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The Strawfoot

Monthly Archives: August 2011

Culp’s Hill witness tree

10 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Gettysburg

≈ Comments Off on Culp’s Hill witness tree

Last August the wife and I took a walking tour of the Battle of Brooklyn, which took place just down the street from where we live.  Halfway through the tour our guide made a passing remark explaining the likelihood of there being remnants of the battle, including almost certainly human remains, just a few feet below the sidewalk where we were standing at the moment.  What fascinates me about visiting historical sites is being in the exact place where history happened.  There is a continuity inherent in such an experience which grounds you with the people who came before and adds an immediacy to the past.  The rangers at Mysteries and Conundrums tell us of a recent discovery in a Culp’s Hill witness tree.

(Union breastworks at Culp’s Hill/Library of Congress)

Postcards from the edge

07 Sunday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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(uploaded to Wikimedia Commons by Hugh Manatee)

My friends and family know how much I love to write postcards. When we went to Gettysburg in June I felt like a slacker for sending “only” eleven to various people we know. The thing I love abut postcards is that, with the incorporation of email into our everyday lives in the 1990s, the personal letter has become a thing of the past. I am not saying I want to return to a life before electronic mail, it’s just that I miss the exhilaration of reaching into the mailbox and pulling out a letter from a friend far away. If it contained a few newspaper clippings and a photo or two, even better.  Postcards are an ideal middle-ground. And besides, I feel so bohemian when I’m sitting in a coffee shop far from home writing them out.  I always thought it was just me, but thankfully I am not the only one who sees it this way.

A six month progress report

05 Friday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Hey everybody, I am writing this on my new MacBook Air from a coffee shop on SOHO.  My best friend and I weathered the rainstorm on Wednesday night and went to the Apple Store across the street from the Plaza Hotel.  I was determined, resolute, adamant when I walked in the door to walk out with an iPad 2 but after some deliberation I decided to go in this direction.  I am happy I did, though an iPad is still in my future. It is all part of my future plans for the blog and my research pursuits.  This morning I had a One to One training session at the Apple SOHO location. Being a Mac novice I thought it would be wise to sign up for the twelve month membership of lessons.  An added benefit of entering the blogosphere is that doing so has forced me to improve my computer and technology skills, which to be honest were starting to lag.

Wednesday was a propitious time to enter the Mac world because it marked the six month anniversary of the Strawfoot.  Entering the blogosphere has been an adjustment but I am glad I did.  It has been a process, especially given my technologically challenged condition.  Still, saying I wasn’t proficient with computers just didn’t seem a good enough excuse.  I remember taking a colleague for coffee in early January where she patiently walked me through the ins-and-outs of blogging.  I had done some preliminary research but was still ignorant of a great deal.  Other colleagues provided helpful input as well.  After deciding to move ahead I chose my focus, opened up an account, and jumped in.  It was all somewhat hush-hush the first few weeks because I wanted to get 20-25 posts under my belt before going “wide” and putting it out there on the Web for all to see.  My mantra with the blog is “all in due time.”  I am committed for the long haul and would rather take my time and do things the right way.  The Air and (eventually) iPad are all part of my longer term plans to incorporate voice, video, and social media to my repertoire.  These are all coming soon.  The past six months have been rewarding in ways I could not have imagined and I am looking forward to what the future brings.  Stay tuned.

Opening the box.  This guy was especially helpful.

Hands-on training, literally

Six months, 131 posts and counting…

Harlem Week

03 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in National Park Service

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(Photo/Maria Azzurra Mugnai)

You may recall way back in February when the Hayfoot and I took a subway trip to Grant’s Tomb.  In recognition of Harlem Week blogger and chef Marcus Samuelsson posts this entry about the final resting place of our eighteenth president.  And yes, the wife and I are still hoping to see the Jazzmobile this summer.

Family reunions

03 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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I have always been intrigued by stories of slave descendants meeting descendants of slave owners.  Such stories add an immediacy to our nation’s history and serve to remind us that in the grand scheme of things our Civil War was not that long ago. Sometimes, for reasons I do not need to explain, the individuals are actual blood relations.  Sometimes not.  The book on this is of course Edward Ball’s Slaves in the Family, which came out in the late 1990s.  I am surprised by the lack of bitterness and generosity of spirit that usually surrounds such gatherings.  Recently Wayne Hunter showed up at a family reunion in South Carolina.

Thanking the troops

02 Tuesday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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Few Americans have understood more clearly the seductions and inadequacies of professing gratitude than Abraham Lincoln. Offering to a mother who had lost two sons in the Civil War “the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic,” Lincoln nevertheless acknowledged “how weak and fruitless must be any words … which should attempt to beguile” her from her grief. Expressions of thanks constitute the beginning, not the end, of obligation.

Shooting Soldiers

02 Tuesday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Film, Sound, & Photography, Museums

≈ 4 Comments

This past spring I mentioned our visit to the Merchant’s House Museum on the Lower East Side to see the Dr. R.B. Bonetcou photographs of Civil War wounded.  I mentioned in that post that a book was in the works.  The exhibit ended yesterday but as writer and blogger Jim Schmidt explains at Civil War Medicine (and Writing), the book has been released.

Update: The exhibit has been extended through August 29, 2011.  If you have not yet seen the collection I suggest you do so by the end of the month.

Lee’s papers

01 Monday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Historiography, Libraries

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The other day I linked to an article about the evolving legacy of Robert E. Lee.  In this week’s Salon Glenn LaFantasie has a piece on the Lee family’s attempts to control his personal papers.  Preventing researchers from learning the general’s true feelings about various public figures of the day is one reason for the hesitation; another is to keep letters of a more personal nature away from the public eye, especially letters Lee wrote when he was courting the woman who became his wife.  Personally I think Lee’s descendants are making a mistake.  The Marble Man myth has already been chipped away significantly and will never return anyway.  Ironically the best thing the Lees could do is take all of the the general’s papers and make them available to the public.  No individual is well-served by the type of adulation Lee has been subjected to for the past century and a half.  It unfair to them and us to do so.  Making him more human, including divulging details of his personal life and showing where he stood on the issues of the day and why he made the decisions he did, would be the best service Lee’s descendants could do for him.

It was forty years ago today

01 Monday Aug 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Beatles

≈ Comments Off on It was forty years ago today

Today is the anniversary of the Concert for Bangladesh.  In recognition George Harrison’s estate and iTunes are streaming the film.  More here.

 

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