Not the most jubilant time to be celebrating the Fourth of July – like sneaking a cake in to your great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather when he’s in intensive care – but I send my gratitude to Jefferson, Adams, Franklin, Washington and the rest. All flawed men, but enlightened ones, who dreamed of a better world, and risked everything to make their beautiful vision a reality. The democratic republic they founded was built on reason, education, and courage. And yes, idealism, but with a clear understanding of human nature, with its vulnerabilities to self-interest and corruption. Their wisdom, conduct, and informed planning have sustained this country for the better part of two-and-a-half centuries. Send your prayers for Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandpa, and happy birthday to the United States of America.
Tag: American History
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Pearl Harbor Remembrance & Reflections
The years, they do fly by. It astonishes me how quickly important anniversaries make their laps. I don’t know if it’s because I’ve been doing this for nine years or because I’m now in my late 50s and time really does speed up when you’re older. Not OLD, mind you – for as nice as it would be to pass the days in a rocking chair on the front porch, I’m not collecting my Social Security benefits quite yet – but older.
Furthermore, I have to say, increasingly I am a little intimidated to go back and look at my past posts. For Krampus, for St. Nicholas, and now for Pearl Harbor Day, I sincerely don’t know how I could improve on what I wrote last year, or even the year before. It is daunting to be in competition with oneself!
Especially so, since I’ve been under the weather this week, and it’s difficult to do anything, so I hope you will excuse me for deferring to the more able-bodied Classic Ross Amico of yore for this day that has lived in infamy, as I do take it seriously, even as I puzzle over what has happened to my country in recent decades.
Now is not the time to go too much into it, since the entire point is for me not to overextend myself in my weakened state, but it’s sad that we do not honor the countless Americans who sacrificed so much, both in the service and at home, by walking the walk. “Thank you for your service” is all well and good, but how about earning it by being civil to our neighbors, not treating domestic affairs like they’re a wrestling match, not glorifying violence, bullying, and vengeance, upholding fair-play, extending a helping hand, and doing our best to leave a positive imprint on our communities? We, as citizens of the United States, carry the seeds of our own salvation or destruction. Do we really want to be the ones to accomplish what the Axis could not?
On December 7, 1941, a surprise strike by the Imperial Japanese Navy on the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor resulted in 2,403 American deaths, 1,178 wounded, and the United States’ entry into World War II. Sailors, soldiers, airmen, marines, and civilians were among the casualties.
Here is last year’s remembrance of composer John Duffy, who served in the U.S. Navy and had family at Pearl Harbor:
And, from two years ago, my reflections on American Christmas in 1941:
Hopefully, next year I will have the strength, the focus, the fire, and the time to pound out another mini-masterpiece. For today, I’m still getting over a flu and I’ve got a deadline looming.
Dona nobis pacem. Peace on earth, goodwill toward men.
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Suffrage, Time, and How Young We Are
When I was a kid, I remember, everything seemed like ancient history. Even in my teens, I looked upon the early 20th century as if it were another world, albeit a ceaselessly fascinating one. Now that I’m in my 50s, it astonishes me that someone my age could go to the movies in 1974, to see “Blazing Saddles,” “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” or “Chinatown,” and the year of his or her birth would have been the year that women in this country were first legally permitted to vote.
In another eight years, we will be as far away from 1974 as 1974 was from the ratification of the 19th Amendment. Furthermore, if we scroll back another 54 years from 1920, we arrive at 1866 – one year after the passage of the 13th Amendment, making slavery illegal in the United States.
Whaaaaaaaaaat?? What kind of barbarism is this? And how young a country are we? Small wonder it’s been such an uphill battle for women and minorities. It’s only yesterday that anyone was acknowledged to have any rights!
In this week of the Democratic National Convention and the anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment (on August 18, 1920), legalizing a woman’s right to vote, and with the Republican National Convention right around the corner, politics is everywhere. It’s one of my least favorite subjects on the planet, but sadly we now live in a world where it must be in the forefront of our consciousness always. Perhaps it always has been the case, and I was simply ignorant, albeit blissfully so.
Here’s an article on music in the women’s suffrage movement in America:
“Songs of the Suffragettes”:
Victoria Woodhull was the first woman to run for president – in 1872! The year before, Woodhull addressed Congress (the first woman ever to do so) and argued that the 14th and 15th Amendments already implicitly grant a woman’s right to vote. Essentially, she said, as an American citizen, her right to cast a ballot was protected. The committee overwhelmingly saw it otherwise. Woodhull was an indomitable force. She never stopped pushing for what she believed, and she lived to see women’s suffrage pass into law. She died in 1927, at the age of 88.
Woodhull is the subject of an opera, “Mrs. President,” by Victoria Bond:
Act I
Act II
Here’s a recent production of Virgil Thomson’s Susan B. Anthony opera, “The Mother of Us All,” on a libretto by Gertrude Stein:
Finally, “Musical Activism in the American Women’s Suffrage Movement, 1900-1920”:
We should be proud of how far we have come as a nation, but not be too arrogant or complacent. The “modern era” has been a short one, and we still have a long way to grow.
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