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Category Archives: Governors Island

The Park Service enters its 100th year

25 Tuesday Aug 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Governors Island, National Park Service

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Stephen T. Mather was the National Park Service's first director and guiding voice.

Stephen T. Mather was the National Park Service’s first director and guiding voice.

Today is the anniversary of the founding of the National Park Service. It was on this date in 1916 that President Woodrow Wilson signed the enabling legislation creating the system. National parks themselves pre-date the 1916 Organic Act. Yellowstone goes all the way back to Ulysses S. Grant’s first term in 1872. Many people helped create the NPS; the one who stands out the most was its greatest advocate and first director: Stephen Mather.

Mather was an independently wealthy industrialist who worked tirelessly for America’s wilderness areas as Park Director. He held that position for a dozen years, from 1917 to 1929. Things were markedly different in those early years. Most parks in the system at this time were west of the Mississippi. Note that the Civil War battlefields were not yet under the auspices of the Park Services. The War Department managed Gettysburg, Antietam, et al during these years. It was Franklin Roosevelt who put the battlefields under the management of the NPS in the early months of his first term. FDR’s New Deal also left a strong mark on the parks; CCC and WPA crews built light infrastructure–camp grounds, stone walls, parking lots, restrooms–in Civil War and other parks.

Eisenhower was another big influence on the Park Service. In 1956 he created the Mission 66 initiative to build visitor centers and other tourist accommodations. The idea was to get this billions-of-dollars undertaking complete for the 50th anniversary in 1966. This work was imperative. The parks were feeling the strain of the millions of American families Seeing the USA in Their Chevrolet during those prosperous postwar years. The Richard Neutra Cyclorama Building in Gettysburg was one example of the Mission 66 movement.

The NPS urges all Americans to Find Your Park during the centennial. Thankfully this is easier than ever. There are now over 400 National Park Service sites within the United States and even overseas. Many of the newer sites are reflective of the changes in historiography that have taken place in recent decades, with an emphasis on telling the stories of traditionally underrepresented groups. There are still very few World War One related destinations within the system; that is because the battles were fought overseas and the American Battle Monuments Commission handles the memorials and cemeteries there. I know firsthand that the rangers and volunteers at Governors Island National Monument are working hard to tell the story of the American Expeditionary Force. The island is rich in WW1 history. That will all play out in the next few years.

Wherever you are, I urge you to visit your national parks.

(image/Stephen T. Mather as he was around the time of the National Park Service founding; Library of Congress, permalink: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/hec2009000939/)

 

 

Thomas Sully’s Jonathan WIlliams

22 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, Museums

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Though born in Boston, Jonathan Williams was very much part of Philadelphia society. He rests today in Laurel Hill Cemetery.

Though born in Boston, Jonathan Williams was very much part of Philadelphia society. He rests today in Laurel Hill Cemetery.

I was at the Philadelphia Museum of Art Museum yesterday. Imagine my shock when I turned a corner and came across this large portrait of Jonathan Williams. The name may not be familiar to everyone, but Colonel Williams was the engineer who modernized Governors Island’s Fort Jay and built Castle Williams. And those were just a few of his many accomplishments. I have never understood why Williams is not a better known figure in American history. He was a grand-nephew of Benjamin Franklin and a good friend of Thomas Jefferson. President Jefferson appointed Williams first superintendent of West Point in 1801. Williams codified many of the Military Academy’s early practices and incorporated a curriculum strong on science and engineering. This should not be a surprise; Williams and his great-uncle shared a fascination with science and technology.

At West Point Williams founded the United States Military Philosophical Society to promote science and engineering among the cadets. In this pursuit he was encouraged by President Jefferson. The MPS only lasted a decade or so, eventually giving way to the intense preparations for the War of 1812; Williams was in New York by Jefferson’s second term helping to fortify New York Harbor.

It is fitting that the painting above is in Philadelphia. Williams had returned there and spent the remainder of his life in the city of Brotherly Love. Among other things he was active in the American Philosophical Society, which is probably what led to this portrait. The APS provided studio space for artist Thomas Sully, who executed this portrait in 1815. Williams died that same year. Alexander Biddle gifted the painting to the museum in 1964.

Remembering Merle Hay and the men of the 16th Infantry Regiment

20 Thursday Aug 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, Great War centennial, National Park Service

≈ 3 Comments

16th infantry graveYesterday the staff at Governors Island National Monument uploaded my video tribute to Merle David Hay. I say “my” video but really it was a team effort. I wrote and narrated the text. Before we videotaped one of the rangers reviewed the draft and added some valuable insights and recommendations. He and another ranger also forwarded along some images to go with the ones I had. Their contributions greatly added to the final cut.

We shot it over three consecutive Sunday mornings in July. It is amazing the work that goes into a four minute clip. Finally one of the summer interns edited the footage. Needless to say, his technical skills are considerably greater than mine. It would not look as good as it does without his hard work. I could not embed it so one will have to click here to watch. Please note that any mistakes are mine alone. We are hoping to do more of these as the WW1 centennial continues. Merle Hay was one of the first three American to have been killed in the First World War. I hope the video is worthy of his memory. It is just one of the stories one will hear at Governors Island.

Here is the link once more. Enjoy.

Sunday morning coffee

16 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, WW2

≈ 4 Comments

Sami Steigmann: volunteer, Holocaust survivor, educator

Sami Steigmann: volunteer, Holocaust survivor, educator

I received a message this weekend from our great friend Sami Steigmann. Sami was emailing to share the news that he was honored this past Thursday at a Words of Bonds event at the Bnai Zion Foundation Center here in New York City. Also featured at that program was Jennifer Teege, the granddaughter of Amon Goeth. Goeth was the commandant of the Plaszow concentration camp. Born in 1908, Goeth was an Austrian who came of age in the instability and chaos following the First World War and quickly found a home in the nascent Nazi Party. He was unrepentant until the end, which came in 1946 when he was hanged for torturing and murdering unknown scores of people. Goeth was played in the movie Schindler’s List by Ralph Fiennes. In one of those examples of Faulkner’s maxim that the past isn’t even past, his granddaughter, Ms. Teege, only learned of the family relation in 2008.

Words of BondsMy wife and I met Sami Steigmann for the first time in 2009. He was our tour guide on a walk through the Governors Island Historic District one summer afternoon. Sami was the one who got me to volunteer at Governors Island in the first place. I wrote a piece about this whole episode that will be published by the Yosemite Conservancy this coming fall, on which I will share more when the time comes. That 2009 chance meeting was a great experience; I can still see it clearly as I type these words. After the tour Sami told the two of us how he survived a Nazi labor camp in the Ukraine and what he learned from the experience. His life has had many twists and turns since then, but he has always managed to hold on to hope and to his faith in others. It is a lesson he shares with school groups across the Greater New York area. He also volunteers at several museums and service organizations here in the city. I was so glad to hear of the event last week.

And Sami, if you are reading this, we are going to do that interview this fall!

Civil War Weekend 2015

07 Friday Aug 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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Should you happen to live in New York City or the vicinity, here is something to do Saturday and Sunday: Governors Island’s annual Civil War Weekend is again upon us. There will be a lot to take in and the weather should be great all weekend. You can’t ask for better than blue skies and temperatures in the 80s for August. On Sunday a guy with my initials will even be leading tours starting atop Soinssons Dock and making our way to Nolan Park. We will be talking along the way about some of the many Civil War officers who spent time on the island over their careers. It is going to be a great weekend all the way around.

2015 CWW Flier

2015 CWW Fliers

The other Peninsula Campaign

06 Thursday Aug 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, Joseph Roswell Hawley

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Puck magazine turned ten the year of the Yorktown Centennial. Sort of the Onion of its day, it naturally had to poke some fun of the occasion.

Puck magazine turned ten the year of the Yorktown Centennial. Sort of the Onion of its day, it naturally poked fun of the occasion.

I have been preparing this week for Civil War Weekend at Governors Island, which is this Saturday and Sunday. One of the most fascinating periods in the island’s history is the stretch from 1878 until Elihu Root’s reforms began transforming the island in the early 1900s. Eighteen seventy eight is the year Winfield Scott Hancock arrived and took command of the Department of the East. He quickly had his hand in many things, one of which was the Yorktown Centennial of 1881. That was the anniversary of the American and their French allies took on the British and their hired guns in Virginia. The battle involved none  of than the General George Washington and the Marquis de Lafayette. A Congressional organizing committee was put together that included none other than Joseph Roswell Hawley.

When we think of the post-Civil War era, we immediately think of the reconciliation vs. emancipation paradigm that underscored so much of the nation’s domestic politics. (Hawley himself had been a Civil War general and was very much part of the reunion circuit until his death in 1905.) It is important to remember though that so much more was happening. The Gilded Age was in full swing when the U.S. and France marked the occasion of their great Revolutionary War victory. Other nations were represented as well, but Yorktown 1881 was really a Franco-American affair. The timing could not have been better for a reunion of these once and former allies. Relations between France and American had become strained over the previous twenty years. Most egregiously, Napoleon III had stuck his nose in North American affairs, trying to undermine the fragile peace that existed between Mexico and the United States in the wake of the Mexican-American War. He even managed to get Maximilian I, the brother of Franz Josef I, installed as the ruler of Mexico in 1864. France and the United States might well have gone to war after Appomattox had things gone a little differently. It was that close.

Napoleon III was gone after the Franco-Prussian war in the early 1870s and by 1881 the Third Republic had had a decade to establish itself. That is why everyone was so determined to make nice in Yorktown for the 100th anniversary of the battle. General Hancock was in charge of providing the American military contingent for the event. Various regiments left from Brookllyn’s Fort Hamilton under his orders in mid-September for Virginia. The idea was that they would march the same route that Washington and his men had taken 100 years earlier. Hancock, among others, was charged with entertaining the many dignitaries as well. This was so true that when he died five years later the government still owed him at least $2500, money he had paid out-of-pocket for the festivities in Virginia. His widow Almira was still petitioning Congress for reimbursement in the late 1880s. (Reimbursement was a delicate topic for Governors Island commanders, who were expected to entertain the many VIPs who passed through the base while visiting New York City.)

There were some glitches during the Yorktown Centennial, especially relating to such logistical issues as accommodations. Still, the commemoration was a big success and did much to restore the Franco-American alliance that had fractured during the Civil War. The memory of Lafayette had a great deal to do with that. On the 4th of July 1917 the 16th Infantry Regiment made its famous march to the marquis’s grave at Picpus Cemetery n Paris, where a senior officer famously declared “Nous sommes ici, Lafayette.” In the 1920s, after the Versailles, the 16th was stationed on Governors Island.

(image via Library of Congress; permalink: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2012647294/)

 

 

Thinking of the French this 4th

04 Saturday Jul 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, New York City, Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace (NPS)

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The Marquis de Lafayette arrived in Castle Garden, also called Castle Clinton in 1824. Today this is a unit of the National Park Service.

The Marquis de Lafayette arrived in Castle Garden, also called Castle Clinton in 1824. Today this is a unit of the National Park Service.

On my tours at the Roosevelt Birthplace I always told the story of Marshal Ferdinand Foch’s 1921 visit to the site, which was then still under reconstruction. The Great War had been over for three years and Foch was on East 20th Street paying his respects to Theodore and Quentin Roosevelt. Many of you will know that young Airman Quentin died in France on Bastille Day 1918. The wider story is that Foch was in the United States on a goodwill tour modeled in part on Marquis de Lafayette’s goodwill tour of 1824-25. Lafayette arrived in New York and landed at Castle Garden to great fanfare before venturing out across the still-young nation whose independence he had helped win.

One of the beautiful things about the Battery is its sense of the old and the modern, as this image of the castle with the Manhattan skyline attests.

One of the beautiful things about the Battery is its sense of the historic and the modern, as this image of the castle with the Manhattan skyline attests.

This all came back to me yesterday when, after the day at Governors Island, I ventured up to the South Street Seaport to see the Hermione. For those not aware, this is a reconstruction of the frigate that took Lafayette here. The ship sailed into New York earlier this week to mark the 4th of July. Interest was high and there were many people out enjoying the scene.

The Hermione docked at the South Street Seaport, July 2015

The Hermione docked at the South Street Seaport, July 3, 2015

One of the most symbolic acts of the Great War took place on a Fourth of July. In 1917 members of the 16th Infantry Regiment led a contingent that included General Pershing on a five mile march ending at Lafayette’s tomb at Picpus Cemetery. The arrival of the Americans in summer 1917, though largely symbolic at this point in the war, could not have come a better time for the flagging morale of the French people. It was at Lafayette’s grave that Colonel Charles E. Stanton said the famous line: “Nous sommes ici, Lafayette.”

As the caption on this old photograph indicates, Colonel Stanton's famous words are often misattributed to John Pershing. General Pershing was in attendance and had previously approved Colonel Stanton's speech, including its most famous line. The 16th Infantry, part of the First Infantry Division, had led the highly publicized march.

As the caption on this old photograph indicates, Colonel Stanton’s words are often misattributed to John Pershing. General Pershing was in attendance however and had previously approved Colonel Stanton’s speech, including its most famous line. The 16th Infantry, part of the First Infantry Division, had led the highly publicized 4th of July march.

Happy 4th.

 

Robert Bullard’s interwar years

01 Wednesday Jul 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, Robert Lee Bullard (General)

≈ 6 Comments

Robert Lee Bullard commanded the First Division, the Second Army, and the III Corps over the course of World War One.

Robert Lee Bullard commanded the First Division, the III Corps, and the Second Army over the course of World War One. He lived until 1947.

A few weeks ago I mentioned that I have been reading some of the first-hand accounts of the Great War. Last night I began Robert Lee Bullard’s American Soldiers Also Fought. As it title suggests the book is a response to those, especially those Europeans, who downplayed America’s contribution to the war effort. That is a subject I will tackle in future posts. What I am most interested in here is Bullard’s introductory statement. On page one he writes:

We did not go into the war, as has been contended, to support “government of the people, by the people and for the people.” Nor did we go in to support democracy against autocracy: the President of the United States was in that war a greater autocrat than the Kaiser.

Plainly it was because our rights were being violated worse by Germany than by England. If Germany won we’d be “next” on their list.

I find the first paragraph striking on several levels. If I am reading it correctly–and I don’t know that I am–Bullard seems to be taking the Wilson Administration to task for its numerous misdeeds during the war. The zeal with which A. Mitchell Palmer scapegoated German-Americans comes to mind. The Creel Committee did some important work, but it too frequently succumbed to reactionary impulses. Bullard is going deeper though. As he saw it, Wilson’s failures also included the flawed outcome at Versailles and his advocacy for the League of Nations.

What is interesting is that in this small treatise Bullard is looking backward and forward at the same time. In the next line he is warning his readers about the German threat. The timing is important here. Bullard published Americans Soldiers Also Fought in 1936, just over a decade after he retired as commander of the Department of the East on Governors Island. After his retirement Bullard had become head of the National Security League, a preparedness organization begun by Leonard Wood and others just after the outbreak of the Great War. The group was still around decades later, taking on challenges wherever it saw them. By 1936 Hitler was entrenched in power and the Kaiser was still very much alive, living in exile in a manor in Holland. Wilhelm II lived another five years, long enough to see the Germans take Paris in 1940.

(image/The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs: Photography Collection, The New York Public Library. “Corps Commander Bullard” The New York Public Library Digital Collections. 1860 – 1920. http://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/510d47d9-b337-a3d9-e040-e00a18064a99)

Sunday evening winding down

28 Sunday Jun 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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IMG_2329Hey all, I’m sorry about the lack of posts this past week. It was kind of a hectic one. We had a good weekend at Governors Island. On Friday another volunteer and I interviewed a lady who worked as a civilian employee in the Adjutant General’s Office during the Korean Conflict. She was an amazing lady in her eighties who took the LIRR from Long Island and then 4 train from Grand Central to meet us on the Governors Island side of the ferry. It was something for us to interview her and then take her to the building where she once worked. She vividly recalled seeing the harbor from the second story window where she worked for two years just after graduating from high school in 1950.

This morning we spoke to another woman who lived in Fort Jay itself when her father was a colonel in the First Army. This woman lives in Texas and was in town for a wedding. She was nine when the family moved here and thirteen when they left; so, her recollections were very strong. Sitting in for the interview were her husband, children and grandchildren. It was obvious how much admiration her family had for her and what the trip meant to all of them. I love meeting people like this because it makes the story of Governors Island that much more immediate. It is one thing to hear that people served in Liggett Hall. It is another to walk the grounds with someone whose father worked in the building and have her tell you all about it. At one time she was pointing to individual homes on Colonel’s Row and recalling the names of those who lived there in the early Fifties. This was really a privilege.

This woman’s father was a career man and an officer on Patton’s staff during WW2. After that war the lived in Paris when she was still very young. Sadly most of his military paperwork was lost in the National Personnel Records Center fire of 1973. This terrible event destroyed the records of generations of uniformed service persons going back to the years just prior to World War 1. I have always known a little bit about the Records Fire, but had never met anyone touched by the event. It was all so unfortunate.

So, that was my weekend. You never know what you might see at Governors Island National Monument. If you know anyone who lived or worked there. we’d love to hear their story.

The Bowery Boys are in the house

21 Sunday Jun 2015

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island

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The Bowery Boys in the Castle Williams courtyard

The Bowery Boys in the Castle Williams courtyard

We had a pleasant surprise at Governors Island this afternoon when the Bowery Boys themselves came into Castle Williams. They are currently working on a piece about the island. As you might imagine if you are familiar with the BB, these guys are as winning and engaging in person as they are on their podcasts. I had to share with them that a good friend of mine in San Antonio is one of their biggest fans. They got a kick out of this information. If you have never listened to or read the Bowery Boys before, do yourself a favor and check them out here. These guys put the love into what they do.

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