smchealth.org |
Rambling observations on books, history, movies, transit, obsolete technology, baseball, and anything else that crosses my mind.
smchealth.org |
Fort Worth Gazette, 29-November-1895 |
On a cold, snowy Thanksgiving Day, 28-November-1895, the first automobile race in the United States, sponsored by the Chicago Times-Herald, took place. The vehicles were supposed to drive from Chicago to Evanston and back. Notice that the word "automobile" does not appear in the article.
Five of the contestants passed through Lincoln. Duryea started at
8:55 and passed the auditorium, a distance of eight miles, an hour later.
He made the finish at 7:18 p. m., completing the course in ten hours and
twenty-three minutes. For miles on the West Side the boulevards were almost
unbroken fields of snow bank and slush.
The fight for speed honors was between Duryea, Muller and Macey. Duryea
is an American Inventor and his motor is a radical departure from that
of the foreign type used on the wagons of his two competitors.
The carriage with which he made the race was manufactured two years ago.
Since that time Mr. Durvea has made many improvements on his motor, but
was unable to complete the work on the new vehicle which he had entered
for the contest. He accordingly made the run with the old motocycle. The
prizes will be awarded on the showing made in the road race, and in the
scientific tests which have been made under the supervision of the best
experts in the country.
For ten days these tests have been in progress and have been followed with
great interest from hundreds of manufacturers from all parts of the United
States. These tests will prove of great value. The Paris-Bordeaux race was
worthless from a scientific standpoint, but the contest just closed may result
in the establishment of reliable data concerning motocycle manufacture.
The Muller came in second.
Horseless Age, January, 1896 |
www.listal.com |
75 years ago today, on 26-November-1945, Charlie Parker, sax player, composer and music visionary, made his first recordings as a leader for Savoy Records. Charlie Parker and his friend Dizzy Gillespie were two of the founding fathers of bebop. Bird influenced everyone.
There is some debate about who was there. Bird's friend and co-conspirator, trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, mostly played the piano. Young Miles Davis played the trumpet most of the time.
These records became very influential.
Bridgeport Times and Evening Farmer, 22-November 22-1920 |
100 years ago today, on 21-November-1920, Irish Republican Army soldiers assassinated several British undercover intelligence agents. Later in the day, the unionist Black and Tans attacked a crowd in a football stadium, massacring men, women and children. Still later in the day, three IRA men were arrested and taken to Dublin Castle where they were beaten and shot dead while "attempting to escape."
listal.com |
San Francisco Call, 09-February-1899 |
Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 09-February-1899 |
coverbrowser.com |
A-1 Comics number 22, published in 1949, featured movie star Dick Powell during his film noir period. I would like to read this one. Powell started out in movies as a singer and juvenile lead. Around 1944, he decided to change his image. He played Philip Marlowe in Murder My Sweet and went on to play many detectives and other tough guys.
coverbrowser.com |
The cover of this 1930 issue of Battle Stories features "Barrage," a First World War tale by Arthur Guy Empey, who was a prolific writer for the pulps. His most popular character was Terrence X O'Leary, a soldier who became a soldier of fortune, and a flier. Later O'Leary starred in science fiction stories. Empey was a member of the US Cavalry who resigned to volunteer for the British Army during World War One. He was wounded during the Battle of the Somme. When the US entered the war, he tried to rejoin the Army, but was rejected because of his wounds and possibly because of some disparaging comments about American draftees. He wrote a book, Over the Top, about the war:
http://cablecarguy.blogspot.com/2014/08/over-top-chapter-one-august-30-2014.html
listal.com |
I take the Jeopardy test every time it comes up. I was called in for an audition once. Last time I took it, they said they would get back to me in two weeks.
moveon.org |
moveon.org |
Radio-TV Mirror, November, 1951 |
100 years ago today, on Election Night, 1920, Pittsburgh radio station 8ZZ, belonging to Westinghouse, broadcasts election results. Frank Conrad, who had experimented with radio broadcasting, helped to create the transmitter. A few days later, the station became KDKA, which is still on the air in Pittsburgh.
Radio-TV Mirror, November, 1951 |
I just put the October, 2020 version of my Cable Car Home Page on the server:
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/
It includes some new items:
1. Picture of the Month: Ten years ago, the San Francisco Giants won the World Series for the first time since moving to San Francisco in 1958. One window of Car 28 exhorted Giants' rookie catcher Buster Posey.
2. On the Decorated Cable Cars page: Cable car 28 decorated for the Baseball Postseason. Ten year anniversary.
3. Added News items about the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and a newly discovered section of Cal Cable conduit
Ten years ago this month (November, 2010):
1. The picture of the month: Fear the Beard -- A decorated window on Powell/Mason Car 28
2. On the UK page: A new article about the City and South London Railway, the first successful tube railway, which planned to use cable traction. I found some nice illustrations of the system as it was built
3. Added more about J M Thompson (no relation), who was involved in promoting and building cable car lines in Los Angeles, Seattle, and Portland, Oregon to the Who page: His full name, a photo, and a brief biographical sketch from the Street Railway Journal
4. On the How page: A photo of a Washburn and Moen wagon used to deliver cables in San Francisco
5. Added News item about a 60 Minutes report about the 1906 movie A Trip Down Market Street. I updated my own page about the film with a 29-March-1906 newspaper article about the Miles Brothers requesting permission to make the movie.
Twenty years ago this month (Fall, 2000):
1. Picture of the Quarter: Geary and Market
2. Roll out Excerpts From The Octopus page.
3. Join more webrings: Funicular, Trolley & Interurban, Tram, and International Transportation.
150 years ago this month:
On 15-November-1870, the failed West Side and Yonkers Patent Railway in New York City was sold at auction
125 years ago this month:
On 11-November-1895, the Market Street Railway discontinued its Ellis Street line.
75 years ago this month:
On 10-November-1945, an O'Farrell/Jones/Hyde car was forced to stop behind a stalled auto near Lombard. The cable car lost its grip on the cable and ran away backwards down the hill. There were no passengers on the car. Unable to regain control, Gripman EJ Howard and conductor EC Steffen jumped. The car ran a block past the end of the track at Beach and hit the South End Rowing Club.
Coming in December: On the Decorated Cable Cars page: On the Decorated Cable Cars page: A ten year update on the Giants' 2010 World Series victory parade
The Cable Car Home Page now has a Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/CableCarHomePage/
Joe Thompson
The Cable Car Home Page (updated 01-November-2020)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/
San Francisco Bay Ferryboats (updated 31-January-2020)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/ferry/
Park Trains and Tourist Trains (updated 31-July-2019)
http://www.cable-car-guy.com/ptrain/
The Pneumatic Rolling-Sphere Carrier Delusion (updated spasmodically)
http://cablecarguy.blogspot.com
The Big V Riot Squad (new blog)
http://bigvriotsquad.blogspot.com/
Richmond, Kentucky Daily Register, 29-November-1920 |
100 years ago today, on 01-November-1920, the British hanged 18-year-old Irish patriot Kevin Barry. He had been tortured in an effort to get him to reveal the names of his companions in an attack on an army truck that resulted in the death of three soldiers.
Washington Nov. 29 -- A reward of $5,000. full protection and secrecy, and a free pass to any part of the world, -- or death by hanging -- this was the choice given by the British military to Kevin Barry, 18 year old Irish patriot, recently executed for alleged complicity in the Irish troubles.
A letter received today by Mrs. R. E Reardon, 3326 Thirteenth st., from her mother, the widow of an Irish magistrate, gives an intimate picture of the last movements of the young Irishman. The letter quotes' one prominent in public affairs in Dublin as supplying the facts. It was mailed on November 12.
"Kevin Barry was hanged for having attacked a lot of fully armed soldiers and taking their rifles," said the letter. "The day before his death a conditional reprieve arrived from Premier David Lloyd George.
"He was taken out of his cell by two officers ; the scaffold with the rope dangling from the roof, was shown him;.
"If, however, he gave the names of his comrades, he was to get $5000 for each name, full protection, absolute secrecy, and a free pass to any part of the world. He listened attentively, pointed to the scaffold and said :
"I am quite satisfied with the arrangements. They seem to be perfect. Now, take me back to my cell and let me prepare for eternity. I hope never to see any of you again, either here or there."
Barry was a medical student, and the only child of a widowed mother. ' .'