Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Monday, January 20, 2014
Old Picture of the Day: Bowler Hat
Old Picture of the Day: Hats
Old Picture of the Day: Hats: They say that the Hat Makes the Man, so welcome to Hat Week here at OPOD. We will be looking at various hat styles and see the things ...
Friday, January 17, 2014
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Radio
And radio, as "low tech" as it might seem today, was really the pioneer for the home entertainment revolution that would come later. Prior to radio, which for almost all families was less than a century ago, at the end of a long day, people (well. . . men) went home to a house which only contained the noise that was animated by the lives therein. Sounds for the most part had a human, or perhaps, animal origin in the immediate sense. For many people, that meant a pretty quiet evening. If there was music, at that time, it might have been generated by a Victrola, but just as often it might have been played by the folks at home. An incredible number of people sang and played musical instruments prior to radio, and most particularly prior to television. But quite a few houses were no doubt mostly silent at night as well, with people reading for entertainment, or playing cards, if only solitaire.
After World War One, however, the radio was on. Shows like Cavalcade of America, Dragnet, The Shadow, The Whistler, and Gunsmoke played ever night on the radio, along with news and music. People rapidly acclimated to having the radio on in their homes, and even if they still read at night, a lot of time was spent listening, just as later a lot of time was spent watching. Truly, a revolution in people's daily lives.
And a revolution in connectedness as well. Prior to the radio, evens that happened far away were truly far away. A person might learn of them rapidly through the newspaper, but still they had a remoteness connected with them, if they were remote. Radio began to change that. For the first time disasters and happenings that occurred far away could be learned of nearly immediately.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Wednesday, January 14, 2024. Endless chain production and Out Of Africa.
Ford Motor Company introduced the endless chain for manufacturing vehicles, turning out a Model T in 93 minutes. It was already using the assembly line.
Karen Blixen arrived in Kenya and, on the same day, married her Swedish cousin Bror Flixen-Finecke, thereby becoming a baroness. She famously became the author of Out of Africa.
Blixen's father was a Danish army officer and parliamentarian who loved the outdoor life, and who authored a memoir featuring that which became a bit of a Danish classic, so she came by her writing skills naturally. Like her to be husband, he also was given to affairs and had a daughter from a pre marriage affair in the United States with a Chippewa woman. He suffered from having contacted syphilis in the United States. He killed himself following impregnating one of his household maids, at which time Karen was only 9.
Blixen is still widely admired for that writing, and Out of Africa is an excellent book which was turned into an excellent film, so it's hardly noticed what a symbol of late state monarchy and empire she was. A Dane who gained admittance to British Kenya, she did so only because she was a white immigrant at a time in which the benefits of flooding non-European lands with Europeans was not questioned. Her marriage was really one of convenience, and it did not last with her husband being unfaithful, something that was so common amongst nobility that it was practically expected, but which also resulted in her being infected with syphilis. Her farming activities were not really successful as much of the land that had been acquired was not suitable for it, with the original intent to have been ranching. The land actually belonged to a family corporation, and not to the couple individually.
Baron Bror Fredrik von Blixen-Finecke went on to marry three times, having asked for divorce from Karen and having obtained it against her wishes. He was an author in his own right.
Monday, January 13, 2014
Governor Hunt's World War Two Correspondence, Heart Mount Internment Camp
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Holscher's Hub: Special Passenger Permit, Chinese Air Force
Watching the Morph. How the news gets spun by the right and left in the age of the unreliable Internet
It appears that Obama’s habitual abuse of his executive action is beginning to rub off on the rest of his administration. His EPA soldiers are now telling a town in Wyoming that they no longer have the right to live there. And what’s worse? They’re giving away that land that the residents rightfully bought to other people.
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Conversion of the Shoreham Hotel's furnace from oil, to coal. 1942
This interesting set of photographs purports to depict the conversion of Washington D. C.'s Shoreham Hotel's furnace from oil to coal in September, 1942.
I knew furnaces were converted from coal to oil, but I've never heard of oil to coal. I didn't even realize that possible. A byproduct of World War Two shortages?