Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Philadelphia

~I've been in downtown Philadelphia lately, and took a few pictures around the area:

The impressive front of Philadelphia City Hall.  The largest municipal building in the world, it was built in the late 19th century and is the world's tallest masonry building (at 548'), constructed of brick and granite walls without a steel frame.  
City Hall from another angle, showing the spire at the top.
A statue of John F. Reynolds, a Union general who died in the Battle of Gettysburg.  I wanted to take a picture of the more dramatic other side, but it was in shadow and my flash didn't go that far -- the statue is surprisingly tall.

Continuing on the subject of Generals, here's a bronze plaque inside City Hall commemorating General Smedley Butler, a two-time Medal of Honor recipient who fought in conflicts across the world in the first half of the 20th century.  He left the marines to become Director of Public Safety for Philadelphia, in charge of the police and fire departments, and was charged with cleaning up the notoriously corrupt police force.  He later said, "cleaning up Philadelphia was worse than any battle I was ever in."

Today, Butler is perhaps best known for his 1933 speech War is a Racket, in which he denounced many of the military interventions he was deployed to as serving a profit motive for well-connected business interests, rather than security or liberty.  The essay is well worth reading and remains disturbingly relevant.

Sculptures on top of a column under City Hall.
More sculptures.  I love the elephant head!

A bear, I assume.

Entrance of the Masonic Temple near City Hall.  The temple was finished around the year 1900 and is a National Historic Landmark.

A statue of Benjamin Franklin, across the street from city hall.




This bizarre statue is located near the Benjamin Franklin statue, and is titled "Government of the People".  For an explanation of what it represents, see here: http://associationforpublicart.org/interactive-art-map/government-of-the-people.

A 37-foot tall, 27-ton bronze statue of William Penn atop City Hall, made by sculptor Alexander Calder and installed in 1894.

A giant paintbrush statue outside of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Purring Monkeys!

Callicebus caquetensis
~Among 441 new species discovered in the Amazon jungle between 2010 and 2013 is a new species of titi monkey, Callicebus caquetensis.  Baby monkeys of this species exhibit a behavior not seen before in other species of monkey: when content, they purr!

Read the whole story (and about some of the other species discovered) here:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/10/131025085909.htm

Monday, October 21, 2013

The Hennepin Canal

~While visiting Sterling, I took several evening walks along the nearby Hennepin Canal.  This canal was built at the turn of the century to link the Illinois and Mississippi rivers, shaving several hundred miles off of the trip  in order to facilitate shipping.  Unfortunately, the canal was not a commercial success; decades-long delays (construction was supposed to start in 1834 but did not commence until 1890) meant that by the time the canal was finished in 1907, railroads had become the major method of bulk transport between the areas the canal was intended to service.  At its commercial peak in 1929, the canal transported around 30,000 tons of shipping...which sounds like a lot, but that was only 1/600th of the canal's projected annual shipping capacity.  With the cost of maintenance exceeding its return value, the canal was closed to commercial traffic in 1951.

Still, despite its commercial failure, the canal was a landmark engineering feat.  It was the first canal constructed with concrete without cut stone facings, a technique which some engineers believed would not work.  The builders of the Hennepin proved these naysayers wrong; in fact, the materials and techniques (such as new types of canal locks) created and tested to build the Hennepin served as a model for the Panama Canal.

After its closure, the length of the canal was later made into Hennepin Canal Parkway State Park, reinventing it as a recreational area for boating, kayaking, hiking, and cycling.  And of course, for visitors like me to enjoy.


Part of the canal system that goes under a bridge.

The far side of the canal.
A path leading through the woods parallel to the canal.  The embankments on either side of the canal are heavily wooded, but narrow; beyond them stretch endless fields of corn.

Ruined bits and pieces were scattered throughout the woods, such as this reinforced concrete bar.  I'm not sure if this is left over from the construction of the canal, or is more recent.


Mushrooms growing on a fallen tree trunk.
Lovely autumn colors on the trees that line the canal.  What a great reflection in the water!

Beautiful red leaves.  Any guesses as to what species of tree this is?


A classic old automobile, now on display in a park near the canal.
The shattered trunk of a fallen tree.  It was getting dark at this point, so I turned back towards the hotel.  I did hear many owls hooting in the woods, and startled a heron who was walking along the edge of the water.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Downtown in Sterling, Illinois

~Today's edition of Where in the World is David finds me in Sterling, Illinois around 1.5 hours west of Chicago.  It's a small city of around 15,000 people, once a prosperous manufacturing center but now fallen on harder times.  While I was there, I walked around the downtown area near City Hall and snapped a few shots for your enlightenment and edification:

A tall monument in a park near the city center.  What could it be for?  Let's take a closer look...

And there's our answer.  It's refreshing to see a monument favoring the Union; in my home state down in the South, almost all Civil War monuments are dedicated to the Confederacy.  This is understandable, given that soldiers from North Carolina would have been almost exclusively fighting in the Confederate army.  The idea of a monument dedicating the "value of the union of the states" is tantamount to blasphemy in much of the South.  In fact, it wasn't until March of this year that a memorial to Union soldiers was dedicated in North Carolina.


Closeup of the statue on top of the monument.  He must have a great view of Sterling from up there!

Grandon Civic Center, home of the Sterling Municipal Symphony Band.  Only a symphony of wind and falling leaves greeted me there.

Since 1996, the Sterling Mural Society has commissioned 18 murals to beautify downtown Sterling.  I like how the person in the lower left is stepping inside the mural from beyond the edge!  But what does this mural depict?  Let's take a closer look at the caption on the lower left (which the person climbing in is also holding on to):

An all-female wall scaling/acrobatics team!  What fun!

A monument outside City Hall commemorating the founder of the original town, which as the plaque says was once known as Harrisburg before merging with nearby Chatham to become Sterling in 1857.  The new name was chosen to honor James Sterling, mayor of Harrisburg, who fought in the Black Hawk War of 1832 along with a young Abraham Lincoln.

In the late 19th and mid 20th centuries, manufacturing was the major industry in Sterling.  Driving over the Rock River bridge from the nearby town of Rock Falls, I was greeted by two large factories on either side of the road, stretching along the river banks.  Both now appear to be vacant, as is this ivy-covered building across the street from City Hall.  The economy here is slowly diversifying into retail and new industries.

What a great sign!

Beautiful autumnal foliage downtown.
Next: exploring the woods along Hennepin Canal in Rock Falls.

Monday, October 7, 2013

The Queen City

~My latest destination is Charlotte, the largest city in North Carolina.  I walked around the downtown area a bit while I was there and took some pictures:

A sign in the middle of a sculpture park shows the distance to other communities named Charlotte.  Hey!  I've been to Charlotte Amalie!
A fishy sculpture in the park.  As time went by, water sprayed from jets at different points around the pool, from both the surface and the mouths of the fish.
Another sculpture at the park, depicting a stack of famous books.  A similar sculpture is on the other side of the stairs to the right, and fake street signs bear the names of famous authors.
Rev your engines, it's the NASCAR Hall of Fame!  It's located right across the street from the hotel I was in.  I'd have loved to go inside for some local culture, but it's closed in the evening.  Another time, perhaps.
  
The steeple of St. Peter's Catholic Church is dwarfed by the gigantic 786-foot Duke Energy Center skyscraper.
"And when at last it is time for the transition from megacorporation to planetary government, from entrepreneur to emperor, it is then that the true genius of our strategy shall become apparent, for energy is the lifeblood of this society and when the chips are down, he who controls the energy supply controls Planet. In former times the energy monopoly was called "The Power Company"; we intend to give this name an entirely new meaning."

A self-explanatory sign, marking the meeting that would soon end the Civil War.
The Charlotte skyline, reflected off of a pond.