Cover Photo by Mark R. Day

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Photo "Bridge of Honor, Bridge of Death"

 
Photo taken by Mark R. Day of the Lower Bridge "Burnside's Bridge" Antietam National Battlefield on a rainy Sunday morning in late August 2012.  Copyright by Mark R. Day 22 September 2012, all rights reserved
 
History of the Bridge
 
 Constructed in 1836 this limestone and granite bridge played a key role in the September 1862 Battle of Antietam during the American Civil War when a small number of Confederate soldiers from Georgia for several hours held off repeated attempts by elements of the union Army to take the bridge by force and inflicted more than 500 casualties on the 51st New York and the 11th Connecticut. 
The bridge now bears the name of the Union Commander, Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside.

Photo "Serenity"

 
 
Photo of Coveville Presbyterian Church taken by Mark R. Day using a Canon power Shot SX100IS on 22 September at approximately 9:30am.  Copyright by Mark R. Day 22 September 2012, all rights reserved



Thursday, September 20, 2012

Thoughts on the Struggle between Liberalism and Conservativism in a Constituional Government


Some thoughts on the Constitution and the state of the American nation on Constitution Day 2012
     I have always held that my values are the same as those of the founding fathers.  I believe in Republican government, the rule of law, and constitutional principles.  Further, I believe in individual rights to free speech, religious freedom, and equality in the eyes of the law for all. 

     Each of these ideas and the values they represent were born in late seventeenth and early eighteenth century Europe, during  the "Age of Enlightenment," as the creative thoughts of men with names like Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu, and Locke.   Our fortune is that the founders of the American Republic had the foresight to adopt these ideas as the basis of the constitutional government they created for the United States of America in 1787. 

     In America these idealistic "liberal" principles became fact rather than rhetoric and our founding fathers created a country that was the first to allow men to control their own destiny.  Each of these enlightenment idea's increased the power of the people rather than the power of the government and set limits on the governments ability to intrude in the lives of Americans.  However, from the beginning there was a troubling question which Americans have struggled with for over 225 years.  That question, simply stated, is how much freedom is too much freedom or put another way how much liberalism will be allowed in our generally conservative society.

     Our Constitution was written in that long hot summer of 1787 to define what level of liberalism and individual rights would be acceptable in the new republic.  The Constitutional Convention had been born out of fear that the country, in a constant state of rebellion, would be destabilized and destroyed.  Daniel Shea, a Revolutionary War Hero, had lead Massachusetts farmers in a failed uprising against the government of that state over the issue of taxation.  Conservative forces in the landowning and business classes saw Shea's Rebellion as a clear signal that limits had to be set on individual liberties to prevent continued instability.  If the country was going to survive and prosper a strong national government was necessary to prevent internal discord, defend against foreign invasion, and ensure the free flow of commerce.  The Federalist, lead by Alexander Hamilton, argued for governmental powers that would regulate trade and commerce, provide for a common currency, provide for an executive officer to enforce the laws, and contain an independent court to settle differences between the many states of the Union.  In opposition the Anti-Federalist, leaded by George Mason and Patrick Henry, argued that a strong government would destroy individual and state rights and proposed that a Bill of Rights be added to the Constitution as a protection for the people and states from abusive laws.

     Over the years since that original argument took place; these two forces conservativism and liberalism have seen their influence over national policy  rise and fall.  At times they have inflamed our passions as the ebb and flow of conservative or liberal influence impacted on the lives of individuals and in some cases the rights of states. Tensions between the two forces lead to the creation of political parties and  laws such as the Alien and Sedition Acts or the Embargo of 1807 earned the disdain of the people.  In some cases the debate lead to open conflict, as in the case of the American Civil War, which divided the country and brought brother to kill brother.

     Today these forces of liberalism and conservativism are once more engaged in a struggle to define the future of our nation.  Many Americans would say that there must be a clear winner in the struggle this time.   I that is true a question must be asked and answered; would the nation be better off with such a winner take all scenario?   If we look to the founding fathers for advice in answering the question the best analogy would be found in the Virginia Statues of Religious Freedom, written by Thomas Jefferson.  Jefferson was concerned with the influence and power of the Anglican Church in Virginia.  At issue were the ideas of religious toleration and the separation of church and state.  When writing the Virginia Declaration of religious Freedom Jefferson did not seek to destroy the church but rather he saw the need to limit its power over the people of Virginia.  Many Virginians  did not practice Anglicanism yet were required to pay a tax to support it and even worse failure to belong to the Anglican Church meant a denial of voting rights.  Jefferson understood that the Anglican Church was necessary to the society but he would not accept its interference in the rights of individuals to practice their own beliefs or vote.  Jefferson observed that there was a thin veil of separation which existed between the church and the state, but he also realized that these institutions were mutually dependent and symbiotic entities which could not stand alone.  The Church needed the government to ensure its existence and the government need the church to teach moral values to its citizens.  Jefferson's very liberal document, the Statute of Religious freedom, ultimately ended the Churches power to deny individual rights but it also stated that the government had no power over the church therefore preserving the conservative moral force that the church held in the society.

In modern America liberalism and conservativism are and must be kept conjoined or yoked in a manner similar to Jefferson's concept of church and state.  American liberty is maintained by two compelling and powerful forces, which act as the opposite ends of the fulcrum.  Like the church and the state liberalism and conservativism are mutually dependent and symbiotic entities.  There can be no true individual freedom without liberalism, but liberalism must be balanced by an equal amount of conservativism to ensure order and stability.  failure to maintain that balance is the surest way to destroy the nation and the principles that it was founded upon.


Written by Mark R. Day 17 September 2012, copyright by Mark R. Day, all rights reserved 17 September 2012
 

Friday, July 27, 2012

Photo "Iconic Deco"


Photo taken by Mark R. Day on 23 July 2012, at Ellis island, with a Canon Power Shot SX100IS.  Copyright Mark R. Day, 27 July 2012, all rights reserved


 With cubic forms and zigzag designs, art deco buildings embraced the machine age.  Like any style, it evolved from many sources such as the streamlined styling of modern technology combined with patterns and icons taken from the Far East, ancient Greece and Rome, Africa, India, and Mayan and Aztec cultures.

Photo "Freedoms Price: Fallen Hero's"


Photo taken by Mark R. Day on 23 July 2012 at Ellis Island using a Canon Power Shot SX100IS. Copyright Mark R. Day July 27, 2012, all rights reserved

Photo "Liberty Stands Watch at Freedom's Open Door"


Photographed by Mark R. Day, 23 July 2012 using a Canon power Shot SX100IS.  Copyright by Mark R. Day 27 July 2012, all rights reserved

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Academic Paper "Billie Holiday: Her Life and Legacy as an Twentieth Century Icon"

An American Icon Project

Billie Holiday: Her Life and Legacy as an Twentieth Century Icon

Prepared for the Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library
Teaching American History Grant Program

By: 
Mark R. Day
History Teacher: Liberty High School Bedford, VA


     On July 21, 1959 the world of Jazz music lost one of its most eternal stars.  Billie Holiday was gone, but she would never be forgotten.  As the more than 3,000 individuals that had come to her funeral sat in St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church, we will never know what images came to mind as they reflected on the life of the Woman they called "Lady Day."   However, we must reflect on her life for ourselves in an attempt to find the proper meaning and position of importance, of this amazing woman whose life still has resonance in American culture and society today.
     My purpose therefore is to  look back over the life of Billie Holiday and review the details of her struggles growing up in poverty, prostitution,  racism, and drug addiction, while searching for her  true legacy and the impact her life has had on twentieth  century  American culture.  To that end,   we will use the following as guiding questions  to facilitate the investigation and establish Billie Holidays relevance as a representative icon in African American twentieth century history.
·         What makes her an authoritative spokesperson on  the African American sub-culture and its values
·         How did she embody the values of twentieth century African American culture both negatively and positively . 
·         What historical impact does she have beyond her lifetime.
     To answer the first and second guiding question and determine her individual significance; comparisons will be made  by reviewing  her life in relation to the general assumptions we have about Twentieth Century African American society.    To answer the final question, we will look at the body of her work as a singer and the impact her work had on culture in her lifetime and on future generations.
     Billy Holiday was born into hardship and ugliness on April 7, 1915. She was  raised in a section of Baltimore called Pig town which was described in this manner in 1896 by an anonymous journalist[1] in John Whites Billy Holiday (1987)[2] "Open drains,  ashes and garbage,  cellars filled with filthy black water . . . villainous-looking Negro's who loiter and sleep around street corners and never work; vile and vicious women with but a smock to cover their black nakedness, lounging in doorways or squatting upon steps, hurling foul epithets at every passer-by, foul streets, foul people, in foul tenements, filled with foul air.  This description reeks of the sordid stereotypes that informed the public on the topic of race at the turn of the century and establishes the background for the early life of the little girl named Eleanora Fagan who would later become Billie Holiday.  Eleanora's mother was nineteen and her father was sixteen.  They were unmarried and the mother "Sadie"  was a woman of ill repute.  As a child Eleanora, aka Billie, was often taken to court for truancy and minor misdemeanors and in some instances Eleanor  was sent to reform school. However, she was always returned to her mother's care.  The tragedy is that the child was never really safe in that home and her mother was often absent.  Evidence of this failure can be seen in 1926  when Eleanora was raped by a neighbor and once again spent time in reform school under witness protection.[3]  Truly the experiences that Eleanor / Billie had in the formative years of her life contain  a plethora of  worst case situations from which she would never completely overcome as she transitioned into adulthood.
     We can begin to get a sense of the realities of Eleanora / Billie's life and  begin to form some opinions about her relevance in the context of the values that existed in the society that produced her.   Born in poverty,  she  would incorporate the harsh lessons which life in such  vile  conditions had  forced her to endure, to discover a source of creativity based in human emotion and then communicate the cruelty, injustice, and pain  which was so prevalent in  Twentieth Century African American society,  effectively to both black and white Americans through her music.  We can see how she was able to transcend the social boundaries and influence the society in general though  her interpretation of the words and the feeling she projected in her performances.
     Billie is quoted as having once made the following statement  "Somebody once said we never know what is enough until we know what's more than enough." [4]  Billie Holiday experienced the full gamete of sins and tribulations that made up the African American experience and she was a symbol of overcoming an environment of disadvantage to find success and public acknowledgement in the face of the society's reluctance to accept a person of color.  Billie said.  "You can be up to your boobies in white satin, with gardenias in your hair and no sugar cane for miles, but you can still be working on the plantation."[5]   Billie was often seen in photographs dressed in white satin and Gardenias so her quote is a telling statement of how she saw herself in society.  It is her unique awareness which creates the iconic image of a black woman who has made a name for herself but who is also,  as Ralph Ellison might say, still invisible as a person in the general society at large. 
     As a result of this curious dichotomy of identity Billie Holiday was never able to leave the abuse, neglect and depravity of the sub culture which had produced her or overcome the racist attitudes of America.     Billie Holiday was a drug addict and  Billie Holiday was black and that marked her as separate from the people she entertained, who were primarily white,  particularly in the 1920s and 1930's when lynching was at its most violent levels.  Ida B. Wells, an African American journalist and newspaper editor, said, " Our country's national crime is lynching.  It is not the creature of an hour, the sudden outburst of uncontrolled fury, or the unspeakable brutality  of an insane  mob."[6]  However,  it will be the issue of lynching that will elevate Billy Holiday to the status of Icon for African American rights.  For she will take a stand and sing what will become a theme song against intolerance and bigotry, "Strange Fruit", and it is in that stand against lynching that she will find her greatest significance.
     The guidelines posed at the beginning of this paper required us to review the impact of her work  on the society both in her time and in the present.  Billie Holiday's song "Strange Fruit" was released as a recording in 1939. The words to the song were written by Abel Meeropol, a Jewish school teacher as a response to lynching.  It is, however, Billie Holidays intense and dramatic interpretation of the song which would jolt her mostly white audiences from their complacency and be hailed by her peers, such as Leonard Fisher,  to be "the first significant protest in words and music, the first un-muted cry against racism ".  In her monograph,  With Billie, Julia Blackburn makes the following comment "People started to come just to hear that one song."[7]  The song was a powerful and thought provoking exposure of racism in America which lead  Jazz singing legend Lena Horne to say  that in singing 'Strange Fruit', "Billie was putting into words what so many people had seen and lived through.  She seemed to be performing in melody and words the same things, I was feeling in my heart."   Billie Holiday had, as her record producer Ahmet Ertegun said, "Declared War on Racism."  She had become a revolutionary through the power of her music to speak to the heart of black Americans.  
Southern trees bear a strange fruit,
Blood on the leaves and blood at the root,
Black bodies swinging in the southern breeze,
Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees.

Pastoral scene of the gallant south,
The bulging eyes and the twisted mouth,
Scent of magnolias, sweet and fresh,
Then the sudden smell of burning flesh.

Here is fruit for the crows to pluck,
For the rain to gather, for the wind to suck,
For the sun to rot, for the trees to drop,
Here is a strange and bitter crop.[8]
     The words of Strange Fruit stir strong images in the mind of the modern listener just as they did at its release seventy-four years ago. Billy Holiday found a way to impart an honesty about the issue of race in America that had heretofore eluded the society.  Out of her emotions and experiences people found  an outlet that spoke to the humanity of the situation and through her music Billie Holiday became an inspirational icon for generations of African Americans.
     What then is Billie Holiday's legacy s today and into the future.   The Critic John Bush wrote that Billie Holiday "changed the art of American pop vocals forever." The great  singer Frank Sinatra said the following in an interview with Ebony Magazine in 1958 ; "With few exceptions every major pop singer in the US during her generation has been touched in some way by her genius.  It is Billie Holiday who was, and still remains, the greatest single musical influence on me.  Lady day is unquestionably the most important influence on American popular singing in the last twenty years."  Clearly Billie Holiday has changed the manner in which music is perceived as a method of protest.
     On the day Billie Holiday died the poet Frank O'Hara, a huge admirer,  wrote the poem "The Day Lady Died."  His poem written in that moment of personal loss has become an American Classic, but it is just one of the many honors that Billie has been given since her death.  In 1987, Billie Holiday was posthumously awarded the Grammy for Lifetime Achievement.  In 1994,  the United States Post Office issued a Billie Holiday postage stamp.  In 2000, she was inducted into the Rock and Roll hall of Fame.  Billie has also been the subject of many television and cinematic presentations.
     Billie Holidays emergence as an artist was based on an emotional intensity born out of her environment.  As a result of her humanity she was able to frame the question of racism in terms so simple that the hearts of those who heard the message burst open in awe of the truth that her voice revealed to them.  Yes Billie Holiday was,  is, and will continue to be  an Icon of American history whose significance in terms of American and international culture will endure the test of time.  Her life is a commentary on the reality of being African American in the early Twentieth Century, and her courage and humility stand as beacons to the ideas that one person can make a difference.

Bibliography
Brainy Quote. Brainy Quote. Com. http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/lynching.html (accessed July 19, 2012).
Elyrics.net. http://www.elyrics.net/read/b/billie-holiday-lyrics/strange-fruit-lyrics.html (accessed July 19, 2012).
Lewis, Jone Johnson. About. Com: Woman's History "Billie Holiday Quotes". http://womenshistory.about.com/od/quotes/a/billie_holiday.htm (accessed July 19, 2012).
Public Broadcaasting Service. American Masters (PBS). June 8, 2006. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/episodes/billie-holiday/introduction/68/ (accessed July 19, 2012).
Julia Blackburn, With Billie: A new Look at the Unforgettable Lady Day, Vintage Book, New York,2005 pg. 111

Donald Clarke, Billie Holiday : Wishing on the Moon, Da Capo Press, Cambridge MA, 2002. pg6

John White, Billie Holiday: Her Life and Times ,, Spellmount Limited, 1987)



[1] Donald Clarke, Billie Holiday : Wishing on the Moon, Da Capo Press, Cambridge MA, 2002. pg6
[2] John White, Billie Holiday: Her Life and Times,  Spellmount Limited, 1987
[3] Julia Blackburn, With Billie: A new Look at the Unforgettable Lady Day, Vintage Book, New York,2005 pg. 14-15
[4] (Lewis n.d.)
[5] (Lewis n.d.)
[6] Brainy Quote.com
[7] Julia Blackburn, With Billie: A new Look at the Unforgettable Lady Day, Vintage Book, New York,2005 pg. 111

[8] 9Elyrics.net n.d.)
Copyright 26 July 2012 by Mark R. Day, all rights reserved