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"I Write the Songs" (or, Get In Line, Barry Manilow)

6/24/2021

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 If you're reading this, you probably know me.  And if you know me, you probably know I now live in Maryland.  If you know where Maryland is, you probably know it's a short drive to our nation's capital from just about anywhere in this state.  

The same can be said about Delaware, most of Virginia, a fair portion of West Virginia, and even the southern part of Pennsylvania.  

I don't think it needs to be said that most of the states in the eastern part of the US are smaller than the rest of the US states are.  For example, you can drive across Tennessee going from west to east on your way to Washington, DC, and after several hours of driving you will still be in Tennessee, with several hours of Tennessee left to go.  But when you leave Tennessee, boom, you're not all that far from DC anymore.  Or from me, for that matter!  So try it and see if I'm right (I am), and then while you're in the area, come see me.  

One thing that is fascinating about where I live is that there is a lot of history here.  Of course, you knew that already, and I knew that before I moved here.  What I didn't know was exactly how much historical stuff happened here, and by "here" I mean stand in a spot, any spot, and you can just about be guaranteed that you're within spitting distance of some historically significant house, grave, battlefield, or historical marker detailing something that once stood on that spot. 

Take Frederick, where I live.  Do you know what happened in Frederick, or really close by?  For beginners, the battle of Antietam occurred very close to Frederick and I can drive to that battlefield site in less than half an hour. It is located in Sharpsburg, MD, and holds the unhappy record of being the site of the deadliest one-day battle in all of US military history. Also near Frederick is Harper's Ferry, WV, which is where things happened that cause kids in school to need to learn about Stonewall Jackson and John Brown. In fact, it is after the Harper's Ferry battle (yup, there was a battle there, too) that Jackson left the processing of the prisoners to the underlings while he hot-footed it to Sharpsburg to join Lee for that battle. The battle in Harper's Ferry was also especially significant because it paved the way for Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. Another historically famous battlefield that is a short drive from Frederick is Gettysburg, PA, where Lincoln delivered the famous Gettysburg Address.  "Four score and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth, on this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal." Thank you, Mr. Whitten, for making me memorize this in 8th grade. I'm serious. I'm glad I had him as a teacher, and I'm glad he made us all learn the Gettysburg address, the Declaration of Independence, and the Preamble to the Constitution.  I can't tell you my son's phone number from memory, but I still remember these words, and I'm pretty proud of that because everyone should know them, even 53 years after having had to learn them in order to recite them in front of the class.  (Thank you, too, Ruth Freeman Franklin, for prompting me by mouthing the words when I got stuck.)

Frederick, itself, had a lot of interesting stuff happen during the Civil War, but it came into its own long before that.  The C&O Canal is close by, and that canal has a lot of wartime history connected with it.  Did I mention that Frederick saw action during the French and Indian War, the Revolutionary War, and the Civil War? I didn't, but it did.  Abraham Lincoln, Benjamin Franklin, Robert E. Lee, Winston Churchill and George Washington visited Frederick (although certainly not at the same time, and not in that order), and here's another cool thing:  Francis Scott Key, the author of the words to the National Anthem, is from Frederick.  Someone Of Importance decided to memorialize him by allowing a flag to be flown around the clock at his grave here (it is one of only three places in the US where this is allowed), and by naming a mall after him. 

I'm sure he would be so proud if he were alive.

There are other historically significant sites here in Frederick, but this story is supposed to be about music (you didn't know that, but I did).  So let's get to it!

Mr. Key, as I stated, wrote the words to The Star-Spangled Banner.  It was sung to the tune of a well-known drinking song that folks at that time knew from their pub-hopping days in England. I expect you already knew that the song was not written about the Revolutionary War, but rather was penned at the conclusion of a major battle during the War of 1812 (which lasted until 1814, when Key wrote the poem that became the song).

Here is the story of how that poem came to be written.

Mr. Key was good friends with a doctor by the name of William Beanes. Dr. Beanes was a civilian doctor who happened to get himself captured and imprisoned on an enemy boat in the Chesapeake Bay, just a stone's throw from Ft. McHenry. Key happened to be a pretty prominent lawyer in DC so he got President Madison to write a sweet little letter to the British officer in command of the boat on which Beanes was being held, telling him what a fine person Dr. Beanes was and that, hey, he was actually a civilian so the officer needed to kindly realize the error of his ways and release Dr. Beanes, if he would be so kind as to accommodate this request.  I'm paraphrasing, but that was the gist. It didn't hurt that Dr. Beanes had saved the life of someone the British officer knew...so the officer agreed.  Well, wouldn't you just know it?  At that very instant, jussssst before Key and his accompanying entourage of groupies (totaling 2 people) and Dr. Beanes were to head back to their own little boat and find their way to the fort, the Brits decided to choose that same exact moment to bombard the fort with volley after volley of weaponry.  They obviously couldn't let Key and his companions to go back to the fort because they might warn the soldiers at the fort that an attack was imminent, so instead they let the four men (I've added the good doctor to the number) go on back to their little boat but they had to pinky-swear that they wouldn't leave and go back to the fort and rat on the British. The men in the little boat agreed, although I suspect a large part of the decision to not row, row, row their boat back to the fort might have hinged on the fact that there were rockets going off leaving red glares, and also bombs bursting in air, and the men were pretty sure their boat might suffer a little damage if they waded into the fray at that point.  Also, they might personally suffer a little damage to theirOWNselves. 

Well, it was pretty harrowing and noisy and scary considering these four men were in a tiny little boat sitting in the water near kind of a lot of British war ships waging a fiery battle on a fort that was severaly undermanned. Adding to this nightmare was Key's knowledge that his own brother-in-law was at Ft. McHenry at that moment with his troops defending the fort. All through the night, the bombs and rockets and, well, whatever else was used as artillery, kept exploding all around them and the men were trying to see if the flag was still flying, which meant the fort was still standing and not overtaken by the Brithsh, and the brother-in-law and his men were hopefully okay. It didn't help that the British officer, upon releasing Dr. Beanes, told Key and the others that they should get a good look at their beloved flag because once the firing stopped they wouldn't see it flying anymore.

It was like the universe was playing a cruel practical joke on the men.  You see, it was pitch dark all night long, except for the rockets' red glare and the bombs bursting in air, which gave off just enough light on occasion that they could see the flag still flying. Then the shelling stopped.  No rockets going off meant no red glare.  No bombs bursting meant no flash of light.  No glare or light meant no one could see if the flag was flying or not. Then came dawn.  Wouldn't you know it, that practical joke continued even after dawn because there was such a heavy fog that they still couldn't see if the flag was flying.  It wasn't until the sun burned through the fog that the men saw the flag in all her glory, flying high and proud. They half expected to see the Union Jack there, but no!  The soldiers at the fort had held tough and the Brits had lost, causing them to limp home with their sails tucked between their legs, so to speak. 

It is of interest to me, and perhaps to you, that the flag that flew over the fort consisted of 15 stars and 15 stripes, recognizing the 15 states currently in the union at the time.  After this, the government reverted back to 13 stripes for the 13 original colonies, and just added a star each time a new state was formed. Also worth mentioning is that this was one humongous flag!  Each star was 2 feet in diameter, and each stripe was 2 feet tall.  The entire flag was about the size of a fourth of a basketball court. AND! There was actually not one, but two flags!  One was smaller, and was probably the one actually flown during the battle, but in the morning the big one was raised and that is the one that Key and his friends saw flying in the sunlight. 

On the way back to the fort that morning, the other men powered the boat paddles while Key spent the time writing a poem about the battle and their joy at seeing the flag. (There were four stanzas detailing the battle.) He showed it to his brother-in-law who titled it The Defence of Fort McHenry, and he managed to get it to someone who was instrumental in getting it published, and the rest is, well, history.  Oh, except that it didn't become our national anthem until 1931 when Hoover was President.  That's another story for another day.

Next up, the story of the song everyone knows as...you know what?  I'm going to make you wait.  I will give you one hint:  It is a patriotic song. Wooo...who saw that one coming?

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And Now This About DC (or, Yes, There Is Lots More To Tell About)

3/24/2021

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I've told you about the cigar-like submarine at the Navy Shipyard called the Intelligent Whale.  I've also regaled you with stories about the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial.  (There may be a quiz later, so you might want to go back and re-read about them.)  You've heard about the cherry blossoms already but I told you more about them, and then there was the fascinating information about the DC flag and what the elements in the design mean.  (Pretty much nothing, if you will recall.)  There is still so much more that can be written about but I worry a little bit that you may be weary of all the talk of the capitol city.  But hey, it is our nation's capitol, so you shouldn't be.  You shouldn't even have to stifle a yawn - you there, yes, you.  I saw that.  Stop it.  We should all want to know all we can about such a grand place, shouldn't we?  

Yup, so that's why I'm going to tell you a little more today.  After this, I may move on to other subjects, at least for awhile.  After all, Easter is coming up...and April Fool's Day...and tax day.  So many events!

But for today, more about Washington, DC.  

You've surely heard about Walter Reed Hospital (where the President and other notables go when they need to find excellent health care).  It used to be located on 16th St NW.  It has moved, although they are still using the old location for offices and other medical-related stuff.  There are other plans in the works for the 16th St. Walter Reed building, but I don't know what they are.  So for now, we will skip right over that.  

At the old Walter Reed location, there is a memorial fountain honoring Colonel John Hoff, which was a gift to the hospital from his widow.  Col. Hoff was instrumental in bringing the Medical Corps up to snuff.  Up until his helpful influence, the organization had been given very little, if any, recognition.  In addition, the personnel had not been recognized as official military officers, so his efforts brought them the benefits that the regular military officers were already getting. He was a good guy, and he did good stuff.  His wife wanted him to be remembered.  Thus, the fountain.

The designer and creator of the memorial sculpture was given pretty lenient license, apparently, to design it as he wished.  Colonel Hoff had served in the Philippines, in the Arctic, and in the tropics.  So!  The sculpture's fountain spouts are carved penguins (I guess they're carved; I know they aren't real) standing on pedestals that have cobras carved into them. 

Yes. 

Penguins standing on cobra-decorated pedestals. 

North meets south.

Picture
And in case you aren't paying really close attention, here is something that is worthy of mention: Penguins are not found in the Arctic. They live at the Antarctic.

So, yeah.

Let's move on to the last of the DC places I want to tell you about. A fitting ending it is, too, because it denotes the big ending. It is a cemetery.

Everyone has surely heard of Arlington National Cemetery, and of course one of the more famous stops if you're taking the walking tour of this cemetery is that of the Eternal Flame that marks the grave of President John F Kennedy (and other family members, including Jacquelyn Bouvier Kennedy Onassis). As notable as that gravesite is the Tomb of the Unknowns. If you have the opportunity to visit sometime, make sure to watch the changing of the guard. But before you watch it, read up on the soldiers who guard the tomb and what is required of them to be chosen. Let's just say they don't just raise their hand and ask permission. Trust me, it's worth the research.

The property that Arlington National Cemetery is located on was once owned by Robert E. Lee and his wife. When they left at the outbreak of the Civil War, the Union Army took it over. Later, when the war raged and the casualties added up, the decision was made to turn the property into a cemetery. An interesting side note is that the quartermaster of the Union forces was so angry at Lee for what he felt was Lee's betrayal of the oath he had taken as an Army officer that the quartermaster purposely buried Union soldiers in the rose garden area of the Lee's homeplace, in the hopes that the Lee family would refuse to return home knowing there were enemies buried in their garden. It apparently worked, because the family never did come back to their former home.

General John J. Pershing is buried at Arlington. He chose his marker and the location of his plot several years before he died. He purposely wanted to be buried among the men who served with him in WWI, so his is a very plain government issued white marble marker, just like all the others around him.

Two astronauts, Roger Chaffee and Virgil Grissom, are buried at Arlington. They were the first two astronauts killed in the line of duty in the American space program. (Other astronauts are buried at Arlington, also.)

There is a beautiful statue of a woman in one area of the cemetery that stands in memory of Jane Delano. She and those buried near her were all nurses who served in the military.

Lee Marvin (yes, the actor) is buried at Arlington. He was a WWII veteran who was awarded a Purple Heart.

Wm. Howard Taft, who not only was the 27th President, but also served as a Supreme Court justice, has his final resting place at Arlington. An interesting note about Taft: He was the first U.S. President to be buried at Arlington, he was the person who popularized Presidents throwing out the first pitch of the season at MLB games, and perhaps most interesting of all, he is responsible for the 7th inning stretch! So thanks to Taft, at least sorta, we have the chicken dance.

Pierre Charles L'Enfant was the architect who designed the layout of DC. He designed the National Mall and Pennsylvania Avenue, which is the road that connects the White House to the Capitol building. He served in the Army during the Revolutionary War. His remains rest here.

Remember Glenn Miller? He was the famous musician and band leader whose plane was lost over the English Channel in WWII (watch the movie "The Glenn Miller Story" if you haven't already). His body was never found, but his daughter made arrangements for him to have a headstone at the cemetery. So technically he isn't buried there, but you can visit his plot.

Robert Peary, who was the leader of the first expedition to reach the North Pole, was a naval officer, and his grave is at Arlington.

Helen Taft, wife of President Wm. H. Taft, is buried at Arlington along with her husband (remember the chicken dance conversation?). (Also, remember my last blog entry about all those cherry trees? Yes. This is THAT Helen Taft.)

There are lots of other people buried there. Some are famous, some are infamous. Most, but not all, are Americans. There are even a couple of war-time enemies buried there who had the misfortune of dying while being held as prisoners of war. There are knowns and unknowns. One thing is for certain -- almost all of them are bonafide heroes.

Welp, there you have it, boys and girls. If you can, come see our nation's fascinating capitol city. And while you're here, come see me! I will be your tour guide and we can see all these things, plus we can take a little run up the road a couple of miles or so to the original 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' and, in the words of Barney Fife, "that Smith Brothers institution" (more commonly known as the Smithsonian) (also, lots of visitors are surprised to learn that the Smithsonian is comprised of several buildings). We can go see the theater where Lincoln met his demise, drive by the Watergate Hotel, go to Rock Creek Park where the folks on NCIS are regularly investigating homicides (on TV, not in real life), and if I know far enough in advance that you're coming, I can take you to Monticello and Mount Vernon. We have some excellent crab cakes here in Maryland, too.

​I'll leave the light on for you.


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