Panabasis
The Groveland Security Network

Janus Museum Circle Cam

Janus Museum Webcams

Bittersweet Cottage Circle Cam

The Groveland Security Network At-a-Glance

A Spotter's Guide to the Circle Cats




Our Other Fascinating Sites:

The Janus Museum

The Circle Cat Club

Panabasis II

Panabasis - Photo



For God's Sake,
Please Buy a Copy




Signed Copies are also available




New! The Janus Museum Museum Shop



Videos by the Janus Museum Video Unit:

'Father, Please Come Home!'

New! A Cat Compendium DVD





Bookmark

Panabasis RSS Link 

Subscribe with Bloglines 


Music from the Museum

The Fiddler, ambrotype c.1858

Janus Museum Radio

Listen in to our webmaster, Tibor Szégy-Légy, as he presents a wide-ranging program of some of his favorite music.

Program 3 in our new series - Outlaws and Bad Persons

Program 9 - Music from the Civil War for Decoration Day

Program 8 - Jazz, harp, and hurdy-gurdy.



We're pleased to feature tunes from The Janus Museum's extensive music library. Every week - or more often as the spirit moves, we'll feature a tune, song, or sound from the collection in streaming Real Audio format.

Our Current Selection

The Red Clay Ramblers sing
Jim Canaan's from their album It Ain't Right.



Previous Musical Selections



Here's an extremely rare treasure, a 78 rpm recording of The Rocket Ranger March from the 1953 TV series Rod Brown of the Rocket Rangers These may be the the first internet performances of The Rocket Rangers March, performed by the Rocket Rangers Chorus, and also an instrumental version of the Rocket Ranger March, performed by the Rocket Ranger Philharmonic Orchestra of Zagreb.



For Armistice Day - The Bells of Hell, from a newly reissued DVD of Richard Attenborough's Oh! What a Lovely War.



And now, a Stephen Foster song especially for the Fourth of July, Plain Old Soldier, sung by Leslie Guin. From Songs of Stephen Foster.



Here's a sprightly archaic banjo tune - Pompey Ran Away (1782) from Carson Hudson Jr.'s I Come from Old Virginny! Early Virgina Banjo Music 1790-1860, another recent find in the old-time music bin.



Here's a thumping good tune, Chasing Old Satan, from the Double Decker Stringband's fine new album, The Rest is Yet to Come.



In honor of the splendid Hésperion XXI concert we recently attended, here's Jordi Savall performing Captain Tobias Hume's A Souldiers Resolution on the viola da gamba.



To commemorate the end of legal fox hunting across the pond, here are two songs from the rich tradition of hunt songs:

Nic Jones sings Reynard the Fox from Ballads and Songs.

Oak, Ash and Thorn perform Bold Reynard from Sowing Wild OATs & Out On A Limb.



Highly Recommended




Film Reviews

We occasionally mention of some of the classic films that are shown in The Janus Museum's Fellow's Lounge - here are links to the webmaster's capsule reviews:

Aaya Toofan

Aelita, Queen of Mars

Amar Akbar Anthony

Astérix & Obélix contre César

L'Atalante

Babes in Toyland (1934), AKA March of the Wooden Soldiers

Baiju Bawra

Bajrangbali

Balram Shri Krishna

The Beggar's Opera; additional

Berserk!

Body

Book and Sword

Boxer

The Brain That Wouldn't Die

Bride & Prejudice

British Intelligence

Byron

The Calamari Wrestler (Ika Resuraa)

The Call of Cthulhu

The Captain's Paradise

Catwoman

The Charge of the Light Brigade

China Gate

Chronicles of Narnia

The Clowns

Cold Comfort Farm (1995 version)

Cousin Bette

The Crawling Hand

A Dance to the Music of Time

Death in the Air (AKA Pilot X)

Drôle de Drame

Elena and Her Men, More on Elena

Enchanted

The Eye of Vichy

Fathom

Finnegans Wake (Passages from Finnegans Wake)

The Flame and the Arrow

French Cancan

Futurama: The Beast with a Billion Backs

A Good Woman

George Washington II: The Forging of a Nation

Giulio Cesare

Glen or Glenda

The Golden Coach

Gormenghast

H.M. Deserters (C.K. Dezerterzy)

Halaku

Har Har Mahadev

The Heart of the World

Henry V (1944 version)

Hot Fuzz

The Illusionist

Les Indes Galantes

The Indian Tomb (Das Indische Grabmal; Fritz Lang's Indian Epic)
More on The Indian Tomb

Jai Santoshi Maa

Janosik: The Highland Robber
More on Janosik

Jungle ki Nagin

The Kaiser's Lackey (Der Untertan)

Lagaan

The Living Corpse

Lola Montes

The Lost Zeppelin

Luv Kush (TV serial)

The Maggie

Mahabali Hanuman (Dara Singh, 1980)

Mahabali Hanuman (Rakesh Pandey, 1981)

Mahabharat; And another entry

Maniac

March of the Wooden Soldiers

La Marseillaise

Master and Commander

The Mikado (1939 version)

Mister Vampire 3

Münchhausen (1943)

Oh! What a Lovely War

Old Khottabych

Old School

Our Man in Havana

Les Paladins

Passport to Pimlico

The Phantom Empire

The Pirates of Penzance (1980)

The Pirates of Penzance (1983)

The Pirates of Penzance (1994)

The Pirates of Penzance (2007)

Porco Rosso

Pride and Prejudice (2005)

Private Life of a Cat

Ramayan (TV serial)

Royal Flash

The Saddest Music in the World

Sadko

Sampoorna Ramayana (children's theater version)

Sampoorna Ramayan; Also a video segment

Seven Years Bad Luck

Shaolin Soccer

Sikander-e-Azam

Sita Sings the Blues

Sleepy Hollow

The Stranglers of Bombay

The Legend of Suriyothai

Tarzan (1985 Bollywood version)

Teenagers From Outer Space

They Who Step on the Tiger's Tail (Tora no o wo fumu Otokotachi)

Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines

Titus

Two Comrades Were Serving (Sluzhili dva Tovarishcha)

V for Vendetta

Valiant

Wagner - The Complete Epic

Waterloo

War of the Worlds (2005)

The Wrong Arm of the Law

Yahudi

The Young Visiters

Zeppelin




News & Comment

City Journal

Thomas Friedman

History News Network

Jane's Information Group

New York Times

The New Yorker

Oliphant

Salon

Slate

Washington Post




Weblogs and Filters

Achenblog

Airminded

AirSpace

ArtsJournal

Arts & Letters Daily

BibliOdyssey

Lilek's Bleat

Boing Boing

Brass Goggles

Chase me Ladies, I'm in the Cavalry

Combat Helmets of the 20th Century

Comics Curmudgeon

Cooked Books

Cool Tools

Cottage Renovations

Cronaca

Cul de Sac

Cute Overload

Daily Kos

DC Blogs

Defense Tech

Dr. Boli's Celebrated Magazine

Europe Endless

Fed by Birds

Fig Newtons and Scotch

Gizmodo

Good Name for a Dog

Hanuman

Hullabaloo

J-Walk

The Jury Box

Language Hat

The Law West of Ealing Broadway

Life on Two Acres

Lifehacker

Martin Klasch

Metafilter

Mirabilis

Mostly Forbidden Zone

The Online Photographer

Other Men's Flowers

Pharyngula

Pinky Diablo and His Singing Grubworm

Political Animal

Porkopolis

Repository for Bottled Monsters

The Rest is Noise

Retro Thing

The Salt Mine

Samizdata.net

seven years in the navey

Squid

Talking Points Memo

things magazine

Time Has Told Me

The Tsarina of Tsocks

Unliteral

Winds of Change


Janus Links

Another Janus Museum

Temple of Janus by Peter Paul Rubens

Temple of Janus by H.W.B., 1883

Some Thoughts on the God Janus

Janus in Myth

More Janus in Myth

The Mystery of Janus

Emblem 18 from Andrea Alciato's Book of Emblems (1531)

Engraving of Janus from Vincenzo Cartari's Le Imagini de gli Dei (1608)

Janus and Athena

Mars, Janus, and Minerva

Janus Galleries

The Art of Katherine Janus Kahn

Janus Great Danes

The Society of Janus (not connected with The Janus Museum)


Photography

The American Museum of Photography

Eugene Atget at George Eastman House

Atget at the International Center of Photography

Civil War Photographs from the Library of Congress

The Daguerreian Society

f295.org

The George Eastman House

Kathleen Ewing Gallery (represents the Janus Estate)

Helios - Photography at the National Museum of American Art

Klotz/Sirmon Gallery

Robin Schwartz

Star Camera Company


Music

Alan Lomax Archive

Archeophone Records

Archie Edward's Blues Heritage Foundation

Blues on Air

Classical Music Archives

Classical MIDI Connection

Concertzender Radio

Dr. Horsehair

Hackmann Hurdy-Gurdies

honkingduck.com

John Fahey

Magnatune

Joe Bussard's vintage 78s

Max Hunter Folk Song Collection

Music by Michael Starke

Old-Time Music Homepage

Phonozoic

Roots of Folk: Old English, Scots, and Irish Songs and Tunes (Bruce Olson's Web Site)

Smithsonian Folkways Recordings

Sugar in the Gourd

Time Has Told Me

Weenie Campbell


History & Reference

American Civil War Portal

American Memory - Library of Congress

CivilWar@Smithsonian

Common-Place

Cyber Times Navigator (New York Times)

Government Information Awareness

The Great War in a Different Light

Historical Picture Collections

ibiblio

Making of America

Moving Image Archive

New York Public Library Digital Gallery

Online Books Page

Open Video Project

Proceedings of the Old Bailey 1674-1834

Repositories of Primary Sources

David Rumsey Map Collection

SIRIS - Smithsonian Institution Research Information System

Statistical Abstract of the United States

Studies in Intelligence

Voice of the Shuttle


Favorites

5ives

Amusing Seaches

The Apothecary's Drawer

Big Meadows (Virginia) Webcam

Bookworm Game

Cat of the Day

Coconino World

Coudal Partners

Ferd'nand

Framley Museum

Golden Age Comic Cover Gallery

Jesus of the Week

Lawsonomy

Mars Attacks

Macaroni and cheese recipes

Mutts - the Official Site

Mutts Online

Patrick O'Brian Web Resources

Pepys' Diary

Sodaplay

The Tsarina of Tsocks

Washington Grove Pacer Farm

webplayer

Recent photographs, commentary, and links from The Janus Museum's webmaster, Tibor Szégy-Légy



Every now and again you stumble on a weblog that seems to perfectly encapsulate a way of life, an environment, people, characters, whatever (although the Janus Museum is not all it seems, we think).

--- things magazine



24 July - Cat on a Hot Catwalk

Natasha attempting to beat the heat

I can't say why I thought it was a good idea to call for a catwalk, what with the temperature at 99 and still climbing - must have been sunstroke. There was Natasha stretched out on the stoop, but she gamely rallied for the walk in the Museum's Forest Preserve:

Natasha in the Forest Preserve

... which I kept mercifully short. The woods were shady, but breathless hot. Natasha's now lying on the cool kitchen linoleum, and I intend to sit in front of the fan and suck down a cold dunkelhefeweisen. If I propose another catwalk before October, you may kick me.

link


24 July - High Aviation/Historical Fashion

Fabulous German Lozenge Camouflage Keds from the Museum Shop

Our old friend and colleague Martha Norbeck-Wallingford has taken over the product development desk for the Janus Museum Museum Shop, and some fabulous new merch is beginning to come through the pipeline. Above, custom high top Keds, sporting World War I German aircraft
lozenge camouflage (Buntfarbenaufdruck). They looked so totally awesome that I had to order a pair myself:


German Lozenge Camouflage Keds

They arrived last week, and caused a huge sensation -

German Lozenge Camouflage Keds

Even the Museum Cats were impressed -

Leroy admires the German Lozenge Camouflage Keds

Cat Leroy especially admired the shoes. The Camo Keds are available for purchase through Zazzle.com - they're actually made in China and airshipped directly to you, the Lozenge Camo Keds consumer - it took mine about two weeks to show up. Oh, yes - Zazzle has a twenty percent off sale going on through Sunday - enter "PRICEREVELIO" in the coupon box at checkout. Also available -


Low Top Lozenge Camo Keds

... Lozenge Camo Low Tops. And also...


Lozenge Camo Ladies' Keds

... For the ladies, these elegant slip-on German Lozenge Camouflage Keds. And remember, your purchases assist the Janus Museum in all its unspecified but artistic/educational activities. Martha says there's more stuff coming...

link


23 July - An Anecdote of the Trenches; Our Old Commander

Bob Lyon - Yorktown, 1981
Bob Lyon with mortar - Yorktown, 1981

Scanning the old 3D and stereoviews from
the 1981 Yorktown reenactment reminded me of a moment while we were stationed in the trenches - Yorktown was a siege, you'll recall - I heard a whoosh and saw a smallish mushroom cloud rising from the trench to the right of our position, followed by a peal of manic laughter. Old friend Bob Lyon, he of the dramatic cinematic death scene, witnessed the incident and tells the story:


In the trenches, Yorktown, 1981
The Trenches, Yorktown

As the leading reenactment unit at Yorktown, and throughout the Bicentennial, authenticity was the byword. Hence, none of us wore watches, modern glasses, and so on. This included a ban on cigarettes. Those who needed their nicotine smoked tobacco in clay pipes. At the conclusion of the Siege of Yorktown event, our esteemed commander, El Supremo Bill Brown (now, sadly, deceased) proclaimed the event over. Glasses went back on, cigarettes appeared. The fellow next to me in ranks, sighed with appreciation and said, "Thank heavens, now I can have a proper cigarette!" He produced one from his haversack and stuck it in his mouth. He had been smoking shredded cigarettes in his clay pipe all week. Since he wasn't very good with flint and steel, he'd been lighting his pipe surreptitiously with a lighter. The lighter was in his weskit pocket, where he'd been also keeping a couple of spare cartridges. Bringing out the lighter, he managed to scoop the end of it full of loose powder - as we surmised later. He brought the lighter to his cigarette, flicked the wheel, and Foom! A large cloud of smoke, a flash of light - fortunately, the lighter didn't explode - and, as the smoke cleared, his face emerged black with powder and his glasses smoked over, hair singed a bit. I asked him, "Are you ok?" He checked his eyes and so on and replied quaveringly, "I think so." I said, "in that case, HAHAHAHAHAHA!" Somebody on the other side of him did the Porky Pig ending: Bu,bee,bee, be, that's all folks! We all laughed immoderately, myself loud enough that Tibor, many ranks away, asked later what was so funny.

Scene in the trenches, Yorktown, 1981
The 1st Maryland Regiment, Yorktown

Bob made mention of Bill Brown - William L. Brown III, former commander of the 1st Maryland; very sad to report that Bill died on June 15th. Bill was an elegant and commanding figure at the head of his troops, and a charming and funny chap when off duty - I remember one morning in the freezing barracks of a West Virginia frontier fort when he kindly warmed my shirt at the fire for me. I thanked him, and he said it was no trouble at all to warm his privates. We called Bill the Fun King; he'll be missed. I'll try to pull some pictures of him and will post them here.

Oh, maybe just one more Yorktown snap:


Firing in the trenches, Yorktown, 1981

A nice shot of the lads letting loose with a volley - you can see the pan flashes on the muskets of the fellows on the left and in the center. And I recall I've posted a shot of myself at Yorktown, and also my brief dangerous cameo role in a movie about Yorktown. Brave days, they were.

link


18 July - Mr. Bacon Wonders

'When Shall We Three Meet Again' - Photograph by Knecht, 1868
   Carte de Visite by R. Knecht, 1868, Janus Museum Collection.

On April 5, 1868, a Mr. Bacon and his dog had their portrait made at the studio of R. Knecht of Easton, Pennsylvania. Mr. Bacon wrote a question under the image:

"When shall we three meet again."

A note on the back shows that the question is intended for a lady, Miss Hannah Knight. It's a great image, and the question still hangs in the air after 140 years - did Miss Knight and Mr. Bacon reunite? Or did she insist on a bit of a beard trim, first?

link


18 July - The Old Regiment in Stereo

Men of the 1st Maryland Regiment, Yorktown, 1981

Red/cyan 3D glasses on? It's time for a few more scans of my old stereo slides. Above, gallants of the 1st Maryland Regiment at Yorktown, 1981. Or, if one prefers, the same scene as a stereocard:


1st Maryland Regiment, stereocard

Most exciting when viewed in stereo - the bayonets seem to be aimed directly at one's heart. The stereocard can be downloaded here and printed out for viewing on one's on stereoviewer - resize, if necessary, to 7 inches in width and print it out on cardstock. And here's...


Soldier of the 1st Maryland Regiment, Yorktown, 1981

... Another grizzled 1st Maryland veteran; his name escapes, me, though.


Stereocard of a 1st Maryland Regiment soldier

... And the optional stereocard, also available for download. We were at Yorktown for the bicentennial of the siege and the British surrender - a huge event.

link


17 July - Earthquake

Earthquake, Germantown, Maryland, July16, 2010

It was 5:06 AM. I was minding my own business, asleep, and then... it felt and sounded like a great thud! - it only lasted a second, and I assumed it was a tree coming down nearby;
not an uncommon occurrence in these parts. It was, instead, the great 3.6 Germantown Earthquake. In the map above, the epicenter is the green dot at the upper left, and the red circle to the lower right, about four miles away, is us. We shut the Museum down for the day and looked for damage - nothing found, thank goodness, and the drains seem to be running a bit faster, even.

One often hears of animals acting strangely before an earthquake, but the Museum Cats had been behaving normally before, and slept right through the tremors. However, our maintenance man Gus had been baying at the moon and running around in circles and roosting on fence posts the night before - nothing out of the ordinary for him, though.

link



14 July - Bastille Day

A soldier of the Garde Nationale, 1789

Happy Bastille Day, unless you're an aristo. Let's go to the video:




No information on this superb performance, save that it was filmed in 1907.





... And let's have a tune, too - Le Carillon National, better known as Ça Ira. It's performed by the Ensemble Orchestral de Marseille, from a great CD published for the bicentennial of the French Revolution,
Le Bal des Citoyens.




... Also, a little slideshow of some of my snaps from in and around Paris.

link


10 July - My Sheep, My Friend

Sheep-related ex voto

There have been goat-related ex votos posted here from time to time -
the goat of evil ex voto, and the truck-riding goat ex voto, and even a dancing goat ex voto - but I believe this is the first ex voto with a sheep; it's currently for sale on eBay. Here's the translation of the inscription:
I thanks to the Virgen of Guadalupe because when I feel sad or lonely I have my sheep, the one I breed since it was a baby, to talk with and it gives me company and friendship even if it's not very smart but very affectionate.
Well, one doesn't shouldn't look for intellectual accomplishment in a sheep, after all. But they can make good pals - I recall that when my nephew Caleb Szégy-Légy was little and living on his father Granville's dairy farm, he had an intimate friend named Dennis who happened to be a sheep...

Caleb and Dennis, Gays Mills, Wisconsin

... That's Dennis on the right. They were inseparable pals - Dennis would follow Caleb into the house (do I recall that there were improvised sheep diapers involved?) and Caleb for a time spoke mainly in baa's. Happy memories... eventually, Caleb became an architect and Dennis was eaten.

link


10 July - More Vintage Chickens from the Collection

Lady with Chickens - stereoview c.1870

And now, coming hard on the heels of
the Celebrated Broody Cat of Excelsior, Minnesota, is another superb chicken-related photograph from the Janus Museum collections - a lady gazes enigmatically at the camera while clutching a hen and rooster in this anonymous stereoview, circa 1870.

Update - Thanks to old friend Rusty Norton, the Lady with Chickens has been identified - more later.

Now that I come to think about it, multitudes of nineteenth century photographic prints are chicken-related, having been made with the albumen process - the paper is treated with egg white before sensitization. I wonder what came first in our stereoview - the chickens or the egg white?





We must have the Chicken Reel, here played by the great Ed Haley from the album Forked Deer, which is tragically out of print.

I think we've got another chicken stereoview somewhere in the files - will have to chase it down. Meanwhile, there's always a chicken being chased by a vampire, of course.

link


10 July - Extended July 4th Coverage - The Mulligan Guard

Gus Fires a Salute, July 4

Gus, the Museum's maintenance man, salutes Washington Grove mayor Darrell Anderson (on tractor) during the Fourth of July parade; Gus begged me to post a snap of him actually getting off a shot during the celebrations, since his
delayed Patriotic Salute occurred after the camera stopped rolling.


Grove Militia Stereoview by Lawrence Hare

Jeffrey Price of the Hornbostel Institute brandishes his pipe-wistle hand-gonne; and Gus, the Museum's flintlock, in this superb stereo pair shot by Lawrence Hare. Sure to be a collector's item, the stereocard is available as a free download here. Print it out on cardstock, if available; you may need to resize the file to 7 inches in width to make it the proper size for the standard stereoviewer.


The Washington Grove Militia in 3D

And for readers with a pair of red/cyan 3D glasses handy, here's a shot by Lawrence of the Grove Militia in all their anaglyphic glory.

Looking over the photographs of our motley horde reminded me of an image in the Museum's collection, another stereoview:

The Mulligan Guards - stereoview by Conkey, 1874

The caption reads No. 224. - Mulligan Guards - "Attention, Company." It was taken in July, 1874 at Camp Rathbone, Troy, New York by George W. Conkey. Here's a detail -

Mulligan Guards - detail of the stereoview

One sees a bizarre variety of uniforms and headgear and a fine relaxed slovenly air; not unlike the Washington Grove Militia, in fact. The troops, probably a New York militia company, are performing a tribute to a boffo vaudeville act of the day...


Harrigan and Hart as the Mulligan Guards

... Ned Harrigan and Tony Hart's lampoon of New York City's beer-soaked neighborhood militia companies, The Mulligan Guards -

Harrigan and Hart's 'Mulligan Guard'

We shouldered arms
And marched
And marched away,
From Baxter Street
We marched to Avenue A.
With drums and fifes
How sweetly they did play
As we marched, marched, marched
In the Mulligan Guards.




Here it is, sung by Mick Moloney, from his album McNally's Row of Flats. Harrigan and Hart took the Mulligans to Broadway in 1878 with The Mulligan Guard Picnic and followed it up with The Mulligan Guard Ball in 1879, and Cordelia's Aspirations in 1883.

Maybe we ought to rename our own company the Mulligan Grove Guards.

link


6 July - Righteous Fists

Boxer Uprising Lantern Slide, c.1901

Soldiers of
the Society of Righteous and Harmonious Fists - the Boxers - are on the run from troops of the Eight-Nation Alliance (from the left, German, Japanese, and Russian) in this melodramatic German lantern slide of the Boxer Uprising from the Museum's collection. The Janus Museum used to present magic lantern shows back during the our less scholarly dime museum phase, around 1900. This slide and our Buster Brown slide are the only remnants that I've been able to locate in the files.

link


6 July - Somewhat Delayed Glorious Fourth Coverage

Washington Grove Militia - Photograph by Lawrence Hare

The ranks of the Grove Militia swelled to four this year with the recruitment of Paul Ludwig, brother to neighbor and superb fiddle-maker
David Rapkievian. In this photo, contributed by Friend of the Museum Lawrence Hare, Paul is second to the right. That's Museum maintenance man Gus Norbeck at the left - William Van Camp next to him - Paul - and the Hornbostel Institute's Jeffrey Price to the right.


Jeffrey Price's Hand-Gonne

Last year, Jeffrey was armed with a matchlock carbine; this year, he sported a 14th century "Pipe-Wistle" hand-gonne. Above, he practices the firing process - clapping the business end of a smoldering slow-match to the touch-hole of the gonne. Oh, we have a video of Jeffrey test firing his priming:





What everyone wants to know: did Gus actually get off a shot, or did he fail in the clutch, as he had for so many 4th of Julys? After the success of the last couple of years, he was quietly confident - a fairly unsettling sight - and his test-fire from the previous day had been very fine.


The Patriotic Salute

So, of course, he flunked it - his flint failed to spark. The other chaps did very well - it wasn't what you might call a disciplined volley, but more of a feu de joie, a running fire, very fine in it's own way. William got off a blast with his Hawkens first, then Paul's Brown Bess, and finally, Jeffrey's Pipe-Wistle. Here's the video - first, the Muskrat Band marches on the field, then the Anthem is played as the Militia goes to a sort of present arms, then the volley -




Gus did re-prime and got off a decent blast - after the camera was turned off, naturally.




Here's more coverage, courtesy of Lawrence Hare.


And here's the
Museum's Video Unit's footage of the Grand Parade:





Picnic on the Porch of the Historic Cottage

... And later, a nice picnic on the porch of the Historic Cottage.

link


After the Glorious Fourth

Patriotic cow by B. W. Kilburn,1891

Will post a full account of yesterday's festivities as soon as possible. Meanwhile, please enjoy this magnificent stereoview from our collection - 6913. 'Tis the Land of Liberty, flowing with milk and Honey. Published by
B. W. Kilburn, Littleton, New Hampshire, 1891.

link


3 July - Patriotic Musketry

A Flash in the Pan, with Pickelhaube

Our maintenance man Gus achieves a jolly nice volley with the Museum's musket while wearing the Museum's pickelhaube, in rehearsal for tomorrow's patriotic salute. Let's go to the video:




Very impressive; will report tomorrow on how the
feu du joie comes off.

link


27 June - The Celebrated Broody Cat of Excelsior, Minnesota

Lusus Naturae - A Cat with a Brood of Chicks - carte de visite by H.A. Ball

Here's another treasure from the Museum's scanning queue - a carte de visite by H. A. Ball, c.1870, of a cat mothering a brood of poor orphan chicks. The text as printed on the reverse of the carte:
LUSUS NATURÆ.



A CAT WITH A BROOD OF CHICKENS.

  One of the strangest freaks of fancy ever displayed by an animal is that of a Cat taking possession of a brood of Chickens, and caring for them with a maternal care equal to that of the mother hen. The history of the family is briefly as follows: In May last, a hen belonging to Wm. Simpson, of Excelsior, hatched out a brood of eight chickens, but she died a day or two afterwards, when a Cat which had come to the place a few months before, seeming to realize the motherless condition of the little chicks, took upon herself the responsibility of fostering them. It took but a short time for the chicks to learn to follow and nestle under their foster mother, and they were inseperable companions until the chicks became so large that they no longer required a mother's care. The Cat followed them about with a watchfulness that was wonderful, and guarded them from the dangers incident to young chickenhood with the loss of but two of the brood, which were smothered by her efforts to collect them all under her. It was a source of sorrow to the mother when her troublesome brood no longer required her care, and she followed them about for some days, before she could make up her mind to give them up. [Textbook Empty Nest Syndrome - T.S.-L.]

  About the 15th of August a second brood came off and the mother hen was shut up and the young chicks put into the care of the Cat, when the latter evinced her satisfaction by immediately taking charge of them, and since then has treated them as her own, the same as she did the first brood. The Cat is quite young, and has never owned any kittens, which makes the display of motherly instinct and affection all the more wonderful. When the premises have been invaded by dogs or children, she has displayed the fierceness of the feline nature, but to all who belong there she is as gentle as a kitten need be. A portrait of the Cat and her brood by H. A. Ball is correct as likeness could be, and shows her in her efforts to hover them.

Photographed from Nature by H. A. Ball, Excelsior, Minn.


Truly a
Cornelia among cats! There's a very fine turn of phrase and word choice in the text that should shame the average Twitterer - ...followed them about with a watchfulness that was wonderful, and guarded them from the dangers incident to young chickenhood... - ...she has displayed the fierceness of the feline nature, but to all who belong there she is as gentle as a kitten need be. It's too bad that the cat's name wasn't recorded, but being a farm cat, she probably didn't have one. And yet she's conferred a sort of immortality to Wm. Simpson and H. A. Ball of Excelsior, Minnesota.


Previously Featured Vintage Cats from the Collection:

Cat in a Carte de Visite
Cabinet Card Cat
Sleeping Cat Stereoview

link


27 June - Off to the Cleaners, or Lunacy and Lunars

Portrait of Sir Charles Wallingford, 1630 - Pieter van der Norbeeck
Portrait of Sir Charles Wallingford. Oil on canvas, 1630, by Pieter van der Norbeeck.

If you're planning a visit to the Janus Museum to view our renowned portrait of Sir Charles Wallingford, you'd better pick another leading cultural institution instead - Sir Chas. is off to the conservators for a thorough cleaning. It seems that things got out of hand during last night's Young Benefactors Evening, and the gallant cavalier now sports a couple of unsightly Jägermeister and Mojito stains. The Young Benefactors program is another brilliant scheme of our Development staff - get a bunch of youngish lawyers, lobbyists and Beltway Bandits, dripping with cash, seduced by Culture (as represented by the Janus Museum) and they'll open up their bank accounts to us. Gus and I were even drafted to serve as waiters, for god's sake.

Well, the proceeds from last evening's bacchanal may pay for half of the cost of cleaning off poor Sir Charles. Thank god, though, we coshed the Jäger-spitter before he got to
Captain John Wallingford. I do find that an otherwise elegant Museum fundraiser is marred slightly when one is forced to concuss the guests, don't you?

But after the cops and the ambulance left, I was able to get a little observing time in -


Full Moon as viewed through the Galileoscope

... And got a few more shots of the Strawberry Moon. Also assisting was...

Cat Leroy assists in the Lunar observations

... Leroy, who was, as usual, very helpful.

link


26 June - The Moon and Cats and I

Full Moon from the Janus Museum Observatory

The Moon being full and rising late last night, I took the Museum's
Galileoscope and a tripod out into the Circle for a bit of observation, accompanied by Cats Leroy and Natasha. Not having an adapter tube as suggested in these instructions for Galileoscope photography, I merely held my camera up to the eyepiece and snapped away.

The cats enjoyed the nocturnal activity and ran about, though neither of them pestered me for a peek through the scope. It was all very pleasant, and it made me wonder if Galileo took his cats along when he observed the heavens - would make a good children's book, I bet - like Captain Kidd's Cat. The name of June's full Moon, by the way, is the Strawberry Moon.




There's no lack of Moon songs, of course; let's hear the Moon part of The Sun Whose Rays from The Mikado:
...Observe his flame,
That placid dame,
The moon's Celestial Highness;
There's not a trace
Upon her face
Of diffidence or shyness:
She borrows light
That, through the night,
Mankind may all acclaim her!
And, truth to tell,
She lights up well,
So I, for one, don't blame her!
Ah, pray make no mistake,
We are not shy;
We're very wide awake,
The moon and I!
Ah, pray make no mistake,
We are not shy;
We're very wide awake,
The moon and I!
... Sung by, I think, Valerie Masterson. Oh, and let's watch -




... The wonderful Shirley Henderson as Leonora Braham, who originated the role of Yum-Yum, from Topsy-Turvy - fabulous movie.

link


25 June - Somewhere a Steer, Sometime

Steer and Approaching Storm, Blue Ridge

The steer was on the move and so was I, trying to get to the car before the storm reached us. It's somewhere along the Blue Ridge, I think. Probably taken... oh, around 1980, maybe. I should've kept track of these things better, I know, me being an archivist. But really, in a couple of hundred years, what difference will it make? However, I'm fairly certain it is a steer - Hereford, I think.

With the threatening clouds and all, the shot reminds me of the Museum's wonderful painting,
White Poodle Frightened by a Storm by Ianthe A. Gergel.

link


25 June - Sleeping Lizards

Sleeping Crocodile - Stereoview by Francis Frith
No. 335. Crocodile on a Sand Bank in the Nile.
Albumen Stereoview by Francis Frith, c.1860. Janus Museum Collection.


Myself, I try to stick to photographing
cats and dogs, or, if I'm feeling particularly brave, rabbits. But Francis Frith (1822-1898) was obviously made of sterner stuff - here's his shot of a crocodile - just look at the teeth on that boy - taken on one of his three trips to Egypt between 1856 and 1860. This particular view was even noticed by the Press - here's a review from the Times of London:
You look through your stereoscope, and straightway you stand beside the fabled Nile, watching the crocodile asleep upon its sandy shore, with the superb ruins of Philae in the distance. The scene changes, and you are in the Desert…
... Quoted by Here's Travelblog. If I ever have the opportunity to photograph a crocodile, even a sleeping crocodile, I'll use a powerful telephoto lens while sitting in an armored car, or, better yet, a tank. While wearing armor.

link


20 June - Father's Day Song

Visiting the House of David, c.1920

That's my Pa, Milton Szégy-Légy, grimacing on the left, during a visit to
the House of David, c.1920. And here's a Father's Day song, especially for Father's Day -




It's Father's Day, composed by Harry Ruby and sung by Zero Mostel from his album Songs my Mother Never Sang.

link


19 June - Boaters Boating and an Amazing Coincidence

Boaters on the River, Janus Museum Collection

Here's a superb image from the Museum's Haberdashery in Photographs collection - two straw boaters messing about in a boat, c.1920, presumably after
Straw Hat Day. If there had been a third hat in the picture, it would have made an excellent book cover for a new edition of Three Men in a Boat. Curiously, I know of a song concerning rivers and straw hats - it's River Blues, also known as Ready for the River:




... Performed here by Bruce Hutton of the Double Decker Stringband and Hesperus, from his solo album Roll Back the Carpet, now tragically out of print, though another recording, Old Time Music - It's All Around is available through Smithsonian Folkways.

Here's an odd coincidence - I was strolling through the town of Bethany Beach, Delaware one morning in the summer of 1978 and chanced to witness Bruce, who I didn't know at the time, being photographed at an "old-timey" photo saloon - that portrait is the one used on the cover of Old Time Music - It's All Around:

Bruce Hutton's 'Old-Time Music - It's All Around'

Truly, an amazing occurrence, and one that bears retelling, which I will.

link


18 June - The Passing of the Old Stump

Leroy on the Old Petting Stump

There was a mellow old tree stump, the remnant of an ancient oak, located a bit east of
the North Wallow in the historic Circle, Washington Grove - it was a favorite with Cat Leroy, who would hop up and seek a bit of attention; thus, it was known locally as the Old Petting Stump. One could just sit on it and meditate on important matters...

Meditation in the Circle on the Old Petting Stump

... Or use it as a stage for a striking tableau...

Cat with Toy Hand Grenade, after Diane Arbus

... As in this dramatic presentation, Cat with Toy Hand Grenade, after Diane Arbus. Also used for our brief examination of the lolcat phenomenon. And it was a fine location...

Stump Snooze for Cat Leroy

... For a little shut-eye on an autumn day. So it was a hell of a shock for us the other day when, on hearing a racket out in the Circle, we stepped out on the Historic Cottage porch and saw...

The End of the Old Petting Stump

... A crew armed with a stump grinder, grinding up the old stump, totally without warning. Shouldn't there have been a public hearing? I would have tied myself to the stump, but couldn't find any rope.

The sad remains of the Old Petting Stump

Natasha sadly views the pile of mulch, all that remains of the Old Petting Stump. Poor old Leroy was too distraught to pose.

link


14 June - Gems from the Scanning Queue

A Double Platen Planer, glass plate negative

Today in the Janus Museum's scanning queue - a superb view of a double platen planer, photog. unknown, c.1920. Note the disembodied hand in the lower left corner, turning a wheel. Next...


Tintype of an artilleryman, Fort Washington

... A 9th-plate tintype of a gallant gunner with his 6-pounder,
Fort Washington, Maryland. And now...

The Smithsonian Castle, ambrotype

... A somewhat foggy but extremely rare ambrotype view of the old Castle of the Smithsonian Institution - previously unpublished. Here's another view of the Castle from the Collection.


Previous Scanning Queue Treasures:

Carmen Miranda and the Assassin

link


14 June - Cephalopodiana

Pelagic Octopus by Chris Newbert

Too beautiful to even think about eating: a Pelagic Octopus (though not a
Tuberculate Pelagic Octopus). Photograph by Chris Newbert. Many thanks to our cephalpod correspondent Grahame for sending the snap, via Pharyngula, via National Geographic.

link


13 June - Alejandro Gatito

Young Kitten Alejandro

Please say hello to young Alejandro, who showed up scared and hungry in neighbors Margot and Ned's garden last week. He was given a couple of square meals and was soon captured by Friend of the Museum Rebecca. She took him to the vet, who pronounced him about eight weeks old and healthy - not even a flea on him. Neighbor Mimi dubbed him Alejandro, and so far the name suits him pretty well. He's now very friendly and affectionate - and over-the-top cute.


Alejandro meets the usual suspects

Peake (left) checks out the new boy as Nutmeg purses her lips in disapproval.

So Alejandro is now looking for a permanent home. Tragically, the Curator has ruled that the Museum does not require a new museum cat, but we have hopes that he'll be adopted in town, near the Circle.


Kitten Alejandro models the new kitten-sized pickelhaube

The prototype of the new kitten-sized pickelhaube arrived most opportunely - Alejandro was very good and submitted to posing in it. By the way, Mr. Pradeep informs me that the first consignment of cat-size pickelhaubes has been finished and is on the dock, ready for shipping.

link


11 June - Surprise Shipment of Charcuterie

A Lovely Assortment of Sausage from Koenemann's

Came home the other afternoon to find a package from Brother Granville at the door - inside was a styrofoam cooler which held the goods temptingly arrayed in the photo above. From the lower left and going clockwise, we find German style salami, bratwurst, natural casing frankfurters, shinken speck, pork sausage links, and Polish sausage - truly a coronary in a cooler. It's a superb assortment of goodies from
Koenemann's Sausage of Volo, Illinois. I've had to store it all in a freezer in an undisclosed location to preeserve it from those ravening hounds, Gus and the Museum Fellows.


Previous Sausage-Related Postings:

Ceci n'est pas une Saucisson Polonais
Alarming Russian Sausage
Choucroute Recipe
Wild Magyar Sausage Advert
Socialist Weiner Poster
Visit to the Kielbasa Factory
Ex Voto Chorizo
The Self-Serving Hotdog

link


5 June - The Merchandise-Hungry Cats

Bird Seller's Ex Voto

The latest eBay cat-related ex voto - a token giving thanks for a miraculous intervention - tragically casts the kitties in an unfavorable light. Here's the translation of the inscription:
Anastacio Sanchez writes: I was selling my birds one day when I suddenly realized I had a line of cats following me and hungry for my merchandise so I ran and asked the Virgen de Zapopan for help and in that instant a large dog came out and chased them away for which I now give thanks.
So hurtful - I'm certain that the cats just wanted to look at the birds.


Previous Cat-Related Ex Votos:

Unmupped Kittens - More Miraculous Trusting Cats
Miracle of the Trusting Cats
Big Blue Cat Miracle
Brave/Ugly Cats Miracles
Miracle of Feline Augmented Literacy
Pretty Hairy Kittens Miracle
Demonic Fear of Kitties
Cat Scratch Fever Miracle
Miracle of the Cat Husband
The Miracle of the Embarrassed Cats
Tragic Love
Canción de los Gatos
San Pascual's Cat
Aunt Honorata's Cats
The Perfect Cat Storm
Cat Pi Milagro
Greedy-guts Miracle Cat

link


1 June - Tom, Jerry, and Franz Joseph I

The Emperor Franz Joseph's appearance in 'Johann Mouse'

His Imperial and Royal Apostolic Majesty Franz Joseph (1830-1916), King-Emperor of Austria-Hungary*, may have appeared in lots of cartoons, but the only one I'm familiar with is Tom and Jerry's
Johann Mouse - it's your basic Cat on Mouse scenario, but set in Vienna and complete with waltzes -




His Imperial and Royal Majesty appears at the 5 minute, 27 second mark.

*The Emperor's Official Grand Title (according to Wikipedia) was:
His Imperial and Royal Apostolic Majesty,

Franz Joseph I, by the Grace of God Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary, Bohemia, King of Lombardy and Venice, of Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia, Galicia, Lodomeria and Illyria; King of Jerusalem etc., Archduke of Austria; Grand Duke of Tuscany and Cracow, Duke of Lorraine, of Salzburg, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola and of the Bukovina; Grand Prince of Transylvania; Margrave of Moravia; Duke of Upper and Lower Silesia, of Modena, Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla, of Auschwitz, Zator and Teschen, Friuli, Ragusa (Dubrovnik) and Zara (Zadar); Princely Count of Habsburg and Tyrol, of Kyburg, Gorizia and Gradisca; Prince of Trent (Trento) and Brixen; Margrave of Upper and Lower Lusatia and in Istria; Count of Hohenems, Feldkirch, Bregenz, Sonnenberg, etc.; Lord of Trieste, of Cattaro (Kotor), and over the Windic march; president of The German Confederation.

And after 1867:
His Imperial and Royal Apostolic Majesty,

Francis Joseph I, by the grace of God Emperor of Austria; Apostolic King of Hungary, King of Bohemia, Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia, Galicia, Lodomeria, Illyria; King of Jerusalem, etc.; Archduke of Austria; Grand Duke of Tuscany, Crakow; Duke of Lorraine, Salzburg, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, the Bukovina; Grand Prince of Transylvania; Margrave of Moravia; Duke of the Upper & Lower Silesia, Modena, Parma, Piacenza, Guastalla, Oswiecin, Zator, Cieszyn, Friuli, Ragusa, Zara; Princely Count of Habsburg, Tyrol, Kyburg, Gorizia, Gradisca; Prince of Trent, Brixen; Margrave of the Upper & Lower Lusatia, in Istria; Count of Hohenems, Feldkirch, Bregenz, Sonnenberg, etc.; Lord of Triest, Kotor, the Wendish March; Grand Voivode of the Voivodship of Serbia etc. etc..

link


Archives


2010

January   February   March   April   May   June

July


2009

January   February   March   April   May   June

July   August   September   October   November

December


2008

January   February   March   April   May   June

July   August   September   October   November

December


2007

January   February   March   April   May   June

July   August   September   October   November

December


2006

January   February   March   April   May   June

July   August   September   October   November

December


2005

January   February   March   April   May   June

July   August   September   October   November

December


2004

January   February   March   April    May    June

July   August   September   October   November

December


2003

January   February   March   April   May   June

July   August  September   October   November

December











Contact us






Listed on BlogShares