Month: January 2015

A Category from the Hall of Fame

Dedicated to Neil deGrasse Tyson

Yesterday, before the blizzard kicked into full gear, I walked around the Hall of Fame for Great Americans at Bronx Community College and snapped some photos. The Hall of Fame is a New York City landmark that was founded in 1900 to honor prominent Americans. The chief architectural feature is the open air colonnade, which showcases bronze busts of the honorees. The categories of endeavor include authors, educators, humanitarians, scientists, statesmen, artists, and explorers; stone plaques along the walkway distinguishes each one. I happened to snap two of the plaques in succession: scientists and teachers. Looking at these two photos reminded me of something I once read. In response to this NY Times article (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/18/nyregion/18kearny.html) regarding the controversy that erupted after a New Jersey high school teacher expressed his religious beliefs in class, Neil deGrasse Tyson wrote:

“People cited violation of the First Amendment when a New Jersey schoolteacher asserted that evolution and the Big Bang are not scientific and that Noah’s ark carried dinosaurs.

This case is not about the need to separate church and state; it’s about the need to separate ignorant, scientifically illiterate people from the ranks of teachers.”

I agree with him.

I thought it fitting that I dedicate these pictures to him. Tyson was born in Manhattan and raised in the Bronx, is an alumnus of Bronx High School of Science and is half Puerto Rican—just like my oldest nephew! He is also someone I can imagine with a bust in the Hall of Fame for Great Americans.

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The Hall of Fame for Great Americans at Bronx Community College

The Hall of Fame for Great Americans at Bronx Community College

Brooklyn Bridge Tower One Plans

Stereoscopic Views Documenting the Building of the Brooklyn Bridge (Part One of Three)

Stereoscopic photography is a technique for creating the illusion of depth in an image via binocular vision.

This three-part blog looks at the stereoscopic photographs taken during the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge. The history of the construction of the bridge as well as the history of stereoscopic photography will also be explored.

PART ONE: From Agrarian to Industrial Nation

The day before the Brooklyn Bridge opened, merchants, in the then City of Brooklyn, prominently displayed a sign in their windows that read:

Babylon had her hanging gardens, Egypt her pyramid, Athens her Acropolis, Rome her Athenaeum; so Brooklyn has her bridge.

Juxtaposing the Brooklyn Bridge with these structural engineering marvels was not premature: the bridge is more than just a span over water because of its innovative design and functionality. The bridge also represents America’s transition from agrarian to industrial society, fostered by the nation’s greatest resource: immigrants. Perhaps the bridge’s greatest achievements are in its visually collective aesthetic qualities: those that anyone, regardless of education or economic status, can understand and appreciate.

The idea for a bridge spanning over the East River was first proposed in 1800 by General Jeremiah Johnson (who would later serve as mayor of Brooklyn), in a pamphlet that examined the topography of Brooklyn:

It has been suggested that a bridge should be constructed across the East River to New York. This idea has been treated a chimerical from the magnitude of the design; but whosoever takes it into their serious consideration will find more weight in the practicability of the scheme than at first sight he imagined.

In other words, the builder of a successful bridge over the East River will have to conceptualize something new and never before attempted. The bridge would have to be able to withstand the elements and not interfere with the busy maritime traffic. Johnson went on to convey, “Every objection to the building of the bridge could be refuted.” A bridge of this magnitude would require vast industrial resources. Industry was something many Americans did not envision for the young nation. This sentiment was echoed, one year after Johnson’s pamphlet was published, when President Thomas Jefferson, in his inaugural speech, conveyed that America’s best defense against the corruption of the old world (crowded fuming cities) was to remain an agrarian society:

“Kindly separated by nature and a wide ocean from the exterminating havoc of one quarter of the globe; too high-minded to endure the degradations of the others; possessing a chosen country, with room enough for our descendants to the thousandth and thousandth generation.”

Rousseau theorized that democracy has “natural limits.” The concept of a republic had been realized in smaller nations, but could it survive on the large scale that America presented? Jefferson realized that in order to assure the Union and benefit from the land, a national system of roads and canals would have to be built. Interestingly, one argument for a bridge over the East River had to do with national security and a safe, viable connection to the nation’s largest city. America had to become an industrial nation in order to survive. Industry breeds technology and technology breeds industry. The day the bridge opened, one article from the New York Times declared, “With the towers and anchorages completed, the stone age, as it may be conveniently called, gave way to the period of steel.” Stone and steel, the materials that comprise the Brooklyn Bridge, also make it a factual, visual representation of the nation’s shift to industry.

SOURCES:

McCullough, David. The Great Bridge. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972

Trachtenberg, Alan. Brooklyn Bridge, fact and symbol. New York: Oxford University Press, 1965

Jefferson, Thomas, Koch, Adrienne, and Peden, William. The Life and Selected Writings of Thomas Jefferson. New York: Modern Library, 1998

Barnett, Clive, Low, Murray. Spaces of Democracy: Geographical Perspectives on Citizenship, Participation and Representation. London: Sage, 2004

“Making The Big Cables” New York Times 24 May 1883

Early Plans for the Brooklyn Bridge, 1857

Early Plans for the Brooklyn Bridge, 1857

People left in the woods to die!

This is the sad state of the world we live in…

Shechaim's News of the Day

Florida the dirty true story of people abuse in America

The United States of America is the richest country in the world, or is it?

It is more and more like the SCUM f the EARTH!

Shame on us!

HH_HOMELESS_VOUCHERS_PKG_tr

http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/9-investigates-thousands-dollars-house-homeless-go/njd2N/

9 Investigates learned that nearly $200,000 federal tax dollars to house the homeless in Orange County went unused.

With so much money available, Channel 9’s Lori Brown asked why people with terminal illnesses are being left to die in the woods.

A group of nurses with the Hope Team head out at 6 a.m. each day to care for people who are living out their final days in the woods in Orange County.

Poor get left in the woods to die in Orange county Florida Lori Brown Channel 9 eye-witness news

http://www.wftv.com/news/news/local/9-investigates-thousands-dollars-house-homeless-go/njd2N/

9 Investigates thousands of dollars to house homeless going unused in Orange County

HOPE TEAM

Homeless Services…

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