Harriet Tubman (Volume 2, Number 2)

Harriet Tubman, righteous heroine

Harriet Tubman
Harriet Tubman

Harriet Tubman was born Araminta Ross in the eastern shore region of Maryland in 1822.  Her exact date of birth remains unknown.  Both of her parents were slaves, Harriet (Rit) Green and Ben Ross.

John Brown
John Brown

The summer of 1859 also brought a resumption of John Brown’s plan for rebellion.  He was already gathering assets in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania in anticipation of his planned attack on the Federal arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia.  His plan was to seize the arsenal and armory, incite local slaves to join his rebellion and spread a slave revolt as effectively as possible.  Brown was fanatically opposed to slavery with an opposition rooted in a deep religious fervor.  He considered himself a divine instrument intent on imposing punishment on those conducting the sinful practice of slavery.  Based on his interaction with Harriet Tubman, Brown fully expected her to join his effort.  He repeatedly attempted to contact her to no avail but he did meet with Frederick Douglass in Chambersburg.  When Douglass realized that Brown was intent on attacking a federal arsenal he told him that “he was going into a perfect steel trap, once in, he would not get out alive.”

St. Gaudens Panel Commemorating 54th Volunteer Massachusetts Regiment, Monument is situated on the Northeast Corner of the Boston Common
St. Gaudens Panel Commemorating 54th Volunteer Massachusetts Regiment, Monument is situated on the Northeast Corner of the Boston Common.

Harriet Tubman also aided in the celebrated 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Regiment in its participation in the attack on Fort Wagner in Charleston Harbor on July 19, 1863.  The 54th was one of the first African-American regiments assembled during the Civil War.  Commanded by a white abolitionist, Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, the 54th was in the vanguard of the assault on Fort Wagner, a heavily fortified beachhead that was part of the defensive infrastructure protecting the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina.  After a lengthy bombardment, the Regiment began a frontal assault on the fort.  Despite heavy losses, the 54th was able to briefly seize part of the south wall but heavy hand-to-hand combat and artillery fire pushed the unit back.  Other Union regiments also attempted to breach the fort around its perimeter but were repulsed with terrible losses.  An estimated 1,500 hundred Union troops were killed, wounded or captured.  The 54th lost over two hundred and fifty men.  Robert Gould Shaw was killed in the initial storming of the fort and buried in a common grave with his fellow black soldiers.  While the grave was eventually washed away by storms and the remains of these soldiers disappeared, the heroic story of Gould Shaw and his men has been immortalized in the film “Glory.”

William Seward, US Senator and Secretary of State
William Seward, US Senator and Secretary of State

Five days after the armistice at Appomattox, President Lincoln was assassinated and Harriet’s benefactor Secretary of State William Seward was incapacitated by an assailant involved in the same plot.  Although Seward would survive and even attempt to help Tubman in her attempts to receive back pay, she eventually decided to head back to her home in Auburn, NY.

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Harriet Tubman, Bibliographical Information

The information for this podcast came from primarily two books:

Bound For the Promised Land, by Kate Clifford Larson

Bound for the Promised Land: Harriet Tubman: Portrait of an American Hero

and Harriet Tubman, The Road to Freedom by Catherine Clinton

Harriet Tubman: The Road to Freedom

 

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Alexander Hamilton, (Volume 2, Episode 1)

Alexander Hamilton, the Zelig of American military and political history.

hamilton portrait
Alexander Hamilton, First Secretary of the US Treasury

The circumstances surrounding the birth of Alexander Hamilton are complicated and even when he was born is a matter of dispute.  His mother, Rachel Faucette, was of British and French descent.  His father, James Hamilton was a Scot.  They met on the island of St. Kitts in the British West Indies where James Hamilton was unsuccessfully attempting to build a career trading sugar and other goods.

Crossing the Delaware, December 25, 1776
Crossing the Delaware, December 25, 1776

Although it only involved a total of less than four thousand men and less than twenty-five artillery pieces, the Battle of Trenton is revered as one of the most important moments in US military history.  On Christmas night, 1776, George Washington ordered approximately 2,000 troops to begin crossing the Delaware River, near Trenton, New Jersey.  Hamilton and his company, now only thirty men in total were part of this attack.  In spite of dreadful weather, the entire American force made it across the Delaware River and as dawn approached, marched a dozen miles to the outskirts of the town.  At eight in the morning, a coordinated attack on the Hessian barracks began.

Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton
Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton

In the summer of 1791, according to Hamilton, a woman named Maria Reynolds knocked on the door of his Philadelphia home and met with him privately (despite the presence in the house of Hamilton’s wife).  She recounted a terrible tale of mistreatment at the hands of her husband, claimed she was abandoned and utterly destitute and pleaded with Hamilton for financial help for her and her young daughter.  That very evening Hamilton walked over to Maria’s residence and handed cash to the twenty-three year old and impulsively began a physical relationship that would last for two years.

Aaron Burr
Aaron Burr

The United States finally began to experience peace and prosperity in the first term of Thomas Jefferson and with the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, Hamilton’s former adversary enjoyed his greatest popularity.  Hamilton was reduced to practicing law but political developments in 1804 again involved him in New York State politics.  It was clear that Jefferson fully intended to dump Aaron Burr as vice-President in the upcoming presidential election.  In the machinations surrounding the Presidential election of 1800, Burr had refused to publically state that he was Jefferson’s Vice-Presidential running mate and even maneuvered behind the scenes to try and win in the House of Representatives.  As a result Jefferson completely isolated him from any role in the administration and replaced him on the 1804 ticket with New York State governor George Clinton.  Burr then decided to run for Governor of New York.  He would be soundly defeated in a bitter campaign marked by personal attacks of all kinds.  For this, he and his followers blamed Alexander Hamilton.  Burr personally began to obsess about the man who had blocked both his Presidential and gubernatorial aspirations.

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Francis Scott Key and The Star Spangled Banner (Volume 1, Podcast 12)

Francis Scott Key and the National Anthem

Francis Scott Key
Francis Scott Key

Key was a prominent lawyer from Frederick, Maryland who, through a sequence of incidents that occurred during the War of 1812, observed one of the most critical episodes in American history.

Map of the Battle of Baltimore
Map of the Battle of Baltimore

In fact, Ross and Cockburn had decided on a coordinated air and sea attack.  Ross would land his troops at North Point, Maryland at the tip of the Patapsco Neck and make the short fifteen-mile march to the city.  After the sixty-mile march on Washington, Ross reasoned that he would handle this much shorter distance with relative ease.  Because the Patapsco was relatively shallow, the larger warships would not be able to enter the inner harbor area.  Instead Cockburn would take the smaller frigates and bombardment vessels upriver to attack Fort McHenry and after extinguishing the guns of the fort, to bombard the city itself, hopefully leading to a major conflagration.

Admiral George Cockburn depicted with the burning Washington, DC
Admiral George Cockburn depicted with the burning Washington, DC

The British army regrouped briefly but within hours began marching briskly towards Washington.  1,200 men halted two miles from the Capitol, Ross continued into the city itself with 200 elite infantrymen.  There was zero resistance, any remaining civilians remained inside their homes.  The only remaining American activity in the city was the deliberate destruction of the Washington Navy Yard, flames visible on the already dark horizon.  Several ships, naval equipment, ordinance and other shipbuilding materials were destroyed to keep them out of the hands of the British.  Ross and Cockburn had already decided to burn any public buildings in the city and as the Navy Yard glowed a few miles away, Ross’ units took position around the US Capitol building.  The Capitol building itself looked nothing like today’s domed edifice, instead it was two square sandstone blocks connected by a wooden passageway.  Under construction since 1793, it was a costly and time- consuming process.  The British entered the building, ascertained that no one was present and began smearing gunpowder paste on the walls of the South Wing.  Once this was lit, paper and wooden furniture was added and within minutes an intense heat drove the arsonists to the North Wing where a magnificent library was quickly put to the torch.  The entire building was soon engulfed in flames.

General Robert Ross, the only man ever to capture America's capital
General Robert Ross, the only man ever to capture America’s capital

Next, Ross, Coburn and a column of men set out to what was known as the “President’s Mansion.”  They entered the now deserted home and devoured the food and wine that was supposed to have been served to the President and his guests as that afternoon’s supper.  After selecting a few souvenirs but nothing of any value as to avoid being charged with “looting”, soldiers quickly began to pile up furniture and soak mattresses with lamp oil.  After some flame was acquired from a nearby tavern, an officer walked through the rooms of the mansion, igniting the makeshift kindling in each room.  Madison’s former home was quickly ablaze, Ross, Cockburn and troops admiring their work from a short distance.

General George Armistead, commander of Fort McHenry
General George Armistead, commander of Fort McHenry

Fort McHenry, under the command of Major George Armistead, responded with over fifty cannons from the fort itself, as well as shore batteries on both sides of the river.  Some of this fire was accurate enough to force Cochrane to move his ships out of range, approximately two miles away.  Here he was content to blast away with his mortars, the Americans unable to reach the British ships.  Armistead ordered his guns to cease fire, and the gun crews to take cover.  British shells and rockets were landing on an average of over one per minute, by noon hundreds of projectiles had landed on or near the fort.  The incendiary rockets were essentially harmless but an occasional mortar shell made its way into the fort and detonated with a tremendous explosion.  One pierced the roof of the fort’s powder magazine but failed to detonate, had it exploded it would have blown up 300 hundred barrels of gunpowder, the fort and most of its inhabitants.

Star Spangled Banner Sheet Music from the 1800's
Star Spangled Banner Sheet Music from the 1800’s

Although “The Star-Spangled Banner” remained popular during Key’s lifetime, it did not achieve official status for many years.  Other songs, including “Hail, Columbia”, “America, the Beautiful” and “My Country, Tis of thee.” would be sung at public events and ceremonies, all achieving unofficial status.  It would not be until a congressional resolution, signed by President Herbert Hoover in 1931 that the Star Spangled Banner would officially be named the national anthem.

key stamp copy
US commemorative stamp of Francis Scott Key

Key would return to his prestigious law practice in Washington.  Thirty-five years old when he wrote “The Star Spangled Banner” he had already argued cases in front of the Supreme Court.  He would represent many clients in some of the era’s most prominent legal cases.  Key had close political ties to Andrew Jackson and would eventually be named the US Attorney for Washington, DC, a post he held until 1841.  He died on January 11, 1843, aged 63.

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Francis Scott Key, Book and Music Information

There were three books used in constructing this podcast:

Through the Perilous Fight, by Steve VogelThrough the Perilous Fight: Six Weeks That Saved the Nation by Vogel, Steve (2013) Hardcover

The Star Spangled Banner, The Making of An American Icon, by Lonn Taylor The Star-Spangled Banner: The Making of an American Icon

The Dawn’s Early Light, by Walter Lord The Dawn’s Early Light

The version of the Star Spangled Banner was recorded by The US Army Band.  It is in the Public Domain:

The Star Spangled Banner

The other musical selections came from the Audioblocks royalty free music website and in order are: “Modern Elegance”, “Rich Man Going Crazy”, “Logro”, “Birth of a New Morning”, “All Across America.”

 

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Amelia Earhart (Volume 1, podcast 11)

Amelia Earhart, Lost Heroine

Amelia Earhart as a child.
Amelia Earhart as a child.

Amelia Earhart was born on July 24, 1897 in Atchison, Kansas.  Although her mother came from a wealthy family, her father was an attorney but also an alcoholic with an erratic work history that lead to an unstable childhood for both Amelia and her sister, Muriel.  Amelia would attend six high schools before graduating from Hyde Park High School in Chicago.

The iconic photograph of Amelia Earhart and her Lockheed Electra 10E
The iconic photograph of Amelia Earhart and her Lockheed Electra 10E

Although Amelia dismissed speculation about a global flight, George Putnam began corresponding with Lockheed during the mid thirties about the potential purchase of their latest and most sophisticated aircraft; the Lockheed Electra 10E.

Amelia and Fred Noonan in June of 1937.
Amelia and Fred Noonan in June of 1937.

It was suggested by Paul Mantz that because Howland Island, at two miles long and one half mile wide would be a navigational challenge, that Fred Noonan an experienced navigator who had mapped many of Pan American World Airways’ American Clipper routes in the Pacific handle this responsibility.  Noonan had left Pan American and was intent on starting a navigational school as his next commercial venture, an endeavor that would certainly be helped by the publicity generated by Amelia’s flight.

The US Air Mail stamp taken from the famous photo.
The US Air Mail stamp taken from the famous photo.

Amelia Earhart 1963 US commemorative stamp.

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Amelia Earhart, Book and Music Information

The best biography of Amelia Earhart is “The Sound Of Wings, The Life of Amelia Earhart” by Mary S. Lovell.

The Sound of Wings: The Life of Amelia Earhart

“Amelia Earhart, The Mystery Solved” is an excellent analysis of Amelia Earhart’s final flight that provides very specific information.

Amelia Earhart: The Mystery Solved

All three musical selections are by Chris Zabriskie:

Virtues Inherited, Vices Passed On

Pick Up A Convict On Alcatraz

Prelude No. 18

All three selections are usable under Creative Commons

Creative Commons License

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Paul Gauguin (Volume 1, Podcast 10)

Paul Gauguin, the Bitterness and the Beauty

Paul Gauguin in Breton attire.
Paul Gauguin in Breton attire.

From his very first days, Gauguin’s life was filled with a volatile instability that must have affected his development.  He was born in Paris on June 7, 1848.  His father, Clovis, was a journalist, his mother, Aline, the daughter of Flora Tristan, a seminal feminist writer of the early nineteenth century.  Aline’s father had been imprisoned for the attempted murder of Flora, an indication of the chaos surrounding Gauguin’s immediate family.  Flora Tristan died in 1844, and in 1847 Aline married Clovis and soon settled down to married life and the birth of a daughter in 1847 and Paul in 1848.  But the political unrest of Paris forced the young family to think about heading into exile.

Mette Gauguin and her five children.
Mette Gauguin and her five children.

It was at the home of Gustave Arosa that Gauguin, in November of 1872, met two female guests, travelling from Denmark.  One of these woman, Mette-Sophie Gad, was immediately attracted to Gauguin and a yearlong courtship began.  Mette was no great beauty, but all accounts indicate that she had a great deal of personality and a practically masculine outlook that could handle the rough edges of an ex-sailor.  A year later the couple would be married and Mette would rapidly become pregnant, Paul’s stock market employment providing a comfortable lifestyle.

Gauguin's iconoclastic "Vision After the Sermon."
Gauguin’s iconoclastic “Vision After the Sermon.”

With the death of Theo Van Gogh and the realization that none of his compatriots would leave France for the exotic destinations that he continually fantasized about, Gauguin became fixated on a newer and even more remote destination: Tahiti.  Again he held out for a major sale and a large check that would get him out of France.  He had maintained this fantasy for decades but this time his growing reputation and a newspaper article published the day before a planned sale at the prestigious auction house at the Hotel Druout insured that his paintings would generate a substantial sum.  In all thirty paintings were sold on February 23, 1891, including “Vision After the Sermon” and the portrait “Beautiful Angela” which was purchased by Degas.

Van Gogh's jade self-portrait dedicated to "Mon Ami Paul", sold by Gauguin to raise money for Tahiti, auctioned by the Nazi's as "degenerate art", today it hangs in Harvard's Fogg Museum.
Van Gogh’s jade self-portrait dedicated to “Mon Ami Paul”, sold by Gauguin to raise money for Tahiti, auctioned by the Nazi’s as “degenerate art”, today it hangs in Harvard’s Fogg Museum.

Vincent Van Gogh had spent the summer writing to all of the artists of Pont-Aven, imploring them to participate in a “colony” in Arles, where he had already relocated.  Gauguin repeatedly put him off by claiming that he would have to wait until he sold some paintings and raised the money to pay off his debts in Brittany.  But when Theo Van Gogh sent him some money and promised more if he would merely agree to join Vincent in the south of France, Gauguin acquiesced.  The overjoyed artist sent him a remarkable, jade green self portrait dedicated to “mon ami Paul” and typically began to fixate on when Gauguin would arrive or if he would even show up at all. Thus the stage was set for one of the most notoriously tragic incidents in art history.

Gauguin's painting of Vincent painting sunflowers which caused their final row.
Gauguin’s painting of Vincent painting sunflowers which caused their final row.

A sequence of events in late December brought about Gauguin’s inevitable departure.  As the weather kept them painting indoors, Van Gogh returned to his familiar motif of sunflowers, Gauguin painted a portrait of Vincent at work.  The result horrified and angered Van Gogh.  “It is certainly I, but it’s I gone mad!”  That night at a cafe an argument culminated in Van Gogh throwing a glass of absinthe at Gauguin, who dragged him home and put him to bed.  Although Van Gogh tried to apologize, Gauguin responded by saying he could no longer stay because he might respond to such future outbursts by strangling Vincent.

The "Yellow House" in Arles, France. It was destroyed in 1940, rebuilt and repainted in cement to resemble the original building.
The “Yellow House” in Arles, France. It was destroyed in 1940, rebuilt and repainted in cement to resemble the original building.

A terrible rainy season insured that Gauguin and Van Gogh would spend most of their time shut up in the Yellow House, unable to paint outside.  They spent much of their time in philosophical discussions that ultimately became hostile, Gauguin condescendingly dismissive towards all of Van Gogh’s opinions especially when it came to art.

Gauguin's "Two Women"
Gauguin’s “Two Women”

Gauguin’s deteriorating health affected his productivity but he still would produce some of his greatest works during this time period, especially,  “Two Tahitian Women”, now in the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Gauguin's "Where Are We Going?"
Gauguin’s “Where Are We Going?”

He also produced the allegorical “Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going? that is now in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.

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Paul Gauguin, Bibliography and Music Information and Purchase

A remarkably detailed biography of Paul Gauguin is “Paul Gauguin: A Life” by David Sweetman Paul Gauguin

“Gauguin” by Henri Perruchot is another competent effort Gauguin

For information about Gauguin in Polynesia, consult “Gauguin in the South Seas”, by Bengt Danielson Gauguin in the south seas / Bengt Danielson ; translated by Reginald Spink

Music used for this podcast included “Parisian” by Kevin MacLeod

Parisian

This song is in the public domain:   License

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Of Some Very Famous People You've Never Really Heard Of…In Less Than An Hour.