Sunday 29 May 2011

An American Way of Life


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An American town and its way of life, Southington, Connecticut. The Memorial Day parade moving down the main street. The small number of spectators is accounted for by the fact that the town's war factories did not close. The town hall is in the left foreground
: photo by Fenno Jacobs, May 1942 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

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Tanners Mollett of Canton, Ohio, rests while cleaning a family grave on Memorial Day Weekend, Graveyard Hill, Shumate's Branch, West Virginia. Graveyard Hill is the site of an African American cemetery on the hillside above the sludge pond ("coal refuse impoundment") now filling Shumate's Branch. Each year former residents of the African American settlement at the mining town of Edwight return with their children and grandchildren to tend the graves of their relatives and hold a family reunion at the former home of Belle Wilson, a family ancestor. This is the one weekend of the year that Performance Coal Company (a subsidiary of A.T. Massey) opens the road into the mountains around Shumate's Branch to allow public access to this cemetery: photo by Terry Eiler, May 1996 (Coal River Folklife Collection/Archive of American Folk Culture, Library of Congress)

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Felix Mollett of Canton, Ohio, cleaning a family grave on Memorial Day Weekend, Graveyard Hill, Shumate's Branch, West Virginia
: photo by Terry Eiler, May 1996 (Coal River Folklife Collection/Archive of American Folk Culture, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Two farmers talking outside of a main street bank, Roxboro, North Carolina, Memorial Day: photo by Jack Delano, May 1940 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Negroes standing on the corner of the main street on a rainy Memorial Day, Roxboro, North Carolina, Memorial Day: photo by Jack Delano, May 1940 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Children at the Memorial Day ceremonies, Ashland, Aroostook County, Maine: photo by John Collier, May 1943 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

One small boy at the ceremonies was the only representative of the Canadian war dead, Memorial Day, Ashland, Aroostook County, Maine: photo by John Collier, May 1943 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Girl scout at the Memorial Day ceremonies, Ashland, Aroostook County, Maine: photo by John Collier, May 1943 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Even with gasoline rationed, many people attended the Memorial Day ceremonies in cars, Ashland, Aroostook County, Maine: photo by John Collier, May 1943 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

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Marching from the cemetery at the conclusion of Memorial Day ceremonies, Ashland, Aroostook County, Maine: photo by John Collier, May 1943 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

At the Memorial Day ceremonies, Gloucester, Massachusetts: photo by Gordon Parks, May 1943 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

Image, Source: intermediary roll film

Washington, D. C. service department cleaning up after the Memorial Day parade: photo by John Ferrell, May 1942 (Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress)

9 comments:

  1. Great selection, Tom. Thanks for posting these. Some are a bit before my time (though then things really did move more slowly) but all are hauntingly familiar, as any truly human record ought to be.

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  2. Thanks, George. I wish I could say all of these images came from before my time too. But alas, no. Still, it's a gone world. I do remember many a memorial day parade, decorating one's bike spokes with colored bunting for the occasion & c. Nowadays, who knows, a funnel cloud would probably siphon its way down into the bells of all the horns in the brass band... while here in our neighborhood, what? Celebrating a new dismal slow-moving chapter in the annals of the winter that refused to end?

    (A few nights ago I heard Josh Willingham comment that the nights are bit colder here than in Miami. Stay tuned for the long-range forecast, Josh.)

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  3. Hi Tom, it's M-day here not far in distance from the location in the first photo, relatively farther in time. The Parade due in one hour on Main st., someone at the pool yesterday said it's the widest Main st. in the (Whatever), and Thunderstorms have come to the Party.

    This weekend is the annual open-air Madrid Book Fair, also traditionally rained on.

    That's my report as of 9:02 AM, New England Time.

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  4. Vincent,

    An up to the minute report was definitely needed, thank you. From the deep greens of the trees and lawns of Southington in May 1942 it does appear they have been having some rainfall. If one is to have rainfall, better that it at least be traditional. But those old World War II era vintage Eastman Kodachrome colours make America so much more deep and dark and green. Perhaps the air and water were better then, though. But probably that's what the geezers all say on memorial day, just to keep the memory of it green, between the cracks in the concrete. Thank you my friend and have a memorable if not also memory-free day.

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  5. maybe the photos from the
    Farm Security Administration/need
    more up to date juxtapositions

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  6. Elmo,

    This was about a feeling. Photos two and three are not exactly up to date (15 years ago), but the dignity and pathos of that family cleaning up the graves on the one day a year when the mountaintop-removal coal company allows them in -- for me that caught the feeling.

    But the present... Sarah Palin in leather on a Harley... if that's up to date, leave me in the past, please.

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  7. Dear TC,

    Yes it was very unbecoming of
    Sarah Palin(who is not qualified
    to be President of the United States)
    to say, at Rolling Thunder, that
    she loved the smell of exhaust,though
    on Memorial Day, that however is quite
    All American...given fireworks all
    over the nation and massive holiday
    auto travel...all potentially,
    dissipating energy into heat...
    ie ?? climate change via the overuse of the 2nd law of thermodynamics...Also though you
    didn't point it out, the Massey
    Coal company which as you so
    poignantly pointed out allowed the
    observances at the family graveyard
    once a year, was implicated in a
    recent coal mine disaster with
    many deaths with confirmed safety
    violations. My idea about juxtapositions has to do with your
    keen eye and the idea that we know
    the present better by seeing it
    side by side with the past. One fact about Palin that will probably
    be disdained but is nevertheless
    true...she's probably had more
    wilderness experience than most
    of the eco-warriors who parade
    around as such and she did take on
    the oil companies when she was a
    very popular of Alaska but as an
    old song goes "how you gonna keep
    'em down on the tundra after they've seen DC"

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  8. Were I God and did I actually exist, and have some influence on things, one of my first priorities would be to keep that carbon-fuming, mammal-shooting woman out of my wilderness.

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  9. Dear TC,

    It's the old cartesian dispute
    about Lillie Palmer's butt vs
    plain old American butt of Ali
    McGraw plus as in poker a full
    house of cynicism, yours and mine.
    I'm sure Plato said something about
    the ethical purity of poets functioning in the real world, I just
    can't remember what it was.

    I do know this,however,and that is
    that if persons wanted to be
    steeped in the eyes and ears of
    poets they should frequent your
    blog with breakfast. Some people
    don't eat breakfast but it is the
    most important meal of the day.

    ReplyDelete