:30 a.m.
Friday, Sept. 23, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. 24, 2 p.m.
Saturday, Sept 24, 7:30 p.m.
Spirit of America performances are open to the public and admission is FREE, but tickets are required. For ticketing information, please visit the Ticketing page.
This Sunday the 11th: Cold Spring, New Hampshire
New Hampshire -- Shore News Today: Cold Spring Village presents Revolutionary War re-enactment
Patriot soldiers of the Continental Army will bring the American Revolution to life on the grounds of Historic Cold Spring Village Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 10 and 11 when the village presents is annual Revolutionary War Encampment.
From 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m., authentically clad and equipped living history re-enactors will recreate the camps of the Continental troops, with cannon firings at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. both days.
Visitors can take in demonstrations of drills, weapons, equipment and camp life. A special presentation of “The Story of Old Glory” will be presented at 1:30 p.m. both days of the event, which features the story and a collection of the history of the Unites States flag.
Historic Cold Spring Village is a nonprofit, open air living history museum that portrays the daily life of a rural South Jersey community of the Early American era. It features 26 restored historic structures on a wooded 30-acre site. Interpreters and artisans in period clothing preserve the trades, crafts and heritage of “the age of homespun.”
Admission is $10 for adults and $8 for children 3-12. Children under 3 are admitted free. Unlimited free admission is available with membership to the village.
The village is on Route 9, three miles north of Cape May. For information call (609) 898-2300, ext. 10 or see www.hcsv.org.
The Old Grange Restaurant operated by chef Tony Clark, located at the Seashore Road entrance, is open for lunch and dinner and can be contacted at (609) 884-0114.
Join Port Tobacco DAR
From South Maryland News: Join Port Tobacco DAR
Do you have a Revolutionary War patriot in your family tree?
If the answer is yes, then consider membership in the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, a volunteer women’s organization that honors and preserves the legacy of our patriot ancestors.
More than 200 years ago, American patriots fought and sacrificed for the freedoms we enjoy today. As a member of the DAR, you can continue this legacy, actively promote patriotism, preserve American history and secure America’s future through better education for children.
Who is eligible for DAR membership? Any woman 18 or older, regardless of race, religion or ethnic background, who can prove lineal descent from a patriot of the American Revolution is eligible for membership.
DAR volunteers are willing to provide guidance and assistance with your first step into the world of genealogy.
How is a patriot defined? DAR recognizes patriots not only as soldiers, but also as anyone who contributed to the cause of American freedom.
To find out if your ancestor is recognized by the DAR as a Revolutionary War patriot, a request form is available online at www.dar.org by clicking on “Membership.”
There you will find helpful instructions, advice on finding your lineage and a prospective member information request form.
DAR has 167,000 members in nearly 3,000 chapters worldwide, including chapters in 12 foreign countries. Since its founding in 1890, DAR has admitted more than 870,000 members.
Port Tobacco chapter of the NSDAR was founded in 1965. Currently there are 80 members who are actively working in the community to further the mission of the national society, which is to promote historic preservation, education and patriotism. To find out more email porttobaccodar@gmail.com.
Diane Milstead, La Plata
The writer is the regent of the Port Tobacco chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution.
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
SAR honors Utley with flag, certificate
From the Lancaster Eagle Gazette: SAR honors Utley with flag, certificate
LANCASTER -- The Hocking Valley Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution ( SAR ) recently honored Mrs. Fran Utley, of Lancaster, in a special ceremony during the Georgian's Lancaster Festival Tea.
An American Flag and certificate were presented by SAR President, Keith Kaufman, to Mrs. Utley, for four decades of distinguished and dedicated service to the Fairfield Heritage Association as a volunteer, curator, and benefactor.
She and her husband, George, were among the first members of the Fairfield Heritage Association and were responsible for overseeing the Georgian Museum's restoration beginning in 1972.
The U.S. flag presented to Mrs. Utley was flown over the United States Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. on April 15, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. George Utley's Seventieth Wedding Anniversary. Following the presentation, Mrs. Utley received a warm applause from all attendees.
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Michigan: Revolutionary War fort takes visitors back to nation’s turbulent early years
From Columbia Daily Tribune: Revolutionary War fort takes visitors back to nation’s turbulent early years
Visitors to Fort Mackinac on Michigan’s Mackinac Island will find themselves in a stonewalled fort that has been restored to what it looked like during its final years of occupation by the U.S. Army.
The British took over Mackinac Island from the French after winning the Seven Years War in 1761. The British built Fort Mackinac during the American Revolution because they feared they could not defend Fort Michilimackinac on the mainland. The United States gained control of Fort Mackinac after the war, lost it again during the War of 1812 and then in the peace negotiation got it back. An important Great Lakes border post, it helped protect the fur trade and promote friendly alliances with the American Indians. The military actively maintained the fort until 1895.
We first saw a re-enactment of a court martial in which one officer served as both the prosecuting and defending official, just as he would have in 1880. Because his wife had needed firewood, the soldier disobeyed an order to stay indoors to recuperate from a medical problem. Before the verdict was announced, the audience was asked for its verdict, which turned out to be more forgiving than the actual one.
Next, we watched a re-enactment of the marching practice that took place at 4 p.m. every day. The audience of 60 men, women and children was put on the field and given basic instruction to right face, left face, forward march, etc. Although we all earnestly tried our best, we were somewhat miserable-looking.
This was followed by a demonstration of battle attack methods using what was then the new breech-loading Springfield 45-70 trapdoor rifle using real metallic cartridges. The final demonstration was cannon-firing.
Next came a tour of the fort, which highlighted the lifestyle of the soldiers stationed there. It was a dull life, with many arrests because of troops going AWOL, fighting and other minor infractions growing out of men not having much to do.
A woman took a group of families on a tour of what family life was like in the military at that time. The officers could have their wives and children with them.
For enlisted men, conditions were crowded and stark. In the years after the Civil War, officers were paid between $1,400 and $2,500 a year, compared to the enlisted men’s pay of $156 to $408 a year.
The small hospital had an interesting display of four mannequins, dressed as patients, in bed with a 3-D projection of a physician dressed in the uniform of the time commenting on each of them and how they were to be treated. After each of his discussions, a modern physician appeared and explained how the disorder would have been treated today.
Displays on the second floor of the enlisted men’s building were devoted to a history of the island, starting with relations with the American Indians, military operations, fur trade operations and today’s tourism business.
Monday, September 5, 2011
Oneida Nation Presents Their History with the American Revolution
From the YNN, Central New York: Oneida Nation Presents Their History with the American Revolution
ORISKANY, N.Y. -- History buffs and those just curious abut the area's history were treated to a live presentation by a member of the Oneida Nation. They learned about how the Oneida Nation and the other five Indian nations contributed to both sides of the conflict that shaped America's history.
The Nation says at first they were asked to stay out of the historic conflict with the British, but eventually the nations got involved and took sides, alienating the six nations from each other.
"There's this great division, and you don't see that before the revolution, and its effect still affects us today. Where we are six separate people that could come together and now we're six separate people that sometimes come together," explained Samantha Meta, an Oneida Nation member.
The presentation is part of the Oneida Nations First Allies program.
ORISKANY, N.Y. -- History buffs and those just curious abut the area's history were treated to a live presentation by a member of the Oneida Nation. They learned about how the Oneida Nation and the other five Indian nations contributed to both sides of the conflict that shaped America's history.
The Nation says at first they were asked to stay out of the historic conflict with the British, but eventually the nations got involved and took sides, alienating the six nations from each other.
"There's this great division, and you don't see that before the revolution, and its effect still affects us today. Where we are six separate people that could come together and now we're six separate people that sometimes come together," explained Samantha Meta, an Oneida Nation member.
The presentation is part of the Oneida Nations First Allies program.
Friday, September 2, 2011
No Longer Circling the Wagons: Many National Parks Get Indian Stories Wrong
From Indian County.com (an op ed piece): No Longer Circling the Wagons: Many National Parks Get Indian Stories Wrong
National parks are America’s great outdoor classrooms, and they attract about 300 million visitors a year, from school groups to senior citizens, mountain climbers to families in minivans. The vast majority of those people will flip through the park’s brochure, browse exhibits at in the visitor center, and read some of the informational signs posted at the roadside turnouts. The more organized or ambitious of the visitors perhaps even checked out the park’s website before they came. In all those venues the National Park Service (NPS) interprets the site for visitors, teaching them about the park and why it is important.
That adds up to a lot of history, a lot of stories. There are stories about the American Revolution in Boston and Philadelphia, about the Confederacy on Civil War battlefields, about segregation along the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail, about pioneers and Indians along the monuments to Western Expansion. The parks that preserve wild nature, such as Yellowstone, Yosemite or the Everglades, also tell a lot of historical stories. Even a national recreational area or seashore like Lake Mead or Fire Island will interpret the area’s history for visitors on their way to those beaches.
Because American Indians lived everywhere in this country, the NPS could tell Native stories at almost every site. After all, it has chosen to tell the stories of settlers at most park units. Unfortunately, the NPS usually leaves out the Native stories in the parks, letting Indians vanish from most park landscapes.
Too much of the NPS’s interpretation of our history is incomplete, and it usually leaves out the Native stories. And when it does tell a Native story, all too often, it is through the eyes of other people, the way it has been done it in too many movies. In Dances With Wolves, for example, Kevin Costner portrays the Lakota sympathetically, but through the eyes of a white military man who falls in love with a white woman who had been adopted by the tribe. A less benign example of that can be found at Indiana Dunes National Seashore, which tells of the Potawatomi tribe through the experiences of a white man, Joseph Bailly. A sign at the Bailly homestead explains that he bought beaver furs and other items from the Potawatomi in exchange for various trade goods. Another sign says the United States gave Bailly $6,000 for counseling the Potawatomi when they sold their land in the Chicago Treaty of 1833. That was a huge sum of money back then, but the sign doesn’t say what he did in those negotiations that made the U.S. government so grateful. Nor does the sign finish the story—the Potawatomi ended up on a “Trail of Death” westward, across the Mississippi.
LO RES FEA Photo Nat Parks 04 Fort Davis Buffalo soldiers AP101028145593 270x161 No Longer Circling the Wagons: Many National Parks Get Indian Stories Wrong
The Fort Davis site talks more about Buffalo Soldiers than Indians.
That’s just one of many Native stories the NPS leaves out of its narrative. Drive across the Great Plains and visit the park units there. Except for Minnesota’s Pipestone National Monument and Knife River Indian Villages in North Dakota, the national park units on the Plains focus on a short period of settlers’ history instead of the much longer Native histories. They also tend to talk about the deeds of settlers instead of the impact those actions had on American Indians.
Visitors to Nebraska’s Scotts Bluff National Monument see a replica covered wagon along with part of the original Oregon Trail as it heads through Mitchell Pass. Across the parking lot, the Oregon Trail Museum and Visitor Center tells the story of the emigrants who passed this way. The American Indians who lived here appear in an exhibit entitled, “The White Emigrants Met the Mounted Hunters of the Plains.” Again, the Native stories are told in relation to the experiences of the intruders.
That park has 62 documented archaeological sites, but you won’t learn that when you’re there. You also won’t be told how Indians used the site before the white man arrived. An oral tradition dating to Frank Kicking Bear says Crazy Horse chose Scotts Bluff for one of his earliest vision quests. He reportedly saw horses and thunder beings in his vision who told him how to prepare for war. But you won’t hear that story at Scotts Bluff. The people who wanted Scotts Bluff to be a national monument had a one-sided view of what made the site important. Telling the story of Crazy Horse preparing for war against the United States would contradict their story, that of peaceful emigrants on their way to Oregon.
Another reason you won’t hear that story is a lack of money and a lack of staff. The staff at the monument hasn’t been able to do the research and other paperwork to help it tell those stories. It doesn’t have this research because the monument doesn’t have a resident staffer who could to write such a document, or who could develop relationships with associated tribes to help them tell their stories about the site. So the old emigrant stories, which date back to the 1920s and 1930s when this site was first preserved, get told. Native stories remain untold.
Also untold is the devastating effect of Euro-American expansion on the people who lived here. The Scotts Bluff stories focus too narrowly on the emigrants to show any concern for the people they displaced. Such sites celebrate U.S. expansion instead of telling the full story.
If you know some history, you might expect to see some of that story an hour’s drive away in Wyoming, at Fort Laramie National Historic Site. Indians and whites signed two important treaties there, in 1851 and 1868. The fort was important for both trade and war, and it attracted a significant community of Natives who lived there. The NPS could tell many stories about this place, which is rich in history. Instead, it chooses to tell the story of soldiers’ lives in a frontier garrison. We learn about when kerosene and electricity arrived, we learn about Victorian furnishings, and we can see a ranger in a historic uniform fire a cannon. The NPS has restored more than a dozen large military buildings on the site, in addition to many smaller outbuildings. It would be easy to add an equal number of tipis to make the Native story visible to the arriving tourist.
Instead, there’s just one tipi in the visitor center. There’s also one Native story on a sign outside, with a kind of Dances With Wolves perspective. The sign tells of Mni
LO RES FEA Photo Nat Parks 02 Little Bighorn Bones LARGE R PAHRE 270x180 No Longer Circling the Wagons: Many National Parks Get Indian Stories Wrong
Gravestones of Indians who died in the Battle of Greasy Grass, a.k.a. Little Bighorn
Akuwin (Brings Water Home Woman), the daughter of Spotted Tail, who was fascinated by the ways of the whites. When she died of tuberculosis in 1866, her father brought her body to Fort Laramie, and the commanding officer, Colonel Maynardier, agreed to bury her at the fort. She remained buried there until 1876, when Spotted Tail brought her remains to his agency near the Black Hills. (Her family returned the remains to Fort Laramie in 2005.) It’s a nice story of people who sought peace between Indians and whites, but it’s hardly typical of what transpired at Fort Laramie. Fort Laramie was, after all, a fort, and an important base for several military campaigns. That’s a story of war and peace, not the place settings on officers’ tables.
Drive down to the Texas frontier and visit the Fort Davis National Historic Site and it’s the same story you see at Fort Laramie. The prosaic details of soldiers’ lives dominate the NPS story, including information about the foods their wives liked to cook. There are some Indians displayed in the visitor center exhibits, and you learn a bit about the Chiricahua Apache military leaders Victorio and Geronimo there. But the Indian exhibits put together get less space than 2nd Lt. Henry O. Flipper, the first African American to graduate from West Point, who was stationed at Fort Davis. Fort Davis memorializes the “Buffalo Soldiers” of the frontier, the African American agents of the U.S. empire. Your host in the site’s film is Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, wearing a very large reproduction of a cavalry uniform.
If you head north from Fort Laramie you’ll eventually reach Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota. Of course the park emphasizes the story of Theodore Roosevelt, who had a ranch here for a few years. The park also tells the story of the natural environment and the wildlife, but it largely forgets the Indians who lived here. A sign at the Painted Canyon Visitor Center mentions that Lakota lived there, and then it points you to a driving tour along the route of two U.S. military expeditions.
Fortunately, there are exceptions in the park system, both large and small. One small step in the right direction has been taken at South Dakota’s Wind Cave National Park, which tells the Lakota origin story associated with the cave, along with the scientific stories. At Guadalupe Mountains National Park in Texas, several exhibits in cramped temporary quarters tell of Native prehistory and history and of cultural clashes with Spanish-Mexican and U.S. groups. Signs like those are scattered through the park system if you look.
For more significant change, consider the Battle of Greasy Grass monument on the Crow Reservation in Montana. After a century of celebrating General George Custer, the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument got that new name—what the Indians call the Battle of Little Bighorn—and an expanded mission in 1991. An Indian memorial was erected in 2003, less visible to the casual visitor than the monument honoring Custer’s Seventh Cavalry but a very moving piece of art. Native tour guides now supplement park ranger talks. The stories of the Indians who fought Custer, as well as those who fought with him, now receive significant interpretation at the site.
A half-day’s drive from Little Bighorn, Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming has also seen major changes in interpretation over the past two decades. It originally focused solely on the geology of the tower. As recreational climbing became more popular, the NPS began to tell that story too. The popularity of climbing sparked a reaction from those nations that believe the tower is sacred and should not be climbed as sport. The NPS has not closed the tower to climbing, but it does explain the controversy to visitors. Indeed, American Indian traditions and religious beliefs about the tower provide a third major interpretive theme at the site. Anyone who enters the visitor center, walks around the tower, or reads a roadside sign will learn about the Native history of the tower and the present controversy. Visitors will also learn something of Native religious practices today.
Other sites have also begun to bring in Native stories, sometimes in novel ways. Yellowstone’s new visitor center is dedicated to park geology, so one might expect a single-minded focus on the physical sciences. On the second floor, however, there are four interpretive signs overlooking the large three-dimensional map of the park. Each sign presents one affiliated tribe’s interpretation of a geophysical feature, as told by a current tribal member. For example, Grant Bulltail, a Crow elder and historian, tells how his people used mud from Artist Paint Pots to paint their tipis. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Dixey of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes tell their people’s story of how Yellowstone Lake was created when Coyote spilled a huge basket of water and fish.
Even in a center dedicated to teaching visitors geology, the NPS has found space for a humanistic interpretation of the landscape. By using pictures of their Native informants, the NPS also reminds visitors that contemporary Native peoples still have relationships with the park and its many resources.
Next door, in Grand Teton National Park, the new Craig Thomas Discovery and Visitor Center illustrates another way to tell Native stories. One wall of the center tells the story of “People in This Place,” with statues and text. The statues include an American Indian woman, a prospector, a hiker, a photographer, a pioneer woman, a mountain climber and a tourist. The Native woman is badly outnumbered, but she is there.
The accompanying text discusses Native history in the area, telling how local tribes used dogs, horses and obsidian. It also acknowledges that both Bannock and Shoshone tribes were restricted to reservations after negotiations with the U.S. government. The text even brings that story into the present, with a picture of two Indian men blessing the return of wolves to Yellowstone in 1995. Both past and present stories appear.
Despite progress, a basic problem remains: Even the parks that are trying to do a better job of telling the full story usually incorporate Native stories by adding new layers to previous interpretations. This leaves Native stories playing perpetual catch-up, fighting for new exhibit space in an already crowded visitor center, never quite able to redress the imbalances of the past. Better interpretation requires erasing past biases.
Erasing a layer is part of the plans for Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site in Colorado, which commemorates one of the most appalling of the killing fields of the Indian Wars. Congress established this as a site to remember the Native women, children and elderly who desperately hid in the creek banks to escape their murderers. The NPS has worked closely with the Cheyenne and Arapaho, and it gives them privileged access for ceremonies. Plans also provide for the NPS to remove a monument that local people had erected in the 1950s. The marker memorializes the soldiers who died while perpetrating that massacre, and neither the NPS nor the tribes believe that it belongs at a site that commemorates the victims of a massacre. That layer of interpretation, which predates the park service, will be erased.
Sand Creek also reflects a new era of closer working relationships between the NPS and the tribes. For example, the NPS has given the Oglala Sioux a major role in the visitor center in the South Unit of Badlands National Park in South Dakota. The park service has proposed transferring the entire South Unit to the tribe as a tribal park, but that will require legislation from Congress.
Changes in interpretation have also been significant at Nez Perce National Historical Park, which includes more than 30 sites in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. After having built closer relations with the Nez Perce nation over the past 20 years, the NPS is ready to let the tribe tell its own story here. The new park brochure about the Bear Paw Battlefield in Montana gives the tribe this voice. It opens with a greeting in the Nez Perce language and then speaks in a Native voice: “Far from our beautiful homeland, upon this quiet terrain of our Earth Mother, the spirits now forever bear silent witness to our people’s painful and tragic encounter with manifest destiny.” The tribe, and not the NPS, appears as your host at this site.
Done right, this approach avoids one of the biggest risks of national park interpretation—having the arrogance to tell someone else’s story your way. The NPS has begun to let others speak. Even when it tells the story itself, national park interpretation is opening up. It’s getting better in some places, and sometimes getting a lot better. With more money for the national parks and more staff assigned to build relationships, there’s potential to see and hear many more Native stories.
National parks are America’s great outdoor classrooms, and they attract about 300 million visitors a year, from school groups to senior citizens, mountain climbers to families in minivans. The vast majority of those people will flip through the park’s brochure, browse exhibits at in the visitor center, and read some of the informational signs posted at the roadside turnouts. The more organized or ambitious of the visitors perhaps even checked out the park’s website before they came. In all those venues the National Park Service (NPS) interprets the site for visitors, teaching them about the park and why it is important.
That adds up to a lot of history, a lot of stories. There are stories about the American Revolution in Boston and Philadelphia, about the Confederacy on Civil War battlefields, about segregation along the Selma to Montgomery National Historic Trail, about pioneers and Indians along the monuments to Western Expansion. The parks that preserve wild nature, such as Yellowstone, Yosemite or the Everglades, also tell a lot of historical stories. Even a national recreational area or seashore like Lake Mead or Fire Island will interpret the area’s history for visitors on their way to those beaches.
Because American Indians lived everywhere in this country, the NPS could tell Native stories at almost every site. After all, it has chosen to tell the stories of settlers at most park units. Unfortunately, the NPS usually leaves out the Native stories in the parks, letting Indians vanish from most park landscapes.
Too much of the NPS’s interpretation of our history is incomplete, and it usually leaves out the Native stories. And when it does tell a Native story, all too often, it is through the eyes of other people, the way it has been done it in too many movies. In Dances With Wolves, for example, Kevin Costner portrays the Lakota sympathetically, but through the eyes of a white military man who falls in love with a white woman who had been adopted by the tribe. A less benign example of that can be found at Indiana Dunes National Seashore, which tells of the Potawatomi tribe through the experiences of a white man, Joseph Bailly. A sign at the Bailly homestead explains that he bought beaver furs and other items from the Potawatomi in exchange for various trade goods. Another sign says the United States gave Bailly $6,000 for counseling the Potawatomi when they sold their land in the Chicago Treaty of 1833. That was a huge sum of money back then, but the sign doesn’t say what he did in those negotiations that made the U.S. government so grateful. Nor does the sign finish the story—the Potawatomi ended up on a “Trail of Death” westward, across the Mississippi.
LO RES FEA Photo Nat Parks 04 Fort Davis Buffalo soldiers AP101028145593 270x161 No Longer Circling the Wagons: Many National Parks Get Indian Stories Wrong
The Fort Davis site talks more about Buffalo Soldiers than Indians.
That’s just one of many Native stories the NPS leaves out of its narrative. Drive across the Great Plains and visit the park units there. Except for Minnesota’s Pipestone National Monument and Knife River Indian Villages in North Dakota, the national park units on the Plains focus on a short period of settlers’ history instead of the much longer Native histories. They also tend to talk about the deeds of settlers instead of the impact those actions had on American Indians.
Visitors to Nebraska’s Scotts Bluff National Monument see a replica covered wagon along with part of the original Oregon Trail as it heads through Mitchell Pass. Across the parking lot, the Oregon Trail Museum and Visitor Center tells the story of the emigrants who passed this way. The American Indians who lived here appear in an exhibit entitled, “The White Emigrants Met the Mounted Hunters of the Plains.” Again, the Native stories are told in relation to the experiences of the intruders.
That park has 62 documented archaeological sites, but you won’t learn that when you’re there. You also won’t be told how Indians used the site before the white man arrived. An oral tradition dating to Frank Kicking Bear says Crazy Horse chose Scotts Bluff for one of his earliest vision quests. He reportedly saw horses and thunder beings in his vision who told him how to prepare for war. But you won’t hear that story at Scotts Bluff. The people who wanted Scotts Bluff to be a national monument had a one-sided view of what made the site important. Telling the story of Crazy Horse preparing for war against the United States would contradict their story, that of peaceful emigrants on their way to Oregon.
Another reason you won’t hear that story is a lack of money and a lack of staff. The staff at the monument hasn’t been able to do the research and other paperwork to help it tell those stories. It doesn’t have this research because the monument doesn’t have a resident staffer who could to write such a document, or who could develop relationships with associated tribes to help them tell their stories about the site. So the old emigrant stories, which date back to the 1920s and 1930s when this site was first preserved, get told. Native stories remain untold.
Also untold is the devastating effect of Euro-American expansion on the people who lived here. The Scotts Bluff stories focus too narrowly on the emigrants to show any concern for the people they displaced. Such sites celebrate U.S. expansion instead of telling the full story.
If you know some history, you might expect to see some of that story an hour’s drive away in Wyoming, at Fort Laramie National Historic Site. Indians and whites signed two important treaties there, in 1851 and 1868. The fort was important for both trade and war, and it attracted a significant community of Natives who lived there. The NPS could tell many stories about this place, which is rich in history. Instead, it chooses to tell the story of soldiers’ lives in a frontier garrison. We learn about when kerosene and electricity arrived, we learn about Victorian furnishings, and we can see a ranger in a historic uniform fire a cannon. The NPS has restored more than a dozen large military buildings on the site, in addition to many smaller outbuildings. It would be easy to add an equal number of tipis to make the Native story visible to the arriving tourist.
Instead, there’s just one tipi in the visitor center. There’s also one Native story on a sign outside, with a kind of Dances With Wolves perspective. The sign tells of Mni
LO RES FEA Photo Nat Parks 02 Little Bighorn Bones LARGE R PAHRE 270x180 No Longer Circling the Wagons: Many National Parks Get Indian Stories Wrong
Gravestones of Indians who died in the Battle of Greasy Grass, a.k.a. Little Bighorn
Akuwin (Brings Water Home Woman), the daughter of Spotted Tail, who was fascinated by the ways of the whites. When she died of tuberculosis in 1866, her father brought her body to Fort Laramie, and the commanding officer, Colonel Maynardier, agreed to bury her at the fort. She remained buried there until 1876, when Spotted Tail brought her remains to his agency near the Black Hills. (Her family returned the remains to Fort Laramie in 2005.) It’s a nice story of people who sought peace between Indians and whites, but it’s hardly typical of what transpired at Fort Laramie. Fort Laramie was, after all, a fort, and an important base for several military campaigns. That’s a story of war and peace, not the place settings on officers’ tables.
Drive down to the Texas frontier and visit the Fort Davis National Historic Site and it’s the same story you see at Fort Laramie. The prosaic details of soldiers’ lives dominate the NPS story, including information about the foods their wives liked to cook. There are some Indians displayed in the visitor center exhibits, and you learn a bit about the Chiricahua Apache military leaders Victorio and Geronimo there. But the Indian exhibits put together get less space than 2nd Lt. Henry O. Flipper, the first African American to graduate from West Point, who was stationed at Fort Davis. Fort Davis memorializes the “Buffalo Soldiers” of the frontier, the African American agents of the U.S. empire. Your host in the site’s film is Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, wearing a very large reproduction of a cavalry uniform.
If you head north from Fort Laramie you’ll eventually reach Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota. Of course the park emphasizes the story of Theodore Roosevelt, who had a ranch here for a few years. The park also tells the story of the natural environment and the wildlife, but it largely forgets the Indians who lived here. A sign at the Painted Canyon Visitor Center mentions that Lakota lived there, and then it points you to a driving tour along the route of two U.S. military expeditions.
Fortunately, there are exceptions in the park system, both large and small. One small step in the right direction has been taken at South Dakota’s Wind Cave National Park, which tells the Lakota origin story associated with the cave, along with the scientific stories. At Guadalupe Mountains National Park in Texas, several exhibits in cramped temporary quarters tell of Native prehistory and history and of cultural clashes with Spanish-Mexican and U.S. groups. Signs like those are scattered through the park system if you look.
For more significant change, consider the Battle of Greasy Grass monument on the Crow Reservation in Montana. After a century of celebrating General George Custer, the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument got that new name—what the Indians call the Battle of Little Bighorn—and an expanded mission in 1991. An Indian memorial was erected in 2003, less visible to the casual visitor than the monument honoring Custer’s Seventh Cavalry but a very moving piece of art. Native tour guides now supplement park ranger talks. The stories of the Indians who fought Custer, as well as those who fought with him, now receive significant interpretation at the site.
A half-day’s drive from Little Bighorn, Devils Tower National Monument in Wyoming has also seen major changes in interpretation over the past two decades. It originally focused solely on the geology of the tower. As recreational climbing became more popular, the NPS began to tell that story too. The popularity of climbing sparked a reaction from those nations that believe the tower is sacred and should not be climbed as sport. The NPS has not closed the tower to climbing, but it does explain the controversy to visitors. Indeed, American Indian traditions and religious beliefs about the tower provide a third major interpretive theme at the site. Anyone who enters the visitor center, walks around the tower, or reads a roadside sign will learn about the Native history of the tower and the present controversy. Visitors will also learn something of Native religious practices today.
Other sites have also begun to bring in Native stories, sometimes in novel ways. Yellowstone’s new visitor center is dedicated to park geology, so one might expect a single-minded focus on the physical sciences. On the second floor, however, there are four interpretive signs overlooking the large three-dimensional map of the park. Each sign presents one affiliated tribe’s interpretation of a geophysical feature, as told by a current tribal member. For example, Grant Bulltail, a Crow elder and historian, tells how his people used mud from Artist Paint Pots to paint their tipis. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Dixey of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes tell their people’s story of how Yellowstone Lake was created when Coyote spilled a huge basket of water and fish.
Even in a center dedicated to teaching visitors geology, the NPS has found space for a humanistic interpretation of the landscape. By using pictures of their Native informants, the NPS also reminds visitors that contemporary Native peoples still have relationships with the park and its many resources.
Next door, in Grand Teton National Park, the new Craig Thomas Discovery and Visitor Center illustrates another way to tell Native stories. One wall of the center tells the story of “People in This Place,” with statues and text. The statues include an American Indian woman, a prospector, a hiker, a photographer, a pioneer woman, a mountain climber and a tourist. The Native woman is badly outnumbered, but she is there.
The accompanying text discusses Native history in the area, telling how local tribes used dogs, horses and obsidian. It also acknowledges that both Bannock and Shoshone tribes were restricted to reservations after negotiations with the U.S. government. The text even brings that story into the present, with a picture of two Indian men blessing the return of wolves to Yellowstone in 1995. Both past and present stories appear.
Despite progress, a basic problem remains: Even the parks that are trying to do a better job of telling the full story usually incorporate Native stories by adding new layers to previous interpretations. This leaves Native stories playing perpetual catch-up, fighting for new exhibit space in an already crowded visitor center, never quite able to redress the imbalances of the past. Better interpretation requires erasing past biases.
Erasing a layer is part of the plans for Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site in Colorado, which commemorates one of the most appalling of the killing fields of the Indian Wars. Congress established this as a site to remember the Native women, children and elderly who desperately hid in the creek banks to escape their murderers. The NPS has worked closely with the Cheyenne and Arapaho, and it gives them privileged access for ceremonies. Plans also provide for the NPS to remove a monument that local people had erected in the 1950s. The marker memorializes the soldiers who died while perpetrating that massacre, and neither the NPS nor the tribes believe that it belongs at a site that commemorates the victims of a massacre. That layer of interpretation, which predates the park service, will be erased.
Sand Creek also reflects a new era of closer working relationships between the NPS and the tribes. For example, the NPS has given the Oglala Sioux a major role in the visitor center in the South Unit of Badlands National Park in South Dakota. The park service has proposed transferring the entire South Unit to the tribe as a tribal park, but that will require legislation from Congress.
Changes in interpretation have also been significant at Nez Perce National Historical Park, which includes more than 30 sites in Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. After having built closer relations with the Nez Perce nation over the past 20 years, the NPS is ready to let the tribe tell its own story here. The new park brochure about the Bear Paw Battlefield in Montana gives the tribe this voice. It opens with a greeting in the Nez Perce language and then speaks in a Native voice: “Far from our beautiful homeland, upon this quiet terrain of our Earth Mother, the spirits now forever bear silent witness to our people’s painful and tragic encounter with manifest destiny.” The tribe, and not the NPS, appears as your host at this site.
Done right, this approach avoids one of the biggest risks of national park interpretation—having the arrogance to tell someone else’s story your way. The NPS has begun to let others speak. Even when it tells the story itself, national park interpretation is opening up. It’s getting better in some places, and sometimes getting a lot better. With more money for the national parks and more staff assigned to build relationships, there’s potential to see and hear many more Native stories.
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