Friday, August 24, 2007

Non-News

Some Quick Non-News Items from AOL:

"Marine Sergeant Charged With Abusing Recruits"--Well fancy that! This guy must have gone WAY over the edge to make such headlines; maybe he killed 3 or 4 of the newbies. Just as pedophiles go where the action is and become scout leaders, my theory is that sadists go where the pickings are easy and their crimes have become virtues, viz., sergeants drift to boot camps. And yes, I have had the misfortune of going through one basic training regimen in my life and I pray to never go through another. Has anyone ever seen the movie, Full Metal Jacket? That portrayal is pretty close to the basic training I remember; in fact, maybe the film was a little understated. I know that after seeing that raw movie, my young son was cured forever of wanting to run off and become a war hero. The object of U.S. basic training seems to be not only the breaking of the recruit's spirit but the deliberate attempt to turn him into a mindless zombie that, when properly programmed, will do anything his handler says. This mostly works just fine in battle; it can have some messy consequences, however, during times of "peace" and the occupation of won lands. The best fighting force the world ever knew--Spartans included--was the Waffen SS of WWII. These European volunteers who fought for Germany had tough boot camps but the individuals never lost their moral compass, their sense of right and wrong, of good and bad, and they were soldiers top to toe, men who fought, and thought, on their feet. And they held their positions to the death, if need be. Our modern boot camps seem designed to remove a young man's brain and replace it with a computer chip. Ever notice the glazed looks on many of our military men?

"Paris Hilton Caught on Tape Having Sex"--Will wonders never cease? I really do not understand what is AOL's, or anyone's, fascination with this young woman. Does she sing? Does she dance? Play tennis? Philosophize? If she has done any of the above, I have missed it, for all I ever hear of her is either that she is going to jail or has been "caught on tape having sex." Americans have way too much time on their hands. This country needs a great natural disaster, the Second Coming of Christ, or maybe the First Coming of Little Green Men to take its collective mind off such numbingly stupid stuff.

"Astronaut Back in Court"--Lisa Nowak and the kidnapping case. This stuns us. We like to think of our astronauts as above and beyond our petty concerns. Things like jealousy, sex scandals, game shows, and what Paris Hilton is up to, is for we mere terrestrials, not those who have gone into orbit. Astronauts are spacemen (or spacepersons). They have transcended our earthly grubbing, our rooting at the trough, for they have seen our orb from afar, and it was good. They have been transformed. They have touched heaven. They have been closer to god than any of we mere worms down here still slipping and sliming in the primordial ooze. Literally and figuratively, they are above us . . . or should be. What if Neil Armstrong, after walking on the moon, got back down to earth and was jacked for shoplifting or for beating up an old lady? It would sorta take some of the luster out of space travel for us. This poor woman, Lisa Nowak, knows all this; yet when all was said and done, she was after all, but a mere mortal.

(photos: top, left, roach; middle, right, Hawaiian fruit fly; bottom, left, ant)

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Ruts

It's getting harder and harder to find the ruts of the old Santa Fe and Oregon Trails here in the eastern reaches. Up in Wyoming, down in New Mexico, and out in the Far West in general, where the rain is less, not so tuff. But back here, where the trails begin, the weather, the crops, the homes, and the asphalt are slowly stealing our magnificent Western heritage. I remember as a teenager that during the summers when we put up hay we slaves had to hold on for dear life as the tractor hauled the wagon over the old Oregon ruts, so deep and wide were they. These are now gone; gone to make way for an extra two lanes of the Kansas Turnpike. Another year, while in college, I followed the Oregon Trail easily one spring day by looking for wide dips in the green wheat fields west of Lawrence. The trail was not the narrow ruts one might imagine, but fifty to one hundred yards wide. Now, these too are gone, covered with back yards. My greatest "trail thrill" came ten years ago. I was out in far western Kansas. I was trying to locate the real (as opposed to the accepted) site of the 1874 German Family Massacre. We were moving slowly in the jeep, paralleling the old Butterfield Stage ruts that ran from Leavenworth to Denver. As it ran through the yucca and cactus, the trail was almost perfectly preserved. Suddenly, my guide, a young rancher from the area, pointed "Look over there, Tom." Standing motionless in the middle of the trail, not fifty feet from us, was are large herd of pronghorn antelope. When they finally realized we were who they thought we were, they were gone in a flash. That wild, wonderful sight will live in my memory forever.

Little Laurel Obermueller,
along with her momma and daddy, arrived here today and will stay for a week or so. With my limited knowledge of German, I would guess that this name means something like "I'm in charge!" The little tyrant. Deb, Noel and I just drop the "Laurel Obermueller" part and call her LuLu Rottenbrat. A photo her mother sent us last year showed LuLu's group of pre-schoolers back in Charlotte marching in a parade. All the kids were doing what little kids normally do in a parade, except one: LuLu, like some tiny traffic cop, was directing traffic! That's what I mean. We look forward to this little Carolina cowgirl, our granddaughter, for the next week--she is a party pistol.

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Huzzah!

Our friend, Joe Houts, of St. Jo, Mo, sent this a moment ago. It is the final, finished trailer for the movie, The Assassination of Jesse James, by the Coward Robert Ford. Looks like this film will be a keeper. Check it out:

http://movies.aol.com//movie/the-assassination-of-jesse-james-by-the-coward-robert-ford/26180/video/trailer-no-2/1960752

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

A Bit on Buck

As Deb mentioned the other day in her blog ("Buck . . . at last!" 8.18.07) we traveled to a really swank country club in Wichita last week for the Wrap Party of Ken Spurgeon's new film, Bloody Dawn. Buck Taylor, who narrates this documentary film on the Lawrence Massacre, was greeting folks at the door when we arrived. Everything Deb and I were hoping Buck would be, he was . . . and then some. Down-to-earth, folksy, easy, breezy; although he was born and bred in the wide open spaces of Hollywood where his pappy, Dub, had herded the family during his long movie career, "Buck" is an aptly named buckaroo. Now living on the Staked Plains of West Texas, with his beautiful wife, Goldie, Buck is a real rootin', tootin', shootin' cowboy from the Brazos River Valley. The fact that Chill Wills, John Wayne and other famous Western stars were frequents at the Taylor home in southern California may explain why Buck grew up with such a strong whiff of mesquite about him.

Some Buck Taylor trivia:

Buck has had roles in such films as Tombstone, The Alamo and Grand Champion.

Buck also appeared in some classic Westerns, including Have Gun Will Travel with Richard Boone and The Rebel with Nick Adams.

Buck appeared in the Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet and My Favorite Martian.

Before Buck landed the long-standing role as "Newly O'Brian" on Gunsmoke, he actually guest-starred on the series as a villain.

Buck has had a role in 50 films.

Buck was recently inducted into the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame.

Buck's movie career began in 1963 with a part in the movie Johnny Shiloh.

Buck named his third son "Glenn" after fellow Gunsmoke cast member, Glenn Strange ("Sam" the bartender).

Buck named his second son "Matthew" after James Arness' Gunsmoke character, Marshall Matt Dillon.


An extremely talented and sought-out artist whose Western themes are as good as anything out there today (left), Buck still rides the rodeo circuit. In fact, in Wichita the other night he was wearing a gorgeous championship belt buckle he had won just two weeks before. Give Buck a buzz:
http://www.bucktaylor.com/

And BTW: Who was the Hollywood genius that cast Buck Taylor--one of the nicest, gentlest people I have ever met--as a villain in Gunsmoke?

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Tom,

While working on the project from Hell, I ran across the fact that Edward Masterson had been buried in the Ft. Dodge military cemetery. I was hoping that with your knowledge & connections you could perhaps shed some light on why that was. According to a Dodge City newspaper article I've just read, Masterson (right) expired in Dodge City so it wasn't a question of having been taken to the fort for medical treatment. Following is the link for the Ft. Dodge Interment Register page showing Masterson (line 137) as well as a neat site featuring articles from Dodge City newspapers.

http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/special/military/vitals/images/burialreg/v1-51.jpg

http://www.legendsofamerica.com/ks-dodgehistoricaltext.html


Billy Markland
Overland Park, Kansas

TG (to George Laughead, Wild West expert): hey, george...............can you help me out w/this guy? i know squat.............hope all is good out your way...met some folks from kinsley friday night...........he is a reenactor who looks like the quaker oats man; white beard, quaker-like hat, etc............said they were in the tornado there in late may, just like we were...................tom of topeka

Hi, Tom and Bill,

Ed was buried at Ft. Dodge because all good citizens were before a 'nice' cemetery was set up north east of Dodge City--only the rough or unknown were buried on Boot Hill. Ed was moved, as were many, from Ft. Dodge to the nice new Prairie View Cemetery, but then--when another new cemetery was started west of Dodge City decades later, they couldn't find Ed. (Wooden markers, etc., had burned over the years. No relatives in area to keep up grave, et al.) Bat Masterson, after 1900 or so, famously tried to put a marker on Ed's site, but no one was sure where he is. I do think that in a group grave of unknowns it is probable that Ed is with us--at least we stand by that 'fact'.

George Laughead (left)
Dodge City, Kansas

George,

Many thanks for the quick response. I owe you one! It was just something I had spotted and became curious about. Of course, the last time I became curious about something on the West was about 4 years ago and I ended up working on a project that I am still working on (sometimes affectionately called the Project From Hell!). Anyway, it is a shame that the interment register does not indicate whether Ed was removed to Fort Leavenworth with the soldiers or not. I suspect not but it would be nice to be sure. There is no Masterson who died in 1878 buried under that name in any of the National Cemeteries per the Nationwide Gravesite Locator Service on the web.

Billy

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Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Odds & Nods

If a man is what he wears, then I am a woman. All my life, because of laziness and indifference, women have dressed me. First my Mom, then my first wife, then Deb. They went out on shopping raids and returned with this shirt or that pair of pants and I would wear them; they all three knew/know that if they didn't buy me my clothes, I would wear the rags until they fell from my body. Friday night, this slothful, slovenly, shameful condition came back to bite me in the buttski. I knew I was gaining some tonnage and my clothes options were narrowing. But imagine my surprise and chagrin when I readied myself--at the last minute, of course--to go to the Wichita Wrap Party with our friends, Dan and Carol Ann Turner, and not a pair of dress pants did me my body fit. The button on the only slacks that I could even get around my belly promptly popped off. In desperation, Deb called Carol Ann and asked if Dan had some clothes I could wear. Dan, a bit bigger and a tad more ample around the waist, provided me with almost-perfect fits. In humor, in embarrassment, I asked my friend if he had any socks, shoes and underclothes I could also wear, and if I could borrow his razor and toothbrush.

Deb up at Fort Leavenworth today working for the feds on a project and, no doubt, flirting with everything in pants. The second-in-command up there, Gen. O'Neill (a three-star, I think), called the other day and said he would join us for lunch in a few weeks when Deb's tour rolls onto post. Poor man.

Quick thoughts on an anniversary: Today is the 140th-something anniversary of the Lawrence (Kansas) Massacre. As I type (8:55 AM), back then Quantrill and his 450 guerrillas were just leaving town. When they rode in that morning at five past five Lawrence was the second largest city in the state (pop. 3,000); when they left, the town was fifth, sixth, seventh, or tenth. Driving through Lawrence today one might think that the impact of the raid is something long gone dead dog in the past. Lawrence is a large and growing city today and its future seems bright. But something not noticed by all newcomers, and most oldcomers, is this: Lawrence is still ranked only fifth, sixth, or seventh in population. After its great setback in 1863, Lawrence never did recover its title as "second city." Indeed, it was only within the last few decades that Lawrence really got over the raid and began to boom.

(photos: top, right, Galaxy NGC; lower left, Uranus.

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Monday, August 20, 2007

Terror 4


At dawn of Friday, August 21, 1863, William Quantrill and 450 pro-Southern guerrillas, surprised and captured Lawrence, Kansas. Many of you history buffs are aware of what then took place. For the next four hours Quantrill and his men engaged in an orgy of looting, burning and killing. When the raiders finally left at 9 that morning, the second largest city in Kansas was almost totally destroyed and more than 150 men lay dead. While some of you are familiar with the general outline of what has come be known as the Lawrence Massacre, the story of the immediate aftermath is less well-known. The following account is from my book, Bloody Dawn.

As the work progressed into the evening, a lookout on Mount Oread, watching the activity below, happened to glance south toward the Wakarusa. There to his horror he saw rising from the valley floor an all-too-familiar sight--smoke and flame. Without a second thought the rider flew down the hill and galloped into town, screaming with all the power in his lungs, "They are coming again, they are coming again; run for your lives, run for your lives."

With these startling words reserves cracked, then crumbled, and suddenly there was nothing left. In a moment, as if from one mind, panic seized all, and like a cannon shot the race from Lawrence instantly became a stampede. Someone rang the armory bell but no one was fool enough to rally. Men who had naively held to their homes at the onset of the first raid and who thus experienced the most terrifying hours of their lives didn't wait around for the second, but broke from town at a run, hair streaming in the wind. Women, whose courage hadn't wavered during the Friday attack and whose poise had been a comfort to all, now caved in completely and became "utterly unstrung." Men, women, children--all raced blindly, filling the streets with a bedlam of sobs, shrieks, and shouts, expecting the slaughter to overtake them with every bound.

Run for your life . . . Quantrill is coming back and will kill all of us . . . Run to the country, Quantrill is coming . . . . Take your children and run . . . Quantrill is coming!

After a few short minutes the dust had settled. The town was deserted. Except for a few wounded, not a soul, black or white, resident or visitor, was left in Lawrence. As time passed, men on the opposite shore anxiously watched for the attack to begin. But mysteriously, there was only silence. Shortly, one hundred citizens recovered sufficiently to cross back and pass out weapons from the armory. Their plans for a stand went for naught, however, for they soon learned the cause of the lookout's alarm--imprudently, a farmer had chosen this moment to burn off a field of straw.

Knowledge of the error came too late to reach the majority of people, however. Some were far away and still running while others were even further along and had no intention of ever stopping, like the clerk at R & B's, who this time would not pull up until he reached New York and absolute safety. But for the rest, many carrying footsore children, there was no run left, and they simply alit in fields and thickets fringing the town.

That night proved to be one of the coldest, cruelest summer nights in border memory. The temperature plunged, the rain and hail came in sheets, the lightning cracked, the thunder roared, and the wind blew with all the fury of a cyclone. But still--soaked, frozen, and huddled as they were--few ventured back, for the wind and cold and rain were far preferable to Lawrence, where they firmly believed Quantrill was adding the final touches to the bloody work begun on Friday.

One of these miserable refugees, seeking an answer to it all, later questioned his aged father. "Why have we been so terribly punished? Why so infinitely worse than any other place in all the history of this war? Why beyond comparison and precedent?" After brief reflection on the territorial days of the fifties, the war on the border and the sagging fortunes of the South in the sixties, of the bloody days of rampage when Lane, Jennison, and their Jayhawkers had turned western Missouri inside out, the son found the answer to his own question. "It has come," he finally admitted, "and they have had their revenge."

But another, angrier than the first, and speaking for a great many more than the first, considered the scales once more uneven.

"Oh! God!" he implored heaven, "Who shall avenge?"

Who shall avenge? Surely they had not been forsaken. Surely, no matter the past sins, surely they had not been so entirely and utterly abandoned. Surely a just and righteous God, even while his children were being returned to dust, must have parted the clouds and sent fiery bolts, red with uncommon wrath, thundering down to smite the devil's host. Surely somewhere between heaven and hell the fiends had been brought to bay and slaughtered as they stood. Surely they had. Where then had it happened? When had it occurred? Who then, oh God, had indeed avenged?

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Sunday, August 19, 2007

Terror 3

At dawn of Friday, August 21, 1863, William Quantrill and 450 pro-Southern guerrillas, surprised and captured Lawrence, Kansas. Many of you history buffs are aware of what then took place. For the next four hours Quantrill and his men engaged in an orgy of looting, burning and killing. When the raiders finally left at 9 that morning, the second largest city in Kansas was almost totally destroyed and more than 150 men lay dead. While some of you are familiar with the general outline of what has come be known as the Lawrence Massacre, the story of the immediate aftermath is less well-known. The following account is from my book, Bloody Dawn.


When he wasn't helping out around town, Peter Ridenour was at the bedside of his friend. "Well, Mr. Ridenour, I am gone up," Harlow Baker had whispered when his partner rushed into the room on Friday. But though he wasn't given much hope by others and could barely breathe, Baker surprised everyone, including himself, by continuing to hang on.

And so the old friend stayed by his side, waiting for the end--fetching ice, tending the wounds, chatting. Jokingly, Ridenour admitted that the only reason he was sitting around this moment was because of a few potato plants and a garden bed he'd hugged so dearly that a leaf might have covered him. His home was gone, he added even though he had naively taken the precaution of locking the door. But the two young clerks had made it. After running so long and hard that his feet bled, the athletic New Yorker hadn't stopped until he had reached Leavenworth. There, he went straight to a family friend, Governor Tom Carney, and borrowed money enough for clothes and a one-way ticket east. But after some rest and reflection he had hesitated. The boy had come back today on the Leavenworth stage. Although admittedly he had never been so scared in his life, not even at Gettysburg, the youth discovered that indeed he had survived the battlefield and now, although his feet were very tired and sore, he had survived Black Friday as well.

Ridenour didn't mention to his partner that the business was wiped out. Five years of savings had vanished in a blink when the banks were looted. The store's huge inventory was also gone and although their insurance covered most everything, including fire, a clause excluded "invading enemies." There were also many outstanding debts and no way to meet them. Although he didn't burden his friend with business matters, Peter Ridenour had already taken the first faint look down the long road back. He was yet young and strong and energetic and his name was respected by all. And if he lived long enough, every creditor would get his due. The store's safe with the books and a modest sum of cash had somehow weathered the storm and if one put stock in such things, there was a benign omen of sorts--the salt wagons from Leavenworth had arrived and were now parked outside the gutted store.

But while he sat and waited and watched his old friend suffer, the thought uppermost on Mr. Ridenour's mind was not salt or creditors or even the store, but whether the partnership, the friendship, would continue as always or if the B would yet be stricken from R & B.

Early Sunday morning at the usual time, work was set aside while a few citizens gathered to worship. They were women and children mostly at the Reverend Cordley's church, dirty and disheveled and dressed in men's work clothes. No one said much. For some, the press of the past two days had been a sore test of faith, and a moment's respite to collect their thoughts and drift in meditation was a welcome balm. There were whispers and silent prayers and then a passage from Psalms, verse 79:

O God, the heathen are come into thine inheritance. They have laid Jerusalem in heaps. The dead bodies of thy servants have they given to be meat unto the fowls of the heaven and the flesh of thy saints unto the beasts of the earth. Their blood they have shed like water round about Jerusalem, and there was none to bury them. After a moment more of silence, work was resumed.

Again, as the heat of the day approached, workers were made aware of their dilemma. The coffin building was not keeping pace with the decay of the bodies. The caskets that came from Leavenworth helped, but there simply were not enough coffins there nor in all Kansas to meet the needs. And more victims were being found. At last, in desperation, it was decided to dispense with formalities altogether and inter the more advanced cases with as much speed as possible. Into a long, deep trench gouged from the cemetery ground, forty-seven black and bloating bodies were finally lowered down. Similar burials, like that of Judge Carpenter and Edward Fitch, took place in backyards. With this, some of the terrible trauma and urgency began mercifully to wear off.

More help came from the countryside and another large wagon train of food, clothing, and supplies arrived from Leavenworth. Visitors continued to enter the city, some to aid and some simply to gawk and assess the destruction. Early estimates placed the damage in the millions of dollars, with over $250,000 stolen in currency alone. Almost every businessman and merchant was totally cleaned out. Still, there were increasing murmurs of rebuilding and renewed investments. Flagging spirits began to revive somewhat as a few took heart. Included among the strangers in town were a number of correspondents and illustrators from large Eastern newspapers who began sketching scenes and taking down eyewitness accounts. A few unabashed individuals came forward with their stories. One black man related that when the raiders had entered Lawrence on Friday morning, he had dashed over the meadows south of town and hid in a tree above the Wakarusa, outlegging his imagined pursuers and establishing some kind of record for the three-mile course. When asked about the feat, his simple reply: "The prairie just came to me." Another man, a dentist, described his escape and return to Lawrence and his utter amazement to find that, though everything else was gone, the Rebels had entirely overlooked his inventory of gold and silver plate.

Others had similar tales to tell, though not always so jocose. They told of a morning replete with hairbreadth escapes and terror, of miracles, irony, and death. But as the journalists scribbled away, always from each new tale there surfaced the same consistent theme--the steely defiance and grit of the women. Almost all their acts, although carried out under fantastic duress, were marked by an uncanny degree of calmness and courage. Instances of their heroism, their "sand," ran on. There was Lydia Stone: When the Eldridge prisoners became frightened of retaliation, the young woman, risking her own life, raced down the riverbank in the teeth of the soldiers' bullets waving a hanky for them to stop. There was Kate Riggs: By grabbing the horse's bridle and hanging on until she had been dragged around the house and over a woodpile, the tenacious woman succeeded in saving her husband Sam from the monster Skaggs. There were Elizabeth Fisher, Eliza Turner, and a score of equally doughty heroines. And never had female ingenuity been better displayed, from the "nieces" of Aunt Betsie to the woman who saved not only a featherbed to sleep on but a neighbor man as well, whom she rolled up inside and carried to safety. Another woman fooled the Rebels by burning oily rags in kettles, thereby making it appear that her home was engulfed in flames.

And even after their bravery and resourcefulness saved many a man and home, the women's work had but begun. When the initial shock had passed, many, like the "ministering angel," Lydia Stone, carried on, moving with quiet grace among the crowds of victims, "attending to their wants and speaking words of comfort and cheer."As Sunday wore on, the women, arms scorched, hair singed, continued their labors with an air of increasing confidence. Some optimistically saw in their great trial a hidden treasure. Although they left little else in Lawrence, the guerrillas overlooked something very precious nonetheless, something that could not be burned with a torch or strapped on a packhorse: Courage--the only thing in life that really mattered. When all else was taken, this at least remained and gleamed more brilliantly than ever before. Then others took note and drew inspiration from a familiar sight at the river's edge. Amid the ruin and devastation the old liberty pole stood straight and tall, defiantly holding its ground. Even the tortuous hot spell was at an end. Late in the day a refreshing north wind kicked up, clearing and cooling the air. If the truth be known, for many of these women, as well as the surviving men, there was within them the dawning of that warm and golden glow that shines only in the hearts of those who have faced off with the worst in life and come away victorious. For Lawrence, the worst had come. The trial had passed. There was nothing more from life to fear.

(continued tomorrow)

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Kaw River Crawdad





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