Thursday, May 19, 2022

An Alabama Author & A Polar Explorer

On March 5 the shipwreck of the Endurance was located more than 100 years after Captain Ernest Shackleton and his crew abandoned the vessel during their 1915 expedition to the Antarctic. In January of that year the ship became frozen in ice; the crew remained with the Endurance until November when it sank. That event began even more incredible efforts by the crew. A recent account is Alfred Lansing and Nathaniel Philbrick's 2015 book Endurance. Incredibly, all members of the crew survived the ordeal. 

A photograph of Captain Shackleton's cabin on the ship reveals a few shelves of books he took on the expedition to help him pass the downtime. This article reprints the inventory of that personal library. The books include an encyclopedia, various dictionaries, collections of poetry, accounts of other polar expeditions, and wait--what's that? Why, it's a novel by an author with Alabama connections!

Let's investigate.

Over the course of her writing career, Amelie Rives Troubetzkoy published more than 20 novels between 1888 and 1930. One of those was World's-End, published in 1914. A copy of that book, probably with the cover and title page as shown below, ended up on a shelf in Shackleton's cabin. Also below is a contemporary review. You can read the novel online at the Internet Archive. So who was Amelie Louise Rives, later to become Princess Troubetzkoy?

Rives was born August 23, 1863, in Richmond, Virginia. Her parents were Alfred and Sarah; Alfred was an engineer. Amelie was the oldest of three daughters. At some point in the 1870's Alfred accepted a position as chief superintendent & general manager of the Mobile and Ohio Railroad in Mobile. Amelie--and probably her sisters--continued the study of music and drawing under tutors and governesses. She also studied music under Miss Evy, who operated a private school in the city, and drawing at the Mobile Academy of Design.

The Rives family can be found in Mobile in the 1880 U.S. census. Patriarch Alfred L. Rives was fifty years old, a civil engineer and born in France around 1830. His wife Sarah was from Virginia. The children were Amelia, 16; Gertrude, 13; and Daisy, 5. Their home was 87 Government Street, near the current location of the Exploreum Science Center and a couple of blocks from Bienville Square.

Amelia's first publication, the romantic short story "A Brother to Dragons" appeared in the Atlantic Monthly in 1886. Two years later her first novel The Quick or the Dead? created a scandal with its daring--immoral!--content as it quickly sold 300,000 copies. The book featured a new widow attracted to her late husband's cousin. Rives career was off to an impressive start; she published many novels, poems, and plays until 1930 and her final novel, Firedamp. Poetry publication continued into the 1940s. She died June 15, 1945. 

In June 1888 Rives married her first husband, a wealthy New Yorker named John Armstrong Chaloner, who led a fascinating life himself. The marriage was tumultuous and by 1895 the couple divorced. The following year she wed a Russian prince, Pierre Troubetzkoy, an established portrait painter. The two were introduced to each other in England by Oscar Wilde. That union lasted until his death in 1936. The couple lived in her ancestral home Castle Hill in Virginia. You can see the prince's 1904 photograph of his wife here

Despite her many publications and fame during her lifetime, Rives has fallen into obscurity since her death. Little has been written about her life or critical evaluation of her work. All of which is a shame. She mixed with some of the best known authors of the day, ranging from Thomas Hardy, Henry James, Ellen Glasgow and Mark Twain. Author James Branch Cabell was a cousin. She was an enthusiastic supporter of women's suffrage. Her work was parodied, surely a sign of her acclaim. Newspapers published anecdotes about her. 

Some reviews were positive, but many not. Her novels were long, stuffed with characters and events and included racial stereotypes of the day. Her heroines and heroes felt intensely, but spoke in the overheated dialog characteristic of so much literature at that time. Yet modern topics crept into them. In her 1915 novel Shadows of Flames a wife discovers the hiding place of her morphine-addicted husband--in his cigarettes. 

See Leila Christenbury's essay linked below for many more details of Rives' life and work. A search of the Library of Congress' Chronicling America newspaper database for 1880-1945 will turn up numerous articles about Rives published in her lifetime. 



Further Reading

Louis Auchincloss, A Writer's Capital Houghton Mifflin, 1979. [Includes a chapter on Rives]

Leila Christenbury, "Amélie Louise Rives Chanler Troubetzkoy 1863–1945," Dictionary of Virginia Biography, Library of Virginia (1998– ), published 2021 

Welford Dunaway Taylor.  Amelie Rives (Princess Troubetzkoy Twayne, 1973 [info on Rives' time in Mobile is on p. 21]









Amelie Rives [1863-1945]

Source: The Bookman via Wikimedia Commons




This photo of Shackleton's cabin was taken in early March 1915 by Australian photographer Frank Hurley. 

Source: BBC.com










These two illustrations in World's End were reproduced from paintings by Alonzo Myron Kimball; one is seen on the cover of Collier's below.

Source: Wikipedia




Prior to book publication the novel was serialized in Collier's November 29, 1913-April 11, 1914





Findlay Weaver, editor of the Canadian publication Maclean's, discussed the book in the October 1, 1914, issue: 

To get back to the particular book to be considered this month, “World’s End” gets its name from the estate in Virginia where the greater part of the action of the story takes place. The novel can scarcely evade the charge of sentimentalism, yet it has an appealing quality which will endear it to the lovers of romance.

The principal characters of the tale are Phoebe Nelson, a heroine who blooms with all the charm of the South, her cousin Richard Bryce and his uncle Owen Randolph.

Richard is a fascinating young man, an abnormally clever artist with untold faith in himself as such and as a poet as well. But he has a twisted view of life, which, in the influence exerted on the girl with her rich and romantic nature, all but wrecks her prospects of true happiness and would have done so but for quiet strength in body, mind, and emotion of Richard’s uncle, Owen Randolph, who, stirred to the depth of his compassion and love for her, employs the force of his big character to reconstruct her life. Through deeply pathetic circumstances, by Owen’s assistance, she finally wins to triumphant happiness and the telling is lightened along the way by a charming humor and fine descriptive pasages making “World’s End” a most realistic place indeed, with warmly pictured characters, including funny and lovable negro servants.

Richard had peculiar views as to religion and marriage. He considered them “inartistic.” The universe was to him a vast studio. At twenty-six his enthusiasms gave him keener delight than they did to those about him. He did not restrict his attention to painting, for besides that he was, at the time of the opening of the story, engaged in writing a one-act opera in accordance with the Chinese laws of music which he maintained constituted the only real tonic-scale; and was also writing a volume of poems, the latest of his poems being “The Daughter of Ypocras.” Expounding this poem, he said: “Ypocras was a lovely girl who had been changed into a dragon and doomed to retain this fearful shape until some lover, knowing her plight, should be bold enough to kiss her on the mouth. The lover comes and, being often mirrored in the beautiful eyes which are all that remain to her of her woman’s form, is drawn gradually into doting on the rare sinuosities of her dragon-shape, and the play of the light along her scales of gold and violet. So that when at last his kiss transforms her again to woman, his artist heart breaks at the loss of his exquisite dragon, and he sinks dying at the feet of the sweetly normal maiden who has taken her place.” Richard further explained that he had endeavored in the poem to reveal some of the dark yet radiant magic lurking in the mysterious perversities of femininity, as opposed to the common-place attraction of what he called “the daylight charm of the uncomplex woman.”

Such twisted views were characteristic of Richard. For instance, when he came suddenly upon Phoebe in her garden, helpet crow “Jimmy Toots” was perched on her shoulder and as she caught sight of Richard she tried with both hands to tear “Jimmy Toots” from his perch but Richard, seeing “a picture of a young woman in an April garden with a bird of ill-omen on her shoulder,” urged her not to take it down.

“You with that crow are like a poem by Baudelaire” and forthwith “Jimmy Toots” became “M. Baudelaire” to Richard. How could one of his intensely artistic nature possibly employ such an inelegant term as “Jimmy Toots.”

Richard paints her picture in the garden with “M. Baudelaire,” calling the painting “Pandore et le Genie du Coffre.” In the painting he exaggerated a likeness he saw in her to a Botticelli, so that the head seemed a little small for the long nymphean limbs. “But the translation of Jimmy Crow into a bird of sombre presage was wholly a masterpiece.

Far more than any serpent he seemed fitted to whisper of honeyed sins in the ear of this virginal Eve-Pandore.

When Phoebe was permitted to see the painting her first words were, “Are my . . . am I quite as ... as long as that?” Her father, while admitting that the treatment was certainly original, considered that his living Phoebe was far prettier than Richard’s “Pandore.”

The reader can well imagine the effect of an attractive yet wholly self-centred young man in his influence upon the young woman who saw in him the ideal for whom she waited and will realize something of the possibilities which this situation opens to the author in working out the story and it is like getting into God’s clear sunshine when the influence of Owen Randolph eventually gains precedence.


The sinking of the Endurance 1 November 1915

Source: Wikipedia









Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Alabama History & Culture News: May 17 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. Some articles may be behind a paywall. Enjoy!


John Gurner enjoys living in history at Alabama's Fort Toulouse-Fort Jackson Park
John Gurner coordinates living history events and conducts historical research at Fort Toulouse in Wetumpka. (Alabama Historical Commission).

'Biopsy' of Clotilda site yields wealth of data for study - al.com
Alabama Historical Commission, partners, say latest round of study will help make big decisions about preservation.


Attalla museum site being remodeled to display rich history of land, town and people
The Attalla Historical Museum continues to see work move forward in ... The museum will be housed in the old Alabama Power building on 5th Avenue.


Selma Students Paint Giant Mural Downtown - Alabama News Network
A huge new mural going up in Selma -- will welcome visitors who come to town -- and highlight the city's history.


How a Failed Assassination Attempt Pushed George Wallace to Reconsider His ...
The governor of Alabama and an ardent segregationist, George Wallace was in ... That put him on the wrong side of history by using hate and fear.


Montgomery's NewSouth Books purchased by The University of Georgia Press
There's a new chapter ahead for Montgomery's NewSouth Books. ..


On the trail of Boo Radley: Harper Lee's iconic book 'To Kill A Mockingbird' lives on in rural ...
At the end of a stretch of twisting, turning country roads in rural central Alabama lies a square much like ones that can be found in countless ...


Alabama shipwreck holds key for kin of enslaved Africans - New Haven Register
A crew hired by the Alabama Historical Commission, working over 10 days ending Thursday, took fallen trees off the submerged remains of the ship, ...


Birmingham Sets Out Rules to Promote Historical Building Redevelopment - BirminghamWatch
The ordinance will protect historical structures in the city, Gambrel argued. ... Judge Hears Testimony in Challenge to Alabama's Ban on ...


See how many historic sites in Alabama are at risk of flooding | News | alexcityoutlook.com
See how many historic sites in Alabama are at risk of flooding ... Rising sea levels. Runoff from rapidly melting snow and ice. Rivers and streams ...


The ghosttown of the South: Selma, Alabama | The Emory Wheel
Selma wasn't originally known for food deserts. Rather, it has a crucial place in American history, best known for Bloody Sunday, a civil rights ...

University of Montevallo names building for civil rights historian who taught 28 years as professor
Dr. Wilson Fallin Jr., retired history professor, and his wife, Barbara, ... and author of books on the history of the Black church in Alabama who ...


New historic marker honors Huntsville preservationist | WHNT.com
A new historical marker now stands in Huntsville honoring noted education ... of the history department at the University of Alabama in Huntsville ...

Dr. Frances Roberts made big impact as early Huntsville preservationist
Editor's Note: This blog was written by Historic Huntsville Foundation Executive ... By then, my curiosity in Alabama history had been awakened.


Thursday, May 12, 2022

UAB Football in 1991 & 1992

On the way to its recent success the UAB football program has had some ups and downs. The Wikipedia entry will give you the basic facts. This blog post looks back at the team's two years at the NCAA Division III level in 1991 and 1992. Why am I doing that? Well, in some recent cleaning out I came across the two flyers and a ticket stub included below.

The program began with two years of club football in 1989 and 1990. In 1991 the university upgraded the program to Division III and Jim Hilyer was hired as head coach beginning that fall. He led the team for two years in Division III and two in I-AA; Watson Brown became head coach in 1995. 

Hilyer had played four years as offensive guard and linebacker at Stetson University. He was an assistant coach at the pro and college level for Mississippi State and Auburn [twice!] and the Washington Redskins and Birmingham Stallions. At UAB, his only head coaching post, he had a record of 27-12-2. Hilyer passed away in January of this year. 

My son Amos and I saw a couple of UAB's games in those Division III days. As you can see from the ticket stub below, we attended the October 12, 1991, contest with Lindenwood University played at Legion Field. Lindenwood, located in St. Charles, Missouri, had just begun football the previous year and played as an independent until 1996 when they joined the NAIA. The team began playing in the NCAA in 2012. The game ended in a 17-17 tie. UAB finished that first season with a 4-3-2 record; you can see the scores here

I've yet to find any ticket stub in my vast collection, but we also attended a game during the 1992 season. The opponent was Gallaudet University and the September 12 game was played at Lawson Field. We were among the crowd of more than 5300 people who watched UAB win 44-6. The Blazers finished that season with a 7-3 record. 

The game had an extra dimension not often seen--or heard--at football games. Gallaudet is a private school in Washington, D.C., that serves deaf and hard of hearing students. At the game we attended, a big drum on the sidelines sent signals to the team on the field. 

Gallaudet has been playing football since 1883. Interestingly, the huddle originated at the school. In the 1890's quarterback Paul D. Hubbard came up with the idea as a way to hide hand signals from opposing teams. 




































Amos and I attended this Blazer win over Gallaudet played at Lawson Field. 



These buildings, now demolished, served as UAB football administrative offices for many years. 




Saturday, May 7, 2022

Alabama History & Culture News: May 7th 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. Some articles may be behind a paywall. Enjoy!

It was Giddens' gift to the community he cared for. February of this year, Giddens Cemetery was listed on the Alabama Historical Registry.

Parent challenges book available to fourth graders at Keokuk school library - Tri States Public Radio
... who were falsely accused of raping two white women while on a train traveling near Scottsboro, Alabama in 1931. The book chronicles how the ...
[The book is "The Scottsboro Boys" by Alabama author James Haskins]


Judson College archives donated to Samford's Special Collection for preservation
The historical archives of Judson College in Marion will be safe, ... and add it alongside Samford's history as well as Alabama Baptists' history.


Museum of East Alabama holding mural dedication ceremony May 12
The agricultural mural is sponsored by the Caroline Marshall Draughon Center for the Arts & Humanities and the Department of Art & Art History at ...


Author pens romance series set in 'Cypress Bayou,' ie Natchitoches
Sands made her debut with her Alabama series in 2015, beginning with “Again, Alabama,” a Southern romantic women's fiction novel, that was followed by ...


[HTML] Antebellum Alabama Plantation in Ruins

YOU CAN, EFFS Stands
… The walls of these ruins contain the history of the largest what was once the
largest plantation in this section of Alabama, that at its height, … With very few
comprehensive accounts available on the history of this site, I set out to find as much …


3-D Scans Reveal Gigantic Native American Cave Art in Alabama | History | Smithsonian Magazine
History | May 3, 2022 7:02 p.m.. 3-D Scans Reveal Gigantic Native American Cave Art in Alabama. A new analysis identifies four life-size human figures ...


Selma's Brown Chapel AME is nation's most endangered historical structure, needs $5 ...
The iconic 114-year-old Selma church, where voting rights organizers gathered on that Sunday in March 1965 before being bloodied by Alabama state ...


During the Civil War, The Union Army confiscated Confederate General Robert E. Lee's land and turned it into what is now Arlington National Cemetery.


Lionel Richie to headline, join other Alabama stars in The World Games Closing Ceremonies
The Opening Ceremonies – set for July 7 at Protective Stadium –will be a colorful celebration of sport and Birmingham history. Sponsored by Alabama ...


Novel details adventures of a literate private investigator | DON NOBLE - Tuscaloosa News
“Bye Bye Baby,” set in Boston, is the 50th Spenser novel, and the 10th by Alabama author Ace Atkins, who, all the while, is writing his highly ...

Alabama Shipyard: On the Mobile waterfront, a sleeping giant has awakened - al.com
Deep History. The Alabama Dry Dock & Shipbuilding Company was founded in 1916 via the consolidation of several smaller drydock companies, ...

'To Kill a Mockingbird' a must-see for all, starring Richard Thomas of John-Boy fame
... Alabama, in Aaron Sorkin's stage adaptation of Harper Lee's classic ... In a departure from the long depictions of childhood play in the book, ...


Birmingham author explores motherhood during a pandemic in 'More than a Mom'
What are ways mothers can model self-care, for themselves and the families they love? Kari Kampakis explores these questions in her latest book, “More ...

Here's the book on a legendary Alabama barbecue joint - al.com
Van Sykes, one of the legends of Alabama barbecue, has just published a new book about the history of Bob Sykes Bar-B-Q, the venerable Bessemer ...


New round of Clotilda exploration work to begin Monday - al.com
According to information released Thursday by the Alabama Historical Commission, the commission and Resolve Marine plan to begin a 10-day ...


How 2 independent bookstores survived the pandemic - thehomewoodstar.com
Alabama Booksmith appeals to a niche community around the world, specializing in signed first edition books, which helped the bookstore sustain ...


The Pioneer Museum of Alabama gets set to bring history to life in May - The Troy Messenger
The Pioneer Museum of Alabama will present a living history event and battle reenactment in May at the second annual Thunder on the Three Notch.

“Fourteenth Colony: The Forgotten Story of the Gulf South During America's Revolutionary Era” By
“Fourteenth Colony” is a book of history the common reader can really enjoy. ... Fort and the author of many books and articles on early Alabama.

Thursday, May 5, 2022

Two Alabama Natives on "Maverick"

One of these days I plan to write about the busy acting careers of Alabama natives R.G. Armstrong and Louise Fletcher. However, this post examines an episode of the classic western TV series Maverick in which the actors appeared together in prominent roles.


Maverick was a popular western on the ABC network for five seasons 1957 until 1962. Today the show would be deemed a dramady, since it often combined drama with some light-hearted dialog and action. James Garner and Jack Kelly played gambling brothers in and out of trouble as they pursued high stakes games. Garner left the series after the third season to pursue movie roles, and this episode, "The Saga of Waco Williams" is from his time on the show, airing in the second season on February 15, 1959. You can read more about Maverick here

This appearance is Fletcher's only one on the program, although she acted in a number of western shows [as well as other TV programs] during the late 1950's and early 1960's. Armstrong would turn up in another Maverick episode in 1960. This episode ranks as the most popular of the show; of all TV sets in use in the U.S. at that hour, over half were tuned to Maverick. 

A summary at the Paley Center for Media web site sets the stage: 

"In this episode, Bret befriends a gunfighter named Waco Williams. Waco and Bret arrive in a town where the cattlemen and the homesteaders are at odds with one another. During a poker game in which Bret is accused of cheating, Waco gets into a fistfight with a cattleman named Karl Bent Jr., whose father, Col. Bent, owns the town. Bret and Waco are then accused of having been sent by the homesteaders to cause problems among the cattlemen. The Bents and their friends try to run Bret and Waco out of town. Waco refuses to go since he is waiting for a friend to meet him. Bret stands by him, but not out of loyalty. He knows that Waco's friend is worth $2,500 in reward money."

No mention of Fletcher's character, who is significant in the story. You can read a detailed account at TVMaze. 

Armstrong plays Colonel Bent, a cattleman who is the de facto ruler of Bent City. Fletcher is daughter Kathy. At first Bent has no use for Waco, but by the end of the episode he comes to admire Williams and decides he's the only man he's met who's good enough for his daughter. That's a good thing, since Kathy and Waco have fallen in love.

Poor Bret--he doesn't get the girl or the reward money or even big poker winnings. The episode is enjoyable and the Alabama actors fun to watch playing  father and daughter. 





R.G. Armstrong as Colonel Karl Bent, master of all he surveys




Colonel Brent and Waco Williams [Wayde Preston] get acquainted 




Brent, his son Karl Jr. and one of their men ride into town for a showdown with Bret and Waco. Brent and Bret are wounded; Karl Jr. and Jack Regan are killed. 




Kathy sits at the beside of her convalescing father as they discuss the turn of events. 











Kathy and Waco finally meet close up in his hotel room with Bret in attendance. 







Something is going on here. 



Colonel Brent offers his blessing to the lovebirds and tells them to get out so he can get some rest. 









Kathy and her new beau arrive in town, and Waco gets a hero's welcome.