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Sagamore Hill

October 9th, 2009

It is a crisp October on Long Island sound.

The wind makes the flag slap and shudder as it pushes me up the hill like a pair of invisible hands. The land around here is green and so rich, it’s easy to imagine those early days when this was king’s land and neighbor had yet to pick sides against neighbor.

On a day like today, a day golden with October’s sun, it is hard not to look around and imagine what it must have been like. It must have been rich. Fish. Deer. Cows grazing across inland pastures. Flocks of birds still speckle the sky.

Teddy Roosevelt raised his family in Oyster Bay amidst the gentle roughness of woods and bays such as these. The home of the 26th president, Sagamore Hill, was known as “the Summer White House.” This also is the place where the former president and Rough Rider died at the age of 60.

In some places, where woods remain, thin forests grow careless and unkempt. Strange names like Hauppage, Ronkonkomo and Nissequogue roll off the tongue likeheavy stones from forgotten languages of a people long removed.

Of Suffrage and Rock ‘n Roll

August 18th, 2008

The dog days of August roared in Tennessee in 1920!

August 18, 1920

Seventy years after the first National Women’s Rights Convention was held in 1850, the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution is passed, finally giving women the right to vote.

The amendment simply reads:

The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.

Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

But these two sentences were hard won despite the fact that 50 years prior, in 1870, Congress had passed the 15th Amendment, giving the right to vote to male citizens of color.

But letting women vote? We’d have to go through Prohibition first!

By the summer of 1920, 35 individual states had granted women the right to vote, Wyoming being the first in 1890. Just one more state was needed to ratify the amendment in order to make it Constitutional law.

Tennessee became that 36th state ¬but it took three roll calls. On the third round of voting, the youngest member of the state legislature, the 22-year old Republican (some accounts say he was 23), Harry Thomas Burn, unexpectedly changed his vote.

Burn had been wearing a red rose in his lapel, signifying that he was against giving women the right to vote. Those “for” the amendment wore yellow roses. When the voting began, red roses outnumbered yellow ones. Then the vote tied at 48 to 48 when Banks Turner changed his vote. Burn was sporting a red rose when he changed his vote in favor of the amendment.

Mayhem burst out. Local legend says that Burn was chased around the Capitol voting chamber by disappointed anti-suffragists. Some describe those chasing Burn as “a mob” which included, ironically, legislators as well as women who were against women having the right to vote!

The story goes that he ended up exiting the building through a window on the third floor, edging himself along the ledge of the Capitol, and finally hiding out in the attic.

What made Burn change his mind between the second and third vote? His mother, Febb Ensminger, had sent him a letter asking him to “do the right thing.”

Tennessee Governor A. H. Roberts signed the bill on August 24, 1920. The amendment formally became law on August 26. Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby read the amendment into law.

Mrs. J. L. Burn’s letter to her son:

Dear Son:

Hurrah, and vote for suffrage! Don’t keep them in doubt. I noticed some of the speeches against. They were bitter. I have been watching to see how you stood, but have not noticed anything yet. Don’t forget to be a good boy and help Mrs. Catt [Carrie Chapman Catt] put the ‘rat’ in ratification.

Signed, Your Mother.

In a later speech to his colleagues, Burn is quoted as saying:

I know that a mother’s advice is safest for her boy to follow and my mother wanted me to vote for ratification. But I appreciate the fact that an opportunity as does seldom come to mortal man to free 17 million from political slavery was mine. I do it not for any personal glory but for the glory of my party. (NYT August 17, 1995)

Carrie Chapman Catt was a former president of the National American Women’s Suffrage Association and one of the party leaders who worked on getting the amendment passed.

Links
www.archives.gov/education/lessons/woman-suffrage/
www.blueshoenashville.com/suffragehistory.html
www.law.umkc.edu/…

In 1997, Beth Ann Hogan became the first coed to matriculate at the Virginia Military Institute.

On a musical note:
In 1969, Woodstock closed with Jimi Hendrix. Hendrix had wanted to be the final performer. Scheduled to begin at midnight at the end of Day 3, he did not take the stage until 9 a.m., kinda on Day 4!

Some of the songs he played during those two hours included:
Foxy Lady, Purple Haze, Hey Joe and, of course, the Star Spangled Banner.

Jefferson Airplane (now Jefferson Starship), Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and Sha-Na-Na played on Day 3.

Richie Havens, The Incredible String Band, Ravi Shankar, Arlo Guthrie and Joan Baez played on Day 1.

Day 2 included Santana, Grateful Dead, The Who, and Janis Joplin.

July 7, the 7th day of the 7th month

July 7th, 2008

In Jewish, Muslim, Christian, Hindu and Buddhist traditions, seven is a sacred number for perfection, completion, spiritual fulfillment.

7 days of creation, 7 days in a week, 7 chakras, the original 7 planets… And, of course, 7 is a prime.

So who was born on this power house day?

George Cukor (1899), Academy Award-winning movie director

Satchel Paige (1906), hero of the Negro Leagues and major league pitcher, first African American inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. No errors in his entire career.

Robert Heinlein (1907), “the dean of science fiction” authored Starship Troopers and Stranger in a Strange Land, among others.

Other firsts:

1754:
Columbia University opens its doors, just under another incarnation as it was originally known as King’s College. (Thank you, King George III.)

1954:
Elvis hits the radio in Memphis! The song: “That’s All Right”.

1958:
Alaska becomes a state.

1981:

Sandra Day O’Connor is nominated by President Reagan to the Supreme Court. O’Connor will be the nation’s first female Supreme Court judge. As a justice, she is regarded as maintaining a centrist position except on her position on abortion where she was more conservative, and on the influence or import of foreign law, where she was more liberal. She retired in 2005.

Barbecuing for the 4th

July 3rd, 2008

I have never barbecued.

Raised in barbecue country, I’ve had my mouth, lips and tongue properly burned by concoctions so hot, you had to be careful you didn’t rub your eyes – now tearing from the heat – with fingers still sticky from peppers and tinted various shades of orange or red from scorching sauce.

I’ve survived secret sauces left to “ripen” for months in bottles on sunny windowsills, sauces so hot that they utterly destroy any possible food-fond bacteria that might otherwise wreak havoc on your gutt, a hot date, or dinner with your sweetheart’s family.

On the other hand, there is a school of thought that considers any form of grilling that is coupled with a sauce, a rub, or a marinade as – barbecue. :)

This means that I have barbecued and never even knew it. Cool!

So, ye veterans of the outdoor grill as well as ye rookies who know no sauce other than A-1 or Worcestshire, prepare ye meats! Consider ye rubs! Blend those saucy salad dressings! And check this out:

Not all barbecue is red!
Some regional sauces in the south traditionally are based on mustard and vinegar and contain not a drop of red, nor a blush of scarlet. That’s right: no tomatoes, no ketchup, no tomato paste in various regional sauces from parts of northern Alabama, eastern North Carolina, and the central or low country of South Carolina.

If one took this idea and made a sauce of vinegar, mustard, garlic, salt, pepper and some oil, you’ve got the traditional French vinaigrette – an oil and vinegar salad dressing to us plebes. Alter the vinegar and the marinade – err, barbecue sauce – changes flavor in delightful ways. Basic vinegars: cider; balsamic; wine and, for a milder tweak, rice vinegar.

Old school sauce
While screamingly hot artisan sauces can be found everywhere from the verdant vines of Sonoma to the Green Mountains of Vermont, traditional hot and savory barbecue’s reputation still rests in the midwest: Kansas City style, St. Louis style and, a bit farther south, Texas style.

The old school barbecue favors either thick or thin tomato bases made interesting with vinegar, different kinds of peppers, horse radish or other assaults on the tongue as well as secret spices (cardamon? cumin? ginger?) and just a hint of something sweet like molasses or peaches or even marmalade.

Or bourbon! Yep. Memphis and various parts of Georgia kick up their sauce with bourbon. At www.epicurious.com both Gourmet and Bon Appetit have recipes for bourbon-based barbecue sauces.

Season early, sauce late, and slow is the way to go
Fine Cooking magazine says that if you want to barbecue without burning or drying out the meat into some hard-to-identify form of briquette, sauce the meat a few minutes before it is done. That’s all sauce needs to cook: minutes.

Seasoning early, however, is good as seasoning lets flavor sink in. Although barbecue rubs might count as seasoning, in my experience, any dry seasonings on grilled meats also burn. Ever put dried garlic on something under the broiler?

This really means that a non-tomato-based sauce, the old marinade, may be the way to go. Flavor sinks in and, if you are using a higher temp oil like canola rather than olive, it can take the heat. Mind you, when fat starts dripping or you’re trying that Memphis barbecue, all bets are off!

According to the July issue of Bon Appétit and Fine Cooking’s summer, 2008 special grilling publication, lower and slower cooking temps definitely are the way to go. They let in more flavor and allow for juicier end results.

Ultimately, temperature is simply a question of control: hot temperatures are harder to control. Does lower and slower mean you need two grills? A hot one and a medium-hot one? Do you need an SUV-sized grill in order to have a hot side and a less-hot side? Or does it require two stages of cooking?

For a really interesting article on what’s hot (excuse the pun) on the barbecue and grill scene, check out (online at epicurious.com) grill and barbecue meister Steve Raichlen’s article “The Best Barbecue in the USA”. He also includes barbecue tips (with good pix) and, for the history geeks like me, a history of barbecue. Cool!

Signed,
Concord Star

Great Independence Day movies!

June 27th, 2008

Is there any part of this country that has not been running for either sunscreen or umbrellas every other day? Sometimes on the same day?

Well, just in case the fireworks do not go as planned, I’ve got a back up plan. Home movies. DVD rentals. Movies about heroes and idealism, the fight for what’s right as well as the fight for survival against all odds. Maybe a comedy or two wouldn’t be so bad either…

Here are my picks for the best of the best for this July 4. Enjoy!

Signed,
Concord Star

Great adventure war classics:
The Dirty Dozen (Paul Newman, Lee Marvin; Oscar winner)
The Great Escape (Steve Mcqeen, Charles Bronson, Richard Attenborough; Oscar-nominated, true story)
Stalag 17 (William Holden, Oscar performance; Billy Wilder directs)

Heroes everywhere:
Flags of Our Fathers (Clint Eastwood directs, Oscar-nominated)
Glory (Matthew Broderick, Denzel Washington, Morgan Freeman; Oscar winner)
Sands of Iwo Jima (John Wayne; Oscar-nominated)

Thrillers, mind games, drama:
Bridge on the River Kwai (Alec Guinness, William Holden; Oscar winner)
The Caine Mutiny (Humphrey Bogart, Van Johnson, Fred MacMurray; Oscar-nominated…7 times!)
GI Jane (Demi Moore, Viggo Mortensen; Ridley Scott directs)
Patriot Games (Harrison Ford)
Run Silent, Run Deep (Clark Gable, Burt Lancaster)

Off the battlefield:
A Few Good Men (Tom Cruise, Demi Moore, Jack Nicholson; Rob Reiner directs; Oscar-nominated)
All the President’s Men (Dustin Hoffman, Robert Redford; Alan Pakula directs; Oscar winner x 4)
Charlie Wilson’s War (Tom Hanks, Julia Roberts; Mike Nichols directs; Oscar-nominated)
Manchurian Candidate (either version: Denzel Washington, Meryl Streep; Jonathan Demme directs, 2004; Frank Sinatra, Laurence Harvey; John Frankenheimer, directs, 1962, Oscar winner)
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (James Stewart; Frank Capra directs, Oscar winner)

Comedy:
Mister Roberts (James Cagney, Jack Lemmon, William Powell; John Ford co-directs, Oscar winner)
Private Benjamin (Goldie Hawn, Eileen Brennan; Oscar-nominated 3 times)
The Russians Are Coming (Alan Arkin, Carl Reiner, Eva Marie Saint; Norman Jewison directs, Oscar-nominated 4 times)

For those who wave their flag in other ways:
Platoon (Charlie Sheen, Willem Dafoe; Oliver Stone directs, Oscar winner)
Tora, Tora, Tora (Jason Robards, E. G. Marshall; about Pearl Harbor, Oscar winner)

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