Gus Gennerich (1886-1936): “He incorrigibly chewed gum no matter how elegant his surroundings. “

October 13, 2009 at 4:32 pm | Posted in Historical | Leave a comment
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Body of Gus Gennerich lies in state at White House. Washington, D.C., Dec. 16. The body of Gus Gennerich, President Roosevelts friend and bodyguard who died in Buenos Aires, lying in state in the East Room of the White House today following simple services attended by President Roosevelt, members of his family, Cabinet members and other friends, the body was taken to New York for burial. White House policemen acted as Guards of Honor.  1936 December 16.  (Library of Congress)

Body of Gus Gennerich lies in state at White House. Washington, D.C., Dec. 16. The body of Gus Gennerich, President Roosevelt's friend and bodyguard who died in Buenos Aires, lying in state in the East Room of the White House today following simple services attended by President Roosevelt, members of his family, Cabinet members and other friends, the body was taken to New York for burial. White House policemen acted as Guards of Honor. 1936 December 16. (Library of Congress)

From President Franklin Roosevelt’s Address before the Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of Peace at Buenos Aires, Argentina on December 1, 1936.

I am profoundly convinced that the plain people everywhere in the civilized world today wish to live in peace one with another. And still leaders and Governments resort to war. Truly, if the genius of mankind that has invented the weapons of death cannot discover the means of preserving peace, civilization as we know it lives in an evil day.

Roosevelt went on to sound an alarm that would be echoed by President Eisenhower, a Republican, 25 years later:

We know, too, that vast armaments are rising on every side and that the work of creating them employs men and women by the millions. It is natural, however, for us to conclude that such employment is false employment; that it builds no permanent structures and creates no consumers’ goods for the maintenance of a lasting prosperity. We know that Nations guilty of these follies inevitably face the day when either their weapons of destruction must be used against their neighbors or when an unsound economy, like a house of cards, will fall apart.

The Great Depression & the New Deal

February 17, 2009 at 10:48 am | Posted in Economy, Historical | Leave a comment
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Migrant agricultural workers family. Seven hungry children. Mother aged thirty-two. Father is a native Californian. Destitute in pea pickers camp, Nipomo, California, because of the failure of the early pea crop. These people had just sold their tent in order to buy food. Of the twenty-five hundred people in this camp most of them were destitute.  February or March 1936.  (Photo: Dorothea Lange)

Migrant agricultural worker's family. Seven hungry children. Mother aged thirty-two. Father is a native Californian. Destitute in pea picker's camp, Nipomo, California, because of the failure of the early pea crop. These people had just sold their tent in order to buy food. Of the twenty-five hundred people in this camp most of them were destitute. February or March 1936. (Photo: Dorothea Lange)

It’s an hour — I know, I know, your time is precious, but so is your knowledge base.

Make some popcorn, get your comfy chair ready, then hop on over to C-Span and listen to Eric Rauchway, professor of history at UC-Davis, valued contributor to The Edge of the American West and author of several books, including “The Great Depression & the New Deal,” talk about what the Roosevelt administration did to save the United States in a time of national economic collapse.

Dental clinic, FSA (Farm Security Administration) camp, Weslaco, Texas, February 1942.  (Photo: Arthur Rothstein)

Dental clinic, FSA (Farm Security Administration) camp, Weslaco, Texas, February 1942. (Photo: Arthur Rothstein)

Inauguration Fever!

November 30, 2008 at 5:26 pm | Posted in Historical, Obama! | Leave a comment
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Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln - March 4, 1861

Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln - March 4, 1861

Although George Washington laid the cornerstone of the Capital Building in what would be Washington, DC on September 18, 1793, it was not until 1801 that the city became officially the capital of the United States.

Thomas Jefferson was the first to be sworn in as president there, although he did so in the Senate chamber rather than outside the building as we are used to with most presidents since Andrew Jackson.

By 1850 the Capitol Building, completed in 1824, was not large enough to contain the needs of the growing American democracy. Thomas Ustick Walter, a Philadelphia architect, was hired to design extensions for the Capitol Building, including a new, larger dome. The Capitol’s first dome was designed by Charles Bulfinch, considered to be America’s first native-born architect (Boston).

When Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated in 1861, the new Capitol Building dome was still under construction.

The exterior of the new dome was complete when the bronze Statue of Freedom (below, right) by New York sculptor Thomas Crawford was set into its place of honor atop the Capital dome, in 1863.

The dome’s interior was not complete until 1866 when Italian/Greek-American historical painter Constantino Brumidi‘s massive fresco, the Apotheosis of Washington — 180 feet above the Rotunda floor and covering 4,664 square feet — was unveiled.

The oath that each president takes, mandated in Article II, Section 1 of the United States Constitution, is as follows:

I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.

Many would do well to note that God is not mentioned in the mandated oath, although every president, beginning with Franklin Delano Roosevelt, have tacked the deity on at the end. The first 31 presidents abstained from mixing government and religion.

Inauguration Day was originally on March 4th. In the early years, without the benefit of planes, trains and automobiles, that much time was needed to complete the casting of votes by members of the Electoral College. It wasn’t until 1937, when FDR was sworn in for his second term, that Inauguration Day was moved to January 20th (except if that date is a Sunday and then, traditionally, it is moved to the following day).

Since 1953 the United States Congress has held a luncheon immediately following the inaugural ceremony at which the president and vice president are guests of honor. Other than at State of the Union addresses, Red Masses, and state funerals, it is the only time the president, vice president and both houses of Congress congregate in the same location.

In addition to the swearing-in ceremony, the Inaugural Address and the Inauguration Parade, ten days of festivities surround Inauguration Day. The theme for the 2009 presidential inauguration will be “A New Birth of Freedom,” in commemoration of the 200th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s birth. Inaugural events are expected to draw record-breaking crowds.

Be on notice! You cannot buy tickets to the swearing-in ceremony. Each Senator and Representative receives a limited quantity of free tickets to the swearing-in to distribute at their discretion. The only place you can get a ticket is from your Senator or Representative. No website or other ticket outlet has inaugural swearing-in tickets to sell, regardless of what they may claim. Tickets are not needed to attend the parade.

If you go, have a great time, and remember that there are hundreds of thousands of Americans who wish they could be there too. Be patient with your fellow Americans. Remember, you’re representing!

(Photograph of Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln courtesy of The Library of Congress)

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