Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Wanda McKay & the 1938 Birmingham Air Show

I first encountered Wanda McKay in one of her three appearances on The Lone Ranger TV show in the early 1950's. Some of us do such things in these days of modern times. I thought she looked familiar, so I consulted Wikipedia and found an entry for her. She wasn't the actress I was thinking about, but lo and behold what did I find--an Alabama connection. See how these things work?

McKay was born on June 22, 1915, in Portland, Oregon, under the name of Dorothy Quackenbush. The family moved to Texas where she finished growing up, and after high school graduation moved to New York City. She did some modeling that included magazine covers and advertisements and billboards for Chesterfield cigarettes before finding a job with Trans World Airlines as a clerk in the Kansas City office as well as occasional model for TWA.

According to that Wikipedia entry and her obituary in the Los Angeles Times, TWA sent her to an air show in Birmingham in 1938 as its entry in the Miss American Aviation contest. She won and by the following year had a contract with Paramount Studios in Hollywood. From 1939 until 1957 she appeared in more than forty films and TV episodes. From 1977 until his death in 1981, McKay was married to the great singer and songwriter Hoagy Carmichael. She died April 11, 1996.

So far I've discovered little else about McKay's visit to Birmingham. The air show was apparently the National Air Carnival which was held in the city in September 1938. Further research awaits!


UPDATE 22 March 2021

A bit of research for me by an archivist at one fo the Smithsonian Institution's museums in Washington, D.C. has produced a windfall. These air show images are courtesy of the National Air and Space Museum's Archives Department. Further comments are below. 



Source: Wikipedia









This photo shows an unidentified stewardess sitting on the boarding stairs of a TWA Douglas DC-3. Based on the known photograph of Dorothy Quackenbush below in which she models a stewardess uniform, I think we can conclude this one is also her. 










See the caption below for information about this photograph.








Source: Listal



Source: FamousFix



Source: Pinterest



Source: Wikipedia















Monday, March 8, 2021

Alabama History & Culture News: March 8 edition

 


Here's the latest batch of links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles. Most of these items are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio station websites. Enjoy!



Hundreds risked everything in Selma 56 years ago today. This group is trying to identify them
Debra Barnes Wilson was 8 on "Bloody Sunday" in Selma, Alabama. ... her life and why the day is one of the most important in American history.

Author Explores Preacher Father's Silence On Racial Injustice In 1960s Alabama
His father had a pulpit at a critical time and place in American history, 1960S Alabama. John Archibald found his father's old sermons and used them ...


Author Deborah Lamb's new book “Urban Legends of the South” is a spellbinding collection of ten ...
... Deborah Lamb is a compelling compilation of southern ghost stories rooted in historical buildings across Alabama, Tennessee, and Louisiana.

EJI Partners with Community to Dedicate Historical Marker in Irondale, Alabama
... the Jefferson County Memorial Project to unveil a historical marker for William Wardley, a Black man lynched in Irondale, Alabama, on December 7, ...


Jefferson County Memorial Project's searing report on Linn Park's racial history
This space has the potential to bring people together across divides while sharing, remembering and taking part of Alabama's and Birmingham's history.”.


New Book Highlights Founding of Alabama State University
alabamanewscenter.com. In the recently released “From Marion to Montgomery: The Early Years of Alabama State University, 1867-1925,” author ...


This 1962 Alabama school cookbook captures Black history, recipes
Trinity High School, which operated in Athens, Alabama from 1865 until 1970, was the only Limestone County school for Black students. The county ...


DON NOBLE: A look at films set in the South from “Gone With the Wind” to “Gump”
Readers cannot help but be astonished by the scope of this book, by the ... Among the Dixie states, Alabama has been the subject and setting for a ...



By the book: Authors bring naval, African-American history into focus
Alabama author Patti Callahan has fictionalized the sinking of the “Pulaski” in her novel “Surviving Savannah.” The main character is Everly Winthrop, ...


Sheila Washington, founder of Alabama civil rights museum, dies at 61
Sheila Washington, who founded an Alabama museum dedicated to the ... Ms. Washington knew nothing of this history when she was growing up in ...


'From Marion to Montgomery' sheds new light on the founding, history of Alabama State University
While assisting an Auburn University graduate student researching Perry County history, Caver was told, “they've got it all wrong over there. … The ...



What an 1870 Race Riot Tells Us About White Supremacy in America Today
Black History Month may be drawing to an end, but The Atlantic's ... project by talking about the historic riots that took place in Eutaw, Alabama in 1870.

Alabama man rebuilds father's race car from the 1930s
LOCUST FORK, Ala. (WIAT) — Alabama has a rich history of racing like Talladega and the Motor Sports Hall of Fame. One part of the state where ...


America's Political Roots Are in Eutaw, Alabama
They know how history can ripple through time; how politicians and private actors bend systems to maintain control; and how racism and white ...


'From Marion to Montgomery' sheds new light on the founding, history of Alabama State University
While assisting an Auburn University graduate student researching Perry County history, Caver was told, “they've got it all wrong over there. … The ...

Alabama Freedom Rider Catherine Burks-Brooks recalls her civil rights journey
“That was part of history. That's the way I look upon it.” Violence in Alabama. The first Freedom Ride rolled out of Washington, D.C., on May 4, 1961 ...

More than 50 years later, Sam 'Bam' Cunningham reflects on historic USC-Alabama game
It helped change college football history. In 1970, Alabama's football program had yet to integrate. No Black player had seen playing time on the varsity ...

Africantown builds a museum for the slave ship Clotilda
There's a part of the story, but it's a larger story and the History Museum working with the Alabama Historical Commission is creating this exhibit to tell ...



Monroe County Courthouse named National Historic Landmark
MONROEVILLE, Ala. (WKRG) — The iconic Monroe County Courthouse in Monroeville has been named a National Historic Landmark. Fewer than 3 ...


The Alabama State Bar's website still lists Madison as disbarred. The gravesite of Arthur Madison ...


'They're a part of history' | Descendants of last-known slave ship survivors work to keep legacy alive
The Clotilda arrived in Alabama's Mobile Bay in 1860. The ship was later burned and sunk to hide evidence of the illegal transport. The trip was illegal ...


WAAY 31 Black History Month Spotlight: WC Handy
16,1873, in Florence Alabama. Handy's musical interest started in early childhood - but because having musical talents and playing instruments were ...


Alabama's Ann Berry set to be sworn in as first Black secretary of the Senate
The significance of being sworn in one day after the conclusion of Black History Month and on the first day of Women's History Month is not lost on ...

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

Alabama History & Culture News: March 3 edition

 



Here's the latest batch of links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles. Most of these items are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio station websites. Enjoy!



This 1962 Alabama school cookbook captures Black history, recipes
Trinity High School, which operated in Athens, Alabama from 1865 until 1970, was the only Limestone County school for Black students. The county ...


DON NOBLE: A look at films set in the South from “Gone With the Wind” to “Gump”
Readers cannot help but be astonished by the scope of this book, by the ... Among the Dixie states, Alabama has been the subject and setting for a ...



By the book: Authors bring naval, African-American history into focus
Alabama author Patti Callahan has fictionalized the sinking of the “Pulaski” in her novel “Surviving Savannah.” The main character is Everly Winthrop, ...


Sheila Washington, founder of Alabama civil rights museum, dies at 61
Sheila Washington, who founded an Alabama museum dedicated to the ... Ms. Washington knew nothing of this history when she was growing up in ...


'From Marion to Montgomery' sheds new light on the founding, history of Alabama State University
While assisting an Auburn University graduate student researching Perry County history, Caver was told, “they've got it all wrong over there. … The ...



What an 1870 Race Riot Tells Us About White Supremacy in America Today
Black History Month may be drawing to an end, but The Atlantic's ... project by talking about the historic riots that took place in Eutaw, Alabama in 1870.

Alabama man rebuilds father's race car from the 1930s
LOCUST FORK, Ala. (WIAT) — Alabama has a rich history of racing like Talladega and the Motor Sports Hall of Fame. One part of the state where ...


America's Political Roots Are in Eutaw, Alabama
They know how history can ripple through time; how politicians and private actors bend systems to maintain control; and how racism and white ...


'From Marion to Montgomery' sheds new light on the founding, history of Alabama State University
While assisting an Auburn University graduate student researching Perry County history, Caver was told, “they've got it all wrong over there. … The ...

Alabama Freedom Rider Catherine Burks-Brooks recalls her civil rights journey
“That was part of history. That's the way I look upon it.” Violence in Alabama. The first Freedom Ride rolled out of Washington, D.C., on May 4, 1961 ...

More than 50 years later, Sam 'Bam' Cunningham reflects on historic USC-Alabama game
It helped change college football history. In 1970, Alabama's football program had yet to integrate. No Black player had seen playing time on the varsity ...

Africantown builds a museum for the slave ship Clotilda
There's a part of the story, but it's a larger story and the History Museum working with the Alabama Historical Commission is creating this exhibit to tell ...



Monroe County Courthouse named National Historic Landmark
MONROEVILLE, Ala. (WKRG) — The iconic Monroe County Courthouse in Monroeville has been named a National Historic Landmark. Fewer than 3 ...


The Alabama State Bar's website still lists Madison as disbarred. The gravesite of Arthur Madison ...


'They're a part of history' | Descendants of last-known slave ship survivors work to keep legacy alive
The Clotilda arrived in Alabama's Mobile Bay in 1860. The ship was later burned and sunk to hide evidence of the illegal transport. The trip was illegal ...


WAAY 31 Black History Month Spotlight: WC Handy
16,1873, in Florence Alabama. Handy's musical interest started in early childhood - but because having musical talents and playing instruments were ...


Alabama's Ann Berry set to be sworn in as first Black secretary of the Senate
The significance of being sworn in one day after the conclusion of Black History Month and on the first day of Women's History Month is not lost on ...

Friday, February 26, 2021

Beulah Vee's Cedar Chest: A Coda

In July 2016 I wrote a series of five blog posts about a cedar chest full of personal items belonging to my aunt Beulah Vee Wright. She died in 1939 at the age of eighteen, so the items date from the 1920's and 1930's. She and her family lived in Gadsden, Alabama. Below I have quoted the introduction to that first post to give you more details. 

Our family on both sides is blessed--or cursed--with a vast amount of memorabilia--everything from photographs, furniture, lamps, and china, to Native American artifacts found in cotton fields across North Alabama, some of it on my side and some from my wife Dianne's. We have a large amount of material related to her father's long military career, for instance. 

Anyway, Dianne, my brother Richard and I have been puzzling over what to do with all this stuff. None of our kids will have the room or inclination to take much of it, so we have explored other options. Before he died in 2003, Dad made a large donation of the artifacts to the University of Alabama's Office of Archaeological Research in Moundville. A few years ago Mom made a second donation of those materials to OAR. Dad's large collection of books related to southeast Native Americans history and archaeology, as well as manuscripts and research materials for his two published books, were donated after his death to the Alabama Department of Archives and History.

Which brings us to Beulah Vee's cedar chest. Last year I contacted Steve Murray, Director of the Alabama Department of Archives and History to see if they would be interested in the items in the cedar chest. I felt it was a time capsule of a white girl and young woman who lived in Gadsden in the 1920's and 1930's. Steve agreed, and I began the usual process of donation. The committee that oversees donations also felt the items would be an appropriate addition to the Archives. On August 26 last year Dianne and I packed up the materials and headed to Montgomery. You can find some photos and more commentary below.


Here's the introduction to that first blog post:

My dad's older sister and thus my aunt Beulah Vee Wright has always been something of a mystery in the family. Born in Gadsden on November 2, 1921, she died soon after her eighteenth birthday on December 10, 1939. She had attended Etowah High School, graduating that spring despite a serious illness that had begun in March. She is buried in Forrest Cemetery in Gadsden with my grandfather Amos J. Wright, Sr., and grandmother, Rosa Mae Wright. 

This event was a cataclysmic one in the family, especially for my grandmother. She never really got over it despite living until 1997. My grandparents' social life apparently changed drastically. My grandfather and father pretty much had to warn everyone not to bring up Beulah Vee's name; the memory must have been too painful. Unfortunately, I never brought the subject up with my father before he died; his memories of his sister would have been interesting to know, since he was 13 when she died.

Despite its effect on her and her desire not to talk about her daughter, my grandmother maintained something of a shrine to her. The furniture purchased for Beulah Vee's bedroom became the guest room furniture in a house where she never lived that my grandparents moved into in the late 1940's. My aunt's portrait shown below hung on the wall of that guest room. And then there was the cedar chest.

My grandmother saved clothes, documents, and various objects of her daughter's life and kept them in the cedar hope chest she and my grandfather had bought for her at some point. Some of those items will be explored in several posts to follow. The chest is stuffed with material--it is a time capsule that captures the life of a young and then a teenage girl in Gadsden, Alabama, in the 1920's and 1930's. 

*******

Below are photographs of several dolls belonging to Beulah Vee and my grandmother that were not discussed in the cedar chest posts. The state archives also decided not to accept the dolls since their collection already contains many examples. I've also included a few photos about the trip to the state archives in Montgomery to transport the donation. 

Further comments are included below some of the photos. 




Here are Beulah Vee and her mother Rosa Mae Wright's dolls patiently waiting 
for the trip to Montgomery. Do you find dolls creepy like so many people?



















This doll is tiny compared to the others. 







Behind these two dolls is a display case that holds Dianne's collection of dolls. 











Here the dolls are packed and ready to go. 



This cradle was made by Beulah Vee's father, my grandfather Amos Jasper Wright, Sr. The portrait of Beulah Vee is one of the few photos of her we've kept. 




The car is loaded up and ready for the trip. The story behind Beulah Vee's painted portrait is told in the first of the five original blog posts. 







We arrived at this entrance of the Archives to do the unloading. Below is a closer look at the signs of the times. 










After all these years of hearing about Beulah Vee and exploring the contents of the cedar chest a few times, I was rather sad to see it leave the family. But we can't keep everything and perhaps the donation will be useful to future researchers and displays at the Archives.