Showing posts with label writer's almanac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writer's almanac. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2014

first radio commercial invited people to leave the "congested city"

The first radio commercial advertised a new apartment complex.
Gunther Barth points to, among other things, the apartment house as a way to announce the arrival of urban living. Yesterday, the students understood that such living could be traced in part to Parisan flats. This morning, Writer's Alamanac mentioned how the first radio commercial in the United States advertised apartments in the Jackson Heights section of Queens in 1922. Given that we can look at emerging urban life occurring between the 1830s and 1910, give or take a decade, this radio advertisement barely falls short of fitting the bill. 

The real estate developer for Hawthorne Court via this commercial told listeners who were tired of congested living in Manhattan the following: "Friend, you owe it to yourself and your family to leave the congested city and enjoy what nature intended you to enjoy." Again, we can see not only the tensions between our rural past and urban life, but also the class politics that may be apparent in this invitation to leave the city. For more about the technology that made this commercial possible, listen to this story on NPR. If you listen closely, you will hear another thing that allows us to see emerging urban life: department stores.

Postscript: Learn about Dr. Susan Reynold's recent visit to our class on Alabama Heritage magazine's Facebook page.

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

waterways key to our nation's capital



Original design of the White House. Library of Congress.



Since I recently mentioned how water is often essential to where people settle, I thought I might share something that was presented today on Writer's Almanac, my favorite radio show. Apparently George Washington, this country's first President, selected an area beside the Potomac as the site for the nation's capital because of the many rivers there. He did as much in 1790 when he signed the Residence Act.  Philadelphia was the capital when he signed the act and continued to be over the next ten years while the city, which was to be no more than 100 square miles, was designed. It was also to be located on the Potomac in a mosquito-filled, marshy area between the Anacostia River and the Conococheague, a creek flowing into the Potomac. Some may have had doubts about the merits of this area, but Washington did not.

In 1800, the federal government relocated to district. Having died in 1799, Washington never occupied the White House. John Adams held that honor, becoming the  first president to do as much. Designed in a Palladian style which reflects both order and classical inspiration, the house burned in 1814 after a British invasion, but was restored.

How much did this city, which was named after Washington, adhere to trends seen in other cities as the nineteenth century matured? For sure, as Gunther Barth tells us, it was a deliberately planned space. And further, as Barth writes, like the cities of  Savannah and even Salt Lake City, Washington D.C. stood out. Such deliberate planning seemed to run contrary to the promises of freedom that "doomed most of attempts to order public space" elsewhere.