Thursday, October 30, 2008

Re: Information on historic tanneries

Re: Information on historic tanneries George Myers to HISTARCH

Once asked to research some tannery remains in Huntington, NY and having instead gone to work in NYC I have one archaeological site to report from New Jersey, though the remains of US patriots of the American Revolution, of "Baylor's Dragoons" were found in it.

How I came by this pamphlet "The Massacre of Baylor's Dragoons September 28, 1778 Excavation of the Burial Site" the Archaeological Report c) 1968 by Wayne M. Daniels, the then Museum Director, Bergen County Historical Society, and authored by Freeholder D. Bennet Mazur, and published by Bergen County Board of Chosen Freeholders, is an archaeology story perhaps fitting for a Halloween story.

First the historical background of the report:

On the evening of September 28, 1778, approximately 120 Dragoons of the Continental Army, under the command of Col. George Baylor, were bivouacked in six barns and out-buildings along what was then called Overkill Road now known as River Vale Road. These men were attacked by a vastly superior force of British troops during the night in which some 54 of the Americans were killed or taken prisoner. The incident became known as "Baylor's Massacre." An unknown number of these men, reported to be between 40 and 60 were alleged to have been buried in tanning vats in the the neighborhood, the location of which was lost in history by the removal of the millstone which once marked the site.
Further:

According to a book on the subject of Tanning operations (footnote 2: Tanning Operations in the United States Before 1840; Library of Congress, not cited in the Bibliography) of the period, such vats would have had to be constructed on the bank of a river or a stream to assure a good water supply, since water for the tanning solution had to be lifted from the river by hand. The tanning operation itself was usually comprised of three hogsheads sunk into the ground, each containing a varying concentration of solution. A fourth vat above the surface was for a liming solution to prepare the skins for tanning by removing hair and fatty matter. A millstone was employed to grind bark for tannic acid and oyster or clam shells for the lime.

The historical research following and the archaeology is excellent, as are the colored drawings, maps, photographs, artifacts, human osteological research and exploration and one conclusion:

The attack upon Colonel Baylor's Dragoon's was not a massacre in the conventional sense, and perhaps it has been misnamed. Certainly documentary evidence referring to as many as twenty bayonet wounds in survivors and the evidence of the cause of death of dragoon #4 (see: Appendix) indicate that a more carefully chosen term might be 'atrocity'.

I was assisting a small "gifted and talented" program in the Huntington Town Cemetery, NY for the Christopher Vagts, then Suffolk County Historian and School Board member, Rufus Langhans, the Huntington Town Historian, Edward Johanneman, Laurie Schroeder and Gaynell Stone, of the Suffolk County Archaeological Association, of which I was a volunteer and participant, when we were also assisted by Dr. Gary Corrado, a podiatrist (medicine below the knee) who in the recent re-enactments, played Benjamin Thompson, a young British officer in charge of British Revolutionary War Fort Golgotha, the remains of which we relocated some parts of, it being plowed over after the Revolution. It was probably where Nathan Hale was brought before his imprisonment and hanging in Manhattan at still unverified location(s). Later Benjamin Thompson would be known (perhaps also "gay") as Count Rumford the important heat science researcher.

One of the shallow excavations, 5th and 6th graders in a cemetery, who were also shown how to make gravestone rubbings, part of the "local history" state curriculum requirements set up then and since in New York, was the recovery of a large pin or brooch with the cursive "Q" and "R" overlaid from presumably the "Queens Rangers" known to have occupied Long Island, and represented by Dr. Corrado, whom I lent the pin for the night to make a copy for his fellow re-enactors, who soon would re-stage the bloodless Sunday morning victory over the British Army at the fort in the Manor of St. George on the Great South Bay, near the New York signer of the Declaration of Independence, William Floyd's Manor, which was also occupied by British forces is said, later visited by American federalists.

The NY SHPO was submitted a report also, by Edward Johanneman, MA, perhaps the remains of the entrance to Fort Golgotha found. A former effort by so-called "archaeologists" from NYC had upset a few people.

Happy Halloween!

LibraryThing

Interesting site of books and references

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Discuss: Stanley Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey' - Cinematical

I read that the scene of a board of scientists discussing intelligent life in the universe that Arthur C. Clarke was left on the cutting room floor and Stanley Kubrick decided in the interest of the film left out. It was said to have been the opening, so it was reported. I saw it on a perforated screen and the sound speakers were on a scaffold behind the screen. I wonder if it was dedicated to Richard Strauss who wrote the music used in the score and wrote "Metamorphosen" about the rubble that Germany became at the end of WW II. Today it was reported after sixty years, trade has begun again in Kashmir between Pakistan and India. Maybe India probe on the way to the Moon will find a "Sentinel".

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Re: Bloomberg 1 -- Democracy 0

I'm reminded it was primary election day September 11, 2001 perhaps voting saved some from infamy. Surprised by the resulting ballot, some "emergency" powers were called and items left off. The "destruction" of the Liberal Party, resulted, it had not the required 50,000 votes to continue. The candidates had a radio debate candidate Bloomberg was invited, he did not show up, the popular incumbent Public Advocate, Mr. Green and some third party candidates discussed issues on the mailed voting guide that never made it to the machines. WABC TV asked the candidates, among other questions, what they would do with the "windfall" the City was to soon get from the sale of the World Trade Center, just announced. Each of the given answers were evaluated as "possible" or rhetoric and marked with an X or a check by the reporters. Visiting from work in Bridgewater and Picatinney Arsenal, New Jersey and West Point Academy to vote and I thought these examples of democracy in action in the media wonderful. In contrast, the former mayor refused to open the city ledgers or "books" to audit for the New York State Comptroller, Mr. McCall, because the mayor said the comptroller was running for Governor! Pretty nervy, what part of the world allows that to happen? We'll have to see now what might happen. It might certainly damage some prospective candidates, which ironically could not be shown in New Hampshire to be the case over Senator McCain's birth residency requirements for presidential candidacy. Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Friday, October 24, 2008

St. Mary’s City, Maryland

The ambassador from Maryland in the New Amsterdam Colony was Augustine Heerman from Maryland and there are further connections in the early history of the colony and there. He was also thought to have introduced the Dutch to tobacco. The Dutch called him the "Czech". His warehouse site remains were excavated in late winter by archaeologists in 1984. (Greenhouse Consultants, Inc., et al) which I also worked on. There is also a brick house in Maryland near his original site all the bricks are laid on end instead by length.

In the spirit of the conference which I won't be attending (watch that rough rainy weather there) I wonder if anyone on the list would like to read about the other "Virginia" in Maine that was settled at the same time as the settlement at Jamestown in Virginia, where the Mayflower was heading which it did actually land in as described. ("The Land of Bad People" 07/06/2007)

My favorite passenger was Isaac Allerton, a Puritan, but others, the Presbyterians were of a greater number, along with the Pilgrims in what became Massachusetts. Some of those from the Charles River later left to settle Setauket, Long Island, NY.

Isaac Allerton, a passenger on the Mayflower, had a warehouse in New Amsterdam, a large ship "Hope" a home in New Haven, and is buried today next to Yale University in Connecticut. A large street, off the exit of America's oldest motor parkway, between the Bronx Botanical Gardens and the Bronx Zoo is named after him. He was arguably (and there laid the rub) thought "second in command" at Plymouth, across the street from the leader and confused with the governor's assistant, John Alder. James Deetz "In Small Things Forgotten" describes the discovery of artifacts from his half-built structure in Massachusetts by an architect.

The Isaac Allerton Warehouse remains might lie under the large parking lot in the South Street Seaport Historic District in New York City. His business relations were involved in larger landholdings in Maryland and left for there later after the outcomes of Jacob Leisler's Rebellion who was exhumed and reburied with honors under William and Mary after his hanging.

(posted to Histarch in response to the announcement of the CNEHA, Council for Northeast Historical Archaeology meetings this weekend in St. Mary’s City, Maryland)

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Dorothy Miner, 72, Legal Innovator

Dorothy Miner, 72, Legal Innovator, Dies - Obituary (Obit) - NYTimes.com

Historic Urban Landscapes

UNESCO World Heritage Centre Information UNESCO World Heritage Centre

World Heritage Information

Call for Papers "Historic Urban Landscapes" - 12th International Seminar

The World Heritage Centre of UNESCO has the pleasure of inviting you to participate in the forthcoming 12th International Seminar of Forum UNESCO - University and Heritage (FUUH) on "Historic Urban Landscapes: A New Concept? A New Category of World Heritage Property?" to be held in Hanoi, Vietnam, from 5 to 10 April 2009.

The deadline for submitting abstracts is 30 October 2008.

Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra - special events

20th annual silent film gala

Timothy Brock, composer & conductor

Charlie Chaplin The Gold Rush (1925)

The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra is proud to present Charlie Chaplin’s greatest and most ambitious silent comedy, The Gold Rush (1925). Subtitled “A Dramatic Comedy,” the film finds Chaplin portraying a lone prospector who searches for love and acceptance in the frenzy of the great Klondike gold rush.

Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra - special events

Border Wall: Texas Finds Plan Biased Against Poor, Raises It To International Human Rights Issue | Guanabee

Border Wall: Texas Finds Plan Biased Against Poor, Raises It To International Human Rights Issue | Guanabee

There used to be a “friendly” group in Texas that had a collection for a wall between Texas and Oklahoma, a Texas A&M grad showed me, from Oklahoma. Apparently this is a common theme in Texas. On the border of the US/Canada many of the Mohawk used to work in the high steel construction in NYC, I’d agree if it was built by them, not. Speaking of strip searched, one US Customs guy once found a marijuana seed in the crack of the bench seat of an old gas station clunker car and we were strip searched in Calais, Maine. Hey, I was “in concert” with a seed!

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

BBC |UK| Scotland| Uncovering north's Christian past

A group of archaeologists are trying to establish if Norsemen brought Christianity to Caithness before St Columba arrived on Iona.

It’s interesting to think that a large “cosmic event” may have caused the settlement of  western “Scotland” from Hibernia after a large comet, it’s thought, exploded over it destroying all its crops and causing wide-scale panic, hunger and devastation. About that time the Irish Gaels migrated to western “Scotia” which was inhabited to the east by the Picts who had “relations" with the Vikings. A similar trade perhaps, later in the 12th century is reported by the British Museum as evidenced by the great number of ceramic vessels that have been found, presumably in the archaeology of eastern Scotland, made in what is today the areas in and around modern Germany.

Did down fly Fingle and they all had to leave? Much later, the English King would ask the “Scots” to settle in what is today Northern Ireland. We “Scots” should have stayed in Turkey! One linguist had a bit of Hittite in Scots Gaelic. Vikings sure got around, traveling the rivers of Russia, the Mediterranean and elsewhere in Europe, Iceland and parts of North America. One “German” with them is credited with calling the new continent “Vinland” after his beloved homeland’s vineyards.  A Suffolk County, New York historian I met wrote of what was believed to be two Irish “slaves” among their number who landed on Long Island near today’s Port Jefferson and it was recorded that they ran up and reconnoitered the hills of Long Island, from where they could see the Atlantic Ocean beyond the barrier beach islands now known as Fire Island, beyond the Great South Bay. Today those hills are the site of the local community college, a former sanatorium. Bald Hills they have generally been called. One former general, George Washington called them, in his diary, passing by after the final victory which secured the treaty for the new nation of the United States, a “mere trifling”.

Update to:  STORSJÖODJURET - OBSERVATIONSPLATS SVENSTAVIK Swedish videos of a possible "sea serpent" like creature thought to inhabit Urquhart's Bay, a deep bay of Loch Ness in Scotland, written about first about Saint Columba, the missionary there. "St. Columba meets the Loch Ness monster ... August 22, 565" Christian History Institute. Written about 100 years after the "facts".

Monday, October 20, 2008

Von Braun’s Spaceship

The L.E.M. (lunar excursion module) was built by separate contractors for the Grumman Co. on Long Island I was told by a manager so no one could get the "big picture" of the design. Even the Navy at the time was "suspect" as it demanded full access to the company's books, and it owned Calverton airbase used by Grumman where two F-101 Voodoo jets were Grumman was trying to improve on (led to F-14 Tomcat?) My grandfather used to tell us the last time he saw his Master Mariner brother, was in a bar in Yorkville in Manhattan ("Germantown") arguing over whether mankind would get to the Moon. He was at the helm of the "City of Atlanta" sunk by U123 in early 1943 having left NYC. At the time, it was also part of the German cinema and involved that technological prediction, like that of Jules Verne, who once described in his novel based on the developments of the "West Point Foundry" a casting of a "supergun" shot from Florida at the Moon. Ironically one was later tested on a floating barge there, which fired a wooden block 2.5 miles up the Hudson River using dynamite rather than "gun-cotton". It was later "reinvented" in Vermont, it's builder assassinated in Holland (said "Time") and a large one found more recently being assembled in Iraq.  - Comment on "Von Braun’s Spaceship" NY Times

Sunday, October 19, 2008

wordplay.newsvine.com - Word Play

wordplay.newsvine.com - Word Play: "George Myers: If you look John Walker's site, the co-founder of Autodesk, the CAD program AutoCAD and other software, there too, in Switzerland at the Fourmilab, for free, is a greasemonkey script that will highlight words based on perceived left or right, blue or red in Firefox which is amusing wordplay. Also it without warnings, in another script change some words to surprises (for some) like 'politician' to 'thief'. Their lexicon or databases can be altered and amended."

Thursday, October 16, 2008

NYCLU, students and elected officials call on DOE to revise new military recruitment policy

NEW YORK – The New York Civil Liberties Union and dozens of high school students Wednesday joined lawmakers in calling on the Department of Education to delay enforcing a new policy that makes it easier than ever for the military to obtain the personal information of New York City children for recruitment purposes.

Further: NYCLU, students and elected officials call on DOE to revise new military recruitment policy

McCain will Cost Media and Ad Business Billions

In the late 1980s there was a public service program on PBS "Defense Monitor" by ex-officers in the US military that investigated and discussed various issues in the "military-industrial complex" that once president of Columbia University, Dwight Eisenhower, warned us about. In one of the last shows, it discussed the $1 billion a year spent in 25,000 secondary schools in mostly poor school districts on the JROTC program, the junior reserve officer training, that allows one branch of the service into a school to recruit students into the military. I bring it up because, my high school, Newfield, is in a town named for the judge who was a "character witness" at Susan B. Anthony's trial, a judicial "taboo" Henry R. Selden. She was arrested for voting in Upstate New York dressed as a man before women were allowed to vote. I did not know this however when the Marine Corps came to it during the Selective Service Draft, then a new lottery system sponsored by a New York legislator. Draft eligible myself, it was said to be the alternative to the draft that would create an "all volunteer" armed services, in what is already the world's largest "day care" system. The JROTC system has expanded from 2 on the East Coast, Army and Marines, and two on the West Coast, Navy and Air Force.

We should see if this is working, which the "Defense Monitor" asked "Are they worth it?" Are there available places for women?  

About Presidential Debates

Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Triviagasm: Declassified Government Documents Reveal the Truth About UFOs

Back in those years in Iran, the Grumman Corporation had a compound of over 3,000 Americans, training the Shah's pilots, crews and other support personnel to fly and service the 80 F-14 Tomcats it had purchased. I thought I read in Newsday on Long Island, where the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) was also built by them that it was once to be 100, today last count 77 still are there, it was reported. The compound was just outside of Tehran according to the F-14 test pilot's wife, an archaeologist/anthropologist who was visiting there before 1979. The Grumman Corporation (now Northrup-Grumman) have for years been rumoured to have radar "knock-down" capabilities perhaps used on the Grumman "Intruder" a mainstay of many flight operations. By the way I used to watch the Phantom F-4's escort the A-10s to range practice from Syracuse, NY at Fort Drum, NY where the "Warthogs" shot at a delivery truck on-range, before leaving and the Army 10th Mountain Division moved there from Camp Hale, Colorado in the 1980s. I was part of the original "archaeology testing" where once were "bog iron" railroad wheels and axles made in the 19th century. One pilot, Captain Button took an A-10 and crashed it into the New York Mountains in Colorado later, no one is quite sure why, before the war in the Gulf of "Arabia". Triviagasm: Declassified Government Documents Reveal the Truth About UFOs

Monday, October 13, 2008

New York Times On "W.": The Film Is Surprisingly Plausible

I worry about a John McCain film. I posted a comment at Slate about the Frank Sinatra produced and delayed film due to JFK's assassination, "The Manchurian Candidate" as a reference "The Hanoian Candidate" (stated supported by the current regime there) and a followup to the story was removed. In it there was some speculation on the culpability of the former naval airman, the current candidate and Senator McCain in one of the disasters shipboard that led to a loss of life, perhaps due to a prank. I also read he had crashed five times, which leads me to some speculation that perhaps the then Air Guard F-102 pilot, George Bush crashed and what we've seen is the coverup, which I'm pretty sure would not be in an Oliver Stone film. The strangest finding when he was running was a drug charge of an individual in Texas with the same name George W. Bush, but six months difference in age found in the investigative journalists' research that was a "practicing medicine without a license charge" that could not be further defined and excluded or included in the "vetting" of a President. I wonder if Oliver Stone included the time the President was called for jury duty and the AJ Gonzalez accompanied him, and advised the President during the juror selection process in a "stripper trial"?

Read the Article at HuffingtonPost

Sunday, October 12, 2008

The Fern Lodge Correspondence - spammed

Oh that's OK. I heard they took down the Alpine? and replaced it? I was doing research there a short while ago for the archaeology review for the construction of the "Ski Bowl Village" and enjoyed my stay there a lot. Last fall worked with a guy whose now probably wife is from North Creek. Though it was very hot that then, I enjoyed learning about its history and how significant the hamlet is visiting the town, county and hamlet offices the Tannery Community Center, ski and train museum, etc. I hope everything is going well there and the connect up with Gore Mountain goes well. One of the ideas was to keep New Yorkers who like to ski closer to home, and some of the effects of gas prices might do that. I have to laugh in the 1930s Wall Street used to have a ski-train to North Creek, maybe it'll be back someday. One of the founders, John Thurman, once had the post office on Wall Street, neutral, before and maybe after the American Revolution. Thanks for the speedy reply.

Gmail - The Fern Lodge Correspondence

Friday, October 10, 2008

Did humans colonize the world by boat? - Archaeoseek - A Social Network for Archaeologists

There was an argument in "American Antiquity" back in the late 1970s early 1980s over the settlement along the Pacific Northwest Coast, as one of the major settlement routes into North America that some think led to further settlement further south along the California coast at least. It was shown linguistically to have been possible by research at Oxford University I recall. One of the problems is that the level of glaciation along the coast and how much the local "eco-niches" and flyways of birds would support human travel. And, also most of the archaeological evidence would be below current sea-level, though some recent cave deposit excavations in that area have shown to be quite old. Anadromous fish populations, i.e., salmonid species probably played a large part in prehistoric subsistence as the various salmon do today, which could be caught in large numbers at the right time of spawning, returning from the sea to the rivers. One "experimental" artifact I saw in the Alaska State Museum was an "umiak" which is a fairly large boat made from "frames" of wood or bone and animal skins sewn together in a waterproof technique on the exterior which could carry a small number of people at a time (up to six?). The other primary route argued was inter-montane, in the high plateau of the Rocky Mountain cordillera, after travel around what is argued too many small lakes and ponds of Alaska where a great number of birds have their young on the end of a large flyway, the hatchlings feasting on the larvae of mosquitos and other insects. Bears have been found to be older than thought in that region one might say.

Talk to the Newsroom: Television Reporters

NY Times : Bill Carter and Jacques Steinberg, who cover television for The New York Times, are taking questions from readers Oct. 6-10, 2008. Questions may be sent to askthetimes@nytimes.com. 
About the Westmoreland suit over "body counts" in the Vietnam Debacle, has it had a lasting effect on TV news? All this "embedding” and no reports. Of course the third grade is good place to be embedded. My cousin George Murray directed "Huntley and Brinkley" and was an award winning TV producer according to Edwin Newman. His last TV was producing CBS coverage of both parties 1976 conventions, having had a heart attack in Mexico City.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Required reading for next week’s Presidential debate?

WOMEN AND LAW
Articles Collected By
Hofstra Law Women’s
Organization
.
Articles
.
  • Abortion in the Courts: Historical Guide to the New Disaster Area …. Kristin Booth Glen
  • Equal Opportunity in Credit: Now, on to Implementing it …. Margot Karle
  • Expanding the Scope of Title VII: Sexual Harassment as a Cause of Action …. Karen R. Kaufman
  • Women’s Admission to Law School: Disadvantage and Discriminatory Criteria …. Terry Roth
  • International Women’s Conference: With an Excerpt From the Official Report …. Bella Abzug

Fall/Winter 1978 ... School of Law ... Hofstra University - where the third and final Presidential Debate will be held.

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Brain Damage

Interesting Pink Floyd site I can’t seem to stop listening to!

Brain Damage

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Frankensteinia: The Frankenstein Blog

Frankenstein Day

Today, October 7, 2008, is Frankenstein Day at the prestigious Bodleian Library of Oxford University, England.

Ask About the New York Mafia - City Room - Metro - New York Times Blog

99. October 7th, 2008 8:06 pm The former Mayor made it that no one in Federal court could be involved with the City, threw out the hi-lo operators in the former Fulton Fish Market, and according to the “NY Post” gave a lawn-mower entrepreneur from Long Island the job of unloading trucks with new unregistered hi-los that belonged to the City. Only we found the “lawnmower man” was in Federal court with former employees! Which was against the new rules! The Teamsters sued. The new fish market, in the Bronx, do the Feds think it’s clean? Nice piece of property there left behind.

First NEO object to be spotted and tracked to Earth exploded near the Nile in the Sudan.

Asteroid 2008 TC3 Reaching Earth

Submitted by tricaric on Mon, 10/06/2008 - 22:58.

We have prepared a short animation, showing the Earth as viewed by the asteroid 2008 TC3. The asteroid is reaching Earth from the night side, and enters the Earth's shadow cone around 1:50 UTC.

Monday, October 06, 2008

Fly with me…

image

From: Freebies at the Northland Poster Collective

Newsvine - Ifill: Palin 'blew me off' during the debate.

I worked in Skagway, Alaska, where its first railroad station and stone built building is, about 90 miles north by ferry from the state capital of Juneau for the US National Park Service one summer in historical archaeology there. An American, Captain Moore, married to a native Tlingit woman and his son working on what was a Canadian homestead claim, found the trails through the mountains that started the Klondike Goldrush, bypassing the long sea voyage around the Aleutians and the long Yukon River upriver trek to the gold deposits near Whitehorse, Canada. That was before the US negotiated the "Panhandle" from international claims of 5 other nations, and not Russia which sold us the big part, our lead negotiator, from Watertown, NY near Fort Drum, Robert Lansing I seem to recall. Mrs. Sarah Palin, I believe, from what was then 3 time zones away from the state capital, now only two so that business can go on better, is no negotiator, which I would have hoped she was.

She seems more of that part of Alaska that wants the capital moved to Anchorage. She seems oblivious to the facts that we were assisted by a Russian oil skimmer, where we had none, when the Exxon Valdez was put up on the Bligh Reef by the fourth mate on a then recently reduced ship crew by "bean counters", whose captain was once honored in Huntington, NY during "Op-Sail" a number of years ago.  At least Senator Joe "six-pack" Biden seems to be a good negotiator. I hope the governor is good at negotiating the Alaskan Supreme Court and the other charges she has since been cited for in the press.

Mon Oct 6, 2008 8:36 AM EDT

Newsvine - Ifill: Palin 'blew me off' during the debate.»

Thursday, October 02, 2008

David Letterman: Top Ten "Things Overheard At Palin Debate Camp"

I'm worried, there's sourdough starter older than Senator McCain in Alaska and Americans love their yeasty treats. Thank you Mr. Letterman for consistently providing some humor about the current administration which seemed mysteriously absent over at SNL. Wish they'd stop promising whenever they're out of office and rewrite those War Powers acts. David Letterman: Top Ten "Things Overheard At Palin Debate Camp"