Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts

Monday, October 27, 2014

The Last Great Walk

Curtis, Wayne. The Last Great Walk: The True Story of a 1909 Walk from New York to San Francisco, and Why It Matters Today. New York: Rodale. 2014. Print.



First Sentences:
At twenty-five minutes past four on a clear, chilly late winter afternoon in 1909, an elderly man walked out of the main New York post office, opposite City Hall in lower Manhattan, and paused for a moment on the uppermost step.


















Description:

Wayne Curtis in his fascinating book The Last Great Walk: The True Story of a 1909 Walk from New York to San Francisco, and Why It matters Today interweaves the facts of Edward Payson Weston's 3,900 mile walk across the United States in 1909 along with significant related topics such as how man began to walk, styles of walking, the development of quality roads, the conflict between pedestrians and automobiles, and the current state of walking in today's society.

Edward Weston was known as The Walking Man for his many long distance walks throughout his life. His first walk resulted from losing a bet that Stephen Douglas would win the 1860 presidency election. The loser (Weston) had to walk 430 miles from Boston to Washington DC in 10 days and witness the presidential inauguration. Weston, although at first doubtful he could complete that distance, actually found the walk an easy, enjoyable experience. He fully intended to walk back Boston a few weeks later but had to alter his plans due to the outbreak of the Civil War that made walking on roads in that area dangerous.

Over the next years he walked 5,000 miles in England and 1,200 miles from Portland, Maine to Chicago in 30 days on a $10,000 bet. He was a showman who advertised his challenges to raise money and also see the flocks of people who cheered him along the way.

But his biggest challenge and the subject of this book was to walk from New York to San Francisco in 100 days. It would require approximately 8.2 million steps - about 80,000 per day (compared with the average American today who takes about 5,000 steps daily). Weston would have to walk over rural and non-existent roads as only 6% of US roads were paved in 1909). He trained by walking 25 - 30 miles each day for months.

The weather was consistently horrendous throughout the journey, with stiff winds that blew him off the road, snow, rain, and mud; all difficult elements that make him re-think his decision to start the trip in winter to commemorate his 70th birthday. That's right, he was 70 years old when he set out from New York City in 1909.

He braved walking across a train trestle (after being reassured that no trains were coming) which spanned the Missouri River. It was one mile long and 150' high, giving him frightful nightmares for days after. In the covered snow tunnels in Montana, he had to press himself flat against the wall as trains shrieked past him only one foot away. Sometimes he walked 35 miles without seeing a house where he could get rest and food after his accompanying car broke down and had to be abandoned. 

In the end, he averaged 38 miles a day over the 3,925 miles, including 2,500 miles walking on railroad tracks to avoid the ankle-deep muddy roads. He walked 1,800 miles alone without a support vehicle, wore out three pairs of shoes, and estimated his money spent as $2,500 (about $60,000 today). To offset costs, he sold photos of himself, gave lectures along the way, and received free lodgings and meals from hotels which he promoted in his articles and interviews.

But The Last Great Walk has much more to offer besides this fascinating man and his travels. Woven into Weston's walk is detailed research into the invention and rise in popularity of automobiles, walking styles, and the dangers of walking (in 1909, 60 people were killed and 1,200 injured in Chicago alone). Author Curtis explains the term "jaywalking," created to convince people not to walk so randomly in streets, has nothing to do with birds. 
["Jay" was] slang for a rural rube or country bumpkin: Only someone who didn't know the ways of the city would cross in the middle of a block ... framing the debate to make urbane city residents fearful of being thought a hick.
While these details might sound like a distraction from the Weston trans-America walk, they actually add tremendously to our understanding of the world of 1909, the magnitude of Weston's feat, and the progress of walking, roads, and automobiles. I found I loved reading these details as much as the trek itself. 

In the end I simply enjoyed following this small, determined 70-year-old man and his quests to walk longer and longer distances to promote health and to just show everyone he could do it at any age. His philosophy was always the same: pedestrianism is something all people can benefit from. After his second cross-country walk, he sums\med it up:
"Anyone can walk....It's free, like the sun by day and the stars by night. All we have to do is get on our legs, and the roads will take us everywhere."
Weston might have been the inspiration for cancer survivor Thomas Cantley who just last week completed his own 4,000 mile trans-America walk while pushing a 6' ball to raise awareness for testicular cancer. Long distance walking clearly still has the power to captivate the attention and imagination of casual walkers like me. Well done, Weston and Cantley! And well done to author Curtis for resurrecting Weston's story of determination.

Happy reading. 


Fred

If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Bryson, Bill. A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail

This is a little more humorous long walk as writer Bill Bryson attempts the 2,100 mile Appalachian Trail. Along with his cranky companion Katz (who throws out all their food in the first few miles because it was too heavy), Bryson comments on nature, the people they encounter, and the joys and sorrows of hiking for distance..

White, Dan. The Cactus Eaters: How I Lost My Mind - and Almost Found Myself - on the Pacific Crest Trail (P.S.)
Young couple other decide to test their lack of skills against the 2,650 mile Pacific Crest Train on the West Coast snaking up from Mexico to Canada. Love, insanity, harsh words, and cactus-eating occurs.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Here Is Where

Carroll, Andrew. Here Is Where: Discovering America's Great Forgotten History. New York: Crown Archetype. 2013. Print


First Sentences:

Here is where it all began: the Exchange Place PATH station in Jersey City, New Jersey, just across the Hudson River from Manhattan.


This is the spot that sparked my almost compulsive desire to seek out unmarked history sites throughout the country.











Description:

"Unmarked history" are words in the first sentences that caught my attention. Certainly, we all have seen monuments and plaques erected to commemorate major events in American history. But what are these "unknown" occurrences that have slipped under our radar, yet have had a profound impact on our lives?


Andrew Carroll sets out to inform readers of such forgotten, yet important occurrences in American history and the people who made them happen in his absolutely fascinating book, Here Is Where: Discovering America's Great Forgotten History. From technological advancements to crimes, medical discoveries to forgotten patriots, Carroll researches and then visits these overlooked locations, as well as digging out historians and experts to provide insight. 

Carroll is collector of historical minutia culled from "obscure magazines and journals or cited in footnotes and parenthetical asides from out-of-print books." Over the years, he has filled twenty-four filing cabinets with references to little-known events, people, and sites. Finding his calendar clear after losing his job and girlfriend, Carroll decides he is finally free to follow up on these tantalizing tidbits of history. Here Is Where is the end result of six months research about selected events and planning the journey, and six additional months for the travel itself.    


Each chapter opens with an historical quote or snippet from a first-hand account to provide some insight about the historical event. Carroll then retells that story, introducing the people involved as well as the importance of the event. He is a riveting storyteller so these forgotten events take on a vital life with his clear, passionate backgrounds.


Lastly, he explores the site, talking with local experts and often family members to cull their memories. Some sites are now parking lots, some off-limits to civilians (which lead to repercussions later for Carroll), and some are still standing. Often, information he uncovers leads to side trips to related cases of equal fascination which he is careful to document as well. Then he is off to the next destination, criss-crossing the country from Niihau, Hawaii to Daniel Boone's grave.


And what interesting stories and people does he uncover along the way?

  • Phil Farnsworth, who invented television broadcasting, but through unbelievably bad luck never profited from his discovery;
  • A correction from the New York Times to Robert Goddard (father of the liquid fueled, multi-staged rocket), published in 1969 after the moon landing, to apologize for the paper's January 1920 comments mocking Goddard's intellect and belief that a rocket could reach the moon;
  • The illegal, but necessary practice of grave-robbing in the 1800's to procure corpses for medical studies;
  • The accidental discovery of penicillin and then the difficulty of brewing large amounts during World War II to make "as indispensable to the Allied war effort as any weapon" during World War II;
  • Dr. Maurice Hilleman who "possibly saved more lives than any other scientist" with his vaccines for mumps, measles, rubella, pneumonia, and 35 other diseases; 
  • D.B. Cooper and Richard McCoy, the only men who successfully hijacked a jet, demanded money, and then parachuted to safety, were probably the same man; 
  • "More that twenty-five thousand Navy and Army Air Corps troops were killed within the United States during World War II ... represent[ing] one out of every sixteen U.S. fatalities in the war"
Other histories relate Carroll's search for the disputed resting places of the bones of Thomas Paine and Daniel Boone along with the circumstances behind their mysterious burials. He recounts how the body of Pete Ray, the only US aviator shot down over the Bay of Pigs in Cuba, was finally returned to his family after being held on ice for 18 years by Cuba (which tried to bill his daughter $36,000 for the refrigeration costs).

Need more? There is the fascinating history of the Spanish Influenza in America and one man's search 90 years later in Alaska for remnants of the virus; the discovery of anesthesia in 1844 by a dentist who noticed, during a public demonstration of laughing gas, that after he took a hit on the gas, he felt no pain in the leg he gashed when leaving the stage. (Previously, all surgical operations from dentistry to mastectomies were done without pain-killers of any type. Yikes!) And there is the first person to scale Pikes Peak in 1857, J.A. Archibald, a woman.


I have a friend who judges non-fiction books by both their last sentences as well as their first ones. It is an odd idea, but one he explained as useful to judge whether the author can keep up the quality writing style to the very end. Peeking at last sentences won't spoil a non-fiction book like it might a novel (e.g., The Odds), so I snuck a look at the last-sentence of Here Is Where. And he's right. The book's final sentences continue to deliver passionate writing, wonderfully portraying the importance of remembering the historical events presented:
"At its best, history nurtures within us humility and gratitude. It encourages respect and empathy. It fosters creativity and stimulates the imagination. It inspires resilience. And it does so by illuminating the simple truth that, whether due to some cosmic fluke or divine providence, it's an absolute miracle that any one of us is alive today, walking around on this tiny sphere surrounded by an ocean of space, and that we are, above eveything else, all in this together."
In all, an addictive narrative on America's forgotten history and people, carefully explained by someone who is fascinated with what he is finding and why it all matters and must be preserved. 

Happy reading. 


Fred
www.firstsentencereader.blogspot.com
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If this book interests you, be sure to check out:

Randall, Willard Sterne, and Nahra, Nancy. Forgotten Americans: Footnote Figures Who Changed American History  
Interesting profiles and activities of 15 little-known shapers of America, including Tadeusz Kosciuszko (Immigrant Army), Tecumseh (Indian Nation), Louis Sockalexis (original Cleveland Indian in baseball), etc.

Overlooked people and events at are both fascinating and informative, including men who flew before the Wright brothers. the origin of "Taps," whether Britain owns California, and the truth behind the Boston Tea Party.