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Yearly Archives: 2012

Johnny Pesky, 1919-2012

14 Tuesday Aug 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Baseball, Those we remember

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Johnny Pesky, rear holding cane

In sad but not unexpected news, Johnny Pesky has died. I am glad he lived long enough to see the Red Sox end their drought and win two World Series. Watching him raise the World Series flag with Carl Yastrzemski in April 2005 was something special. What I loved the most about Pesky was his innate kindness, the way he always had something positive to say. Pesky spent 73 years in professional baseball.

(image/Andrew Malone)

Checking out a museum, literally

13 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Libraries, Museums

≈ Comments Off on Checking out a museum, literally

I have been a librarian for fifteen years now. In fact I received  my Masters in Library Science fifteen years ago this week. I graduated in August 1997, interviewed at the public library in New York in September, and moved to to the city that October. The profession has changed more in the past decade and a half than at any time in its history. I still struggle  to grasp some of these changes, particularly  the rapidly changing information technology that is now part and parcel of the profession. If you told me in the late 90s that someday I would be able to check out and download a book to something called an ereader–from the comfort of my living room–I may or may not have believed it. It is a fascinating field in which I learn something every day. Libraries in New Jersey have embarked on a project to make it easier for people to visit area museums, even museums outside the Garden State. They are buying memberships to cultural institutions and making admission available to patrons for checkout.

(Image/William Merritt Chase’s The Tamborine Girl, Montclair Art Museum)

A rainy Friday

10 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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Fittingly it is raining today; the past few years this has become one of the more melancholic days on my calendar. For over a decade until he died three years ago it was on the second Friday in August that I made my annual trip to see my father and step-mother in Arkansas. This day hits me harder than the anniversary of his death, probably because the routine had become so…routine…that I know instinctively how today would have played out were he still here. I would have gotten the six a.m. flight out of LaGuardia, transferred in either Memphis or St. Louis, been met at the Little Rock airport by the two of them, gone for lunch, and then taken the hour drive back the house where I unpacked my small suitcase to settle in for the week. Somewhere in the week we would have taken a sidetrip to Memphis, the Mississippi Delta, Shiloh, or some other place. It was a pattern that began in the late 1990s and continued throughout the 2000s as I passed from the last stages of my youth into full blown middle age. The rhythms were so set that they eventually became unspoken. The one consolation is that my soon-to-be-wife was able to make the trip in 2009 and see, if just for that brief time, a part of my life that is now gone. We take what we can get.

Coincidentally, my trip always coincided with Elvis Week in Memphis. Three years ago I took the Hayfoot to Graceland. Were we there this week, we may have returned to Memphis to see some other sites. Last night I began Peter Guralnick’s Last Train to Memphis: The Rise of Elvis Presley, which had sat unread on my shelf for a number of years. This week seemed the appropriate time to get around to it. It makes me feel a little closer to what are rapidly turning into the “old days.”

The best way we can remember and pay tribute to someone is to live happily and productively. Tomorrow begins Civil War Weekend at Governors Island. It will be a fun time, not least because the Hayfoot will be turning out on one of the days. I won’t be dwelling on it every minute, but somewhere along the way I’ll stop and think of those Arkansas Augusts and the times we shared there and then.

“1950s Mayberry in the middle of New York”

08 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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Last week I mentioned the reunion of Coast Guard brats held this past weekend on Governors Island. I took the opportunity to talk to as many of these folks as I could and it was a priviledge. Many had not been back on the island since the 1960s and they were conspicuous on the ferry ride. They were the ones soaking it all in from the bow. Reunionites had come from as far as Portland and Seattle to be part of the weekend’s events,and without exception they were quite approachable and happy to share their stories.. I committed the faux pas of asking one if he and others were doing the “tourist thing” in the city. His answer was that he wasn’t a tourist, but coming home. A few told stories of having Girl Scout meetings in the casemates of Castle Williams, something I had read about but never heard discussed in the first person until last Saturday. I had always wondered what it was like attending a Boy Scout/Girl Scout meeting, teen dance, or Halloween party in a Second System fortification built just prior to the War of 1812. Did the participants find it strange? Unsettling? Mordant, but perhaps in a vaguely pleasurable way? The answer is that, even as young children living on the base with their military dads and families, they understood and appreciated the uniqueness of their situation. They understood how special it was even as it was going on, which is quite a gift. A brother and sister mentioned living with their family in one of the houses in Nolan Park back in the day. Another watched the original World Trade Center buildings rising across the harbor from her living room in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Some were old enough to have attended the 1964-65 World’s Fair. It was everything you volunteer for. The New York Times was on hand.

For the map lovers among us . . .

07 Tuesday Aug 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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A friend sent this to me today. It is educational and hypnotic in equal measure, especially at ten ’til midnight.

(Hat tip Polly McCord)

John Keegan, 1934-2012

05 Sunday Aug 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Those we remember

≈ 1 Comment

Military historian Sir John Keegan has died. I never met the man, though I did once see him speak at the 92nd Street Y. Personally and intellectually Keegan was a significant influence in my life. The first book of Keegan’s I read was A History of Warfare, which he released in 1993. After receiving my bachelors degree at the University of Houston  in May of that year I spent most of that summer hanging out with friends, playing wiffle ball, and watching the Astros. As summer gave way to fall we turned our attention to the Oilers. Yes, the Houston Oilers, that’s how far back this story goes. In the latter part of the year, after this extended period of laziness and general goofing around, I stumbled upon A History of Warfare in my local bookstore during the holidays, became entranced, and found my intellectual juices stimulated again.

A history of warfare was something of a misnomer; really it was an anthropology of warfare. It may not seem like much two decades on, but Keegan’s book taught many people the importance of taking an interdisciplinary approach to their scholarship. In Warfare, Keegan famously, or infamously, concluded that Clauswitz’s maxim that “warfare is politics by other means” is only partially correct. Keegan discussed the reasons men–and it is almost always men–have gone to war over the centuries and found parallels across cultures and millennia that went beyond the Prussian officer’s penetrating but more limited analysis. I always liked that the book was a history of warfare, and not the history of warfare. With the indefinite article Keegan acknowledged that even his own interpretations, however learned, were not final judgements. A History of Warfare, at least to me, was an invitation to join the conversation. It was in large part because of this book that I majored in interdisciplinary studies when I went back for my second masters degree a decade later in 2003.

Keegan was in the news a great deal in 1993 and 1994, plugging his book on the circuit and serving as a talking head in the lead up to the 50th anniversary of the invasion of Normandy. I remember him tutoring Bill Clinton about D-Day before the president went to France for the commemoration.

He played a role in my personal life as well. In 2008, fifteen years after Warfare’s release, yours truly was in a Brooklyn bookstore with the woman who would eventually become my wife. Still in the “getting to know each other” phase, we were browsing the shelves, occasionally pulling books we had read off the shelves and showing them to each other to give each other a sense of who we were. You are what you read. When I pulled Warfare off the shelf, I was surprised to discover that the Woman Who Became the Hayfoot was already well schooled in the works of Sir John Keegan. I only became more entranced. (That I had read almost the complete works of V.S. Naipaul had the same effect on her.)

Keegan’s observations often sprung up at unexpected times and in unexpected places. My eventual wife and I were in the medieval wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art looking at the swords, armor, and other objects one day when I remembered an anecdote of his: Keegan was once touring a similar museum with a friend when the acquaintance mentioned the beauty of the objects on display. When Keegan mentioned the purposes of the military accoutrements they were looking at, and what they were capable of doing to the human body, his companion suddenly became filled with revulsion. It had never occurred to him that what he had always seen as works of art were once something else entirely. The story is a helpful reminder that military history is not–or at least should not–be something that exists for our pleasure and edification.

Keegan continued writing, often well and with great insight, in his later years. He never managed, however, to rise quite to the levels he did in Warfare or in earlier efforts such as The Face of Battle (1976) and The Mask of Command (1987). Like Stephen Ambrose, he became  a little too famous and spread a little too thin. The books were published too often and too hastily, and the observations not quite as sharp. Perhaps this is inevitable with any famous person. Become too famous and you eventually loose control of even your own narrative. His 2009 book The American Civil War: A Military History was one of weakest efforts.

Still, Keegan had reached that point in his career where he had earned the right to have his voice heard. Sadly, it is a voice we will no longer hear.

(image from the Roger Mansell collection, published in A History of Warfare)

Bon weekend

03 Friday Aug 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Uncategorized

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It is Friday morning. As of today I am off work for the next 2 1/2 weeks, though I do have a number of projects I will be working on in addition to playing tourist here in the big city. For starters, the clock is ticking on a book review now due in about ten days. Before I write the review I will have to, uh, read the book. Still, the Hayfoot and I have some fun things planned.

Right now I am having my morning coffee and listening to Elvis (Elvis is Back) before I take off for Governors Island. It is going to be a special day because a group of Coast Guard brats, people who lived on the island while their parents served in the CG, will be on hand. The idea is to give them a tour and then conduct oral histories. I have been looking forward to it for awhile. Civil War Weekend is next week. Details soon to come.

Checking the news this morning I saw that a cache of baseball cards discovered in an Ohio attic are projected to sell for a cool $3 million. Unlike most cards that showed the wear-and-tear of rugged children’s use in the days before baseball cards became Cherished Collectibles, many of these were graded in perfect condition. When I was a kid we put ours in our bicycle spokes to make the sound of a motorcycle. In a refreshing twist, the extended family have decided to share the bounty with each of about fifteen cousins getting a share of the find. Nice twist on the usual story of what happens when money unexpectedly arrives.

(image/Library of Congress)

Pic of the day

31 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Baseball

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Yankee Stadium, July 31, 2012

The Marshall House flag, cont’d

31 Tuesday Jul 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums

≈ Comments Off on The Marshall House flag, cont’d

Earlier this year I wrote about the Marshall House flag, the posting of which you can read below. Alas yours truly will be at the Yankees game and so will have to watch the repeat, but tonight’s History Detectives examines whether a swatch found in some old boxes by a daughter going through her parent’s belongings is indeed part of the famous banner. Portions were filmed at the New York State Military Museum in Saratoga Springs.

The New York State Military Museum has one of the most extensive collections of flags in the United States, going back two centuries to the War of 1812. Its collection of Civil War battle flags is the largest in the country, which should not be a surprise given the Empire State’s outsized role in bringing an end to the Late Unpleasantness. One of the crown jewels of the state’s collection is the Marshall Flag, the Confederate national banner which flew above the Marshall House hotel in Alexandria Virginia until taken down by Colonel Elmer Ellsworth in May 1861.

The Photographic History of the Civil War in Ten Volumes: Volume one, the Opening Battles

Virginia passed its Ordinance of Secession on May 23 and tensions were high in the capital and just across the Potomac in Virginia. The following day Ellsworth noted the flag flying atop the building and in a fit of bravado dashed to the roof and pulled down the stars and bars. When he got to the bottom of the stairs Ellsworth was shot by proprietor James Jackson. Jackson in turn was shot by one of Ellsworth’s men. Both died instantly.

Currier and Ives print from the collection of the Library of Congress

Ellsworth was a dashing figure and a favorite of President Lincoln. He had been the colonel of the 11th New York “Fire Zouaves,” whose men had spent much of 1861 parading with great fanfare to large, appreciative crowds across the North. Their showmanship had more in common with acrobatics and synchronization than military tactics, and their colorful uniforms only added to their popularity and mystique. Ellsworth’s death made him a martyr across the North. The gruesome and violent nature of his death, however, was also one of the first signals to Americans of what the war would entail. How could a man so handsome and young, so vibrant, so full of life and charisma be taken away in an instant? Such is the nature of war.

Envelope from the collection of the New-York Historical Society

The NYS Military Museum has spent the last several years conserving what is left of the Marshall House flag. Here is an overview.

Riding Ellis ferry

29 Sunday Jul 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Ellis Island, Heritage tourism

≈ Comments Off on Riding Ellis ferry

From the “You never know what will enter your in-box” department:

  • Josh Rasp lives on Yankee Ferry, the only remaining Ellis Island Ferryboat
  • Step 100 years into the past and feel the history of this iconic boat
  • Tour the boat during sunset and discover the on-board vegetable garden

If you were an immigrant coming to New York at the turn of the century, Yankee Ferry would have been the last boat you’d have seen before stepping onto New York soil. Though she was originally built as a ferryboat for the Calendar Islands off of Maine, she moved to Boston Harbor during WWI under the command of the U.S. government as a watch point for German U-boats. After that, she spent time in WWII and off the coast of Block Island before making her way back to New York in the hands of a private buyer.

Yankee Ferry has definitely seen her fair share of interesting characters, heard more than a few crazy stories, and outlived all others of her kind to claim the title as the only surviving Ellis Island Ferry. These days, she’s home to Josh Rasp, a self-described nomad, who’s been living on Yankee for over a year. The current owners, Richard and Victoria, have turned Yankee into housing for a chicken coup and a sustainable garden as the next stage of her life begins.

Visit Yankee at sunset and learn about her incredible history over dessert with the boat team. You’ll take in amazing views of the Manhattan skyline while you tour the 4 original decks that used to hold up to 2000 passengers. You’ll also see the 120 tires that are geometrically placed to look like polka dots from the top, but are actually filled with vegetables and plants including heirloom tomatoes and summer squash. A true step back into the past, this experience will leave you eager to learn more about New York’s deep and interesting history.

The tour is Sunday August 12 and leaves from Hoboken, New Jersey.

(image and text courtesy of Sidetour)

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