I have written about Ranger Betty Soskin before and so won’t tell her story again. Here is a a brief clip in which she discusses the shutdown.
07 Monday Oct 2013
Posted in National Park Service, WW2
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I have written about Ranger Betty Soskin before and so won’t tell her story again. Here is a a brief clip in which she discusses the shutdown.
06 Sunday Oct 2013
Posted in Uncategorized
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The Castle during the Civil War: This photograph is mislabeled April 1865 but probably dates to 1863, before the fire
I am sitting here listening to The Statesmen Quartet, the Memphis vocal group that exerted tremendous on the young and impressionable Elvis. It is great Sunday morning music.
Earlier in the week I received in the mail a publisher’s advanced copy of Smithsonian Civil War: Inside the National Collection and have been enjoying it very much. What I like the most about the Smithsonian Institution is its interdisciplinary approach to its collections and museums. It covers out national heritage from different perspectives—scientific, historic, artistic, cultural, and so on. Since the start of the Sesquicentennial I have visited numerous Civil War-related exhibits at different Smithsonian museums; each one had a different shift of emphasis and added to my understanding of the war. This book takes that approach, drawing on the resources of thirteen different Smithsonian archives and museums. Another thing I like is that the editors have kept Smithsonian itself as the central aspect of the book. Thus, we read how collecting the Civil War started as almost an afterthought and grew organically from there. Books like the recently published Lincoln’s Citadel describe the chaos, violence, and dirtiness of Washington City during the war. Like Lincoln, Smithsonian director Joseph Henry lost his son to typhoid during the war. What we now know as The Castle was partly lost to fire in January 1865. My favorite Smithsonian museum is the National Portrait Gallery, which is housed in the old Patent Office. I recognized many of the artifacts in the book from the NPG, as well as other places. Walking the halls, you half expects to encounter Walt Whitman or Clara Barton coming your way.
There is nothing like seeing the real deal, which is why we visit. In the photographs and concise essays of this new release, the Smithsonian has done a good capturing that excitement.
(image/Smithsonian Institution)
05 Saturday Oct 2013
Posted in Uncategorized
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Had it not been for the Shutdown friends and I would be on Metro North right now on our way to Hyde Park. Weatherwise, it was a perfect day to visit but alas we will have to wait. I was shocked and horrified to see footage of congressmen/women blaming NPS personnel to their face for the closings on the National Mall this week. Blaming federal employees who are stuck in the middle and are trying to make the best of a difficult situation is the height of arrogance. I was glad to see these workers responding with grace and dignity.
(image/National Archives)
02 Wednesday Oct 2013
Posted in Genealogy, Joseph Roswell Hawley, Libraries
≈ Comments Off on Calendar says fall, thermometer says summer
It was an unseasonably warm day here in the Big Apple, I just got back from a meeting of the Archivists Round of Metropolitan New York at Green-Wood Cemetery. It was a chance to see and hear about some of the behind the scenes activities of the 175 year old garden cemetery. A special treat was to behold the original hand-written list of men from the 14th Brooklyn wounded at Gettysburg. Many of the men from the 14th are now interred there, some having died of their wounds and others having returned from the war to live out the rest of their natural days before meeting again in Valhalla. As I said a few weeks back, I am trying to think holistically in my personal and professional endeavors. Yesterday I started Brenda Dougall Merriman’s Genealogical Standards of Evidence: A Guide for Family Historians, a primer on the basics of proper genealogy. It is part of my longterm plan to become BCG certified.
This morning I emailed a friend who agreed to critique my book proposal to see if he would read it and comment by the weekend after next if I got it to him one week from today. It is part of my plan to keep my feet to the fire. It is so easy not to do it. In a piece of serendipity, a colleague in the library where I work asked in the afternoon if I want to be part of a writing club she is founding. The idea is that once a week the group will get together to check our progress, read each other’s work, and that type of thing. I think this is going to work well.