Sunday, October 16, 2011

Edwin Booth

Congratulations to DAG, winner of yesterday's Person-of-Mystery contest.  He correctly identified Edwin Booth as the unknown person in the photo!  I was up in the hills completing a Wilderness Medicine course, so I couldn't check in yesterday, but Edwin Booth was on my mind.  Why?  Well, things like first aid and saving people were in my head and then I stumbled upon a photo of Edwin Booth and his daughter.

(Edwin Booth)

So who was Edwin Booth?  At one time, he was considered the foremost actor in the United States and considered by many the best Hamlet of all times.  Certainly he was more famous than his actor brothers and eclipsing the fame his father (also an actor) had during his lifetime.

(John Wilkes Booth, Edwin, and Junius Jr. in the play Julius Caesar)

Just like a good Shakespearean tragedy, the Booth family had its own internal conflict.  Edwin was a strong unionist and John Wilkes was an ardent secessionist.  As the war progressed, the two frequently quarreled over politics.


Then when his brother assassinated President Lincoln, Edwin's life took a terrible turn.  He believed that everything he had worked so hard for, his family name, his career, and his reputation would be forever tarnished by his brother's actions.  Actually, history has proved his fears true as today, Edwin is chiefly remembered as the brother of Lincoln's assassin.

(Robert Todd Lincoln)

The interesting thing is that Edwin Booth at one time personally saved Lincoln's son from harm.  It happened at a train station in Jersey City, New Jersey, during the Civil War when Robert Todd Lincoln, the president's oldest son and the only one to reach adulthood, was traveling from New York to Washington.  Edwin Booth was on his way to Richmond with his friend John T. Ford (owner of Ford's Theater where the president would be later shot).  Robert Lincoln was pressed by a crowd towards a train and fell helpless between the train and the platform when the train began to move.  Instantly a man forcefully pulled the helpless Lincoln up by his coat, saving him from certain injury and possible death.  Turing to thank the man, Lincoln recognized it was the famous Edwin Booth and thanked him by name.

(Edwin Booth with daughter Edwina)

Following the assassination, Edwin was personally heartbroken, despondent, and feared for his life and the lives of his family.  Friends raced to be with Edwin to prevent a relapse into alcoholism or worse.  For years, his career was impacted as theater owners would not permit him to preform.  Eventually as part of his rehabilitation, Edwin wrote an autobiography in the form of letters addressed to his daughter Edwina and performed in Europe for a time, but interestingly enough he never wrote of saving Lincoln.  Robert Lincoln would however and reported the incident at least three times in writing and spoke about it on at least two occasions.


Saturday, October 15, 2011

Person-of-Mystery

Another weekend and I'm back to the hills for the second part of the Wilderness Medicine course with the Boy Scouts.  Like last week, I'll have no phone reception and won't be home until late tonight, but because I care about you all, I've pre-posted the contest for today.  Best of luck!



Who could we be?  That's the mystery!  Go ahead and take a guess and then go enjoy your day.  Check back tomorrow and I'll reveal the answer.  The first correct post to name either one of these two will be the winner.



Friday, October 14, 2011

Oklahoma Party




Unknown Oklahomans on an unknown ship.  An unsigned, undated, and unmailed post card from the collection of my great-grandmother, Jessie Burrows Benton.

This is the Oklahoma party.  Don't you think they are a fine looking bunch?  Mrs Key is not in the picture.  Don't lose this and I will tell you all about them when I get home.  This was taken on the aft of the ship.  You see the life boats don't you?


Thursday, October 13, 2011

After the Storm





After the Storm. 5613

Postmarked Pond Creek, Oklahoma, July 27, 1908, 6:30 PM

Miss Jessie Burrows
Wichita,
Kans.
Sta. A.

July 27,

Best wishes
from Adelia.


Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Could Blurry Photos Be History?

I love photography, history, and technology.  And while some might find that technology incongruous with my other interests, I believe that advancing technology often helps the historian better understand the past.  Think for a moment about what satellite or multispectral imaging has done for archaeology.

There are two new technologies currently being developed that should dynamically change the way people enhance photos and in my mind have plenty of applications for historic photos.  The first technology which has more modern application can be found in Lytro cameras (not yet available) under development.  A company called Lytro has announced that they have developed a technology they call "light field" where the camera will not just capture the light and focal information for a specific point, but all the points within view of the camera lens.  What this means is that after a shot is taken, you'll have the ability to change the focal point of the shot after it's taken.  The camera will store all possible shots you can take and then allow you to tell it what part of the picture you want to be in focus.

(A single shot with Lytro technology focused on the foreground or background)

If you'd like to see a simulation of Lytro light field technology, see HERE.

And while this all sounds wonderful for the future, what about those photos in the closet that are already wrongly focused?  Well, the latest thing to hit the digital photography world has been the rapid development of improved de-bluring algorithms for digital enhancement.  That's why I was very excited to see a YouTube clip from the Adobe MAX conference last week, where a new unblur Photoshop tool in development was previewed.  People already use Photoshop for photo retouching and enhancement, but I can see that slightly blurry historic photos might greatly benefit from this technology.  For example, Virgil asked last week what the blurry words above the mantle in the Goodner family photo read.  Maybe with this technology, I could know.

Check out the video below.  The resolution is not great, but it does give you a good idea of what's coming:





Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Pigeon Poop


I was speaking with a city maintenance worker recently when the conversation somehow turned to the trouble with keeping structures free of bird droppings.  He provided me an interesting statistic:  A single pigeon produces its weight in poop every eight days.  Skeptical, I googled this when I returned home and it appears he might be correct.  No wonder the cleanup is such an ongoing process.


Monday, October 10, 2011

Crawford Long


Congratulations to Michael, winner of this weekend's Person-of-Mystery Contest!  He correctly identified Dr. Crawford Long, who is best known for being the first surgeon to use ether as an anesthesia.


Dr. Long was on my mind as I was about to attend a course in remote medical care and it made me think about what it would have been like in the earlier days of medicine.  Dr. Long is also one of those people from history that I'd love to somehow have back for an afternoon to sit around and talk with for a spell.  Imagine what it must it have been like to try and remove a tumor from someone in the days when you just had to start cutting with the patient awake!

(Surgery before anesthesia)

Crawford Long was born in Georgia and attended Franklin College (now the University of Georgia) in Athens, Georgia, where he was a roommate of Alexander Stephens who would later become the Vice President of the Confederate States.  In fact, he and Stephens stayed lifelong friends.

(Alexander Stephens)

Stephens was not the only later-to-be-famous person Long would know.  Crawford Long was also a cousin of Doc Holliday and reputedly performed surgery on Doc Holliday before Holliday ventured west.

(Doc Holliday)

Graduating from Franklin College in 1835, he continued his education first at Transylvania College in Lexington, Kentucky and a year later transferred to the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia.  While a student, he was witness to hypnotists, traveling showmen of all sorts, and youthful parties where people would inhale nitrous oxide or sulfuric ether.  Although he was skeptical of the hypnotists, he did take notice that at the gas parties, people using these inhalants seemed oblivious to pain while under the influence.

("Ether Frolics")

In 1841, Dr. Long returned to Georgia and started his medical practice in rural town of Jefferson in Jackson County.  Remembering his earlier observations, he began careful experiments with sulfuric ether. He finally performed the first ever surgery using ether on March 30, 1842, when in the presence of several witnesses he removed a tumor from the back of James Venable's neck.  Long went on to remove a second tumor at a later date.  He continued to experiment with ether on other patients and used it to remove cysts and amputate toes and fingers.  Eventually Long would also use ether for dental extraction and to assist in childbirth, even using it on his own wife on the occasion of their second child.

(Dr. Long's first surgery from contemporary accounts)

Dr. Long did not publish his results, but performed his experiments carefully and in controlled environments with multiple witnesses.  In 1846 a Boston dentist named William Morton performed a public demonstration of surgery using ether and published his results.  However, it wasn't until Morton petitioned Congress for $100,000 in recognition of his supposed accomplishment and then later sued the government to speed remuneration, that Long finally published his results.  Long never sought monetary gain and medical experts eventually recognized Long as the first to use anesthesia for surgical purposes.

(Crawford Long's statue in the Capitol Building in Washington, DC)

He worked right up until the end of his life.  In 1878, at age 62, he had just administered ether to a woman about to have a child, when he suffered a stroke.  When the attending physicians recognized that he was in trouble, they rushed to Dr. Long's aid.  His last words were, "Care for the mother and child first."


Saturday, October 08, 2011

Person-of-Mystery

Today, I'm off in the hills taking a Wilderness Medicine course with the Boy Scouts, but I already know from previous experience that I won't have phone reception where I'm going, so I can't check in and comment until very late Saturday.  Therefore, I've pre-posted the contest today.  Have fun!





Who could I be?  That's the mystery!  Go ahead and take a guess and then go enjoy your day.  Check back tomorrow and I'll reveal the answer.  The first correct post will be the winner.



Friday, October 07, 2011

Goodner Girls at Dorothy's Birthday


Here's another interesting photo from the same Goodner family as yesterday at their home in Gainesville, Texas.  It would appear as though it was Aunt Dorothy's birthday.  The red cross flag in the background was hung from homes, so that returning World War I soldiers would know at what houses they could stop to rest, receive meals, or stay for the night before continuing on to their families.


Thursday, October 06, 2011

Goodner Family at Home


It's back to the attic today for another family photo.  Today I'm featuring a photo of my great-grandparents' family at home.  I believe this photo may have been taken at their home at 301 East Scott Street in Gainesville, Texas.  My grandmother, Marymac, is on the far left with her arm around her mother's shoulder.


Wednesday, October 05, 2011

O' Lang Syne





Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot And Days O' Lang Syne?  Copyright, 1904, The Ullman Mfg. Co., N. Y.

Postmarked Hutchinson, Kansas, June 12, 1906, 2:30 PM
Rec'd Wichita, Kansas, June 12, 1906, 11:00 PM

Miss Jessie Irene Burrows
1153 University Ave.,
Wichita, Kansas.

7/5/06

If a body write a body,
Receiving no reply,
Might a body ask a body
If that's the reason why?
Opal C. Ambler


Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Triathletic Boys

Saturday, our family was out at Lopez Lake near Arroyo Grande, California, to watch our two older boys compete in the Scott Tinley Triathlon.

(Tim, center, waiting for the swim to start)

Several years ago, Tim, was downtown for a Farmer's Market, when he came across a flyer for a local triathlon and decided to do it.  Kristine and I were a little apprehensive, but Tim had fun and surprisingly did okay for a guy his age.

(Tim scrambling to enter the lake)

So he competed for the next few years doing the kid version of the same triathlon, but last year he moved up to the adult version and again surprised us for how well he did.  The course he competed in was the on-road sprint version which was 1/4 mile swim, 12.4 mile bike ride, and a 3 mile run.

(Tim swimming the quarter mile in the lake)

Because of his age, he was in the back of the pack to start the course, but we were pleasantly surprised to see him emerge fifth (out of 117 guys) from the lake with a time of 7 minutes 55 seconds!

(Tim out of the lake ahead of the university team!)

He was looking really good and probably in his best form ever.  His training for water polo certainly paid off.

(Changing for the bike portion.  The clock doesn't stop)


We knew he would probably lose some time on the bike and run.  He doesn't have a professional road bike and he's always lost time there, but after watching Tim leave on the bike, we left to get Andrew to the lake to start the kid version of the race.

(Andrew happy as can be, warming up in the chilly lake)


Andrew is our middle son and 11 years old right now.  I can't tell if he really wanted to race for the race sake or because his older brother has done it.


The youth course is a little different.  It's a 200 yard swim, a 4 mile bike ride, and a mile run.  Like his brother, Andrew was out of the water pretty quick.

(Quick change in transition)

(Off he goes on the bike portion.  Like Tim, he really should be using a road bike)

At this point in the race, I was getting a little concerned.  Based on his previous times, Tim should have been back by now, but his bike wasn't stacked where it should have been.

(Andrew coming down the final stretch)

Andrew finally finished his race.  He finished second in his class, so we're thinking we may have to start looking for a used road bike for him too.

(Two brothers after the race)

We finally found Tim.  He had hit a patch of gravel about 3/4 of the way through the bike course and wiped out, scraping up his hip and left arm.  He tried hopping back up, but his derailleur was all bent and he couldn't get it working.  He was a little frustrated that he couldn't finish the race, but took it in stride.

There's always next year!


Sunday, October 02, 2011

Victor David Brenner

Congratulations once again to Robert, who correctly identified yesterday's Person-of-Mystery as none other than Victor David Brenner.


Last week unintentionally turned into a bit of a money themed week, so I felt it only fitting to finish it off with Brenner.  You see, when I was a boy, developed an early fascination with coins.  My grandmother had given me some coins that my grandfather had collected from countries around the world while he was in the navy and I found them fascinating.  However, since I didn't have money to collect high denomination coins, I collected pennies.


Here's how it worked – from the money I earned doing my paper route I would have my parents go to the bank and get about $20 in rolls of pennies (50 in each roll).  In my spare time, I would sift through the rolls pulling out any wheat pennies, and replacing any I removed with newer pennies, rerolled the coins and finally made a small pen mark on the outside of the roll.  Usually, the rolls contained little of interest, but occasionally I could find something good, maybe even a steelie or the rare Indian Head.

(Example Penny Book - not mine, just an image from the Internet)

Before long, I bought a penny book and placed the coins into their appropriate slots often replacing better specimens for worse ones.  The United States had mints in three cities that commonly produced Lincoln pennies:  Philadelphia, Denver, and San Francisco.  Mint marks are found under the date with "D" for Denver, "S" for San Francisco and no mark for Philadelphia, so each year typically has three pennies to collect (e.g. 1914, 1914-D, and 1914-S).


The value of the coin is determined by by a variety of factors including the quality of the coin (less handled, the better) and the quantity minted (the fewer made, the greater the value).  For me, part of the fun was in the find, so I never bought any coins from a dealer.  I was able to find every penny this way save one, the elusive 1909-S VDB.  Which brings us back to Victor David Brenner.


Brenner was born in 1871 as Viktoras Barnauskas in a Jewish home in what is now Lithuania.  His family left Russia due to anti-semitism and he adopted an American sounding name in hopes of obtaining citizenship.  The family trade was gem and seal engraving, so when he came to America, he took up sculpture and medal making and became well regarded for his work.


In the Summer of 1908, President Roosevelt sat for Brenner in his studio so Brenner could make some sketches for a Panama Canal Medal that Roosevelt was having made.


While completing the work, Roosevelt saw a bas-relief Brenner had made of President Lincoln in hopes of capitalizing on the centenary of Lincoln's birth.


Roosevelt was a big fan of Lincoln.  Teddy had seen Lincoln's funeral as a boy and considered himself his political heir and Republican standard-bearer.  Roosevelt even possessed a ring containing actual hairs from Lincon's body given to him by John Hay.

(Roosevelt's Lincoln Ring)

In 1905, the famous sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens had been chosen to redesign several coins including the $20 gold piece and the penny.  Saint-Gaudens completed a double eagle, but died in 1907 before he could redesign the penny.  So when Roosevelt noticed Brenner's Lincoln medallion, he decided that Brenner's work would become the new penny.


Brenner's Lincoln penny was groundbreaking in many ways.  For starters, it featured a real person and most previous U.S. currency depicted allegorical imagery like liberty personified, eagles, or nondescript Indians.  However, after it's release people lodged complaints, particularly people from the South who objected to having a depiction of the former tyrant on their currency.  Some objected to the stylistic wheat design on the reverse bearing little resemblance to real grain.  But the greatest number of complaints came from those who took umbrage with the prominently placed artists initials, "V.D.B.," at the bottom of the reverse between the wheat stalks.


The Philadelphia and San Francisco mints produced 103,006,618 pennies in 1909 (which sounds like a lot, but for comparison in 2008, the mint produced over 5.4 billion pennies).  Of the pennies produced in 1909, only 28,479,000 were produced with the offending "V.D.B." initials and of these a meager 484,000 were produced in San Francisco making the 1909-S VDB, one of the most sought after pennies by collectors and ironically bringing renown to the mysterious Victor David Brenner.  Eventually by 1918, the controversy had subsided and a very tiny "V.D.B." returned to the penny's front side where in can be found today at the bottom of Lincoln's bust at about the 7 o'clock position.



Saturday, October 01, 2011

Person-of-Mystery

My older two boys are doing a local triathlon today, so I'm going to be watching them.  I'll try and check in, but I don't know if I'll have Internet or not.


Who could I be?  That's the mystery!  Go ahead and take a guess and then go enjoy your day.  Check back tomorrow and I'll reveal the answer.  The first correct post will be the winner.