Monday, May 25, 2009

Memorial Day

Memorial Day was an outgrowth of our Civil War, in which some 620,000 Americans died and hundreds of thousands were maimed. The impact on communities both Union and Confederate gave birth to spontanous demonstrations of grief and respect.

In 1864, women from Boalsburg, Pennsylvania, put flowers on the graves of their dead from the recent fighting and slaughter at Gettysburg. The following year, a group of women decorated the graves of soldiers buried in Vicksburg, Mississippi.

In April 1866, women from Columbus, Mississippi, laid flowers on the graves of both Union and Confederate soldiers. It was recognized at the time as an act of healing regional wounds. In the same month, up in Carbondale, Illinois, 219 Civil War veterans marched through town in memory of the fallen to Woodlawn Cemetery, where Union hero Maj. Gen. John A. Logan delivered the principal address. The ceremony gave Carbondale its claim to the first organized, community-wide Memorial Day observance.

On May 5, 1866, Waterloo, New York, began holding a yearly memorial service .

Waterloo received congressional recognition as the "birthplace of Memorial Day.

May 30, 1868, was designated "for the purpose of strewing with flowers, or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country during the fighting.

Historic Old Saint Paul's Cemetery predates the first "Memorial Day" by more than sixty years, having been established in 1800. The cemetery is the final resting place for a number of military heroes.

Among them:

John Eager Howard: A captain, who rose to the rank of colonel in the Continental Army, he fought at the Battle of White Plains and in the Battle of Monmouth. He was awarded a silver medal by Congress for his leadership at the Battle of Cowpens, during which he commanded the 3rd Maryland Regiment, Continental Army.

General George Armistead: who served as the commander of Fort McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore in the War of 1812.

General Lewis A. Armistead: was mortally wounded while leading his brigade towards the center of the Union line in Pickett's Charge. Armistead led his brigade from the front, waving his hat from the tip of his saber, and reached the stone wall at the "Angle", which served as the charge's objective. The brigade got farther in the charge than any other, but it was quickly overwhelmed by a Union counterattack. Armistead was shot three times just after crossing the wall and died two days later.

I have informally counted more than a dozen other names of military who are listed in the cemetery records.

The photos were taken at Old Saint Paul's Cemetery during a ceremony.

Fine Print: The foregoing represents the author’s somewhat informal meanderings in topics that he is unqualified to report on. Any discovered factual errors should not be reported to the author and should be kept to oneself. Any accusations of plagiarism or the like will be disregarded totally by the writer and will not be contested nor apologized for. The same holds true for missspelllings, typos, and other nit-picky rubbish.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Belated Bells.

Several weeks ago I had coffee with Basil and Mary Ellen Acey in their Roland Park home and the topic of the Harrison Carillon came up. Basil was instrumental (no pun intended) in bringing to fruition this magnificent feature to our historic church. I asked Basil to send me some background information that I might be able to use for this blog. I have decided to include his written piece in its entirety as follows:

"Sunday morning services at OSP begin with a ‘peal’ from the Harrison Carillon located in the north Tower of the sanctuary over the Reading Room.


The Harrison Carillon is an assembly of 23 bells mounted on a large steel frame which can be seen through the screened arched openings in the Tower.

(ed. note: the photos shown here are not our carillon as I have not yet had the opportunity to climb the tower, but I'm pretty sure that ours looks much the same. -F.C.)


The Carillon is named in honor of the Baltimore businessman – George Harrison – who assembled a group of Baltimore companies which donated the $122,125 for the carillon to be fabricated, shipped and installed in the Tower. OSP was responsible for the costs for design and construction of the Tower interior structure to receive the carillon.


The current OSP – designed in 1853 by the New York architect Richard Upjohn (who also designed Trinity Episcopal Church in N.Y.)- with a bell tower – Campanile –of about 150 ft in height. However lack of funds limited the current height to 56 ft. Whether the original Tower or the current tower was to contain bells has not been confirmed, but the current Tower was constructed without any openings , leaving no doubt that bells were not planned for at that time.


Mr. Harrison had been involved in the installation of bells at other locations in the U.S., and had expressed an interest -in discussions with the Rector William McKeachie and members of the OSP Vestry and Senior Warden in October, 1988 - in bringing bells into OSP and downtown Baltimore. A Committee composed of members of OSP and prominent businessmen under the leadership of Mr. Harrison was established and plans for the future installation began to take form.



In early, 1990, Mr. Harrison selected The Verdin Company, founded in 1842 in Cincinnati, Oh., to provide the Carillon. Verdin, in turn, selected Petit and Fritsen Royal Bellfoundry , founded in the Netherlands in 1660, to cast the bells.


On December 10, 1990, the Carillon arrived in Baltimore, and assembly of the frame and bells in the Tower was completed in a few days. Concurrently , the internal components – control equipment, keyboard console, organ relays – were installed at the organ console, and the whole assembly was then calibrated ,tuned and programmed by Verdin and the OSP organist and choirmaster, Rodney Hansen.


The Harrison Carillon was dedicated to the parish, the generosity of Baltimore businesses and businessmen who supported it and the citizens of Baltimore."

More on this later!