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200 Feet of Posterity

A Profile of Tom Munnelly “Your immortality is assured,” wrote B.H. Bronson to Tom Munnelly upon the inclusion of another of Tom’s finds in Bronson’s Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads.  Tom’s comment: “I still can’t afford a copy of the damn thing.” Tom Munnelly is employed by the Irish Department of Education as a folk song collector.  He is the only...

Helstonia – The Blue Anchor: Demythologizing My Local

  The Blue Anchor Inn is old.  Everyone agrees that the house with the half-thatched roof at Helston’s No. 50 Coinagehall Street is old.  The question for the historical enquirer is how old?  And, further, for how long has it been a public house?  As is often the case with venerable establishments such as the Blue Anchor – especially those with a...

Notes of a Footnote – 5 – The Nabes

Little Red in Spaldeen City When I was growing up in the West Village during the late ‘40s and early ’50 there were eleven movie houses within what I considered walking distance of my home on Bethune Street.  They were, from south to north, the Waverly; Hudson Playhouse; 8th Street Playhouse; Art; Loew’s Sheridan; Greenwich; 5th Avenue Playhouse; Elgin; RKO 23rd...

Blake’s Room

The room was nothing, which suited Blake.  It was small without being cramped, bare without being mean and tasteless in that no taste, good, bad or bizarre had been used on its space.  The divan, armchair, two straight-chairs and gate-leg table were simply the accumulation of cast-offs from other rooms.  In contrast stood a dour Victorian desk-bureau; the property of...

Helstonia – Two Lawmen of the Old (Cornish) West – Part Two

LAWFUL WEDLOCK   On the basis of currently available information, one may only speculate as to the personal and professional relationship between James Fitzsimmons and John Wedlock.  They were immediate colleagues for seven years.  Fitzsimmons was the older by several years.  Both were skilled tradesmen.  Fitzsimmons had served in the British Army and, although no direct evidence has come to light,...

Notes of a Footnote – 4 – Spaldeen City

Little Red in Spaldeen CityTopping the list of essential items of sporting equipment in use during my West Village childhood were the pale pink hollow rubber balls – about the size and feel of freshly shaven tennis balls – that were known to several generations of New York City kids as spaldeens.  Manufactured by the firm of A.G. Spalding &...

Rounders Schmounders

BASEBALL BEFORE WE KNEW IT: A Search for the Roots of the Game      By David Block       University of Nebraska Press 340p “The age-old debate over baseball’s ancestry has always been long on bluster and short on facts.”   Thus begins David Block’s remarkable book, in which he travels many scholarly miles in redressing the imbalance.   The work is without question the most...

Helstonia – Two Lawmen of the Old (Cornish) West – Part One

James Fitzsimmons & John Wedlock - Peace Officers in Victorian Helston  During the decades surrounding the American Civil War, a myth-laden period of mass Westward migration, expansion and settlement, a number of legendary (“When legend becomes fact, print the legend”) law enforcement officers emerged. Wild Bill Hickock, Wyatt Earp, Bat Masterson, Pat Garrett, Luke Short and Ned Buntline among others came...

Notes of a Footnote – 3 – Dropout

Little Red in Spaldeen CityI always hated school.  I hated it from the moment my mother first left me, age four, at the Winfield Nursery on Horatio Street to the day in 1959 when I slipped out through one of the Amsterdam Avenue fire doors of the High School of Commerce, never to return.  I still can’t say positively whether...

Wolcott Revisited

Rattling a Skeleton in the British Television Closet Over three consecutive nights in mid-January 1981 the ITV Network broadcast a four-part police drama serial.  The first British-made production to be shown in the mini-series format, it drew audiences averaging 13 million.  It was called Wolcott and concerned the adventures, trials and tribulations of a Metropolitan police detective constable in North East...