Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Person, Place, and Thing: December 6-13

  ( I apologize for incomplete entries. All of a sudden the Instagram and Facebook posts, from which I copy and paste to generate this blog, have topped being as easy to search.)




Person.

On December 6, 2010, a first edition of John James Audubon's The Birds of America was sold at auction by Sotheby's of London for £7.3 million ($8.9 million), a record price for a printed book. The record stood until 2013 when a copy of the first book published in America, The Bay Psalm Book, sold for $14 million.

Audubon (1785-1851) was a self-trained artist, naturalist, and ornithologist, born on his father's sugar cane plantation in Saint-Domingue (now Haiti). His mother, a Louisiana lady, died shortly after his birth, and he was raised by his mixed-race enslaved housekeeper, by whom his father had already fathered several children. Due to the growing slave rebellion in Saint-Domingue, Audubon's father moved John James (then Jean) and a sister near Nantes, France to live with his French wife ( married before he ever went to Saint-Domingue and never divorced).

Audubon had a natural affinity to birds from childhood. His father wanted him to be a Navy man like himself, but he was prone to seasickness and disliked math and navigation. As a teen, he moved to America, studied and drew birds, became a taxidermist, and opened a museum to display his work. Soon, he was traveling throughout America, documenting the varied and rich bird life of the new country, accumulating over 300 illustrations and finally publishing his book in 1826.

One fact that most people don't realize: he didn't draw much in nature. For every bird illustration he used multiple, sometimes dozens, of stuffed dead birds that he either shot himself or paid hunters for, arranged and posed until he was satisfied.



Place.

On December 6, 2010, a first edition of John James Audubon's The Birds of America was sold at auction by Sotheby's of London for £7.3 million ($8.9 million), a record price for a printed book. The record stood until 2013 when a copy of the first book published in America, The Bay Psalm Book, sold for $14 million.

Audubon (1785-1851) was a self-trained artist, naturalist, and ornithologist, born on his father's sugar cane plantation in Saint-Domingue (now Haiti). His mother, a Louisiana lady, died shortly after his birth, and he was raised by his mixed-race enslaved housekeeper, by whom his father had already fathered several children. Due to the growing slave rebellion in Saint-Domingue, Audubon's father moved John James (then Jean) and a sister near Nantes, France to live with his French wife ( married before he ever went to Saint-Domingue and never divorced).

In France, they lived in a mansion called La Gerbertiere, near Coueron in French Brittany on the Loire River. Restored in 2008, it now belongs to the municipality and is used as a venue for cultural events, concerts, and exhibits.


Thing.

On December 6, 2010, a first edition of John James Audubon's The Birds of America was sold at auction by Sotheby's of London for £7.3 million ($8.9 million), a record price for a printed book. The record stood until 2013 when a copy of the first book published in America, The Bay Psalm Book, sold for $14 million.

Audubon (1785-1851) was a self-trained artist, naturalist, and ornithologist, born on his father's sugar cane plantation in Saint-Domingue (now Haiti). His mother, a Louisiana lady, died shortly after his birth, and he was raised by his mixed-race enslaved housekeeper, by whom his father had had several children already. Due to the growing slave rebellion in Saint-Domingue, Audubon's father moved John James (then Jean) and a sister near Nantes, France to live with his French wife ( married before he ever went to Saint-Domingue and never divorced).

One of the birds included in the book was the Bird of Washington, Washington Eagle, or Giant Sea Eagle. At the time, naturalists labeled it a hoax, created by Audubon, and not a real bird. It is possible, some ornithologists today believe, that it was misidentified juvenile bald eagle or that it could have been a real bird that became extinct immediately after Audubon's sightings. However, today, the prevailing opinion among experts is that was an Audubon invention, or plagiarized picture of a golden eagle illustrated by another naturalist.



Persons.

At 7:35 AM, on December 7, 1941, America and the world were rocked by a surprise Japanese attack on America's Pacific naval base at Pearl Harbor Hawaii. Nineteen ships and hundreds of planes were damaged or destroyed, and 2,400 soldiers, sailors, and civilians died. The Japanese had hoped to deliver a preemptive death blow that would keep the US out of the way as they conquered Asia. Instead, the attack led ultimately to the destruction of two Japanese cities and hundreds of thousands of deaths.

At Dawn We Slept, published in 1982, is still considered the master work about the attack, reflecting 37 years of research and interviews with American and Japanese participants. It is the first of a trilogy of books by Gordon Prange about the attack.

The mastermind behind the audacious plan was Isoroku Yamamoto, the admiral who at first warned his government against attacking the US and "waking the sleeping giant." Duty compelled him, however, and he did the impossible. He became the only man specifically targeted by the US, shot down on a Pacific flight in 1943.

Husband Kimmel was the commander-in-chief of the Pacific fleet. Following the attack, the US government looked for scapegoats, as governments do. He became a target, relieved of command and reduced in rank, he left the Navy in early 1942, disgraced.

Doris Miller was a cook on the West Virginia. When the attack came, he helped several wounded sailors to safety and then manned an anti-aircraft gun, downing 4-6 Japanese planes. He became the first black American awarded the Navy Cross and had a destroyer frigate named for him from 1973 to 1991. In 2020, it was announced that a future aircraft carrier will be named the USS Doris Miller.


Place.

At 7:35 AM, on December 7, 1941, America and the world were rocked by a surprise Japanese attack on America's Pacific naval base at Pearl Harbor Hawaii. Nineteen ships and hundreds of planes were damaged or destroyed, and 2,400 soldiers, sailors, and civilians died. The Japanese had hoped to deliver a preemptive death blow that would keep the US out of the way as they conquered Asia. Instead, the attack led ultimately to the destruction of two Japanese cities and hundreds of thousands of deaths.

At Dawn We Slept, published in 1982, is still considered the master work about the attack, reflecting 37 years of research and interviews with American and Japanese participants. It is the first of a trilogy of books by Gordon Prange about the attack.

Japan intended the attack as a preventive action. Its aim was to prevent the United States Pacific Fleet from interfering with its planned military actions in Southeast Asia against overseas territories of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and those of the United States. Over the course of seven hours there were coordinated Japanese attacks on the US-held Philippines, Guam, and Wake Island and on the British Empire in Malaya, Singapore, and Hong Kong.

This photo was taken from a Japanese plane at the beginning of the attack. The explosion near center was the result of a torpedo hitting the USS west Virginia.

Thing.

At 7:35 AM, on December 7, 1941, America and the world were rocked by a surprise Japanese attack on America's Pacific naval base at Pearl Harbor Hawaii. Nineteen ships and hundreds of planes were damaged or destroyed, and 2,400 soldiers, sailors, and civilians died. The Japanese had hoped to deliver a preemptive death blow that would keep the US out of the way as they conquered Asia. Instead, the attack led ultimately to the destruction of two Japanese cities and hundreds of thousands of deaths.

At Dawn We Slept, published in 1982, is still considered the master work about the attack, reflecting 37 years of research and interviews with American and Japanese participants. It is the first of a trilogy of books by Gordon Prange about the attack.

Perhaps the most famous of the ships sunk in the attack is the USS Arizona. The USS Arizona memorial marks the resting place of 1,102 of the 1,177 sailors and Marines killed on the USS Arizona during the attack. Two of the ships bells were salvaged in the 1940s. Weighing more than 1200 pounds each, one bell is on display at the Pearl Harbor National Memorial, and the other is on the University of Arizona campus.




Person.

Bill Bryson, a favorite author of mine, was born on December 8, 1951 in Des Moines Iowa.

Two years into his college career, he decided to drop out and backpack around Europe. (He finished a degree a few years later.) This ignited his career as a writer. He's since written numerous books on a variety of topics including travel, history, the English language and science. He's lived in the UK most of his adult life and holds dual citizenship. In 2003, British readers chose his book Notes From a Small Island as the book that best summed up British identity.

His books are always funny, insightful, and educational.


Place.

Bill Bryson, a favorite author of mine, was born on December 8, 1951 in Des Moines Iowa.

Two years into his college career, he decided to drop out and backpack around Europe. (He finished a degree a few years later.) This ignited his career as a writer. He's since written numerous books on a variety of topics including travel, history, the English language and science. He's lived in the UK most of his adult life and holds dual citizenship. In 2003, British readers chose his book Notes From a Small Island as the book that best summed up British identity.

His travel books are known for their humor and keen insights. If you have a taste for travel books or documentaries, his books are must reads.


Thing.

Bill Bryson, a favorite author of mine, was born on December 8, 1951 in Des Moines Iowa.

Two years into his college career, he decided to drop out and backpack around Europe. (He finished a degree a few years later.) This ignited his career as a writer. He's since written numerous books on a variety of topics including travel, history, the English language and science. He's lived in the UK most of his adult life and holds dual citizenship. In 2003, British readers chose his book Notes From a Small Island as the book that best summed up British identity.

He was made an honorary Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his contribution to literature on 13 December 2006; the "honorary" part was removed once he became a British citizen. In recognition of his writing about science, Bryson was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS) in 2013, becoming the first non-Briton to receive this honor.




Person.

American journalist, author, and folklorist Joel Chandler Harris ( 1848-1908) was born on December 9 in Eatonton Georgia, but spent most of his adult life in Atlanta as editor of the Atlanta Constitution newspaper.

He led two professional lives. As editor of the Constitution, he was a huge supporter of Henry Grady's vision of the "New South," arising from the ashes of the Civil War and Reconstruction. The other was as a fiction writer and folklore collector.

He was born to an unmarried Irish immigrant and never knew his father. His childhood, as a poor, illegitimate, redheaded Irish boy in the mid 1800s was not the easiest. He left school at 14 and went to work on a plantation 9 miles out of town as a printer's apprentice, a printer's devil as they were called. The plantation owner happened to put out a newspaper. Harris worked for clothes, room, and board, learned printing, was allowed to write for the newspaper, and consumed the contents of the plantation's large library.

He also spent lots of time off in the slave quarters, where he felt less self-conscious about his background, and he developed a unique relationship with the enslaved people. Of course, there was the huge gulf of race and enslavement between them, but they forged a connection on another level, storytelling. The enslaved adults told him animal stories and myths that had their origins in Africa and had been passed down over the years. Some had been infused with bits and pieces of Native American and African American lore picked up in the Caribbean and In the American South. He absorbed the stories, language, and inflections of the storytellers.

At the Constitution, he started printing the stories in order to preserve them, and he created a character named Uncle Remus, based on the older enslaved men and women from whom he learned the tales. They were published in a book in 1880.

Despite criticism, his preservation and popularization of these stories is hugely important.

Place.

American journalist, author, and folklorist Joel Chandler Harris ( 1848-1908) was born on December 9 in Eatonton Georgia, but spent most of his adult life in Atlanta as editor of the Atlanta Constitution newspaper.

He led two professional lives. As editor of the Constitution, he was a huge supporter of Henry Grady's vision of the "New South," arising from the ashes of the Civil War and Reconstruction. The other was as a fiction writer and folklore collector, most famous for collecting and publishing African folk tales he heard as a teen on a Georgia plantation.

The Wren's Nest was the Harris family home from 1881 until 1908. In 1913, it was opened as Atlanta's first house museum, and it was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1962. Today, it is operated and maintained by the Joel Chandler Harris Association. Through tours, field trips, and live storytelling performances, the Association's mission is to cultivate future generations of readers, writers, and storytellers.

Thing.

American journalist, author, and folklorist Joel Chandler Harris ( 1848-1908) was born on December 9 in Eatonton Georgia, but spent most of his adult life in Atlanta as editor of the Atlanta Constitution newspaper.

He led two professional lives. As editor of the Constitution, he was a huge supporter of Henry Grady's vision of the "New South," arising from the ashes of the Civil War and Reconstruction. The other was as a fiction writer and folklore collector, most famous for collecting and publishing African folk tales he heard as a teen on a Georgia plantation.

The Uncle Remus Museum in Eatonton has (at least as far I know, still has) a statue of Br'er Rabbit, one of the chief characters in the Uncle Remus stories, the trickster, out front, and another sits at the county courthouse. Each statue stands three feet tall atop its base, and weighs about 250 pounds.




Persons.

On December 10 1936, Edward VIII (1894-1972) signed the official Instrument of Abdication, giving up the throne to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson. His brother, George VI, became king, paving the way for Elizabeth II to inherit the throne. Since it was practically impossible for Edward and Wallis to have direct heirs, succession might have been different if Edward had continued as king. George VI died before Edward, so he might never have been king, but the crown would have gone to a much older Elizabeth.. And, it seems quite possible that if Edward had not abdicated, he may have been the last monarch.

Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David Windsor served as king for almost the entire year of 1936. However, he had scandalously fallen in love with an American divorcee (twice divorced) with a scandalous past named Wallis Simpson. When it became apparent that he would not be allowed to keep the throne with Simpson as queen consort, he resigned. After abdication, he was created Duke of Windsor. He and Simpson married in 1937 (after her second divorce was granted), and they lived on a royal allowance in the South of France. When WWII commenced, he was made Governor of the Bahamas. After the war, they spent most of the rest of their lives in France, rarely returning to the UK.

Wallis Simpson's background wasn't the only source of scandal. There are claims that both Edward and Wallis were at least bisexual, and stories of their partying and social activities constantly surrounded them. And, then there are the accusations that they were friendly with Hitler and Nazi Germany. The royal family and British government kept a close watch on their activities and communications during their lives, and much of that gathered information seems to have been destroyed or is still held as top secret classified intelligence. Some historians have gone so far as to speculate that Hitler intended to place Edward on the throne again once the UK was defeated.



Place.

On December 10 1936, Edward VIII (1894-1972) signed the official Instrument of Abdication, giving up the throne to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson. His brother, George VI, became king, paving the way for Elizabeth II to inherit the throne. Since it was practically impossible for Edward and Wallis to have direct heirs, succession might have been different if Edward had continued as king. George VI died before Edward, so he might never have been king, but the crown would have gone to a much older Elizabeth. And, it seems quite possible that if Edward had not abdicated, he may have been the last monarch.

After serving as Governor of the Bahamas during WWII, the Windsors returned to Paris, where they lived most of the rest of their lives. They rented, at a very nominal rate from the French government, a 14 room mansion built in 1859 in the Bois du Boulogne, the Central Park of Paris. Charles de Gaulle had lived there for a several years after the war, and it was most recently occupied by department store magnate Mohamed Al-Fayed, the father of Dodi Al-Fayed, Princess Diana's lover who died with her in the car crash. Diana was just one of many notables who have visited the house over the years. Both the Duke and Duchess died in the house, in 1972 and 1986.

They also owned a 26 acre estate outside of Paris where they spent weekends and holidays.

17 Carnations is a look at the Windsors, the abdication, and their controversial lives.



Thing.

On December 10 1936, Edward VIII (1894-1972) signed the official Instrument of Abdication, giving up the throne to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson. After serving as Governor of the Bahamas during WWII, the Windsors returned to Paris, where they lived most of the rest of their lives.

Historians and royalty watchers have tried for years to separate speculation and fact about the Windsors. There are questions about their sexuality, about Simpson's alleged extramarital affairs, including with Nazi Ambassador Von Ribbentrop, and whether or not they were sympathetic to the Nazis or even conspired with Nazi leadership.

In May 1945, American troops found archived Nazi documents in various locations. They also captured a German soldier who was an assistant translator for Hitler. He had been instructed to destroy many documents, but he buried some instead near Marburg, offering to trade them for immunity. They became known as the Marburg Files and contained correspondence to, from, and about the Windsors. PM Churchill and Supreme Commander Eisenhower immediately labeled them top secret. While some documents have been released over the years, it is believed by some that more incriminating documents are still held as classified.

17 Carnations is a look at the Windsors, the abdication, their controversial lives, and the Marburg Files.




Person.

On December 11, 1913, Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa was recovered by police, two years after it had been stolen from the Louvre in 1911. Before it's theft, it was little known or appreciated outside of the art world. It was the publicity of the theft and recovery of the painting that made its fame explode.

The thief was an Italian artist, museum worker, and self-styled patriot named Vincenzo Peruggia. He said that he was angered that the work was the property of France and resolved to return it to its homeland. It was one of Leonardo's last works. Thought to be a portrait of the wife, Lisa del Giocondo, of an Italian merchant, it took a few years to complete; Leonardo was never rushed. For whatever reason, he never delivered it to the merchant, instead, he took it to Amboise France when he moved there under the patronage of King Francis I. He died there, and Francis acquired his possessions, including the Mona Lisa.

On the morning of August 21, 1911, three men stepped out of the closet they had hidden in overnight, removed the painting from its frame, rolled it up, and walked out with it before the museum opened. It took 28 hours before anyone noticed that it was missing.

Peruggia had constructed the frame of the painting when he worked at the Louvre, and he recruited two associates. His first aim was to sell it, despite his patriotism, but he had to wait. It spent two years in a trunk in his Paris boardinghouse room. In 1913, he tried to sell it to a dealer in Florence. The dealer told him to leave it for inspection and come back later. Peruggia was shocked when policemen arrived at his door an hour later. He pleaded guilty and served 8 months.

The Last Mona Lisa is a fictionalized account of the theft and subsequent forgeries published last year and now on my reading list.



Place.

On December 11, 1913, Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa was recovered by police, two years after it had been stolen from the Louvre in 1911. Before it's theft, it was little known or appreciated outside of the art world. It was the publicity of the theft and recovery of the painting that made its fame explode.

The painting of Lisa del Giocondo, the wife of an Italian merchant, took a while for Leonardo to paint. He never did much quickly. In fact, he took it with him to Amboise France in 1516 when he moved to work for his patron, French King Francis I. He took up residence in a chateau there and did various engineering and architecture designs for the King, often directing massive opulent entertainments for the royal court.

When Leonardo died in 1519, his possessions, including the Mona Lisa, went to Francis I. The king admired the work and hung it it in his large bathroom at the palace of Fountainebleau. The King's private quarters had so many paintings that it became a semi-public (at least for members and visitors to the court) art gallery. It remained at Fountainebleau until Louis XIV moved it to Versailles. Louis XV supposedly hated it and had it banished from the palace. It found its way into the hands of a palace bureaucrat. During the French Revolution, it was hidden in a warehouse.

In 1797, it went on display at the Louvre, where it remained until Napoleon ordered it hung in his bedroom while he was Emperor. After Napoleon, it returned to the Louvre.

The Last Mona Lisa is a fictionalized account of the theft and subsequent forgeries published last year and now on my reading list.



Thing.

On December 11, 1913, Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa was recovered by police, two years after it had been stolen from the Louvre in 1911. Before it's theft, it was little known or appreciated outside of the art world. It was the publicity of the theft and recovery of the painting that made its fame explode.

There are many questions and mysteries surrounding the Mona Lisa that have generated many speculations and theories over the years. First, who is she? Some sources say Lisa del Giocondo, but why did her Italian merchant husband never get the portrait he commissioned? Others speculate it was Isabella d'Este. Another art historian used computer analysis to combine the Mona Lisa's face with Leonardo's drawn self-portrait, and claimed that the Mona Lisa is a feminized version of Leonardo himself.

Then there's the smile. So enigmatic that a French artist jumped to his death in 1852. His suicide note said he couldn't live another day without figuring out her smile. It's an unusual smile that seems to change based on the viewer's perspective. Some suggest that the model had a painful teeth/mouth condition, quite common in those days, which caused the smile - or weird grimace? There's also the idea that the smile was a reaction to the artist. Apparently, Leonardo, always energetic and in need of constant mental stimulation, often required food and entertainment - musicians, etc. -while he drew and painted his subject. Perhaps she was amused by this flamboyant, temperamental, hyperactive, man flitting around before her.

The Last Mona Lisa is a fictionalized account of the theft and subsequent forgeries published last year and now on my reading list.




Person.

Novelist and historian Dee Brown died on December 12, 2002 at age 94. His most famous work was 1970's groundbreaking Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, one of the first histories of the conquest of the American West told from the Native American perspective.

Brown was born in Alberta, Louisiana but grew up in Arkansas. As a boy, he spent a lot of time reading the history of the American West in the public library. He attended the Arkansas State Teachers College and George Washington University, becoming a librarian for the US Department of Agriculture in 1934. He wrote a couple of novels, but, in 1941, they were deemed not patriotic enough by publishers. Drafted, he did his military service as librarian for the US Department of War.

From 1948 to 1972, he was an agriculture librarian and professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and wrote part-time. During the 1950s and 1960s, he published 17 books. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, published in 1970, was a major influence on history writing, publishing, and movie and television production, as a movement grew toward more accurate and balanced portrayals of Native American and American Western history.

While Brown was a leader of this movement and most people believed that he was of Native American ancestry, he was not.


Place.

Novelist and historian Dee Brown died on December 12, 2002 at age 94. His most famous work was 1970's groundbreaking Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, one of the first histories of the conquest of the American West told from the Native American perspective.

The titular location Wounded Knee was the site of two important events in Native American history. On December 29, the US 7th Cavalry killed nearly 300 unarmed Lakota men, women, and children who had left their reservation to go to another reservation to participate in a Ghost Dance. The incident was known in history books as the "Battle of Wounded Knee" until the 1970s when it was recognized as the Massacre that it was. Twenty soldiers were awarded the Medal of Honor for their role in the massacre. There is a movement to rescind these medals including a provision of a military bill in Congress currently.

From February to May 1973, 200 Lakotas led by the American Indian Movement (AIM), occupied the town of Wounded Knee in order to call attention to the plight of the American Indian. Two occupiers and two FBI agents died during the occupation.

Thing.

Novelist and historian Dee Brown died on December 12, 2002 at age 94. His most famous work was 1970's groundbreaking Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, one of the first histories of the conquest of the American West told from the Native American perspective.

The 1890 Wounded Knee Massacre was the result of a religious movement that had swept through Indian reservations called the Ghost Dance by whites. A Paiute healer named Wovoka or Jack Wilson had gotten very ill. During his illness, he claimed to have received visions from the Creator demonstrating a Spirit Dance. The Creator told him that if enough Indians did the dance, gave up white ways, and returned to more traditional lifestyles, all the whites would disappear, and dead Indians, horses, and bison would repopulate the land.

Plains Indians were so desperate and miserable on their reservations that the dance spread like wildfire. This frightened whites who believed it was a war dance. Indian agents in charge of reservations outlawed the dance and forbade traveling to other reservations to participate in dances. One band of a few hundred Lakotas led by Spotted Elk left their reservation without permission to join a dance on the Pine Ridge Reservation. The 7th Cavalry was sent to return them and caught up with them near Wounded Knee. The cavalry surrounded the band, mostly women, children, and elderly and ordered them to disarm. Several accounts claim that a deaf Lakota resisted turning over his rifle, a shot was fired, and the Cavalry opened fire. Within minutes, nearly 300 were dead.



Persons

On December 13, 1937 the Japanese Army launched six weeks of crimes against humanity that came to be called "the Rape of Nanking (Nanjing)" or the "Nanjing Massacre. " At least 200,000 men, women, and children in the Chinese capital were raped, abused, and murdered by Japanese troops. Officers lined up prisoners for competitive beheadings with samurai swords. Japanese biological and chemical weapons units conducted experiments on civilians. The Japanese intentionally destroyed much evidence after the war, and,even today, there are groups of Japanese who deny the event ever took place.

The commanding officer who led the massacre was Prince Asaka, son-in-law of the Emperor. General MacArthur granted amnesty to imperial family members so he was never prosecuted. He died of old age at 93.

The Reverend John McAfee, an American Episcopal minister documented many if the atrocities on film.

John Rabe, a Nazi official headed an international committee that attempted to intervene and stop the violence and to alert the outside world. He is credited with saving up to 250,000 civilians.

American reporter Frank Tillman Durdin and others risked their lives to document the massacre.

Minnie Vautrin, an American missionary who ran a girls school, saved 10,000 women and children.

Journalist and author Iris Chang wrote the definitive history of the massacre in The Rape of Nanking. Sadly, after, a long battle with depression, took her own life in 2004, about a year after her book The Chinese in America was published.

Place.

On December 13, 1937 the Japanese Army launched six weeks of crimes against humanity that came to be called "the Rape of Nanking (Nanjing)" or the "Nanjing Massacre. " At least 200,000 men, women, and children in the Chinese capital were raped, abused, and murdered by Japanese troops. Officers lined up prisoners for competitive beheadings with samurai swords. Japanese biological and chemical weapons units conducted experiments on civilians. The Japanese intentionally destroyed much evidence after the war, and, even today, there are groups of Japanese who deny the event ever took place.

Nanjing or Nanking has had a prominent place in Chinese history since the third century. It is the home of the world's largest inland ports and a provincial capital. It was the national capital under several regimes, including the Republic of China through 1949. It's population is about 9.5 million.

Journalist and author Iris Chang wrote the definitive history of the massacre in The Rape of Nanking. Sadly, after, a long battle with depression, took her own life in 2004, about a year after her book The Chinese in America was published.

Thing.

On December 13, 1937 the Japanese Army launched six weeks of crimes against humanity that came to be called "the Rape of Nanking (Nanjing)" or the "Nanjing Massacre. " At least 200,000 men, women, and children in the Chinese capital were raped, abused, and murdered by Japanese troops. Officers lined up prisoners for competitive beheadings with samurai swords. Japanese biological and chemical weapons units conducted experiments on civilians. The Japanese intentionally destroyed much evidence after the war, and, even today, there are groups of Japanese who deny the event ever took place.

This photo, taken on December 12, 1937, the day before the actual siege of Nanjing, and others appeared in the Tokyo Nichi Nichi Shimbun newspaper. Captions read "Contest to kill 100 people using a sword" and "Incredible record ... Both 2nd Lieutenants Go into Extra Innings." Pictured are Toshiaki Mukai and Tsuyoshi Noda who did have such a contest and then another to go for another 150. Some apologists argue that the article meant in hand to hand combat. Noda himself said that wasn't true, that he never killed more than 4 or 5 in hand to hand combat. Both men were executed by the International Military Tribunal for war crimes against civilians after the war. One of the swords used in the contest is in display at the Republic of China Armed Forces Museum in Taipei, Taiwan.

As I wrote earlier today, there are still Japanese individuals and groups who declare that none of the atrocities of the Nanjing Massacre occurred.

Journalist and author Iris Chang wrote the definitive history of the massacre in The Rape of Nanking. Sadly, after, a long battle with depression, took her own life in 2004, about a year after her book The Chinese in America was published.

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Person, Place, and Thing: November 29 - December 5

 ( I apologize for incomplete entries. All of a sudden the Instagram and Facebook posts, from which I copy and paste to generate this blog, have topped being as easy to search.)



Person.
American author Madeleine L'Engle was born on November 29, 1918 (died 2007). She was best known for the young adult sci-fi/fantasy fiction A Wrinkle in Time and its sequels. I remember reading and enjoying Wrinkle, but I don't remember much else about it.
L'Engle was born in New York City. Her mother was a pianist, and her father was a writer, critic, and foreign correspondent. She began writing and journaling early (at 5 ), but struggled academically in school because of her shyness and awkwardness; leading some teachers to question her mental aptitude. She survived, nevertheless, a series of schools, boarding schools, and governesses, and she graduated from Smith College, graduating cum laude in 1941.
She published a couple of novels by 1942, and she tried stage acting, meeting her husband, Hugh Franklin, in a production of The Cherry Orchard. The pair moved to Connecticut and ran a general store for a while before moving back to New York so Franklin could resume his acting career. Meanwhile, after numerous rejections from publishers, she vowed to quit writing, but then an idea struck her, and she wrote Wrinkle. It was rejected more than thirty times until published in 1962, and it won the Newbery Medal that year. During the next three decades, she wrote dozens of books for children and adults.




Person.
Shirley Chisholm (nee St. Hill) was born on November 30,:1924 in Brooklyn, of Guyanese and Barbadian descent. She won elections to the New York State legislature and served in Congress before becoming the first black to run for a major party presidential nomination and the first woman to run for the Democratic nomination. (Margaret Chase Smith had run for the Republican nomination in 1964.) Her autobiography uses her motto as a title: Unbought and Unbossed.
Her father worked in a factory making burlap bags, and her mother was a seamstress and domestic worker. She lived with her Barbadian grandmother for a few years of her childhood and picked up a slight life-long Caribbean accent. She excelled academically and graduated from Brooklyn College, where she had begun on the activist path, inspired by her father's support of Marcus Garvey and the Barbados independence movement. After graduation, she became a teacher's aide and then a teacher. She first ran for the New York state assembly in 1964 and won, despite strong opposition due to her gender maybe even more than her race. In 1968, she became the first black woman elected to Congress.
In 1972, she ran for President. Despite only spending a total of $300,000, facing gender and racial discrimination from within her own party, and her struggle to be recognized as a real candidate by the party and the media, she finished fourth in first ballot convention votes for the nomination at the Democratic Convention in Miami. She retired from Congress in 1982 and was active politically until health issues arose in 1993, and she died at her home in Ormond Beach Florida in 2005.

Place.
Shirley Chisholm (nee St. Hill) was born on November 30,:1924 in Brooklyn, of Guyanese and Barbadian descent. She won elections to the New York State legislature and served in Congress before becoming the first black to run for a major party presidential nomination and the first woman to run for the Democratic nomination. (Margaret Chase Smith had run for the Republican nomination in 1964.) Her autobiography uses her motto as a title: Unbought and Unbossed.
Chisholm lived with her Barbadian grandmother in Barbados from age 5 to age 9, and she said that experience was a life-shaping experience. She developed a light Caribbean accent that she carried throughout her life, and she referred to herself as Barbadian-American.
Barbados had been occupied by numerous indigenous peoples when Europeans arrived in the late 15th century. Spain, Portugal, and Britain all claimed the island for the next five centuries. Under English control, Barbados became a valuable colony, with a plantation economy, powered by slavery, until slavery was outlawed throughout the British empire in 1807, with full emancipation not occurring until 1838.
Following WWII, an independence movement was born, as in many other British colonies, and this movement partly inspired Chisholm's activism. Barbados was finally granted independence in 1966. In 2021, Barbados transitioned to a republic within the British Commonwealth.



Person.
Henry Ford was a terrible, horrible human being.
Racist, Anti-Semite, Robber Baron, Inventor, Industrialist, Captain of Industry, Visionary, Business Magnate. Yes, all of that. Historians today still debate about historical relativism, the idea that a historical event, era, or figure can only be understood in the context of its own time and place, rather than trying to evaluate history based on present-day morals, knowledge, and attitudes.
I'm not stepping into that.
On December 1, 1913, Ford debuted the world's first moving assembly line in his Highland Park Model T factory, revolutionizing the auto industry in particular and industrialization in general.
In 1927, he decided to conquer the Amazon and add to his status as richest person in the world. He bought a tract of land in Brazil, double the size of Delaware, intending to grow rubber. He named it Fordlandia, and it's a little known part of history that had huge repercussions still felt today. Greg Grandin's book tells the story.

Place.
On December 1, 1913, Henry Ford debuted the world's first moving assembly line in his Highland Park Model T factory, revolutionizing the auto industry in particular and industrialization in general.
In 1927, he decided to conquer the Amazon and add to his status as richest person in the world. He bought a tract of land in Brazil, double the size of Delaware, intending to grow rubber. He named it Fordlandia, and it's a little known part of history that had huge repercussions still felt today. Greg Grandin's book tells the story.
Ford envisioned a prefabricated industrial town intended to be inhabited by 10,000 people to secure a source of rubber for Ford manufacturing in the US. Ford had negotiated a deal with the Brazilian government granting him a concession of 10,000 km2 (3,900 sq mi) of land on near the city of Santarem Brazil in exchange for a 9% share in the profits generated.Ford's project failed, and the city was abandoned in 1934.
The town was mostly deserted, with only 90 residents still living in the city until the early 2000s when it saw an increase of population, being home to around 3,000 people as of 2017

Things.
Fordlandia's rules.
On December 1, 1913, Henry Ford debuted the world's first moving assembly line in his Highland Park Model T factory, revolutionizing the auto industry in particular and industrialization in general.
In 1927, he decided to conquer the Amazon and add to his status as richest person in the world. He bought a tract of land in Brazil, double the size of Delaware, intending to grow rubber. He named it Fordlandia, and it's a little known part of history that had huge repercussions still felt today. Greg Grandin's book tells the story.
By 1930, Ford's strict rules caused resident workers to revolt. Alcohol, women, tobacco and even football were forbidden within the town, including inside the workers' own homes. Inspectors would go from house to house to check how organised the houses were and to enforce these rules. The inhabitants circumvented these prohibitions by paddling out to merchant riverboats moored beyond the town jurisdiction, often hiding contraband goods inside fruits like watermelons. A small settlement was established 8 kilometres (5 mi) upstream on the "Island of Innocence" with bars, nightclubs and brothels.
The workers on the plantations were given unfamiliar food, such as hamburgers and canned food, and forced to live in American-style housing. Most disliked the way they were treated – being required to wear ID badges and work through the middle of the day under the tropical sun – and would often refuse to work.
Revolts, mismanagement, and a general lack of understanding of how to cultivate rubber led to the experiment's failure.



Person.
On December 2, 1950, Isaac Asimov's "I, Robot" series of short stories was first published as a collection by Gnome Press in the US. They originally appeared from 1940 to 1950 in sci-fi magazines Astounding and Super Science Stories. Their common theme is the interaction of humans and robots and morality. In other words, he was preparing us for the coming computer overthrow of humans. Remember, be nice to your toaster; it could be some computer overlord's earlier model.
Asimov ( c. 1920-1992) was born in Russia to a Russian Jewish family that immigrated to the US in 1923. In the US, they owned a candy store that sold newspapers and magazines, sparking Asimov's love of reading, including pulp fiction sci-fi. He graduated high school at 15 and attended college, switching his major from zoology to chemistry because he hated dissection.
He started writing at 11, encouraged by his father who bought him a typewriter. He started concentrating on sci-fi in his late teens. His "I, Robot" and "Foundations" series are credited with introducing several terms into English like "robotics" and "positronic" ( a fictional technology that found its way into Star Trek). Asimov thought his most enduring contributions would be the "Foundations" series and the "Three Laws of Robotics" created in "I, Robot ."
However, he was so prolific and diverse that his works are found in every major category of the Dewey Decimal System (if you know what that is - fewer libraries use it these days) except 100, psychology and philosophy. There are more than 500 books in his bibliography plus his numerous essays, short stories, and criticisms. He also wrote an estimated 90,000 letters.
He is considered one of the "Big Three" of Sci-fi authors, along with Robert Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke, and the "ABCs" of Sci-fi with Ray Bradbury and Clarke.

Place.
On December 2, 1950, Isaac Asimov's "I, Robot" series of short stories was first published as a collection by Gnome Press in the US. They originally appeared from 1940 to 1950 in sci-fi magazines Astounding and Super Science Stories. Their common theme is the interaction of humans and robots and morality. In other words, he was preparing us for the coming computer overthrow of humans. Remember, be nice to your toaster; it could be some computer overlord's earlier model.
Numerous things have been named for Asimov including a crater on Mars. Asimov Crater is an impact Crater in the Noachis quadrangle of Mars, located at 47.0° S and 355.05° W. It is 84.0 km (52.2 mi) in diameter.The name was officially adopted on May 4, 2009.

Thing.
On December 2, 1950, Isaac Asimov's "I, Robot" series of short stories was first published as a collection by Gnome Press in the US. They originally appeared from 1940 to 1950 in sci-fi magazines Astounding and Super Science Stories. Their common theme is the interaction of humans and robots and morality. In other words, he was preparing us for the coming computer overthrow of humans. Remember, be nice to your toaster; it could be some computer overlord's earlier model.
Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics, stated in his "I, Robot" series of stories have had a huge impact on science fiction storytelling and in the real-life world of robotic technology.




Persons.
December 4 marks the date of death of two important figures in political science and theory.
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) was supposedly born prematurely because his mother went into labor because she was panicked by news of the approaching Spanish Armada. Fear became an underlying theme of his most famous work, Leviathan. In Leviathan, Hobbes expounds on the origins of government, making his famous assertion that life before government was "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short" because mankind lived in constant fear of more powerful antagonists. Therefore, he argued, when a stronger individual came along and offered people protection, they became his subjects, giving him complete and total loyalty and obedience. This marked the beginning of government. His work became a major justification and explanation for absolute monarchy. Hobbes himself was an unabashed royalist who served as a tutor to the young Prince Charles during the English Civil War.
Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) is considered one of the most influential political scientists of the 20th century. Born to progressive secular Jewish parents in Germany, she was raised to be a staunch Social Democrat. Once Hitler took power, she was arrested and briefly held by the Gestapo in 1933 because she was researching Nazi antisemitism. Once released, she fled to Czechoslovakia and then to Paris, where she worked to settle Jews escaping Nazism in Palestine. In 1941, she left occupied France for the US, via neutral Portugal. She became a US citizen and began writing and working for various Jewish organizations. In 1951, she published The Origins of Totalitarianism, a hugely influential work dealing with the nature of power and evil and explaining how citizens can be manipulated into a totalitarian state. She coined the phrase "banality of evil" to explain how complacency and apathy, not dogmatic ideology, leads the general population to a totalitarian state.
Place.
December 4 marks the date of death of two important figures in political science and theory.
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) wrote Leviathan, Hobbes expounding on the origins of government, and justifying absolute monarchy.
Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) is considered one of the most influential political scientists of the 20th century. In 1951, she published The Origins of Totalitarianism, a hugely influential work dealing with the nature of power and evil and explaining how citizens can be manipulated into a totalitarian state.
Both spent time in self-imposed exile in Paris to escape strife in their own countries. Hobbes lived in Paris for 11 years during the turmoil leading up to the English Civil War and the war itself. There, he socialized with other exiles, researched, wrote, and tutored the exiled Prince Charles. Arendt lived in Paris for a couple of years between her escape from Nazi Germany and her eventual settlement in the US. While in Paris, she worked for an organization that helped to settle Jews fleeing Germany into Palestine.

Thing.
December 4 marks the date of death of two important figures in political science and theory.
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) wrote Leviathan, Hobbes expounding on the origins of government, and justifying absolute monarchy.
Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) is considered one of the most influential political scientists of the 20th century. In 1951, she published The Origins of Totalitarianism, a hugely influential work dealing with the nature of power and evil and explaining how citizens can be manipulated into a totalitarian state.
Hobbes and Arendt are two towering figures in political science, must read philosophers that poli sci majors are likely to run into early in their studies. So what is political science?
Wikipedia:
"Political science is the scientific study of politics. It is a social science dealing with systems of governance and power, and the analysis of political activities, political thought, political behavior, and associated constitutions and laws.
Modern political science can generally be divided into the three subdisciplines of comparative politics, international relations, and political theory. Other notable subdisciplines are public policy and administration, domestic politics and government, political economy, and political methodology. Furthermore, political science is related to, and draws upon, the fields of economics, law, sociology, history, philosophy, human geography, political anthropology, and psychology."



Person.
On December 5 1848 in his State of the Union address to Congress, President James K. Polk inserted a sentence confirming the discovery of gold in California, igniting the Gold Rush. There had been rumors, but this was the first acknowledgement by the government.
The man credited with the discovery was James Marshall, a carpenter and sawmill operator working for John Sutter, a Swiss immigrant who had planned to create his own private fiefdom to rule in California. On January 24, 1848, Marshall had gone to work, tasked with overseeing the construction of one of Sutter's sawmills on the American River. Inspecting the channel below the mill, he happened to look down and picked up 4-5 gold nuggets. Tests confirmed they were gold, at least 96% pure, 23 karat. Word spread like wildfire. The sawmill operators, and most of Sutter's men, left immediately to find their own fortune. Sutter's personal empire collapsed, and he saw no profits from the Gold Rush. Marshall tried a vineyard and mining and failed at both. The state of California awarded him a small pension for a couple of years for his discovery, but he died penniless in 1885.
Place.
On December 5 1848 in his State of the Union address to Congress, President James K. Polk inserted a sentence confirming the discovery of gold in California, igniting the Gold Rush. There had been rumors, but this was the first acknowledgement by the government.
The man credited with the discovery was James Marshall, a carpenter and sawmill operator working for John Sutter, a Swiss immigrant who had planned to create his own private fiefdom to rule in California. On January 24, 1848, Marshall had gone to work, tasked with overseeing the construction of one of Sutter's sawmills on the American River. Inspecting the channel below the mill, he happened to look down and picked up 4-5 gold nuggets.
This mill (pictured) was located near Coloma, California, a small settlement for Sutter's workers, near the site of Native American villages that had stood in the area for centuries. Today, most of the area is part of the Marshall Gold Discovery State Historic Site and a National Landmark District, with a population of 589. The second photo is of the site of Marshall's discovery, and the cabin was Marshalls home.
You can still pan for gold there, and there are occasional gold finds.
H.W. Brands, one of my favorite historians wrote The Age of Gold.

Thing.
On December 5 1848 in his State of the Union address to Congress, President James K. Polk inserted a sentence confirming the discovery of gold in California, igniting the Gold Rush. There had been rumors, but this was the first acknowledgement by the government.
The man credited with the discovery was James Marshall, a carpenter and sawmill operator working for John Sutter, a Swiss immigrant who had planned to create his own private fiefdom to rule in California. On January 24, 1848, Marshall had gone to work, tasked with overseeing the construction of one of Sutter's sawmills on the American River, near the settlement of Coloma. Inspecting the channel below the mill, he happened to look down and picked up 4-5 gold nuggets.
Coloma was named for the nearby Indian village of the Maidu people. Like many California Indians, acorns were a major part of the Maidu diet. The depressions in the rock in picture 1 are mortar holes, used by Maidu women to grind acorns. The granary basket pictured was typical of the communal baskets made for storing the acorns. Each Maidu adult may have consumed as much as 2,000 pounds of acorns a year.
Unfortunately, the gold rush was a disaster for California's indigenous population. As many as 90% of the estimated indigenous population of 300,000 died as the result of the gold rush, through disease and massacre.