A Thanksgiving Memory

Photo by SG Atkinson - Autumn Decorations
I was born on the Delmarva Peninsula a little over 61 years ago. Nearly all of my Thanksgivings have been on the Peninsula and I have many Delmarva Thanksgiving memories.

My favorite memories, which could be said for most, are from my youth.

I was raised on a farm own by my grandparents and tilled by my father. During the 60s and 70s, the time when I was growing up, one of the things to happen on the farm when the weather started turning cooler was hunting.

My Grandfather, like many then as well as now, rented the farm for hunting. In his case these hunters became his friends. It was generally the same small group of hunters that came to the farm every Saturday morning to hit the goose blind. My father and grandfather was part of the team. I was able to join them when I wanted.

Thanksgiving weekend was the big hunting weekend. My grandfather ran a small produce/country market in Chestertown, Maryland. The only days he didn’t open the market was on Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Thanksgiving mornings started with a trip to the goose blinds. It wasn’t unusual for a trip later in the day into the cow pasture to do a bit of rabbit hunting. And of course the day ended with a large homemade country dinner of turkey and a table full of food.

The only time we had turkey was Thanksgiving and Christmas so it was a big treat. It was also one of the few times that we had Maryland Beaten Biscuits as well as an Apple/Carrot/Raisin salad that my grandmother made. This was a favorite and I ate a lot of it.

Friday was spent getting things ready for the big opening day. Deer hunting opening day was on the Saturday after Thanksgiving and has been a big deal as long as I remember. When I was a kid, it was a really big day. To the men of the area it was a bigger day than Black Friday is today for Christmas shoppers. I guess to hunters it is and always will be.

Early Saturday morning hunters from all over the State would arrive on the farm. It wasn’t unusual for 40 men to be standing in the pre-dawn hours, getting into their hunting gear and drinking a final cup of coffee.

The season began at 30 minutes before first light so an hour or more before dawn it was off to the tree stands in the woods for a day of hunting. This was usually after the leader brought everyone together to go over the ground rules and a short prayer for a safe and successful hunt.

Even though hunting wasn’t one of my favorite sports it’s still a fond memory. I haven’t hunted nor fired a gun in nearly 40 years. I still enjoyed the excitement of a hunter standing proudly over a large buck, or watching my aging grandfather at full run to help my brother after he bagged his first deer.

Note:
This was first published in 2009 at “6 Things to Consider” a blog I ran from 2006-2018.. It has been revised to and slightly edited.

Stories About a Few of Our Favorite Christmas Songs

When should Christmas music be started to played for the Holidays? One thought is after Halloween, another is as soon as the weather starts turning colder (living in Maryland this would be around Mid-October) but for most that time starts around Thanksgiving.

We all know and love the following songs, but did you know that they also have interesting stories. Here are brief stories about six of our Christmas favorites. Oh, and for me I start playing them anytime after the first of October, sometimes even earlier.

White Christmas
The song was introduced in the movie Holiday Inn. What isn’t as well known is that it was a song about being stuck in sunny and warm LA and dreaming of a White Christmas. The original first verse is:
The sun is shining
The grass is green
The orange and palm trees sway.
I’ve never seen such a day
In Beverly Hills LA.
But it’s December the 24th
And I am longing to be up North…

This part is rarely performed with the song (The Carpenters version does) and was never recorded by Bing Crosby.

Have Yourself A Very Merry Christmas
This Judy Garland song was written for and first introduced in the movie Meet me In St. Louis. The original intent for the song was to say that by next year things would be brighter. The original lines were;
Have yourself a merry little Christmas
May your heart be light
In a year our troubles will be out of sight
From now on

Have yourself a merry little Christmas
Make the yuletide gay
In a year our troubles will be miles away

At the request of Judy Garland it was changed to:
Have yourself a merry little Christmas.
Let your heart be light,
From now on our troubles
Will be out of sight.

Have yourself a merry little Christmas,
Make the Yule-tide gay,
From now on our troubles
Will be miles away.

Then in 1957 when Frank Sinatra was recording his Christmas Album A Jolly Christmas he requested another change to the lyrics. Later in the song there was the line;
If the Fates allow
Until then, we’ll just have to muddle through somehow
And have ourselves a merry little Christmas now.

Sinatra wanted a more jolly song and asked for this to be changed. It was to:
If the Fates allow,
Hang a shining star
On the highest bough,
And have yourself
A merry little Christmas now.

This sure makes for it to be a merrier, Merry Christmas song.

I’ll Be Home for Christmas
The song was written in 1943 and recorded in that same year by Bing Crosby. Placing it in that time period it’s obvious that the song was about a soldier at war and his Christmas wish. If it wasn’t for White Christmas this would probably be considered His Christmas song. (Although his version of Silent Night sold more copies) The song remained on the charts for 7 weeks and well pass Christmas.

Silver Bells
The song was written by the prolific movie composers Jay Livingston and Ray Evans for the movie The Lemon Drop Kid, staring Bob Hope. It was originally going to be Tinkle Bells, until Livingston’s wife told him that to millions of american women the word tinkle meant something else and not something that would generally go over good in a Christmas song. The word tinkle was replaced with silver. Now the next time you hear the song replace the word “silver” with “tinkle” and see if it doesn’t seem like slightly different song.

Frosty the Snowman
Frosty the Snowman was written with one thought in mind. Just before it was written Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer had be a huge commercial hit and the team of Jack Nelson and Steve Rollins wanted to write the next “Christmas Classic”. By the end of the winter they had put together two holiday songs to pitch to Gene Autry. Autry was sold and recorded Frosty for the next Christmas season.

And, the other Holiday song they pitched. It wasn’t a Christmas song, but the Easter song Here Comes Peter Cotton-tail.

A Christmas Song
In the hot heat in the summer of 1945, Mel Torme visited his friend Bob Wells. Earlier in the day Wells had written phases in a notebook in an effort to stay cool. A couple of these were; “Chestnuts roasting … Jack Frost nipping … Yuletide carols … Folks dressed up like Eskimos.”

Torme also in an effort to try to cool off, thought that maybe writing a winter song would help. They took these phrases and in 40 minutes much of the music and some of the lyrics of one of the most recorded Christmas song was completed.

Life and Time

It’s been awhile since I written a post. There are a couple of reasons, but when looking back the real reason is that I have not done a good job at time management.

It’s not that I haven’t had ideas on what to write. I’ve had quite a few over the past weeks. I just didn’t bring up the editor screen to start. Of course now that I am here I have no idea what those thoughts were.

I guess I just have to do it. Not to over think about it and then not come back to it.

Which brings me to today. It was morning when I began and I had a thought on what I was going to write. Five hours later, after close to an hour drive to go to a Business Networking Lunch, and then the drive back, I have no idea what I was thinking when I began.

So I’ll leave it as saying that I have to do a better job of time management.

Somerset County, MD

Somerset County, Maryland was established on August 22, 1666 by a proclamation of Lord Baltimore through his Governor, Charles Calvert. At the time it was the entire southern Eastern Shore of Maryland south of the Nanticoke River.

The name comes from Lady Mary Somerset, the wife of Sir John Somerset. Lady Somerset was the sister of Lady Anne Arundell, who was the wife of Cæcilius Calvert, 2nd Lord Baltimore. They were daughters of Thomas Arundell, 1st Baron Arundell of Wardour. Anne Calvert, Baroness Baltimore, née Anne Arundell lent her name to Anne Arundel County.

In 1659/1660 Virginia passed a law that required Quakers in the colony to convert to Anglicanism or leave the colony. They decided to leave and move north to Maryland, who welcomed them. In November 1662 The Quakers settled a bit north of the southern boundary of Maryland on the southern bank of the Annemessex River which had been established at the mouth of the Pocomoke River and marked by a rock outcropping labelled as “Watkins’ Point”. This point would continue across the peninsula. A separate group of Anglican Virginian settlers were granted permission to make a second settlement further north along the Manokin River.

When established the Northern and Southern Borders of the county were in doubt. The Virginia Assembly declare that the Virginia-Maryland border was to be 30 miles north of the Pocomoke Sound, at the mouth of the Wicomico River. Both settlements were south of this point. Maryland authorities were outraged and appealed to the Virginia Governor, who agreed with Maryland’s claims. An agreement of the border between Maryland and Virginia Chesapeake Eastern Shores was agreed upon in June of 1668.

The Northern Border was in disagreement between the Maryland and the Colony of Pennsylvania (and Delaware) and wasn’t resolved until 1763 when surveyors Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon drew the definitive boundary between Delaware and Maryland. The Western border was the Chesapeake Bay with the Eastern border being the Atlantic Ocean.

Since then portions of the originally established Somerset County has been divided to create the Maryland counties of Worcester and Wicomico. The current county is 611 Square Miles with the land area as 327 Square Miles and 284 Square Miles of water. The 2010 census has the population at 26,470.

Woodstock

The Woodstock Music an Art Fair, also known as An Aquarian Exposition: 3 Days of Peace & Music, held in Bethel, New York on August 15,16 and 17, 1969 has been called both the end of the 60’s and the beginning of the 70’s. I suppose that both of these can be true, but I feel as an event it was more of the beginning of the 70’s with the Moon Landing a few weeks earlier being the end of the 60’s.

The Summer of ’69

When thinking back 50 years to the Summer of ’69, a year also made famous in the Bryan Adams songs, one will see that there are many things to look back on during this summer besides the Moon Landings.

In baseball 1969 was the first year that the leagues expanded to 12 ball clubs each and divided the leagues in to an East and West division. The Baltimore Orioles won 109 games and won their division by 19 games. Even after this they still had to play a 3 out of 5 series against the Western division Twins, winning the first American League Divisional Series in three games. In mid-August the Chicago Cubs had a commanding lead over the New York Mets, but a late season burst by the Mets and a swoon by the Cubs left the Mets, who had never finished above 9th in their 8 years in a 10 team league, winning 100 games and the division. After winning three against the Atlanta Braves they played the Orioles in the World Series finishing their amazing season by winning the series in five games after losing the opener.

Strange things were happening around Lake Worth, located near Fort Worth, Texas. On July 10, 1969 three couples went to Fort Worth Police and told a story of a large hairy creature leaping out of the darkness and landed on one of the parked cars. Throughout the summer there were numerous reports seeing this creature, could it have been a Bigfoot. Reportedly foot prints were found that were 8 inches wide and 16 inches long. By the end of 1969 the reports were dying down leaving some to wonder what happened to the Lake Worth Monster.

The middle of August could well be called the weekend of Peace, Love and Rock and Roll. The Woodstock Music and Arts Fair began on August 15, 1969 and ran throughout the weekend ending on the morning of August 18th. 186,000 tickets were sold for the concert, but when more showed up than expected, it became a free concert drawing over 1/2 million young men and women to listen to some of the best Rock and Roll acts of the 1960s including Janis Joplin, The Who, Jefferson Airplane, Richie Havens, who opened the concert, and Jimi Hendrix, who closed the concert in the early daylight hours of Monday morning.

1969 also had the concert that could be considered just the opposite of Woodstock and that was the Altamont Free Concert held on Saturday, December 6, 1969, in Northern California. This concert was headlined by the Rolling Stones and included a number of acts that played at Woodstock. The concert was marred by considerable violence.

Two nights August 8 and 9, 1969 rocked Los Angeles. On the night of the August 8th at the rental home of Roman Polanski and his pregnant wife Sharon Tate a group of deranged hippies gruesomely killed Steven Parent, Jay Sebring, Wojciech Frykowski, Abigail Folger, Sharon Tate and Sharon Tate’s unborn child. Polanski was in England. The next night the some of these same people went to the home of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca and did the same. These hippies were the followers of Charles Manson.

July Just Slipped By

Wow, Where did the month of July go?

I have been mostly non-stop for these past weeks and have neglected posting here. Shame on me.

Photo Calendar Delmarva Scenes 16 Month 2019-2020 Calendar coverThere has been a few projects I’ve been involved with during the month. I have put together two of my proposed 2020 calendars of my photos. The first, the 6th Annual Delmarva Scenes calendar, is now available for purchase. It’s a 16 month calendar beginning September 2019 and goes throughout 2020. Some of the photos have been used in previous calendars and others are new. I suppose one could see it as a ‘Best of’ calendar. I think they are some of my best photos. The other is one of Delmarva Sunsets, which will be available in August. I’m waiting for the preview copy to arrive.

I have been working with my local community theatres. Yes that’s plural. Two to be exact. One, Garfield Center for the Arts, as Stage Manager for their upcoming production that opens on August 23rd, Circle Mirror Transformation. And at Church Hill Theatre photographing their summer camp. The production was this past weekend. And anyone who have seen a youth production you can imagine how cute the shows were.

Photo by SG Atkinson: CHT Green Room Gang Jrs
Church Hill Theatre’s 2019 Green Room Gang Jrs
Photo: Church Hill Theatre's  2019 Green Room Gang Srs
Church Hill Theatre’s 2019 Green Room Gang Srs

In the middle of this was our Annual 4-H county fair. I am the Photography Chair, and spent a good part of a week, also the hottest week of this summer, at the fair. My photos of the fair can be seen on my ShoreToBeFun Photographs FB Page.

Photo: Greased Pig Contest at Kent County, MD Fair
Greased Pig Contest at Kent County, MD Fair

And that was all on top of delivering Art and Entertainment News at the ChesaDel Crier. Today, I’m playing catch-up, which includes posting here.

Delegate and a Mayor

Photo by SG Atkinson: Rock's Mayor Dawn Jacobs with her husband Maryland's 36th District Delegate
Since 2013 I have photographed the 4th of July Parade in Rock Hall. I photograph at least 5 parades a year, this was my 5th already this year, and it is one of my favorite. I always seem to catch a unique photo at each one.

This year leading the parade, as they usually do, is the Rock Hall Sons of the American Legion Riders. Leading the riders this year was Rock Hall’s newly elected Mayor Dawn Jacobs, riding behind her husband Maryland 36 District Delegate Jay Jacobs. I would say that both were enjoying the day.

More photos from Rock Hall’s 4th of July Parade and Celebration can be seen on my FB Page ShoreToBeFun Photographs

July 2nd – Independence Day

How much do you actually know about what happened on and around July 4, 1776? We all know that July 4th is the birthday of the United States, but is it really?

Events that lead up to the birth of the United States started in 1774 when 56 representatives from 12 of the British Colonies meet in Philadelphia from September 5 to October 26. They created a Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress in response to the Intolerable Acts.

A second Continental Congress was called to convene on May 10, 1775. Letters of invites to this congress was supposed to be issued to Quebec, Saint John’s Island (now Prince Edward Island), Nova Scotia, Georgia, East Florida, and West Florida. It appears that only Georgia and Quebec actually received these invitation letters.

The 12 colonies came together on May 10, 1775, Georgia didn’t arrive until July. By the time this congress convened the Battles of Lexington and Concord had been fought and war had begun and Congress was to take charge of the war effort. On June 14, 1775, the Congress voted to create the Continental Army out of the militia units around Boston and quickly appointed Congressman George Washington of Virginia as commanding general of the Continental Army.

While Congress was moving towards declaring independence from the British Empire many delegates lacked the authority from their home governments to take this action. That was until Richard Henry Lee, a representative from Virginia received from The Virginia House of Burgesses that on May 15, 1776 they resolved that “the delegates appointed to represent this colony in General Congress” be instructed to propose to that respectable body to declare the united Colonies free and independent states.”

Lee presented on June 6, 1776, a resolution to congress that read;

Resolved, That these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States, that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved.

That it is expedient forthwith to take the most effectual measures for forming foreign Alliances.

That a plan of confederation be prepared and transmitted to the respective Colonies for their consideration and approbation.

Debate began on the resolution, but it was decided to wait for three week so that the delegates could send the resolution to their home colonies and receive direction on voting. It also appeared to those present that the resolution could pass and that there needed to be a suitable declaration for the resolution.

On June 11, 1776 a committee, consisting of John Adams of Massachusetts, Benjamin Franklin of Pennsylvania, Thomas Jefferson of Virginia, Robert R. Livingston of New York, and Roger Sherman of Connecticut, was formed. They were known as the Committee of Five.

The committee delegated that Jefferson would write the draft. Jefferson and the committee worked on it from June 12 until June 27. Franklin and Adams made several minor corrections and the entire committee made additional changes and additions, a total of forty-seven alterations including the insertion of three complete paragraphs from Jefferson’s original draft. Jefferson then produced another copy incorporating these changes and the committee presented this copy to the Continental Congress on Friday June 28, 1776.

On Monday July 1st, congress began debate on the Lee Resolution.

Delaware had three delegates representing the colony had declared on June 15th their independence not only from England, but also from Pennsylvania with whom they shared a Royal Governor. The three delegates were Thomas Mckean and Caesar Rodney who were for Independence and George Reed who was against. When debate began Rodney was in Dover Delaware who as a Militia General was seeing to the command of his troops. (Some stories are that Rodney was on his death bed. While it is true that he had a rare form of facial cancer that left him disfigured and in constant discomfort he was not at his home due to the disease. In fact Rodney lived for nearly 8 more years).

Thomas McKean, who was on the side of independence, sent a dispatch to Caesar Rodney who received it on July 1st, the day before the vote would be taken. He quickly mounted his horse and began the 80 miles trip to Philadelphia. He rode throughout the night. While he rode he encountered a severe thunderstorm. He continued to ride through the rain that turned the road to mud. He arrived just before the final vote was taken on Tuesday July 2nd. When Delaware was called he rose and voted in favor of Independence. George Read, the Delaware delegate who was against Independence, did sign the Declaration.

South Carolina still wasn’t in favor of independence, but Edward Rutledge, who opposed independence and had made many motions to delay the vote, convinced the delegation that for the sake of unanimity, they should vote in favor. The New York delegation abstained, since they did not have instructions from their home government. The Vote for Independence had passed.

In a letter that John Adams sent to his wife Abigail on July 3, 1776 he said;

The second day of July, 1776, will be the most memorable epoch in the history of America. I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated as the day of deliverance, by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations, from one end of this continent to the other, from this time forward for evermore.

Finally at a little after 11 o’clock on Thursday morning July 4, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was approved. This was after many hours of debate during the two days leading to the vote. There were Thirty-nine revisions to the committee’s draft, including the deletion of language that denounced King George III for promoting slave trade.

Again the New York delegation abstained from the vote, but did approve the Declaration five days later.

John Hancock, as President of Congress, and Charles Thompson, Secretary of Congress signed the document on that day. It wasn’t until July 19th that congress ordered that the Declaration to be officially inscribed and signed by its members. Congressional delegates began to sign the officially inscribed copy on August 2nd. It was even signed by some members who had not voted for its adoption and some who were not present at Congress when the vote was cast.

Note:
This was originally written in 2006 and has been revised and republished on various sites each year since then.

School’s Out

This post is for the teachers of the world.

This time of the year is the time that many schools close for the summer.

Many think that the summer is a vacation for teachers. For many this is not the truth. Today teachers send the summer taking classes, continuing teaching in summer school or other jobs.

The thought that they are getting paid a huge salary for only having to work for 10 months is also not true. When one considers the cost of the education they are required to have to teach, the time that they spend each day they are teaching, living expenses, and the out of pocket expenses they provide for their classroom, many are struggling to make ends meet.

In the classroom they often have to be a councilor, nurse, nurturer, as well as teacher. All of this while being told by the administration on what and how they should teach.

I have a lot of respect for teachers. But often students and their parents do not. When Johnny or Jane are learning because they aren’t listening, being disruptive or even not attending the class, often the blame is put on the teacher, and not the student. Or the parent who allows their job to do what they wish without discipline or respect.

In my view the Education System is broken. And it won’t be fixed until we give our teachers the respect that they deserve. And the we I am talking about is all of us. From the highest administrator to the student, parent and the public.