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Essentially the Only One

by Richard

Posts tagged with "history"

Trail of Tears State Park

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A trip to Trail of Tears State Park yesterday.

A long two hour drive south of St. Louis. I'd started in bright sunshine but by the time I passed through Ste. Genevieve County, a thin and uniform blanket of cloud cast a gloomy gray over the land. I continued on, hoping it would break, but it did not. So much for any striking photography, I thought to myself.

Nevermind. It was a pleasant drive, listening to audio Dr. Who stories, and as I exited off Interstate 55, I found a Diary Queen for a quick hamburger. Then onto Mo Route 177 and northeast to the park itself.
The Visitor's Center was closed, a fact relayed to me with typical Missouri courtesy by a young man at the top of the stairs I was about to ascend, so drove off up one of the park roads to a lookout area. Here was lovely view of the valley leading down to the Mississippi River and beyond over into Illinois.

Prettier it would have been with a clearer sky and less ground haze, yet in a way it was entirely appropriate for a visit to this park.

For the history behind this beautiful area is far from pretty. This land was campground for many of the 16,000 Cherokee forced from their lands by President Andrew Jackson's 1830 relocation order. Here they waited for the Mississippi River to clear of ice during the severe Missouri winter before moving on. Many lost their lives here, overall it is estimated that 4,000 died during this early example of ethnic cleansing.

Now the river carries tugboats and barges and this land is set aside for the enjoyment of descendents of the settlers whose arrival sealed the fate of the native populations.

Better that than a series of revolting oversized mansions ruining this lovely landscape. At least the Park acts a memorial and reminder of the darker aspects of American history.


I drove on, finding a pretty lake for boating and fishing. I had hoped to hike a little, but it was late and darkening, so I decided to head back and come back another day with more time and hopefully better weather.

As I drove back on Route 177, I noticed a wide area of fields. Pretty in one direction.


But turn my head the other way, and land was filled with a sprawling P&G factory complex.

Strikingly out of place it seemed in this relatively remote landscape, reminding me of similar sights I had seen in Canada of aluminum smelters in the forests of Quebec.

A huge leap in history and custom from the people who originally lived on this land yet providing much needed employment to those now residing here.

Is that photograph real?

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“If you can’t have the perfect family,” she added, “at least you can Photoshop it.”



Interesting NYT article about the supposedly increasing habit of rewriting or reimagining personal family history using Photoshop and other imaging software to create a vision that never actually existed.

As the article points out, there is nothing new about this and for a more in-depth and informed discussion of this subject than I could ever put together, read Errol Morris's superb Zoom blog.

What strikes me, though, about this article is the desire for people to create a family, appearance and history that is not real, yet, somehow, appeals more to them. Is this an act of overwhelming egotism, fantasy fulfillment or simply a way of avoiding confronting unpleasant truths? Perhaps a bit of all of these things. What seems to be missing from the consideration of those who makes these changes is that a photograph is a record that can last beyond the lifetime of those it pictures. Unreal photographs make for unreal history, and who wants to be remembered for what they wish had happened than for what really happened?

Apparently a lot of people.

Not me though.

Too cute to miss

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From another era

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This Thanksgiving, my wife and her sister joined their father in going through some old letters, photographs and postcards that had accumulated over the years. Amongst them was a set of postcards from Russia, including this one that must date from just after the Russian Revolution.

Here are prominent members of the Communist Party - Trotsky (Трóцкий), Lenin (Ленин), Alexandra Kollontai (Коллонта́й), Anatoliy Lunacharskiy (Луначарский), Lev Kamenev (Каменев) and perhaps Nikolai Bukharin. Thanks to Edward, Maria Spiridonova (Спиридонова) and Nikolai Krylenko (Крыленко).

Looking at these youthful faces, most of whom met a violent end thanks to Stalin and all of whom set in motion changes that upended the existing world order, in this placid blue filigree background is a little strange. There's a sort of innocence there that was not to last. I wonder what the designer of the card had in mind; nothing about it strikes one as emblematic of the art of social realism, it's more like the membership photograph of a small group of earnest academics.

There was nothing on the back to give it any family connection, so it was put aside to be discarded. I picked it, and a number of other cards from the same and earlier eras, to keep as I found it had an interesting aura. When you think of the bloody and wrenching changes that befell Russia and Europe afterwards, it feels like a window into a different era.
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