7|10|2011 #museum, #history

Apollo Moon Flag

Portions of fabric clipped from the U.S. flag before it was planted on the moon by Neil Armstrong in the Apollo 11 mission are being offered Sunday by Ira and Larry Goldberg auctioneers, 11400 W. Olympic Blvd, Suite 800. Lot 1209 has an estimated sale price of $100,000-$150,000.  NYT

Cubs Pendant 1908 A pendant presented to Chicago Cubs executive Charles Williams honoring the teams 1908 world championship is being offered by Hunt Auctions. Estimated sale price is $20,000 to $30,000. Phil Rogers of the Chicago Tribune has the story.

Meanwhile, Christian Lopez ends up with the ball from Derek Jeter’s No. 3,000, but turned it over to Jeter. In return, he received season tickets for the remaining home games, and three bats, three balls and two jerseys, all signed by Jeter. A nice feature by Sam Borden in the NYT

Captain America The Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee, Wis., is displaying one of its custom motorcycles created for the film “Captain America.” The bikes are Cross Bones modified to look like a 1942 WLA Army motorcycles. The museum says the company made about 70,000 WLA motorcycles during the war.

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Movieland Mystery Photo [Updated+]

July 9, 2011, Mystery Photo

[Update 2: Margaret Campbell and Gertrude Olmstead in “Monte Carlo,” 1926. ]

[Update: Please congratulate Mike Hawks for identifying the mystery gal on the left right!]

Here’s another mystery photo, courtesy of Steven Bibb. Thanks!

June 29, 1939, Margaret Campbell

June 29, 1939: Campbell’s son, Campbell McDonald, admitted killing his mother in her sleep and was committed to Mendocino State Hospital.]

There’s another photo on the jump….

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Posted in Film, Hollywood, Mystery Photo, Photography | Tagged , , , | 14 Comments

Michael Jackson – Art Collector

Michael Jackson "Leave Me Alone."

Is Michael Jackson’s art collection with $900 million? Well, maybe not.

Dylan Howard of Star magazine writes: Michael Jackson secretly left behind an almost billion-dollar secret art fortune that is now at the center of an international tug of war, Star has exclusively learned.

But not so fast:

Ashton Cooper of ArtInfo.com writes: When the news broke recently that Michael Jackson had a $900 million art collection, most people probably had the same reaction: Michael Jackson had a $900 million art collection?! Furthermore, all but the most fanatical of Jackson fans were probably unaware that the late singer was himself a visual artist.

And the appraiser?

Photo: Michael Jackson: “Leave Me Alone.”

Posted in Art & Artists, Crime and Courts, Music | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Gen. Custer — ‘Living History’

Steve Alexander Steve Alexander is giving his “living history” portrayal of Gen. George Armstrong Custer on Saturday at the Michigan Historical Center in Lansing as part of its “Plowshares into Swords” exhibit marking the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. The museum is also displaying the “Custer flag” before it returns to a private collection.

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Maria Ridulph: McCullough Denies Kidnapping, Killing Girl

Dec. 5, 1957, FBI Agents Hunt Child

Dec. 6, 1957, Maria Ridulph Ted Gregory and Isolde Raftery of the Chicago Tribune, reporting from Seattle, have a jailhouse interview with Jack Daniel McCullough, suspected in the 1957 killing of Maria Ridulph.

“You gotta have evidence. They have nothing,” McCullough tells Trib.

Posted in 1957, Cold Cases, Crime and Courts, Homicide, Seattle | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Another Good Story Ruined – Mulholland and the Valley ‘Conspiracy’

Morrow Mayo, Los Angeles

My L.A. Times colleague Elaine Woo has a first-rate obituary on Catherine Mulholland, author of “William Mulholland and the Rise of Los Angeles.”

One reason Mulholland took on the biography was to provide what she viewed as a more balanced portrayal of her grandfather. I haven’t read the book (I bought it the other day at the Last Bookstore) so I’ll refrain from commenting.

But it is worthwhile to note that the story of the Valley conspiracy, as told in Morrow Mayo’s “Los Angeles,” is so embedded in Southern California’s world view that it is indestructible.

Not that scholars haven’t tried. While researching the 1910 Times bombing last year, I stumbled across a wonderful article by one of my favorite historians, W.W. Robinson, on “Myth-Making in the Los Angeles Area,” published in the March 1963 issue of Southern California Quarterly.

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Posted in 1963, Another Good Story Ruined, Books and Authors, Film, History, Hollywood, Obituaries, San Fernando Valley | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Another Good Story Ruined – Mulholland and the Valley ‘Conspiracy’

7|9|2011, #history, #museum


CT  MET-AJ-1-RAINBOW-BEACH
NEWS


Lauren Viera, writing in the Chicago Tribune, says that the Art Institute of Chicago is quietly conducting a search for a director to replace  James Cuno, who has become president and chief executive of the J. Paul Getty Trust.

Sidebar: Help Wanted

RECOMMENDED

John Keilman of the Chicago Tribune has a terrific story about civil rights groups preparing to dedicate a historic marker at Rainbow Beach, where activists conducted “wade-ins” to integrate the lakeshore 50 years ago.


INDIANA, PA.,

John Marchese of the New York Times visits the Jimmy Stewart Museum and looks at the challenges faced by movie star museums around the country.

Marchese says:   There is a range of curatorial sophistication and collection quality, but what all these places have in common is local pride in the glitzy fame achieved by a native son or daughter, the hope for some tourist dollars in otherwise out-of-the-way places, and often a beginning based on the obsessive collecting of memorabilia by a devoted fan. And they all count on something uncertain: a tireless fascination with big movie stars that continues decades after their last films.

NEW YORK

The Metropolitan Museum’s Young Members Party (ages 21-35) was like “Gossip Girl” meets “Night at the Museum,” one partygoer tells Lizzie Simon, writing in the Wall Street Journal.

Photo: July 9, 1961: Police escort protesters from Rainbow Beach. Credit: Chicago Tribune

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Posted in African Americans, Architecture, Chicago, History, Museums, New York, Philadelphia, Washington | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Wanted: Mickey Cohen on Tape

Mickey Cohen, No Date

I have received an unusual request regarding a film now in production. The folks are looking for the famous/notorious TV interview that Mike Wallace did with Mickey Cohen in 1957. Clips from the interview are on the DVD with Wallace’s book “Between You and Me,” and the complete audio is available. But the movie folks would like to have the complete video. How about it, Brain Trust? Got any Mickey Cohen kinescopes in the closet?

Photo: Mickey Cohen in one of his favorite pastimes: washing his hands. Credit: Los Angeles Times

Posted in 1957, Brain Trust, Film, From the Reference Desk, Mickey Cohen, Television | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Day in Hollywood: July 8, 1941

June 8, 1941, Marines Occupy Iceland
July 8, 1941, Comics
July 8, 1941: I thought it would be fun to check in with our old pals, Lee Shippey, Tom Treanor and Jimmie Fidler.

Lee writes about visiting researchers spending their summers at the Huntington. That’s my idea of a vacation!

Tom, meanwhile, notes L.A.’s annual cycle of destruction:  “I listened to a typical terror item yesterday about the scourge of the carelessly thrown away cigarette. It seems it’s to be an even greater hazard this year. The rains have been so heavy that the underbrush is extra thick and extra inflammable. We’re just one big tinderbox. Look out.”

Garbo and Gayelord Hauser have been taking daily walks in the Brentwood hills, and daily they wind up at the same place — a little Catholic church, Jimmie Fidler says.

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Posted in 1941, Art & Artists, Columnists, Comics, Film, Hollywood, Jimmie Fidler, Lee Shippey, Tom Treanor, World War II | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

University Demolishes Theda Bara’s Former Home

Theda Bara House Xavier University tore down Theda Bara’s former home in Cincinnati. Not for any particular reason. Just because.

Photo: Theda Bara’s former home is demolished. Credit: The Cincinnati Enquirer/Michael E. Keating

Posted in Film, Hollywood, Preservation | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

#history, #museum [Updated]

Crucifix, 1963


April 10, 1963: Firefighters recover a crucifix from Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church. Credit: Detroit News



NEWS

Steve Hindle takes over as research director at the Huntington Library. Pasadena Star- News

The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts reports that its exhibit of the touring show “Picasso:  Masterpieces From the Musée Picasso, Paris” was a blockbuster, generating record attendance of about 250,000 and $2.4 million in ticket revenue.

Jacqueline Trescott, writing in the Washington Post, says that according to Chmura Economics & Analytics, the show brought $26.6 million to the Richmond area and $30 million to Virginia. Virginia Museum of Fine Arts press release

The show is at the
de Young museum in San Francisco through Oct. 9.



The Daily Mirror Recommends

Marney Rich Keenan of the Detroit News has a terrific story about the restoration of a 13-foot crucifix that was salvaged in 1963 after a fire burned Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church.

Keenan says: “Now, 100 years later, the revered Christian symbol and Verbiest family heirloom is once again being rescued. The all-but-forgotten cross — neglected and found on the floor behind an altar at Detroit’s Good Shepherd Church covered by a sheet — will soon be restored to its original beauty. Once refurbished, the crucifix will resume its place of honor for adoration and prayer in a new church home.”

A restoration project at Frank Lloyd Wright’s
Martin House Complex includes duplicating the original windows, many of which vanished over the years. Eve Kahn, writing in the New York Times, has the story.


Did the West Make Newspapers, or Did Newspapers Make the West?

On Stanford University’s Rural West Initiative,
Krissy Clark and Geoff McGhee write:

“The history of newspapers in the rural West is a history of crisis and triumph in alternation. Failure, and bouncing back from it, have been a tradition. And at a time when there is so much talk about the future of newspapers, this past is worth considering. Ironically, this legacy of turbulence finds rural newspapers relatively unscathed by the calamities currently facing many big city papers. Put another way, there is no crisis in rural Western newspapers; the crisis has always been there. And the papers are stronger for it.”



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Posted in History, Museums, Preservation, Religion | Tagged , | Comments Off on #history, #museum [Updated]

Found on EBay – Theda Bara in ‘Salome’

theda_bara_salome_ebay11 A publicity photo of Theda Bara from the lost film “Salome” has been listed on EBay. The vendor says this is an original studio handout, not a reprint. As with anything on EBay, an item and vendor should be evaluated thoroughly before submitting a bid.  Bidding starts at $99.

Posted in Film, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Photography | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

U.S. Returns Looted Items to Iraq

Saddam Painting

Writing in the Washington Post, Jason Ukman says that 30 items looted from Iraq have been returned, with hundreds more to follow. Investigators have been tracking stolen artifacts on Craigslist and Christie’s, among other places.  The recovered items include ancient artifacts and items from Saddam Hussein’s rule.

Ukman says: An estimated 15,000 pieces were stolen from Iraq’s National Museum in pillaging after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, and many more are believed to have been smuggled out since then by U.S. military personnel and contractors. More than half of the items that have turned up in the United States or elsewhere have been repatriated to Iraq, but treasured items remain missing.

Photo: A recovered painting of Saddam Hussein with perspective corrected by the Daily Mirror. Credit: U.S. Department of Homeland Security

Posted in Found on EBay, Museums | Tagged , | 1 Comment

#history, #museum



Cleopatra's Needle

NEWS

The U.S. Justice Department says that oral history interviews are not protected by confidentiality agreements, according to Scott Jaschik on the Inside Higher Ed blog.

Jaschik writes: The U.S. position in the case deals with a number of issues raised by Boston College — some of which don’t relate to issues of academic rights. (For example, the college suggests that release of the records could endanger the peace process in Northern Ireland, and the U.S. rejects that view.)

On the issues related to the rights of researchers and colleges, the brief rejects all of the college’s arguments. The government argues that there is no right of confidentiality a researcher can grant that would withstand a subpoena. The Justice Department notes that Boston College acknowledged in its communication with research subjects that its confidentiality pledges assure privacy “to the extent American law allows,” which the government says isn’t very far in cases like this — whatever implication may have been read into that statement by researchers or by interview subjects.

Reaction by Glenn Reynolds (InstaPundit.com) | James Joyner (Outside the Beltway)

Background on the controversy over oral history interviews with IRA members at Boston College. Boston Globe



FEATURED


My L.A. Times colleague Molly Hennessy-Fiske takes a look at the rush to preserve memories from the Egyptian revolution.

She writes: Archivists at American University in Cairo, the Library of Alexandria and the Egyptian National Library and Archives have separately rushed to chronicle Egypt’s revolution, preserving not just memories and artifacts but the digital ephemera that set this uprising apart: videos, photographs, Facebook and Twitter posts. American University students have started a separate project to translate documents related to the revolution and post them online.

The Daily Mirror Recommends:

NEW YORK

New York’s Department of Parks and Recreation is studying whether pollution is damaging Cleopatra’s Needle, a Central Park landmark since 1881.

According to Francie Diep and Joseph Castro, writing on the New York Times’ always interesting City Room blog, Egypt’s minister of antiquities, Zahi Hawass, said New York’s weather was damaging the obelisk and warned in January that he would  “take the necessary steps to bring this precious artifact home.” Hawass’ statement is here.

Photo: Cleopatra’s Needle. Credit: Wikipedia

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‘Zoot Suit’ and History – Part 4

June 8, 1943, Zoot Suit Riots

June 8, 1943: A mob of servicemen block a streetcar on Main Street to remove a passenger wearing a zoot suit.


June 7, 1943, Zoot Suiters
This was supposed to be an easy – if long – post to wrap up the Zoot Suit Riots. But research took another path, because The Times ignored the first days of the riots. I’m used to The Times making some incredibly dumb news decisions in its history, but not covering these events is still pretty shocking. I can’t imagine what they were thinking.

Anyway, there will be a slight detour into further research. I hope you’ll enjoy the scenic route!

To recap: I decided to take a look at the historical background of the Zoot Suit Riots after seeing “Zoot Suit” in the Los Angeles Conservancy’s Last Remaining Seats series.

In Part 1, we saw that The Times initially treated the zoot suit as a youthful fad, but the attitude changed once zoot suits were outlawed by the War Production Board to conserve fabric.

In Part 2, Times columnist Timothy Turner provided some more sympathetic insight (zoot-suiters aren’t all criminals and delinquents) that was a surprising counterpoint to the mainstream opinion.

In Part 3, we looked at the events leading up to the Zoot Suit Riots of June 1943.

Here’s our story:

On June 2, 1943, immediately preceding the riots, The Times published this account describing a “zoot suit orgy” in which two women were persuaded to go for a ride with a suspect, but were taken to Elysian Park, dragged into the bushes and “attacked.” I’m presuming they were raped, although the usual newspaper euphemism in this era is “criminally attacked.”  And yes, The Times identified the victims and published their addresses, as did all newspapers in this era.

June 2, 1943, Zoot Suits

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Posted in 1943, Downtown, Fashion, Film, Hollywood, LAPD, Latinos, Zoot Suit | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Found on EBay – Earl Carroll’s Nightclub

Earl Carroll's Ebay 1943
This photo of some young guys having a good time at Earl Carroll’s on Aug. 7, 1943, has been listed on EBay. Bidding starts at $19.95.

Posted in 1943, Found on EBay, Hollywood, Nightclubs, Photography | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

B-26 Heads for Museum [Updated]

June 1, 1944, B-26
Nov. 5, 1944, A-26 Invader

Rick Rouan of the Lancaster (Ohio) Eagle Gazette reports on a B-26 Marauder that is returning to the 1941 Historical Aircraft Group Museum in Geneseo, N.Y., after being restored by the Historical Aircraft Squadron. The plane should arrive in time for the Geneseo Airshow, Thursday through Sunday.

[Update: The June 1, 1944, photo at the top shows a B-26 Marauder. The second story, from Nov. 5, 1944, shows the A-26 Invader, the type of aircraft that was restored.]

Posted in 1944, Museums, World War II | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Soviet Film Posters – Update

Seventh Heaven Regular Daily Mirror reader Gary Martin visited the exhibit of Soviet film posters at the Tony Shafrazi Gallery and files this post:

American museums have all become so look alike and all show such similar works by the same small handful of artists, all of whom apparently knew how to Make Money in the best free market sense, that it is absolutely refreshing to go to the art galleries and to see things that have limited commercial value and that are hardly ever seen under the strictures of corporate America sponsorship. This exhibition of Soviet film posters is a good example of what I mean. I suppose that in a more liberal era we might once have seen these at MOMA, but certainly not in this current climate so rigidly proscribed by lock step Reagan Republicanism. So much for the GOP claim that it is the one true and only path to freedom of expression. Art Ongoing

Photo: “Seventh Heaven.” Credit: Tony Shafrazi Gallery

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#history, #museum

penn_station_eagle David Dunlap has a great story in the New York Times’ City Room about the return of an eagle head, sculpted by Adolph A. Weinman, that was salvaged from the demolition of Pennsylvania Station.

There’s lots more about bits and pieces that have been salvaged from Penn Station – some of them are fairly large.

Imagine my surprise to discover there is an Assn. of Wedding Gown Specialists dedicated to preserving that dream outfit. Writing in the Wall Street Journal, Deborah Lynn Blumberg takes a look four companies that clean and preserve wedding dresses.

The Daily Mirror recommends:

Margherita Stancati, writing in the Wall Street Journal, lists what might be the world’s five greatest treasure troves, pegged to the opening of the vaults at Kerala’s Sree Padmanabhaswamy temple.

Julia Moskin, writing in the New York Times’ Diner’s Journal, highlights Gregory Cohen, one of the nation’s experts on American soda fountains.

Photo: Eagle from Penn Station. Credit: Kelly Shimoda for The New York Times

Posted in History, Museums, Preservation, Transportation | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Maria Ridulph: Ex-Cop Had History of Abuse, Records Show

1957_1205_FBI

1957_1206_ridulph

John O’Connor of the Associated Press files a story from Springfield, Ill., about affidavits submitted against Jack Daniel McCullough in the kidnapping and killing  of Maria Ridulph.

McCullough, a former police officer, was fired over accusations that he molested a teenage runaway in the 1980s, O’Connor says. His ex-wife and others describe sexual and emotional abuse, O’Connor says, as well as allegations that he ran a photography business in his home and brought in prostitutes to take nude photographs of them.

Posted in 1957, Cold Cases, Crime and Courts, Homicide, Maria Ridulph | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Maria Ridulph: Ex-Cop Had History of Abuse, Records Show