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Yearly Archives: 2011

Brady’s camera

04 Sunday Dec 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Film, Sound, & Photography

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March 1865 Brady letter to Lincoln asking for another sitting

Matthew Brady’s camera  sold at auction for $65,725 on November 30th. Heritage Auctions of Dallas conducted the sale. Brady sold the camera when he filed for bankruptcy in April 1873 and photcopies of the insolvency papers are included in the lot. It is believed to be the camera Brady used to photograph Lincoln during his February 1860 trip to New York City. This camera was also part of the New-York Historical Society’s wonderful “Lincoln and New York” exhibit in 2009-10. I remember seeing it there with my father-in-law just before the N-YHS closed for renovation.

Also included is an original copy of the September 23, 1957 Life magazine, in which Ed Clark uses Brady’s camera–yes, the actual camera–to photograph President Eisenhower and others in period poses. Check it out starting on page 118. An added bonus in this edition of Life from the year of the Little Rock segregation episode is a look into the governor’s mansion of Arkansas’s Orville Faubus. You can’t make this stuff up.

(image courtesy Gwillhickers/Library of Congress)

My Civil War neighborhood

02 Friday Dec 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Monuments and Statuary, New York City

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Hey everybody, I was running to a function in the city this morning. Cutting through Madison Square Park on my way to my destination I stopped to take a few photos on my cellphone.

This is the William Seward monument, which was dedicated in the Centennial year of 1876. That same year the arm of the Statue of Liberty was also placed in Madison Square Park, as a fund raising effort to procure proceeds for the completion of the statue that now stands in New York Harbor. The rumor on the street is that this is the head of Seward soldered onto the body of Lincoln. The reasoning is that, there being so many sculptors working on Lincoln figures in the decade after the sixteenth president’s assassination, it was quicker and less expensive to build the Seward statue in this manner. I have no idea if this is true but the gangly nature of the subject’s pose makes it seem plausible, doesn’t it?

This is Admiral David G. Farragut of “Damn the torpedoes” fame. Farragut was a Southerner but remained loyal to the Union. Next spring when I visit Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx I will make sure to see his final resting place. David McCullough wrote about this Augustus Saint-Gaudens piece in the Wall Street Journal in May. The more time passes the more fascinated I am with public art, especially monuments and statuary. Each tells a fascinating if obscure story to those wiling to listen.

I always get a kick out of the professional dog walkers. This one “only” had five.

The Empire State Building from Madison Square Park. It was a beautiful late autumn day in the city, crisp with blue skies and sunshine.

Around the corner is the 69th Regiment Armory. I blogged about this not long ago.

The building dates to 1904 but you can see from the inscriptions below that the famous regiment of course goes back to the Civil War.

It is hard to make out, but the first entry for battles engaged in by the 69th is Bull Run. Better blog photos are a 2012 resolution, pun intended. I was so happy to see the restored painting at the New-York Historical Society last week.

Finally I was off to my program, where I took this during the lunch break.

Enjoy your weekend.

Insert joke here

01 Thursday Dec 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Baseball

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For years Pete Rose has been a fixture on the Las Vegas autograph circuit. I didn’t think Baseball’s all-time hit leader could sink any lower than he did a few years ago when he was selling autographed bats and balls with the inscription “I’m sorry I bet on baseball.” Apparently he can. Now Rose is selling autographed reproductions of the document banning him for life from Major League Baseball for gambling. The item comes in a copper binding and is notarized authentic by a Nevada notary public. It sells on Rose’s website for a cool $500, but Rose will personalize your purchase at no extra charge. The only thing sadder than Rose selling these tawdry items are the people buying them.

(image/Kjunstorm)

Monuments gone wild

30 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in The lighter side

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Hey everybody, I am sorry about the lack of posts this week. There are a few weeks to go in the semester and the Hayfoot and I have been busy. The week has been something of a grind.

On the lighter side of things I ask this question: What do FDR, Peter the Great, Crazy Horse, and Martin Luther King Jr. have in common?

Answer: They made Travel + Leisure’s list of the World’s Most Controversial Monuments. Fear not, internationalists among us. Bad taste knows no borders; everywhere from Argentina to Uruguay is here.

Enjoy these misguided homages the good and the great.

FDR: loved the president, the statue, well…

(image/Cafzal)

“A place where people gather”

28 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums

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Step into the sanctuary of the African Meeting House and you will walk on the same ancient floorboards where Frederick Douglass, William Lloyd Garrison and other prominent abolitionists railed against slavery in the 19th century, and where free black men gathered to shape the famed 54th Massachusetts Civil War regiment.

I can’t wait to visit here on my next trip to Boston, the city where both my parents grew up and where I still have family.  For decades visitors, myself included, have walked the Freedom Trail.  Our definition of that term is about to get a little wider.

Dreadlocked rustler

27 Sunday Nov 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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In recent weeks there has been much in the news and on the blogosphere about the successful effort to ban the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) license plate in Texas.  Now a Native American group is protesting the just-approved plate that pays tribute to the Buffalo Soldiers.  The relationship between Native and African Americans was and is a complicated one and this is just the latest skirmish between the two groups.  Future disputes are likely.  In a guest post last month my friend Susan Ingram outlined the ongoing dispute between the Cherokees and Cherokee Freedmen.

(image by Chr. Barthelmess/25th Infantry, 1890)

Black Friday

25 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums, New York City

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One of my favorite things to do the day after Thanksgiving is visit a museum.  Being that the New-York Historical Society opened earlier this month after a two year renovation, this year’s choice was a no-brainer.  I have been a habitué of the N-YHS since moving to New York over a decade ago.  If you are a serious student of American history and have never been to this institution, you simply must visit.  An added bonus is that it is directly across the street from Central Park and a few blocks north of the Dakota apartment building.  I always go out of my way to see the Dakota when I am in the area and it fills me with sadness every time.  Earlier this week I finished this.

When I exited the train station on 72nd street this morning the bleachers from yesterday’s Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade were still standing.

The New-York Historical Society’s institutional memory is unsurpassed.  The Society opened its doors in 1804, the year Vice-President Aaron Burr mortally wounded Alexander Hamilton in a duel on the cliffs of Weehawken, New Jersey overlooking Manhattan.  Thomas Jefferson was the sitting president and George Washington had died just five years earlier. Here are a few photos, all taken on my cell phone camera.

The scale is difficult to make out but these slave shackles were intended for small–very small–children.  This was from the first floor permanent exhibit.

No, this is not a ghost.  There were living historians at the Society today.

These Revolutionary War-era musket balls,

and buttons worn by British troops, are from archaeological digs in upper Manhattan.

The introductory film did an excellent job tracing the evolution of New York City from the time of the Lenape Indians, through the Dutch and Colonial eras, the Civil War, the Gilded and Jazz Ages, 9/11 and today.

I loved this contemporary figurine on the third floor’s visible storage area.

The ribbons are from Civil War reunions.  The first is from a UCV gathering in South Carolina in 1898; the second is from 1904.  It is often lost on people how far into the twentieth century Civil War veterans lived.

A tribute to General Michael Corcoran of the 69th New York.  Several months ago I wrote of the restoration of The Return of the 69th (Irish) Regiment, N.Y.S.M. from the Seat of War. I saw it today for the first time and can attest to its power. I have always loved the confluence of art and history.  I cannot wait until January when the New American Wing Galleries reopen at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  It has been almost three years.  I already have MLK Jr. Day marked on my calendar for a Holiday Monday visit.

It is hard to make out (again, cellphone camera), but this is a paper toy soldier of an African American doughboy.  The Centennial of the Great War is a little over two years away.

It is not all militaria.  The Society collects and interprets artifacts from all aspects of New York and American life.  This baseball sculpture was made in 1868.

Death masks are compelling because they remind us that historical figures were living people, not just names in a history book.  This is General Sherman.  My gosh, look at the detail in the beard.  They have the Lincoln Volk mask at the Society as well.

Frederick Douglass.  The statue is new.

All-in-all not a bad way to spend Black Friday.  No lines, no crazy customers, and a lot cheaper than the department store.

Happy Thanksgiving

24 Thursday Nov 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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My idea of Thanksgiving wasn’t instilled by an artist. That happened on a plane ride over Iowa, many Novembers ago. My wife and I were flying to Cedar Rapids to spend the holiday with her parents. Propeller planes then flew low over America, and around midday I noticed a recurring pattern on the snow-covered landscape below. Cars and pickup trucks, presumably loaded with husbands and wives and their kids, kept turning off the arrow-straight county roads and into the yard of the ancestral farmhouse—the one that had a barn. America was coming home.

Hey everybody, no Civil War here today. Someone woke up at 7:00 to dress our turkey. The bird is now in the oven and we are relaxing with our coffee and our Kindles and Pink Martini on the record player. Thanksgiving has always been my favorite holiday, probably because I have much to be thankful for. Wherever you are, we hope you enjoy your day. Happy Thanksgiving.

(above/theHayfoot’s homemade cranberry sauce)

Grayson, Oklahoma; population 134

22 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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Your humble writer lived in North Texas for a number of years and is married to someone who went to college in Oklahoma.  In the decades just after the Civil War there was a sizable movement of African-Americans from the Deep South to the state of Texas and what was then the Oklahoma Territory.  All-Black towns thrived during this era.  Some of these locales became so successful that whites reacted violently to them in what were, in effect, pogroms.  This history was lost, often intentionally so, for decades and is only now being rediscovered.  Other times these towns declined for less dramatic reasons, such as changes in the economy.  These places, so far removed from many parts of the country, have fascinating stories that will hopefully be told before they are lost forever.  Here is a small clip from one of them.

Cemetery robbery

22 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Monuments and Statuary, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Cemetery robbery

Visiting cemeteries has been a passion of mine for as long as I can remember.  One of my favorite afternoons ever was exploring Pere Lachaise one spring day a few years ago.  A few weeks back I was in one of the small cemeteries that dot Manhattan and can be found if one looks hard enough.  I struck up a conversation with one of the security personnel who told me that the theft of bronze, copper, and other metals has become an increasing problem in the past few years.  The metals are worth a great deal as scrap and apparently the economy is forcing individuals to desperate measures.  The Wall Street Journal corroborates that this is, sadly, a national phenomenon.  Civil War cemeteries would seem to be particular vulnerable to such crime, with their statuary and other ornamentation.  Hopefully officials are aware of this trend and will increase their vigilance.

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