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Category Archives: National Park Service

Cyclorama Building on the move?, cont’d

23 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Gettysburg, National Park Service

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Update: The Park Service has released its environmental assessment of the cyclorama building. There will be a meeting at Gettysburg National Military Park on September 6, 2012 for discussion and public comment.  I hope they can resolve this once and for all. The building has turned into an eyesore. Here is the url: http://parkplanning.nps.gov/cycloramaea.

Original posting (below) August 23, 2011

Authorities at Gettysburg National Military Park announced that they are exploring the feasibility of relocating Richard Neutra’s Cyclorama Building to a less conspicuous location.   This may be the least bad option given the possibility that the Park Service may never be granted the authority to demolish the site.

Gettysburg Cyclorama Building; photo/Don Wiles

I am always sympathetic to the arguments of architectural historians and preservationists that we are losing too much of our cultural heritage.  Every time I walk through the travesty that is the current Penn Station I rue the loss of the magisterial original.  It is fair to argue, too, that Neutra’s Gettysburg building is now itself part of the history of the evolution of the park, part of the Mission 66 project and designed to reflect the stature of the United States during the Cold War and Space Age.  Still, despite the nostalgia that many feel for the building they visited during their youth, the fact remains that the building never worked.  For one thing the Modernist structure sits incongruously atop Ziegler’s Grove on Cemetery Ridge, the site of some of the hardest fighting on Day 3 of the battle.  It was also structurally unsound, leaking frequently, and responsible for a great deal of the damage the Cyclorama incurred in the decades it was housed in the building.  Besides, there are plenty of representative Neutra buildings still standing.

Neutra’s Miller House, Palm Springs; photo/Ilpo’s Sojourn

Whatever happens, a permanent solution to the Cyclorama Building issue will hopefully be forthcoming in the intermediate future.  Stay tuned.

“Food to match the scenery”

08 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in National Park Service

≈ Comments Off on “Food to match the scenery”

Some friends and I were at the ballgame last night and one thing I could not help noticing was the wide selection of foods available. The hot dogs, peanuts, and cracker jacks are still there at the Old Ball Game. In addition, however, are a wide range of healthier fare such as fruit, frozen yogurt, and even sushi for those looking to watch what they eat. One of the intriguing aspects of Horace Albright’s memoir The Birth of the National Park Service is his account of the Service’s relationships with the various private vendors and concessionaires. This is no small thing. Places like Yosemite, Yellowstone, and the Grand Canyon are remote; visitors, far from home, are vulnerable to the cost and quality of the fare offered. The NPS has been conscious of this from the outset and did its best to ensure quality, consistency, and fairness, for the most part succeeding. Hamburgers and fries were once enough to satisfy most of the general population. Today the organization is focusing on providing options expected by a more health conscious clientele.

Creating America’s Best Idea

05 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in National Park Service

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I am halfway through Horace Albright’s The Birth of the National Park Service: The Founding Years, 1913-1933. Albright was Assistant Director of the NPS at its founding and later served as the first superintendent of Yellowstone. In 1929 he replaced Stephen Mather as Park Service director. Each brought his own unique talents to the job and together they created the National Park Service as we know it. Albright published Birth in 1985, two years before he died at the age of 97. He seemed to have been aware since the 1910s that he and his colleagues were making history and he had copious resource material to fall back on when it came time to tell his story. Even better, because he outlived so many of the principals–we are going back here all the way to the Wilson Administration–he does not have to pull punches. He goes into detail of which congressman helped and which impeded the task of creating the various parks and monuments, and the various interests that lined up for and against the various NPS projects. Cattle grazing was a major bone of contention with ranchers whose spreads were adjacent to park lands. Mather and Albright were especially adept at marketing the new Park Service to public officials with political clout and wealthy potential donors such as John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Being early adopters, they were quick to use that new fangled machine the automobile to reach the faraway nooks and crannies of Yosemite, Yellowstone, and elsewhere. I have not gotten there yet, but Albright also into detail about how the Civil War battlefield, previously run by the War Department, came under the auspices of the Park Service through President Roosevelt’s Executive Order 6166 in 1933. Albright stepped down later that same year, but remained active inNPS-related work for the rest of his life, meeting, for instance, with President-elect Eisenhower at the Commodore Hotel in New York City in 1953. Jimmy Carter awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980. So many people think the National Parks, monuments, and other public spaces are “just there,” not realizing the time and forethought it has taken to preserve and protect them. Thankfully Albright took pen to paper near the end of his life to tell us his version of events.

(image/Albright (hat in left hand) at the 50th anniversary of Yellowstone’s founding, 1922)

Remembering Rosie

26 Saturday May 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in National Park Service

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Last year I highlighted the career of Betty Soskin, a blogger and ranger at the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Homefront Museum in Richmond, California. Today the national historical park is opening its new visitor and education center. Ranger Soskin is in her nineties and still going strong.

(image courtesy NARA; Labor Department, Women’s Bureau)

Summer 2012 now in session

25 Friday May 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Governors Island, National Park Service

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Governors Island, May 2012

Hey everybody, it is Memorial Day weekend. I took the day off today to go to Governors Island for the annual island walk around. Each year just before the start of the season the Interpretation Division schedules an interpretive tour of the island with primarily other staff and volunteers serving as the audience. The purpose is to give rangers experience in front of a live audience before the opening of the island for the season. Each of about ten rangers speaks for 10-15 minutes on a certain aspect of the island’s long and rich history. It is great fun and quite informative. The rangers and volunteers are all dynamic and bring their own personality to what they do. It was especially good today because we got to see the inside of Castle Williams, which will be open to the public as of tomorrow after an extensive renovation. One will even get to visit the roof, with its million dollar views of New York Harbor. Tours of Castle Williams are free, but tickets are required. If you have never been t0 Governors Island, you are in for something special. It is even more meaningful this year with the bicentennial of the War of 1812 now upon us.

Castle Williams with Manhattan in the background

Whatever you do between now and Labor Day, make the National Park Service part of your summer.

The Homestead Act: A Short History

20 Sunday May 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Ellis Island, National Park Service

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The Ingalls family: Caroline, Carrie, Laura, Charles, Grace, Mary

The other day when I posted on the 150th anniversary of the creation of the Department of Agriculture I mentioned that it was one of several pieces of legislation passed in 1862. Today is the sesquicentennial of the Homestead Act. That these and other measures were enacted one after the other is not coincidental. The Republican Party and its antecedents had wanted to enact public works legislation for decades, only to be stymied by their Southern opponents. Secession assured the Republicans a majority in Congress, allowing them the pass the laws they had long desired for internal improvements. Hence the Agriculture Department, and the Homestead, Morrill, and Pacific Railway Acts. There was also the Second Confiscation and Militia Acts for the prosecution of the war. And of course the Emancipation Proclamation that September. One could make a strong case that 1862 was the pivotal year in American history.

The Homestead Act went into effect on 1 January 1863, the same day as the Emancipation Proclamation. It was responsible, literally, for giving us the country we live in today. 270 million acres–10% of the nation’s land mass–were given away during the 123 years the Homestead Act was in effect. Land was distrubuted under the act’s provisions under every president from Lincoln to Ronald Reagan. Immigration, expanding before and even during the war, exploded in the decades after Appomattox. That is why they eventually built Ellis Island in the 1890s. It was not just immigrants; individuals like Charles Ingalls moved westward by the thousands, in his case from Upstate New York, in search of greener pastures. It is important when studying our civil war to think beyond the drums and bugles if one wants to understand the country we live in today. President Kennedy believed it was the most important document in American history.

For the first time ever, all four of the Homestead Act’s parchment pages have left Washington and are on exhibit. Appropriately the document is currently at Homestead National Monument of America in Nebraska, through May 28th. The Park Service and National Archives collaborated on this video that one can watch in less time that an episode of any sit com.

The Roosevelt Ride

05 Saturday May 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Libraries, National Park Service

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Hyde Park, Summer 2011

Last summer I posted about our day trip to Hyde Park. The best way to do this if you are going from the city is to take the 8:45 from Grand Central to Poughkeepsie and get the Roosevelt Ride to the Library and Presidential Museum.  As of May 1 the free shuttle service is again up and running for the 2012 season. When we were there last year there was a fair amount of renovation taking place, which I assume is funded by the stimulus money funneled into the economy over the past few years. The Hayfoot and I will probably skip this year, having gone each of the last two. We will probably go back in 2013 when the changes are complete. Still, there is much to see and if you have never been we highly recommend. The site gets about 100,000 visitors a year, many of whom are “leaf chasers,” folks who visit the Hudson Valley each fall to witness the fall foliage. The Roosevelts and their generation have receded into history and every year there are fewer and fewer visitors who have that viseceral attachment to FDR that so many people had even into the 1970s and 80s . I spoke to one of the rangers about this very thing. This is one of the special places in 20th century American–world–history. Ed Rothstein of the New York Times filed this report from his trip earlier this week.

Summer’s almost here.

Robert Sutton speaks

05 Saturday May 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in National Park Service

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I had hoped to attend the conference of the National Council on Public History, of which I am a member, but unfortunately was not able to make it. The conference was held two weeks ago in Milwaukee in conjunction with the meeting of the Organization of American Historians. C-SPAN covered some of the goings on, including this interview with NPS chief historian Robert Sutton.

The National Park Service’s Civil War

06 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Media and Web 2.0, National Park Service

≈ Comments Off on The National Park Service’s Civil War

The National Park Service has had an active web presence for quite awhile now. This week the organization has taken it up a notch by unveiling its official site for the 150th anniversary. There are many worthwhile blogs and websites for information regarding the conflict. What is unique about the NPS is that it is the caretaker for many of the places where Civil War transpired. To put it mildly, this give the Park Service a unique perspective. All told, the Service protects and interprets over 100 parks related to the war and its legacy. Some (Gettysburg) are obvious; Others (Aspet, the home of sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens) less so. The one safe bet is that wherever you live you are close a national park or monument, and probably one related to the Civil War. The sesquicentennial is an exciting time because it is quite consciously an attempt to make up for the failures of the centennial fifty years ago. Nowhere is this more apparent than when visiting our parks. Visit if you can. Nothing beats the real thing.

Fort Jefferson, Dry Tortugas National Park

(image/National Park Service)

The field trip

03 Tuesday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Ellis Island, National Park Service

≈ Comments Off on The field trip

A few weeks back I mentioned that Scholastic was hosting a virtual field trip at Ellis Island. Well, the field trip was held this past Thursday and was a tremendous success. Students from across the country submitted over 3,600 hundred questions, in advance and live during the event. Scholastic has more, lots more, on its website. I found the video especially informative. It is an excellent introduction for children and adult folks who may just want to brush up on this important part of our nation’s history. How much do you know about Ellis Island?

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