Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail (Arizona & California)

… was authorized on this date in 1990.

juan Bautista de Anza

The national trail commemorates the route followed by a Spanish commander, Juan Bautista de Anza, in 1775-76 when he led a contingent of 30 soldiers and their families to found a presidio and mission near the San Francisco Bay. Along the trail route, the visitor can experience the varied landscapes similar to those the expedition saw; learn the stories of the expedition, its members, and descendants; better understand the American Indian role in the expedition and the diversity of their cultures; and appreciate the extent of the effects of Spanish colonial settlement of Arizona and California.

Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail


Over 240 people set out from Tubac on October 23, 1775. The first night out, the group suffered its only death en route when María Manuela Piñuelas died from complications after childbirth. Her son lived. Two other babies born on the trip brought the total number of settlers to 198. Of these, over half were children 12 years old and under.

The expedition continued down the Santa Cruz River to its junction with the Gila River. While they camped, Anza, Font, and a few soldiers visited Casa Grande, which was already known as an ancient Indian site. They followed the Gila to the Colorado River crossing, one birth occuring along the way. They were assisted in crossing the Colorado by Olleyquotequiebe (Salvador Palma), chief of the Yumas (Quechan), whose tribe had befriended Anza on his 1774 trek.

As the route headed through the sand dunes and deserts of southeastern California, the journey became more difficult. To better secure forage and water during one of the coldest winters on record, Anza divided the expedition into three groups, each traveling a day apart to allow water holes to refill.

They regrouped near what is now Anza Borrego Desert State Park. On Christmas Eve they welcomed another birth and reached Mission San Gabriel Arcángel on January 4, 1776. From there they followed known trails through Indian villages along the coast of California, visiting Mission San Luís Obispo de Toloso and San Antonio de Padúa, to arrive at Monterey and nearby mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo on March 10.

Anza then took a small group to explore San Francisco Bay, where he chose sites for the presidio and the mission. Following orders to explore the “River of Saint Francis,” he traveled the east side of San Francisco Bay before turning south to return to Monterey.

Discovering the Anza Trail

Macbeth

… was killed on this date in 1057. But not as Shakespeare portrayed it. Here’s the story from the BBC:

Macbeth was a king of the Scots whose rule was marked by efficient government and the promotion of Christianity, but who is best known as the murderer and usurper in William Shakespeare’s tragedy.

Shakespeare’s Macbeth bears little resemblance to the real 11th century Scottish king.

Mac Bethad mac Findláich, known in English as Macbeth, was born in around 1005. His father was Finlay, Mormaer of Moray, and his mother may have been Donada, second daughter of Malcolm II. A ‘mormaer’ was literally a high steward of one of the ancient Celtic provinces of Scotland, but in Latin documents the word is usually translated as ‘comes’, which means earl.

In August 1040, he killed the ruling king, Duncan I, in battle near Elgin, Morayshire. Macbeth became king. His marriage to Kenneth III’s granddaughter Gruoch strengthened his claim to the throne. In 1045, Macbeth defeated and killed Duncan I’s father Crinan at Dunkeld.

For 14 years, Macbeth seems to have ruled equably, imposing law and order and encouraging Christianity. In 1050, he is known to have travelled to Rome for a papal jubilee. He was also a brave leader and made successful forays over the border into Northumbria, England.

In 1054, Macbeth was challenged by Siward, Earl of Northumbria, who was attempting to return Duncan’s son Malcolm Canmore, who was his nephew, to the throne. In August 1057, Macbeth was killed at the Battle of Lumphanan in Aberdeenshire by Malcolm Canmore (later Malcolm III).

Redux line of the day

First posted here, two years ago today.


Sage advice from not quite six-year-old Sofie on how not to be stressed:

“[T]ake deep breaths, ride your scooter, eat some cake, run fast, take a bath, spend time with your kid and play a game, and then, if you are hungry, eat some cake.”

Today’s Birthdays: August 15th

Today is Napoleon’s birthday. He was born August 15, 1769 (and died in 1821, at age 51). As an adult, Napoleon Bonaparte was just over 5-feet, 6-inches tall (1.686 m), about average for his countrymen at the time.

Four time Oscar nominee for best supporting actress (one win), Ethel Barrymore was born on this date in 1879.

Pulitzer-winning author Edna Ferber was born 121 years ago today. She’s known best for So Big (Pulitzer prize in 1924), Show Boat, Cimarron, Giant and Ice Palace.

TV chef Julia Child was born Julia McWilliams in Pasadena, California, on this date in 1912.

Wisecracking Dick Van Dyke Show co-star Rose Marie is 88.

Mannix, Mike Connors, is 86.

Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer is 73.

Princess Anne, daughter of Queen Elizabeth, is 61.

Debra Messing is 43.

Ben Affleck is 39.

Jennifer Lawrence is 21 today. She was a best actress Oscar nominee for Winter’s Bone.

Stieg Larsson, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, would have been 57 today. He died in 2004.

Pro Football Hall of Fame member Gene Upshaw was born on August 15th in 1945. Upshaw played for the Raiders, 1967-1981. (Ahh, the glory years.) Upshaw had a second career as Executive Director of the National Football League Players Association. He died in August 2008.

Canadian born jazz pianist Oscar Peterson was born 86 years ago today (1925). The seven-time Grammy winner died in 2007.

Today is the Feast of the Assumption, the principal feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, the feast celebrates both the “happy departure of Mary from this life” and the “assumption of her body into heaven.”

By promulgating the Bull Munificentissimus Deus, 1 November, 1950, Pope Pius XII declared infallibly that the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary was a dogma of the Catholic Faith. Likewise, the Second Vatican Council taught in the Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium that “the Immaculate Virgin, preserved free from all stain of original sin, was taken up body and soul into heavenly glory, when her earthly life was over, and exalted by the Lord as Queen over all things.”

Today’s Photo Album

Five photos from a weekend in Santa Fe. You may click each image for a larger version.

I love Santa Fe. I go there frequently, sometimes just for dinner and a stroll. Indeed, proximity to Santa Fe is one of the best things about living in Albuquerque.

But I’ve been to European cities too. C’mon Santa Fe. Palace? Cathedral?

Building shown (in part) in background is the Museum of Contemporary Native Arts. Photo taken yesterday, noonish.

The song goes, “If you’re going to San Francisco, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair.”

Well, the song for Santa Fe might be, “If you’re going to Santa Fe, be sure to wear a hard hat on your head.”

Photo is of the Palace Street façade of Sena Plaza. The patio is wonderful, and brunch at La Casa Sena restaurant lovely. And, being as it’s Santa Fe, perhaps the deterioration is fake.

Flowers hanging from lamppost in Santa Fe Plaza.

You know you are in the right spot in any city in the world when you are walking among the wedding parties and their photographers.

iPhone photo.

Another hanging basket in the Plaza.

August 14th

Today is the birthday

… of Earl Weaver. The former Baltimore Orioles manager is 81.

Earl Weaver managed the Orioles with intensity, flair, and acerbic wit for 17 seasons. He fashioned an impressive .583 winning percentage bolstered by five 100-win seasons (1969-1971 and 1979-1980). Known for his innovative managerial style and his colorful confrontations with the men in blue, the Earl of Baltimore won 1,480 games, six American League East titles, four pennants and the 1970 World Series.

Baseball Hall of Fame

… of Dash Crofts. The Crofts of Seals and Crofts is 71.

… of David Crosby. The Crosby of Crosby, Stills and Nash is 70. Mama Cass introduced Crosby, Stills and Nash to one another in 1968. Before that, of course, Mr. Crosby was in another Hall of Fame group, The Byrds.

… of Steve Martin, born in Waco, Texas, but raised near Disneyland. He’s 66 today.

… of Susan St. James. The wife of McMillan and Wife is 65. McMillan was played by Rock Hudson. Ms. Saint James has been married to Dick Ebersol, formerly of NBC Sports, for 30 years. Her name at birth was Susan Jane Miller.

… of Danielle Steel. The novelist is 64.

… of Gary Larson. The Far Side cartoonist is 61.

… of Earvin “Magic” Johnson. Magic is 52, as is actress Marcia Gay Harden.

… of Susan Olsen. Cindy, of The Brady Bunch, is — wait — for — it — 50.

… of Halle Berry. The Academy Award winner is 45.

… of Tim Tebow. He’s 24.

… of Ernest Lawrence Thayer, the poet who wrote “Casey at the Bat,” born on this date in 1863.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-2lXQQcXb8

Today is the 66th anniversary of the end of World War II; V-J[apan] Day or V-P[acific] Day. That’s Alfred Eisenstaedt’s famous photo, “The Kiss.” The nurse has been identified as Edith Cullen Shain. She was 27 that day. No one knows who the sailor was.

Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz

… is 85 today. He took control of Cuba in 1959.

Castro wrote a letter to President Franklin Roosevelt in 1940. (He says he was 12, but should have been 13 or 14.) “If you like, give me a ten dollars bill green american in the letter [back] because never have I not seen a ten dollars bill green american and I would like to have one of them.” Castro went on to say, “I don’t know very English but I know very much Spanish and I suppose you [FDR] don’t know very Spanish but you know very English because you are American but I am not American.”

Perhaps if FDR had given him the $10 history might have been different.

I saw Castro give a speech outside the Hotel Nacional in Havana in 1993.

Little Sure Shot

Annie Oakley 1902… was born 151 years ago today (1860).

As the star attraction of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, she thrilled audiences around the world with her daring shooting feats. Her act helped fuel turn-of-the-century nostalgia for the vanished, mythical world of the American West. Over time she became an American legend — the loud, brassy, cocksure shooter celebrated in the musical “Annie Get Your Gun.” But that legend had little to do with the real Annie Oakley. Although famous as a Western sharpshooter, Oakley lived her entire life east of the Mississippi. A champion in a man’s sport, she forever changed ideas about the abilities of women, yet she opposed female suffrage. Her fame and fortune came from her skill with guns, yet she was a Quaker.

American Experience | Annie Oakley | PBS

Larry McMurtry’s excellent essay “Inventing the West” from the August 2000 issue of The New York Review of Books tells us about this famous performer.

Annie Oakley (Phoebe Ann Moses—or Mosey) grew up poor in rural Ohio, shot game to feed her family, shot game to sell, was pressed into a shooting contest with a touring sharpshooter named Frank Butler, beat him, married him, stayed with him for fifty years, and died three weeks before he did in 1926.

When Annie Oakley and Frank Butler offered themselves to Cody the Colonel was dubious. His fortunes were at a low ebb, and shooting acts abounded. But he gave Annie Oakley a chance. She walked out in Louisville before 17,000 people and was hired immediately. Nate Salsbury, Cody’s tight-fisted manager, who did not spend lavishly and who rarely highlighted performers, happened to watch Annie rehearse and promptly ordered seven thousand dollars’ worth of posters and billboard art.

Annie Oakley more than justified the expense. Sitting Bull, normally a taciturn fellow, saw her shoot in Minnesota and could not contain himself. Watanya cicilia, he called her, his Little Sure Shot. Small, reserved, Quakerish, she seemed to live on the lemonade Buffalo Bill dispensed free to all hands. In London she demolished protocol by shaking hands with Princess Alexandra. She shook hands with Alexandra’s husband, the Prince of Wales, too, though, like his mother the Queen, she strongly disapproved of his behavior with the ladies. In France the Parisians were glacially indifferent to buffalo, Indians, cowboys, and Cody—Annie Oakley melted them so thoroughly that she had to go through her act five times before she could escape. In Germany she likened Bismarck to a mastiff.

In 1901 she was almost killed in a train wreck. Annie claimed that it was the wreck that caused her long auburn hair to turn white overnight; skeptics said her hair turned white because she left it in hot water too long while at a spa. She continued to shoot into the 1920s. In her last years she looked rather like Nancy Astor. Will Rogers visited her not long before her death and pronounced her the perfect woman. Probably not until Billie Jean King and the rise of women’s tennis had a female outdoor performer held the attention of so many people. She became part of the “invention” that is the West by winning her way with a gun: a man’s thing, the very thing, in fact, that had won the West itself.

Annie was her nickname as a child. Oakley was a stage name. Offstage she referred to herself as Mrs. Frank Butler.

Photo taken 1902 when Oakley was 42. Click image for larger version.

Ben Hogan

… was born 99 years ago today. Hogan was the great golfer of mid-century, overcoming injuries from a severe, near-fatal auto accident. Hogan won four U.S. Opens, two Masters, two PGAs and one British Open between 1946-53.

At some point NewMexiKen read a story about Hogan playing in a pro-am. The duffer with him kept asking how he, Hogan, did this and how he did that, as if the amateur could match Hogan’s skills if only he used the right club. Finally, after a wonderful chip shot, the amateur asked Hogan which club he had used. That was too much. Hogan proceeded to pull out every club in his bag and make perfect chip shots onto the green with each.

James Dodson’s is a good biography of Hogan.

Bambi

… premiered 69 years ago today. Is there a sadder movie ever than this Disney classic?

Roger Ebert wrote an excellent review when Bambi was released yet again in 1988. He starts generally positive:

In the annals of the great heartbreaking moments in the movies, the death of Bambi’s mother ranks right up there with the chaining of Dumbo’s mother and the moment when E. T. seems certainly dead. These are movie moments that provide a rite of passage for children of a certain age: You send them in as kids, and they come out as sadder and wiser preteenagers.

And there are other moments in the movie almost as momentous. “Bambi” exists alone in the Disney canon. It is not an adventure and not a “cartoon,” but an animated feature that describes with surprising seriousness the birth and growth of a young deer. Everybody remembers the cute early moments when Bambi can’t find his footing and keeps tripping over his own shadow. Those scenes are among the most charming the Disney animators ever drew.

But then he questions the whole effort:

Hey, I don’t want to sound like an alarmist here, but if you really stop to think about it, “Bambi” is a parable of sexism, nihilism and despair, portraying absentee fathers and passive mothers in a world of death and violence. I know the movie’s a perennial clasic, seen by every generation, remembered long after other movies have been forgotten. But I am not sure it’s a good experience for children – especially young and impressionable ones.

Appomattox Court House National Historical Park (Virginia)

… was designated a national historical monument on this date in 1935. It became a national historical park in 1954.

Walk the old country lanes where Robert E. Lee, Commanding General of the Army of Northern Virginia, surrendered his men to Ulysses Grant, General-in-Chief of all United States forces, on April 9, 1865. Imagine the events that signaled the end of the Southern States’ attempt to create a separate nation. The National Park encompasses approximately 1800 acres of rolling hills in rural central Virginia. The site includes the McLean home (surrender site) and the village of Appomattox Court House, Virginia, the former county seat for Appomattox County. The site also has the home and burial place of Joel Sweeney – the popularizer of the modern five string banjo. There are twenty seven original 19th century structures on the site.

Appomattox Court House National Historical Park

Photo shows two brothers, often at war, making peace with a hug outside the McLean home in Appomattox Court House. It’s not known whether Grant and Lee hugged.

Today’s Post Redux

First posted here eight years ago today.


In A Viewer’s Companion to ‘Citizen Kane’ Roger Ebert says his favorite speech in Kane is delivered by Mr. Bernstein (Everett Sloane) when he is talking about the magic of memory with the inquiring reporter:

A fellow will remember a lot of things you wouldn’t think he’d remember. You take me. One day, back in 1896, I was crossing over to Jersey on the ferry, and as we pulled out, there was another ferry pulling in, and on it there was a girl waiting to get off. A white dress she had on. She was carrying a white parasol. I only saw her for one second. She didn’t see me at all, but I’ll bet a month hasn’t gone by since, that I haven’t thought of that girl.

Crank It Up

First the original by Desmond Dekker and the Aces (#9 in U.S., #1 U.K. 1968) and one of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s 660 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll.

http://youtu.be/CnSX91CAxAo

And the remix by Apache Indian.

http://youtu.be/-ARPgWdiS_4

There is an iPhone app for the Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll. Lists all 660 songs with links to samples of nearly all. It’ll cost you $2.

Links via Jared Bernstein | On the Economy.

224th Day of 2011

Cantinflas, the great Mexican comedian, acrobat and musician — and bullfighter — was born 100 years ago today. His actual name was Fortino Mario Alfonso Moreno Reyes. Cantinflas appeared in more than 50 films, most famously as Passepartout in Michael Todd’s 1956 Around the World in Eighty Days. In English-speaking countries, David Niven was billed as the star. Elsewhere Cantinflas took top billing — he was the highest paid actor in the world at the time. He saved the movie from the stiff Niven if you ask me.

William Goldman is 80 today. He won Oscars for best original screenplay for Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and best adapted screenplay for All the President’s Men. Other screenplays he has written include The Princess Bride, adapted from his own novel, Heat, Harper, Maverick and Marathon Man.

Parnelli Jones is 78 today. Jones won the Indianapolis 500 in 1963.

George Hamilton is 72 today.

Mark Knopfler is 62. Money for nothin’ and your chicks for free.

Pete Sampras is 40.

Katharine Lee Bates was born on this date in 1859. A poet, she is best remembered for the words to “America the Beautiful,” first published in 1895 and refined until 1913. She had been to the top of Pikes Peak in 1893.

O beautiful for spacious skies,
For amber waves of grain,
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain!
America! America!
God shed His grace on thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea!

If you know anything about mythology you probably learned about it first from Edith Hamilton, born on this date in 1867. Hamilton’s book Mythology, written after she had retired as a school head mistress, was published in 1942.

Christy Mathewson was born on this date in 1880. Mathewson was one of the original five inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1936 — with Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner and Walter Johnson. Mathewson had died in 1925.

As charismatic and popular as any player in the early 1900s, the college-educated Christy Mathewson won 373 games over 17 seasons, primarily for the New York Giants. Using his famous fadeaway pitch, Matty won at least 22 games for 12 straight years beginning in 1903, winning 30 games or more four times. A participant in four World Series, Mathewson’s lone title came in 1905 when he tossed three shutouts in six days against the Athletics. He set the modern National League mark with 37 wins in 1908.

Baseball Hall of Fame

The movie producer Cecil B. DeMille was born on August 12th in 1881. Known for his extravaganzas (e.g., The Ten Commandments), DeMille won his only Oscar for The Greatest Show on Earth.

Three-time Emmy winner Jane Wyatt, Margaret Anderson of Father Knows Best and Spock’s mother on Star Trek, was born 101 years ago today. Her Emmys were in 1958, 1959 and 1960. She died in 2006.

The actor, director John Derek was born on August 12, 1926. Derek’s wives included Ursula Andress, Linda Evans and Bo Derek.

Alvis Edgar Owens Jr. was born on August 12, 1929. As Buck Owens with his band the Buckaroos he had 21 number one country music hits. Owens also co-hosted the television comedy-variety show Hee Haw 1969-1986.

And it’s the birthday of Zerna Sharp, born in Hillisburg, Indiana, on this date in 1889. According to The Writer’s Almanac a few years back, Ms. Sharp is the woman who —

invented the characters Dick and Jane to help teach children how to read…Sharp’s idea was to use pictures and repetition to teach children new words. She took her idea to Dr. William S. Gray, who had been studying the way children learn to read, and he hired her to create a series of textbooks. She didn’t write the books, but she created the characters Dick, Jane, their sister Sally, their dog Spot, and their cat Puff. Each story introduced five new words, one on each page.

The IBM PC (Personal Computer) was released 30 years ago today.

Cleopatra VII Philopator committed suicide on this date in 30 B.C. She was Ptolemaic Queen of Egypt for 21 years (ruling with her two brother-husbands and her son). In addition to her two brothers, her spouses were Julius Caesar and Mark Antony. She wasn’t yet 39 when she died.

Where Our Money Goes

As reported by the San Francisco Fed.

88.5% of American consumer spending is for products and services made in the U.S.A.

  • 67% of the money we spend is for services, and almost all services are local; 96% in fact.
  • We spend about 10% on durables: cars, furniture, appliances. About two-thirds of the durables we buy are made in America.
  • The remaining 23% of our expenditures are for nondurables: food, clothing, gasoline, electricity. About three-quarters of these are made in America.

And even of the 11.5% we spend on foreign goods, more than a third is spent for American based transportation, wholesale and retail services. For Chinese made goods, the U.S. cost of the price is 55%. (Higher wholesale and retail margins on clothing, shoes and electronics account for this.)

Our economy is much, much more self-contained than generally understood.

August 11th

Alex Haley was born 90 years ago today. More about Haley in a separate post.

David Rice Atchison was born on August 11, 1807. Atchison was U.S. senator from Missouri 1844-1855. He was twice present pro tempore of the Senate, including during 1849. Saturday, March 3, 1849, was James K. Polk’s last day as president. Zachary Taylor did not take the oath until Monday, March 5, 1849. So, some claim, on Sunday, March 4, 1849, the president pro tempore of the senate was the president of the United States, and that was David Rice Atchison. Atchison, Kansas, is named for the senator. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad is named for the town.

Mike Douglas was born Michael Delaney Dowd Jr. on August 11, 1925. Douglas began his entertainment career as a singer on a Lake Michigan dinner cruise ship. He was the vocalist with Kay Kyser until 1951, including two hit songs, “Ole Buttermilk Sky” and “The Old Lamplighter.” Douglas did the vocals for Prince Charming in Cinderella. He became a daytime television talk show host in 1961 in Cleveland, first on the five Westinghouse owned stations, but later in wide syndication. The Mike Douglas Show was immensely popular and highly regarded and lasted until 1982. Guests included just about everybody. Douglas died on his birthday five years ago today.

Marilyn dos Savant, once listed by Guinness as having the world record IQ, is 65 today. Many have challenged the validity of IQ testing and Guinness quit listing highest IQ in 1990 — the concept is so vague and as dos Savant herself has said “attempts to measure it are useless.” She has written a column in Parade since 1986. She also is CFO for Jarvik Heart, Inc. Dr. Jarvik is her husband. Vos Savant was first listed in Guinness for having an IQ of 185. At one time, based on a test she took as 10-year-old, she claimed 228.

Co-developer of Apple, with Steve Jobs and Ronald Wayne, Steve Wozniak is 61 today. Wozniak is considered solely responsible for the 1975 Apple I hardware, circuit board and operating system.

Hulk Hogan is 58 today. The columnist David Brooks is 50. Pablo Sandoval, Kung Fu Panda, is 25.