Archive for November 10th, 2010

November 10th, 2010

Private Edward Rowe, KIA 8-28-1918

by DickH

A few days ago we posted a Veterans Day essay by Steve O’Connor. Steve ended with a passage about the grave of Edward Rowe who was killed in World War One. After reading the essay, our World War One archivist, Eileen Loucraft, found the 1918 newspaper story announcing Rowe’s death.

Here’s what Steve O’Connor wrote about Private Rowe:

It’s time for me to get back to my daughter’s softball game, but I stop at one last stone. “Erected by Clan X,” the inscription reads, “Edward Rowe, born in Paisley, Scotland, July 30, 1898, Killed in Action in Cheriy, France, August 28, 1918.” There are lines of a poem below that, but I have to rub off the lichen from the stone, and pull the moss out of the graven letters:

Left untended the herd
The flock without shelter
Left the corpse uninterred
The Bride at the Altar
And like the wind and the wave
Swept on to defend his native country.

Later, when I google those lines, I find that they are taken from “The Pibroch of Donald Dhus,” written by Sir Walter Scott in 1816, all except the last two, which appear to have been inserted for the occasion.

The stanza should conclude:

Leave the deer, leave the steer
Leave nets and barges
Come with your fighting gear
Broadsword and targes.

And researching the date, I conclude that Edward Rowe probably died on the first day of the Oise-Aisne Offensive. I find myself wondering about Sarah Ingalls and Little Freddy and Leonard Thompson. I imagine Edward Rowe shouting to his comrades in his thick Paisley brogue as he went over the top. A forgotten hero of a forgotten battle, and I leave the graveyard feeling strangely alive, and every inch a mortal.

And here’s the September 13, 1918 Lowell Sun article announcing Rowe’s death:

Private Rowe is Dead – Well Known Local Musician Killed in Action, Messages Say Today – Young Patriot Was Listed for Officers’ School, Family Lives Here.
Another Lowell boy has made the supreme sacrifice in France. read more »

November 10th, 2010

‘Atlantic’ Marks 153rd B-day w/ Poems by Gr. Merrimack Valley-5th Cong. District-Concord/Merrimack Watershed Author

by PaulM

This blog is in good historical company as a publication that regularly features poetry. Read Ralph Waldo Emerson’s four poems in the first issue of the Atlantic magazine, published on November 9, 1857.

November 10th, 2010

Veterans Day observances

by DickH

The Greater Lowell Veterans Council will honor those who have served in the military with a ceremony tomorrow that begins at 10 am in the Lowell Memorial Auditorium’s Hall of Flags with a speaking program to be immediately followed by a wreath laying ceremony at the various monuments on the grounds of the Auditorium. Everyone is invited to attend.

At 1 pm tomorrow, the Lowell National Park will present a lecture called “Sumter Surrenders; Volunteers Called” which the NPS describes as follows:

Men of Lowell left their jobs to become citizen soldiers. “Join them” as they travel to defend Washington. Hear the cheers in northern cities and “witness” the attack in Baltimore by a mob of thousands. This is their story, as told by Park Ranger Karen Thomas at the Boott Cotton Mills Museum, 2nd Floor-Boott Events Center, 115 John Street.

On Saturday (November 13), the newly formed Global War Veterans, an organization for those who served in the military after Vietnam, will help dedicate the new Veterans Memorial Square at the Westlawn I Cemetery at 155 Boston Road in Lowell. This new Veterans Memorial will also have facilities for the “proper and respectful removal from service” of American flags that have become too worn for continued use.

November 10th, 2010

“Grim omen for Scott Brown”

by DickH

The nationally recognized website Politico carries a story today with this headline: “Midterm elections offer grim omen for Scott Brown’s future.” The story quotes UMass Lowell Chancellor Marty Meehan (“Obviously, the results show that Massachusetts is, at its core, a Democratic state – It has been a reliable Democratic state for many years, particularly when it comes to the congressional delegation.”) who coincidentally was Brown’s host today when the Senator visited UML to participate in the school’s recognition ceremony of student veterans and also makes reference to last week’s Boston Herald story that urged Brown to run for president since this election’s results show how tough a time he will have getting re-elected in Massachusetts in 2012.

I think all this scary talk about taking on Scott Brown is amusing right now. His election last January should be a constant reminder to Massachusetts Democrats of the dangers of overconfidence. Still, if the buzz about the Massachusetts Senate seat continues in the national media, next summer’s state Democratic Convention which will be held right here in Lowell at the UML Tsongas Center should attract considerable attention for an off-year gathering.

November 10th, 2010

Cut from American Cloth (3)

by PaulM

Cut from American Cloth (3)

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     On a siding just north of the train station, there’s a scrap train—ground-up fenders and stoves and corroded pipes en route to the smelter, the chopped ham of American industry. In the rail yard, freight-car murals in graffiti code, the blocky colored letters like aggressive plastic alphabet-magnets on a refrigerator door.

     Next to the train station stands the ugly mill building on Thorndike Street that you cannot miss, if you listen to local cable TV commercials from Comfort Furniture. The wavy wooden floors of the four-story complex creak and squeak as customers wind through aisles between the tons of sofas, recliners, dining room sets, lamps of all types, coffee tables, bunk beds with matching desks, and assembly-required home entertainment center shelf units. There is only a hint of the patent medicine production plant that thrived in this factory. Running sideways up the tapered brick chimney is the word “Hood’s,” for C.I. Hood & Company, one of the city’s two massive patent medicine operations of the nineteenth century. Cartons of vegetable pills, tooth powder, olive ointment, and syrups promising cures for everything from rheumatism to syphilis filled the loading dock. When it was built in 1893, the Hood laboratory was the world’s largest medicine manufacturing building. Charles Hood’s specialty was a bottled syrup called Sarsaparilla, which promised to “cure neuralgia pains.”

     For the first 17 years that I have lived on Highland Street, every weekday at 3 p.m. during the school year a dozen or more yellow buses pulled into the semi-oval driveway in front of the Rogers Middle School that faces my house. The school was a microcosm of New Lowell, with Cambodian-Americans making up more than half the building’s population—the rest were Portuguese-American kids from long-settled families around St. Anthony’s in the Back Central section and newcomers from Brazil, Cameroon, and Guatemala, along with Latino kids and the third-, fourth-, fifth, or sixth-generation Lithuanian-, Greek-, French Canadian-, and Irish-American youngsters. The descendents of the native peoples and early English colonists are as scarce as heirloom species in the flower boxes under the windows on Elm Street. In the school lobby students with newcomer DNA could read about Edith Nourse Rogers, who still holds the record as the woman who served longest without interruption in the U.S. House of Representatives (1925 – 1960). The Great Recession of 2008-09 claimed the Rogers as City Hall budget cuts led to its closing—despite the “Rogers School Rocks” protest signs waved by kids and their parents.

     “Congresswoman Rogers was a liberal and an internationalist,” writes Mary H. Blewett, longtime professor of history at the University of Massachusetts–Lowell, “typical of successful Republicans of the northeast. She voted for most of the key New Deal programs of the thirties—the Wagner Act which protected union organization, the Social Security Act of 1935, and the minimum wage law of 1938—in line with the needs of her Lowell constituents, if not with the Republican leadership.”

     A Mainer by birth, Rogers married into a wealthy textile industry family in Lowell, where she had studied in a private girls school. She succeeded her husband, Congressman John Rogers, when he died in office. “Mrs. Rogers” became the veterans’ best friend, her experience with the military having begun with agencies serving the wounded in France during World War I. In 1939, moved by reports of abuse of German Jews, especially the brutality of Kristallnacht, she and Sen. Robert F. Wagner of New York filed a refugee aid bill that would have allowed 20,000 German refugee children into the United States. President Franklin D. Roosevelt withheld his support, and despite lobbying by children’s advocates across America, the bill was defeated at the committee level. Mrs. Rogers backed laws creating a Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps in 1941 and the G.I. Bill of Rights, the latter providing a range of social, financial, and educational benefits to World War II veterans. She was 79 when she died in 1960, in the midst of a re-election campaign.   . . .

—Paul Marion (c) 2007

November 10th, 2010

Corey’s City

by PaulM

I missed this long post on cities on October 29 over at our blogging colleague Corey Sciuto’s place, and don’t think rh.com linked to it otherwise, so here’s the one click access to a bunch of interesting ideas and observations about cities and urban life.

November 10th, 2010

Creative Destruction

by PaulM

I don’t enjoy George Will’s columns the way I did when he started writing, but this column is less about his opinions than about the mind of Robert Weissenstein of Credit Suisse Private Banking. Read about the rapid changes in products and processes in our high-speed society. I picked this item up from realclearpolitics.com

November 10th, 2010

String Project 10th Anniv. Concert with Harlem Quartet

by PaulM

Sunday, Nov. 14, 3 pm

Commemorate the 10th Anniversary of the UMass Lowell String Project as everyone proudly reflects on the accomplishments of the String Kids and the continued growth of the organization. Special guests will be the Harlem Quartet, a group of innovative and highly engaging young Black and Latino musical stars. Also performing will be members of the Lowell Youth Orchestra and New England Orchestra.
The UML String Project offers string training to Lowell Public School students, targeting diverse, underserved neighborhoods. Students are taught violin, viola and cello by UML music majors, distinguished professors and guest artists. Creative Sound Play (CSP) introduces participants to music technology, improvisation, composition and music from different cultures. A one-month Summer String Camp offers intensive sessions with individualized training and ensemble experience as well as CSP classes.
There will be a VIP reception immediately following the concert. Reservations are $100 per person for the concety and reception; $30 for the concert only. (A portion of the admission fee is tax-deductible.)
Performance at Durgin Hall, UMass Lowell South Campus, 35 Wilder Street; Reception at Allen House. For more information, contact Jacqueline_Ledoux@uml.edu or buy tickets online
The Harlem Quartet
November 10th, 2010

Politics Afoot? Catholic Campaign for Human Development Under Scrutiny

by Marie

Those of us in the pews are used to the annual collection for the Catholic Campaign for Human Development on the Sunday before Thanksgiving. My CCHD envelope for November 21st notes:

“Your gift will help groups of low-income Americans address the causes of poverty in their communities. Your generosity will secure job training opportunities, improved education, affordable housing, and other tools for reducing poverty in our nation.”

According Daniel Burke writing for the Religious News Service (RNS) – the CCHD is under scrutiny - I  would say attack – by some  Catholic bishops in advance of the annual meeting of  U. S.  Bishops  next week in Baltimore.

In fact, some bishops already ban the annual CCHD collection asserting that it funds “ left-wing activists, some of whom undermine church doctrine on homosexuality and abortion.”  Supporters see Catholic Campaign for Human Development (CCHD) and its activities as exemplifying “Jesus’ preference for the poor and downtrodden.”

Within the article the charges and judgment noted – of  “community organizers committed to the left”  or  the anti-poverty program “philosophically flawed right from the outset” or  ”sin as the root cause of poverty” seem  not so charitable towards the poor or even in the spirit of  Pope Benedict XVI’s attitude that the “institutional path” of charity is “no less excellent and effective than the kind of charity which encounters the neighbor directly.” The charges seem political.

Be that as it may, the CCHD will offer a report at the November 15-18 meeting that addresses the charges and criticism.

At the bishops’ meeting in Baltimore, CCHD officials will present a 15-page report that details reforms they say will bolster the program’s Catholic identity. The new policies will also ensure that groups whose activities conflict with the church’s stance on social issues do not receive funding, they said.

 

Fueling these criticisms of the CCHD are such sites as  InsideCatholic.com with the stated mission  “to be a voice for authentic Catholicism in the public square.”  It should be disclosed that InsideCatholic’s  director is Deal W. Hudson - a  former adviser to the Republican National Committee and former President George W. Bush – who denies the politics.

Read the full Burke article at HuffingtonPost.com.
Check the website of the U. S. Conference of Bishops for an article on Fr. Daniel Mindling who will serve as a consulting theologian for the CCHD.

For a local note:

 InsideCatholic and others seem to have put a target on Chelmsford native – the Reverend J. Bryan Hehir -  an internationally renowned theologian who specializes in Catholic social teaching and international relations - former President of Catholic Charities USA - former advisor to the U. S. Conference of Bishops and current Secretary for Health and Social Services for the Archdiocese of Boston.  They claim he “undermines Catholic teaching.”

Hopefully, the essence of the Catholic Campaign for Human Development  – addressing the causes of poverty in our communities – remains after the bishops meet next week. Stay tuned.

November 10th, 2010

In the Merrimack Valley: No Tolls in Nashua City Limits

by Marie

“Not in our backyard” – With the New Hampshire  State Turnpike Bureau about hold a series of public hearings about options for placing “tolls” on the Everett Turnpike – with one scheduled Nov. 17 in Nashua – the Nashua Board of Alderman took a stand last night. According to an article by Patrick Meighan in the Nashua Telegraph:

The Board of Aldermen on Tuesday almost unanimously backed a resolution that puts the city on record objecting to placing any tolls within the city limits. That vote wasn’t a surprise. More interesting was why the board was in a hurry to pass the resolution immediately, suspending the rules to give it a second reading and allowing it to come to a vote at the same meeting in which the legislation was introduced.

 The state Turnpike Bureau will soon hold a series of public hearings, with one scheduled Nov. 17 in Nashua, on options for placing tolls on the F.E. Everett Turnpike. That hearing will be held at 6:30 p.m. in the City Hall auditorium…

Tolls could be placed anywhere from the Massachusetts border to Manchester, but among the options is putting a toll in Nashua between Exits 1 and 2, said Alderman-at-Large Barbara Pressly. The reason for the tolls is the completion of a new access road that leads from the turnpike just south of the Bedford tolls to the Manchester airport. When the access road opens, the state stands to lose an estimated $4.8 million in toll revenue, Pressly said.

The new access road was built with federal money thus cannot be a site for a toll booth or any electronic means to collect a fee. Alderman Pressly is urging all Nashua resident to protest a Nashua toll site. Why? Perhaps it’s the vision of even more traffic gridlock at the root of Pressly’s persistence. Ironically, one Alderman was late to the meeting as she was stuck in traffic!

Read the full article here.