Here is an interesting web blog that I ran across. The woman who runs it wrote about NEQUA and so she showed up on the google search.
http://thesymzonian.wordpress.com/2012/12/17/nequa-or-narratorial-reliability-in-a
-utopia/comment-page-1/
There is a lot of comparative stuff on her web site. She is working towards her Doctorate. I don’t know what she wants a Doctorate for. With the information she has right now she could become one of the best guides to the hidden places people do not usually visit. Has anyone every thought of an amusement park totally underground? There could be replicas of several different entrances to the Underground worlds. I think it could be a winner.
I spent a little time underground in the Silver Mines near Calico in California. I heard that the entrances have all been blown up so no one can go inside any more. Duh da DUH Da.
A woman I have known for thirty years just told me last week that the lead mines in southeast Kansas are where the real flying saucers are hiding. She saw them sixty years ago.
Incidentally, I went to California recently and had the ability to take the EXTRATERRESTRIAL HIGHWAY. Here is what I saw.
Stopped to see an old friend in Kanab and he told me his flying saucer story, which can be substantiated by two other persons. He saw his in broad daylight. Great piece of trivia. He said they do not “fly” They disappear in one spot and then re-appear in another. He was eating lunch and watched it for about twenty minutes.
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Getting down to the final few corrections. The galleys are at the printer. Here is the front cover.
We were going to do a science fiction cover. We tried a romantic idea, then decided on a feminist cover. Nothing we did seemed right. Science Fiction hadn't been invented in 1900. Nequa takes a feminist position but the reality is that in 1900 suffrage positions were still being staked out. We decided that the hollow earth Utopian ideas and the chapters on economic evolution would be hard to portray on a cover that needed to attract and sell books. Remember the white papers? well this is the cover to look for.
We were going to do a science fiction cover. We tried a romantic idea, then decided on a feminist cover. Nothing we did seemed right. Science Fiction hadn't been invented in 1900. Nequa takes a feminist position but the reality is that in 1900 suffrage positions were still being staked out. We decided that the hollow earth Utopian ideas and the chapters on economic evolution would be hard to portray on a cover that needed to attract and sell books. Remember the white papers? well this is the cover to look for.
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Here are the backcover quotes I wrote about. Makes me want to buy the book
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Rediscovered in an Attic in Kansas
Back in Print after 114 Years
--------------------------------------------------------------------
“Nequa is a surprisingly enjoyable salutary tale.”
John Clute. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
"........parallels American history in a broad sense, but a great change
came during a moral revolution in which selfishness was abandoned."
Science Fiction: The Early Years
Everett F. Bleiler and Richard Bleiler
"Though fairly typical of other terra cava narratives concerned with
exploration, spiritualism, and utopianism, there are a few unique features,
not the least of which is a female narrator."
Michelle K. Yost http://thesymzonian.wordpress.com/
"One of the most elusive American hollow earth books. “ Lloyd Currey
“A few of the male writers also questioned their culture's
prevailing gender ideology in the pages of the Utopian Novels.
The most obvious example is Alcanoan O. Grigsby, whose 1900
novel NEQUA, describes a world where both sexes are equal after
women put an end to war and demanded freedom from domin-
ation of man-made laws.”
--From the forward of ”Unveiling a Parallel” by
Carol A. Kolmerten, Prof. of English at Hood College
------------------------------------------------------------------
One of the First Feminist Hollow Earth Science Fiction Books
------------------------------------------------------------------
As I said five very knowledgeable persons have allowed me use their quotes. The quotes are from other published sources. Remember they are commenting on a book which has been speculated about for years, only available as a printed book in a dozen libraries. One of the people I quote said that they had to read NEQUA on microfilm. He said it “was very wearying”. Well I read a lot of newspapers on microfilm and they just flat put me to sleep. It would be a horrible way to read a book like NEQUA.
The statements in bold print are quotes from me.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Rediscovered in an Attic in Kansas
Back in Print after 114 Years
--------------------------------------------------------------------
“Nequa is a surprisingly enjoyable salutary tale.”
John Clute. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
"........parallels American history in a broad sense, but a great change
came during a moral revolution in which selfishness was abandoned."
Science Fiction: The Early Years
Everett F. Bleiler and Richard Bleiler
"Though fairly typical of other terra cava narratives concerned with
exploration, spiritualism, and utopianism, there are a few unique features,
not the least of which is a female narrator."
Michelle K. Yost http://thesymzonian.wordpress.com/
"One of the most elusive American hollow earth books. “ Lloyd Currey
“A few of the male writers also questioned their culture's
prevailing gender ideology in the pages of the Utopian Novels.
The most obvious example is Alcanoan O. Grigsby, whose 1900
novel NEQUA, describes a world where both sexes are equal after
women put an end to war and demanded freedom from domin-
ation of man-made laws.”
--From the forward of ”Unveiling a Parallel” by
Carol A. Kolmerten, Prof. of English at Hood College
------------------------------------------------------------------
One of the First Feminist Hollow Earth Science Fiction Books
------------------------------------------------------------------
As I said five very knowledgeable persons have allowed me use their quotes. The quotes are from other published sources. Remember they are commenting on a book which has been speculated about for years, only available as a printed book in a dozen libraries. One of the people I quote said that they had to read NEQUA on microfilm. He said it “was very wearying”. Well I read a lot of newspapers on microfilm and they just flat put me to sleep. It would be a horrible way to read a book like NEQUA.
The statements in bold print are quotes from me.
Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Every book also needs a back cover. The “How to Write, Publish, Market, and Get Rich” books all say that the back cover is the most important. They are right about one thing I see an interesting book, actually an interesting cover, and I automatically pick up the book take a close look at the cover and automatically turn the book over. The books whose front cover intrigued me enough that I pick them up in the first place are instantly turned over. It’s like I want to read the ending first.
Probably the book producers have trained me to do that. Subconsciously I know that some intriguing explanations related to the cover, some teasers to heighten my interest and some brief explanation as to how this packet of writing will provide me with sex, power or money are brazenly splashed across the back cover.
It could be that I want to see if there are any experts that think that the book is worth reading. If there aren’t any experts it doesn’t keep me from buying the book but if their are some experts then I automatically buy the book.
I am also cognisant of having read teasers that pique my interest. Quick short statements that when combined with the front cover and one experts quote , quickly find me with my money in my hand.
So I have spent some time writing phrases and then trying them out on my friends. Actually it just dawned on me that I should have been trying them out on my enemies, they’ll give a better, more exacting critique. But the nagging thought in the back of my mind is how do I find experts.
Then on last Saturday I had Dim Sum with my wife and one of our best friends, Kathy and a friend of Kathy’s. The friend of Kathy’s when I asked what she used for recommendations to get the super job she has stated, “I’m from Chicago, So I learned how to just ask, if I want something. Surprisingly it works at least half of the time.”
So on Wednesday I sent emails to five people who have had knowledge of NEQUA for several years. I listed a quote and asked them if they would allow a back cover quote and if the answer was yes what they wanted as an attribution signature. I got five yes answers. Well I’m from Kansas, and when we ask it works 100% --well at least this time.
Saturday, August 23, 2014
In the third edition of NEQUA I state “I guessed from the sound of the word (Nequa) that it’s origin was probably to be found in a Central Asia or Native American language. “
Three weeks ago on my way back from the Borg I stopped off at Alma where Grigsby ran a newspaper. I wanted to visit the museum they have there. The person watching the desk listened to my inquiry about wanting a photograph of Grigsby and handed me a book.
A historical book about Alma, Kansas, the town where A.O. ran a newspaper for several years. The book reported on the names of several native Americans. Several persons were listed who were married in Alma. The term -qua was the last syllable of several Native American woman’s names. I asked the person in charge what they knew about the Native Americans that had lived in Alma in the 1800's. There wasn't much information available but it was suggested that I make inquiries with the Pottawatomie, Kickapoo, Salk and Fox as they had all been in the area of Alma.
Another internet source reported that in Lakota, Nequa meant “Native Son” So what does qua actually mean.
This week on the way back from Mennonite Press in Newton Kansas I was cruising at 80 mph watching the road ahead for potential Police Officers in radar cars, Out of the corner of my eye I saw a sign, Tequa Creek. I instantly let off of the gas. Decided that I read the sign wrong and then right in front of me is another bridge with another Tequa Creek sign on it.
When I got home I called the museum in Franklin county and asked if they had any information on what the word meant. Surprisingly they said that Franklin County at one time had more different Native American tribal groups represented in the county than any other Kansas County.
Tequa Creek was named after Chief Tuk-quos, a Sauk, also spelled Tuquas. They had no information on what it meant.
Three weeks ago on my way back from the Borg I stopped off at Alma where Grigsby ran a newspaper. I wanted to visit the museum they have there. The person watching the desk listened to my inquiry about wanting a photograph of Grigsby and handed me a book.
A historical book about Alma, Kansas, the town where A.O. ran a newspaper for several years. The book reported on the names of several native Americans. Several persons were listed who were married in Alma. The term -qua was the last syllable of several Native American woman’s names. I asked the person in charge what they knew about the Native Americans that had lived in Alma in the 1800's. There wasn't much information available but it was suggested that I make inquiries with the Pottawatomie, Kickapoo, Salk and Fox as they had all been in the area of Alma.
Another internet source reported that in Lakota, Nequa meant “Native Son” So what does qua actually mean.
This week on the way back from Mennonite Press in Newton Kansas I was cruising at 80 mph watching the road ahead for potential Police Officers in radar cars, Out of the corner of my eye I saw a sign, Tequa Creek. I instantly let off of the gas. Decided that I read the sign wrong and then right in front of me is another bridge with another Tequa Creek sign on it.
When I got home I called the museum in Franklin county and asked if they had any information on what the word meant. Surprisingly they said that Franklin County at one time had more different Native American tribal groups represented in the county than any other Kansas County.
Tequa Creek was named after Chief Tuk-quos, a Sauk, also spelled Tuquas. They had no information on what it meant.
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
This post doesn’t have much to do with the publishing of NEQUA except in some peripheral ways. The book shown here was written by a friend of mine it gives some brief explanation of how to compete with the BIG MONEY BOYS in a political arena. I am referred to as Mork in the book and I must say that the time I spent messing up the plans of the arrogant self elected spenders of public wealth , was some of the most fun and hardest work I ever committed to.
We actually did stand toe to toe with guys who contributed $3,000,000.00 and spent it all buying T.V. time and newspaper ads. We beat them with $30,000, which is peanuts in today's political arena.
I especially like to say that the “people who count” those who “Think Big” the “movers and shakers” all of the cliches used to describe the wealthy, the powerful, the gnomes behind the curtain really take a loss hard. I would always laugh and say “Oh come on it’s only money!!” Of course we rarely ever spent any. One of the best retorts was when we beat a $35,000,000.00 bond issue. The press asked us how much we spent and our answer which was duly noted in the records of our political action committee was $36.82 and thirty dollars was for the party to celebrate.
Anyhow if you think that you might enjoy rubbing wealth noses in the cat box buy this book and look over the place you live. Democracy and Liberty live on the efforts of the little people.
The big wars and big time lobbyists, are making money for the corporations.
Remember
(1) the “Bubbas” and “Obamas” are the grease and oil that rise to the top of clean water. You always get dirty when dealing with those guys and you always get the bill for everything they do.
(2) there is always a curtain and there is always somebody behind the curtain.
(3) Always elect someone dumber than yourself .
NEQUA contains the same message except they were lucky that the evolution of their thought, removed the oily grease and tore down the curtain early in their history. We are still suffering the same plight as our forefathers who tried to change the way things were accomplished.
You can order the book from www.biblio.com
We actually did stand toe to toe with guys who contributed $3,000,000.00 and spent it all buying T.V. time and newspaper ads. We beat them with $30,000, which is peanuts in today's political arena.
I especially like to say that the “people who count” those who “Think Big” the “movers and shakers” all of the cliches used to describe the wealthy, the powerful, the gnomes behind the curtain really take a loss hard. I would always laugh and say “Oh come on it’s only money!!” Of course we rarely ever spent any. One of the best retorts was when we beat a $35,000,000.00 bond issue. The press asked us how much we spent and our answer which was duly noted in the records of our political action committee was $36.82 and thirty dollars was for the party to celebrate.
Anyhow if you think that you might enjoy rubbing wealth noses in the cat box buy this book and look over the place you live. Democracy and Liberty live on the efforts of the little people.
The big wars and big time lobbyists, are making money for the corporations.
Remember
(1) the “Bubbas” and “Obamas” are the grease and oil that rise to the top of clean water. You always get dirty when dealing with those guys and you always get the bill for everything they do.
(2) there is always a curtain and there is always somebody behind the curtain.
(3) Always elect someone dumber than yourself .
NEQUA contains the same message except they were lucky that the evolution of their thought, removed the oily grease and tore down the curtain early in their history. We are still suffering the same plight as our forefathers who tried to change the way things were accomplished.
You can order the book from www.biblio.com
Friday, June 6, 2014
Several months ago I decided that the location of the office of “Equity” and the publishing headquarters for NEQUA should be closely looked at. My intuition paid off as I found that the demographics of the office location held some very interesting information. I drove to Topeka and easily found 115 east 5th Street, it was a big vacant lot. An example of the advantages of American Urban Renewal. There isn’t any renewal only an unusable vacant lot.
A call to the Shawnee Public Library had gotten me connected with a man who knew all about buildings in Topeka and also about removed buildings. He said that he was sure that a photograph of the building existed because he remembered that the 115 location was the home of Langston Hughes when he was seven years old. The story was that Langston’s father had gone to Mexico and Langston and his mother were in Topeka where she worked for a Lawyer. Incidentally Langston was his mothers surname and Hughes was his fathers surname.
When I expressed amazement at the idea of Langston Hughes living in a commercial building, the gentleman supplying this information said it wasn’t unusual as the area for several blocks was a commercial district that was racially integrated. By living one block off the main drag of Topeka, Langston’s mother had only a block to walk to work.
I got a copy of the photograph and it was a concrete and brick two store building with rooms upstairs and a couple of commercial spaces downstairs. This was “mixed-use”, an existent idea one hundred years ago, before the Urban Developers reinvented the idea in 1960. It allowed for Doctors and Dentists and lawyers to have “offices” in their living quarters.
Well I proceeded to check on the property owner and recheck the construction method, which was concrete with brick facing, meaning that it could have still been in use today if some bureaucrat somewhere had decided that Urban Renewal might include a minor makeover, instead of a scorched earth conclusion.
I went back to the census pages to look at who might inhabit the same building. In addition to Mary Lowe’s family, there was a Dr. Sunday, a black physician, an attorney and two “chinamen.” Obviously a highly integrated area one hundred and fourteen years ago in the middle of Kansas.
A call to the Shawnee Public Library had gotten me connected with a man who knew all about buildings in Topeka and also about removed buildings. He said that he was sure that a photograph of the building existed because he remembered that the 115 location was the home of Langston Hughes when he was seven years old. The story was that Langston’s father had gone to Mexico and Langston and his mother were in Topeka where she worked for a Lawyer. Incidentally Langston was his mothers surname and Hughes was his fathers surname.
When I expressed amazement at the idea of Langston Hughes living in a commercial building, the gentleman supplying this information said it wasn’t unusual as the area for several blocks was a commercial district that was racially integrated. By living one block off the main drag of Topeka, Langston’s mother had only a block to walk to work.
I got a copy of the photograph and it was a concrete and brick two store building with rooms upstairs and a couple of commercial spaces downstairs. This was “mixed-use”, an existent idea one hundred years ago, before the Urban Developers reinvented the idea in 1960. It allowed for Doctors and Dentists and lawyers to have “offices” in their living quarters.
Well I proceeded to check on the property owner and recheck the construction method, which was concrete with brick facing, meaning that it could have still been in use today if some bureaucrat somewhere had decided that Urban Renewal might include a minor makeover, instead of a scorched earth conclusion.
I went back to the census pages to look at who might inhabit the same building. In addition to Mary Lowe’s family, there was a Dr. Sunday, a black physician, an attorney and two “chinamen.” Obviously a highly integrated area one hundred and fourteen years ago in the middle of Kansas.
Friday, April 25, 2014
Finally got a break through on Matilda C. Gillmore. I had looked for her since finding out that she was a co-editor with Mary P. Lowe of The New Woman Newspaper. I found a woman named Mathilda, born in Chamois Missouri, listed as a Mulatto, but Gillmore was her maiden name and later a Matilda showed up in the Topeka city directories listed as a journalist with a son whose name was Jesse Gillmore, so it meant that for her to be the right Gillmore she had to have kept her maiden name. Nothing I did expanded the research on Matilda. I spent some time with Sherrita Camp, an African-American genealogist in Topeka who tried to help me. We couldn’t find where Matilda came from or where, after six years she disappeared to. I finally decided to look at every notation in Ancestry.com that had a Matilda or an M. C. Gillmore or Gilmore, looking for a son named Jesse or Jessie. There were only 8050 notation to look at . Maybe I would find a marriage, or death date. I went through 980 notations and quit for the day.
A week later I went to the Federal Archives in Kansas City and asked one of the volunteers, a woman named Evelyn Brissette who has spent 25 years doing geneology research to help me get back to the internet location that listed the 8050 Gillmores. She said “let me try one other thing, first.” She typed in Matilda’s son’s name in this manner, Jess* the asterisk, a “wild card” and Kansas as a location where he lived. The third notation listed Jessie and his mother Matilda living in Lawrence, Kansas . Matilda was listed as born in Sweden. Her mother was Jennie Catherine Anderson also born in Sweden. Jennie and her husband ran a boarding house on Vermont Street.
Matilda was a journalist and a printer. I still haven’t found any marriage record for Matilda C. Gillmore. The Kansas Matlida moved with her mother and her son to Florida in 1900. Her son grew up to own a printing shop in Virginia Beach, Virginia.She died in 1936 and is buried in Virginia Beach.
So that removed Matilda C. Gillmore from Missouri. Strange the way my mind works, now I wonder what happened to the first Matilda C. It is almost as if I knew her.
A week later I went to the Federal Archives in Kansas City and asked one of the volunteers, a woman named Evelyn Brissette who has spent 25 years doing geneology research to help me get back to the internet location that listed the 8050 Gillmores. She said “let me try one other thing, first.” She typed in Matilda’s son’s name in this manner, Jess* the asterisk, a “wild card” and Kansas as a location where he lived. The third notation listed Jessie and his mother Matilda living in Lawrence, Kansas . Matilda was listed as born in Sweden. Her mother was Jennie Catherine Anderson also born in Sweden. Jennie and her husband ran a boarding house on Vermont Street.
Matilda was a journalist and a printer. I still haven’t found any marriage record for Matilda C. Gillmore. The Kansas Matlida moved with her mother and her son to Florida in 1900. Her son grew up to own a printing shop in Virginia Beach, Virginia.She died in 1936 and is buried in Virginia Beach.
So that removed Matilda C. Gillmore from Missouri. Strange the way my mind works, now I wonder what happened to the first Matilda C. It is almost as if I knew her.
Friday, March 21, 2014
Several months ago I decided that the location of the office of “Equity” newspaper and the publishing headquarters for NEQUA should be closely looked at. My intuition paid off as I found that the demographics of the office location held some very interesting information. I drove to Topeka and easily found 115 east 5th Street, it was a big vacant lot. An example of the advantages of American Urban Renewal. There isn’t any renewal only an unusable vacant lot.
A call to the Shawnee Public Library had gotten me connected with a man who knew all about buildings in Topeka and also about removed buildings. He said that he was sure that a photograph of the building existed because he remembered that the 115 location was the home of Langston Hughes when he was seven years old. The story was that Langston’s father had gone to Mexico and Langston and his mother were in Topeka where she worked for a Lawyer. Incidentally Langston was his mothers surname and Hughes was his fathers surname.
When I expressed amazement at the idea of Langston Hughes living in a commercial building, in the center of Topeka, the gentleman supplying this information said it wasn’t unusual as the area for several blocks was a commercial district that was racially integrated, at that time. By living one block off the main drag of Topeka, Langston’s mother had only a block to walk to work.
I got a copy of the photograph and it was a concrete and brick two store building with rooms upstairs and a couple of commercial spaces downstairs. This was “mixed-use”, an existent idea one hundred years ago, before the Urban Developers reinvented the idea in 1960. It allowed for Doctors and Dentists and lawyers to have “offices” in their living quarters.
Well I proceeded to check on the property owner and recheck the construction method, which was concrete meaning that it could have still been in use today if some bureaucrat somewhere had decided that Urban Renewal might include a minor makeover, instead of a scorched earth conclusion.
I went back to the census pages to look at who might inhabit the same building. In addition to Mary Lowe’s family, there was a Dr. Sunday, a black physician, an attorney and two “chinamen.” Obviously a highly integrated area one hundred and fourteen years ago in the middle of Topeka, Kansas.
Monday, March 10, 2014
Last week I spent the day at the Watkins Museum in Lawrence, Kansas. Why? because Lawrence has had a lot of strange people go through there, and so I figure that one of the persons I am looking for who worked on NEQUA just might have spent some time in Lawrence.
The Watkins is in a grand old building downtown on Massachusetts Ave. Being my bull in a china shop, self I just ambled in a minute after it opened. They run their place on an appointment basis. How the public is supposed to know that I do not know. Of course I was able to slide by the rules with my best sad face showing.
They put me in touch with a woman named Mary Wallace, a volunteer archivist. She had actually been responsible for preparing the files in the section where she works, which was great because I just told her the story of what I knew about the NEQUA crew and she wrote down a couple of key words and pulled the files for me. It only took about two hours to go through the potential files.
Mary also gave me a card for the “Collection Manager” who she said could do a search of the notations on photographs and see if there were any photographs of the dozen or so names I gave her.
Two days later I got an email saying, No Luck, but it included a couple of suggestions of other places to check.
It is this type of service that I have come to expect from research people. They know there section of information better than anyone else or they should, and they usually have an idea how to play their intuitive card which sometimes pays off with very unsuspected information.
Seems there is always one more place to check.
The Watkins is in a grand old building downtown on Massachusetts Ave. Being my bull in a china shop, self I just ambled in a minute after it opened. They run their place on an appointment basis. How the public is supposed to know that I do not know. Of course I was able to slide by the rules with my best sad face showing.
They put me in touch with a woman named Mary Wallace, a volunteer archivist. She had actually been responsible for preparing the files in the section where she works, which was great because I just told her the story of what I knew about the NEQUA crew and she wrote down a couple of key words and pulled the files for me. It only took about two hours to go through the potential files.
Mary also gave me a card for the “Collection Manager” who she said could do a search of the notations on photographs and see if there were any photographs of the dozen or so names I gave her.
Two days later I got an email saying, No Luck, but it included a couple of suggestions of other places to check.
It is this type of service that I have come to expect from research people. They know there section of information better than anyone else or they should, and they usually have an idea how to play their intuitive card which sometimes pays off with very unsuspected information.
Seems there is always one more place to check.
Thursday, February 27, 2014
I was doing my early morning search for more information on the Nequa crew and hit on a great site. The site url is http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/ It is a site where newspapers that have been digitized are available and better yet you can type in a persons name and it will search for the name in the newspapers that have been digitized. So I put in A. O. Grigsby and then spent a couple of hours looking through the notations that have been found by the search system. A lot of the items I have already seen. But there were two real, real interesting notations.
In 1892 Mr. and Mrs A.O. Grigsby are listed as members of the welcoming committee for the Inauguration of the Governor of Kansas. I wasn’t surprised that a political operative with Populist connections would be involved in that Inauguration as it was for the Populist Governor that had been elected.
What made this surprising is the fact that I had found NO notation of there being a new Mrs. A. O. Grigsby after the death of Mrs. A. O. Grigsby in Hubbard county. I spent today at the National Archives looking for marriage licenses. didn’t find any so the story takes a new turn and might just come out the way I predicted. No I will not reveal the prediction until the book comes out.
In 1892 Mr. and Mrs A.O. Grigsby are listed as members of the welcoming committee for the Inauguration of the Governor of Kansas. I wasn’t surprised that a political operative with Populist connections would be involved in that Inauguration as it was for the Populist Governor that had been elected.
What made this surprising is the fact that I had found NO notation of there being a new Mrs. A. O. Grigsby after the death of Mrs. A. O. Grigsby in Hubbard county. I spent today at the National Archives looking for marriage licenses. didn’t find any so the story takes a new turn and might just come out the way I predicted. No I will not reveal the prediction until the book comes out.
The second notation appeared in the St. Paul Daily Globe on Novenber 11, 1888. I copied it out of the newspaper so you can read the original.
Now for those of us who have always been happy in the middle of the road doing what the Republicans say or the Democrats suggest, the above newspaper item doesn’t mean much. It is just a meeting to commemorate the death of some men with principals in Chicago. But the fact that these men were asking for an eight hour work day. Their Labor Unions were calling for a boycott. The powers that ruled were afraid that they would lose a little money, so it all ended with violence and people getting killed and eight men being hung, (actually they choked to death because the nooses were loose and so the usual breaking of the neck could not take place, they swung until they choked to death, a very gruesome way to die, according to the witnesses.) They were labeled Anarchists. They did not follow the Republican or Democrat party line. Thus, Judicial Murder.
So that is the reason for this “Festival of Sorrow”at which A. O. Grigsby is listed as one of the speakers.
I first learned a little about the Haymarket Affair while at a conference of the National Association of Gravestone Studies. They had their conference in Chicago which I attended. We toured cemeteries in Chicago and one was the cemetery where Emma Goldman and some other nefarious characters were buried. The first thing that the guide told us was that NO cemetery in Chicago would accept the bodies of the men who were hanged as Anarchists responsible for the Haymarket riots. Finally the German Waldheim Cemetery allowed the burial of these men. There is a Haymarket Martyrs' Monument in the center of where these men are buried, which has been placed on the National Historical Monument list. The dead men were pardoned.
One of the men on the Gravestone Association tour was the grandchild of one of the Haymarket Riot martyrs. His grandfathers envolvement was that he printed circulars to announce the protest. Seems strange that printing a poster could get you hung by the Police.
I first learned a little about the Haymarket Affair while at a conference of the National Association of Gravestone Studies. They had their conference in Chicago which I attended. We toured cemeteries in Chicago and one was the cemetery where Emma Goldman and some other nefarious characters were buried. The first thing that the guide told us was that NO cemetery in Chicago would accept the bodies of the men who were hanged as Anarchists responsible for the Haymarket riots. Finally the German Waldheim Cemetery allowed the burial of these men. There is a Haymarket Martyrs' Monument in the center of where these men are buried, which has been placed on the National Historical Monument list. The dead men were pardoned.
One of the men on the Gravestone Association tour was the grandchild of one of the Haymarket Riot martyrs. His grandfathers envolvement was that he printed circulars to announce the protest. Seems strange that printing a poster could get you hung by the Police.
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
In NEQUA I am reading about the Ice King, which is frozen in the ice near the north pole. The weather here in Kansas City has been perfect for providing a background for this chapter.
When it snows I just stay in, except for keeping a hole open in the fish pond. No reason to drive out the driveway and mix with the loonies sliding to work. (Incidentally there is a piece of Canadian money called a loonie.)
In the book there are several very creative endeavors undertaken by some of the crew of the Ice King while they are stuck in the ice. The dialogue reminded me of my Swede relatives talking about a fellow relative who seems to have a little bit more creativity than the rest of us. In a half whisper, under their breathe, they say “he’s real sharp,” to describe a young person with a little bit of their creativity showing.
Personally I thought that probably the young person has a little bit better ability to focus their attention than most people. Maybe their retention of previous situations is superior. It could be they have developed their ability to recall a previous similar situations and with some minor readjustment they can use the old answer to solve the present problem.
It seemed to me that usually there is a lot of luck involved with real creative solutions. At times it seemed that the usual intellectual answers were rejected with perhaps a cessation of the human involvement, a little spaced out glazed look in the eyes, a seemingly brief period of silent prayer. I even concluded that there was a little repartee with the higher sources. My relatives always came down on the side of “sharpness” which in my opinion obfuscates the actuality of what creativity, true creativity really is.
The two most creative persons on board the ICE KING, other than Jack Adams are Scandinavian. Maybe there is some genetic answer.
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
The guy who did this is Joey, a very interesting guy. Joey earned a degree from a college in central Kansas seven miles north of where Dr. T. A. H. Lowe started practicing medicine. Joey moved to Kansas City. He found a job with the Public Library.
I first met Joey while doing some political harassment of guys who think that widows and lower economic households should pay for athletic teams. Major league ball teams who pay players millions of dollars to chase a ball or run around with a ball and yet they expect that the taxpayers should pay for box seats for good ol boys to swill expensive booze while “watching” millionaire ball players play games. They want taxes to upgrade the stadiums where they earn their money. I disagreed and I met some other guys who also disagreed. We successfully stopped several tax votes to collect and transfer MILLIONS to teams in Kansas City. It is amazing what a few internet sites like www.TaxHog.com can do before an election. Joey helped us out.
This is one of his starts on the cover
Next thing I knew Joey was married, had a couple of kids and had moved on to a better paying job in another city. He was still doing I.T. stuff and following his first love when not working. He would rather be painting paintings. Anyhow I ran him down and asked if he would be interested in creating a front and back cover for a book project I was going to do. I sent him a quick drawing I had done, which was to be a guidance image for getting started on this book cover.
Well he is off to a great start and is planning on showing various stages of development on his web page. So if you want to see how an art project starts and progresses you should check out his personal website.
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
The Eclectic Medical Institute which Dr. Tilghman A. H. Lowe attended was only one of several. There were also the:
California Eclectic Medical College in Los Angeles,
Hospital Medical College, Eclectic in Atlanta, Georgia,
College of Eclectic Medicine and Surgery,
Eclectic College of Physicians and Surgeons in Indianapolis,
King Eclectic Medical College in Des Moines,
Eclectic Medical College of Indiana in Louisville Kentucky,
Eclectic Medical College of Maine in Lewiston,
Worchester Medical College, Eclectic in Massachusetts,
Michigan Eclectic Medical College in Detroit,
Eclectic Medical University of Kansas City,
Lincoln Medical College, Eclectic in Nebraska,
Eclectic Medical College of the City of New York,
Randolph Eclectic Medical Institute in Rochester,
American Eclectic Medical College in Cincinnati,
Eclectic Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia,
Eclectic Medical Institute in Memphis,
Wisconsin Eclectic Medical School in Milwaukee
So one can conclude that the word Eclectic probably meant something at one time.
A quick look at the history of the Eclectic Medical Schools shows they were responsible for changing medicine in the United States from the dominate British Rationalist system. They systematized the knowledge of Native Americans and other “root” doctors and experimented many times on themselves to obtain information on what certain plants and plant compounds would accomplish when administered to humans. Take five minutes and read the following page for an interesting background on something that was largely obliterated by it’s competition.
http://doctorschar.com/archives/eclectic-school-of-medicine/
I’ve found three Eclectic Physicians who wrote books about traveling to the center of the earth. Dr. Tilghman A. Howard Lowe, Dr. John Uri Lloyd and Dr. Cyrus Reed Teed.
Did the idea carry some special meaning? Did their experimentation cause some type of mental aberration? Did these men ingest compounds which actually caused them to “go inside” in the meaning of investigating the interior landscape of the mind? Did they expand the normal range of consciousness and use the idea of traveling into the interior of the earth to explain traveling inside of their own minds? Were there plant compounds which decreased the power of their egos or changed the usual human “me first” perspective to one of compassion and consideration for their fellow man? With the acquisition and publication of some of these ideas, these physicians might be ostracized, ridiculed or literally “road out of town on a rail”. So they wrote a book of fiction.
What made me suspicious is that when Dr. John Uri Lloyd reflected on his writings he was adamant that he wrote, just to attempt to sell to “fictional readers”, but Lloyd actually writes about transcending the physical realm. Going inside. Some of the same ideas and approaches exist in Nequa.
California Eclectic Medical College in Los Angeles,
Hospital Medical College, Eclectic in Atlanta, Georgia,
College of Eclectic Medicine and Surgery,
Eclectic College of Physicians and Surgeons in Indianapolis,
King Eclectic Medical College in Des Moines,
Eclectic Medical College of Indiana in Louisville Kentucky,
Eclectic Medical College of Maine in Lewiston,
Worchester Medical College, Eclectic in Massachusetts,
Michigan Eclectic Medical College in Detroit,
Eclectic Medical University of Kansas City,
Lincoln Medical College, Eclectic in Nebraska,
Eclectic Medical College of the City of New York,
Randolph Eclectic Medical Institute in Rochester,
American Eclectic Medical College in Cincinnati,
Eclectic Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia,
Eclectic Medical Institute in Memphis,
Wisconsin Eclectic Medical School in Milwaukee
So one can conclude that the word Eclectic probably meant something at one time.
A quick look at the history of the Eclectic Medical Schools shows they were responsible for changing medicine in the United States from the dominate British Rationalist system. They systematized the knowledge of Native Americans and other “root” doctors and experimented many times on themselves to obtain information on what certain plants and plant compounds would accomplish when administered to humans. Take five minutes and read the following page for an interesting background on something that was largely obliterated by it’s competition.
http://doctorschar.com/archives/eclectic-school-of-medicine/
I’ve found three Eclectic Physicians who wrote books about traveling to the center of the earth. Dr. Tilghman A. Howard Lowe, Dr. John Uri Lloyd and Dr. Cyrus Reed Teed.
Did the idea carry some special meaning? Did their experimentation cause some type of mental aberration? Did these men ingest compounds which actually caused them to “go inside” in the meaning of investigating the interior landscape of the mind? Did they expand the normal range of consciousness and use the idea of traveling into the interior of the earth to explain traveling inside of their own minds? Were there plant compounds which decreased the power of their egos or changed the usual human “me first” perspective to one of compassion and consideration for their fellow man? With the acquisition and publication of some of these ideas, these physicians might be ostracized, ridiculed or literally “road out of town on a rail”. So they wrote a book of fiction.
What made me suspicious is that when Dr. John Uri Lloyd reflected on his writings he was adamant that he wrote, just to attempt to sell to “fictional readers”, but Lloyd actually writes about transcending the physical realm. Going inside. Some of the same ideas and approaches exist in Nequa.
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
There are still a lot of blanks in Dr. Tilghman A. Howard Lowe’s life story. Part of his life story centered around his desire to become a physician. I have not found any notations that explain why he decided to become a physician.
Did he want to be of service to the world or his little part of it? Did he want to make a lot of money like a large percentage of today's medical school graduates? Maybe he just met someone and saw an opportunity that might give him an inside track to acquire a profession.
The medical school he attended required a proctor. Some one to vouch for ones character. A person to oversee the progress and provide a little encouragement to each student. Dr. Lowe’s proctor was George Washington Hull. Hull was probably born in Ohio in 1820 and graduated from the Cincinnati Eclectic Medical College in 1861. He practiced medicine in Renick’s Mill up river from Lexington Missouri. He was evidently run out of Renick’s Mill, because he was a Union sympathizer. A lot of the state of Missouri was inhabited by slavers and confederate sympathizers. After a period of time in Indiana, G. W. Hull shows up in Labette County, Kansas, which is where Dr. Tilghman A. Howard Lowe’s parents lived. So probably Tilghman met Hull and found a way to get a little help getting into The Eclectic Medical College of Cincinnati, Ohio,
The Eclectic Medical College is where Tilghman's story gets real interesting. I’ll write about that a little later when I get it all straight.
The question about whether he was service minded or after the money may be answered in part by the fact that he charged his mother, his brother, and brother-in-law for medical treatments while living in McPherson Kansas.
Did he want to be of service to the world or his little part of it? Did he want to make a lot of money like a large percentage of today's medical school graduates? Maybe he just met someone and saw an opportunity that might give him an inside track to acquire a profession.
The medical school he attended required a proctor. Some one to vouch for ones character. A person to oversee the progress and provide a little encouragement to each student. Dr. Lowe’s proctor was George Washington Hull. Hull was probably born in Ohio in 1820 and graduated from the Cincinnati Eclectic Medical College in 1861. He practiced medicine in Renick’s Mill up river from Lexington Missouri. He was evidently run out of Renick’s Mill, because he was a Union sympathizer. A lot of the state of Missouri was inhabited by slavers and confederate sympathizers. After a period of time in Indiana, G. W. Hull shows up in Labette County, Kansas, which is where Dr. Tilghman A. Howard Lowe’s parents lived. So probably Tilghman met Hull and found a way to get a little help getting into The Eclectic Medical College of Cincinnati, Ohio,
The Eclectic Medical College is where Tilghman's story gets real interesting. I’ll write about that a little later when I get it all straight.
Dr. Tilghman A. Howard Lowe graduates in 1883 and returns to Kansas, McPherson Kansas to be exact. The Eclectic College lists him as practicing in two locations, McPherson and Sherman City, Kansas. It would have been a long drive between patients, particularly by horse and buggy.
The question about whether he was service minded or after the money may be answered in part by the fact that he charged his mother, his brother, and brother-in-law for medical treatments while living in McPherson Kansas.
Monday, January 13, 2014
Maybe culprit is the wrong word.
Me culpa , “accepting the guilt” was the position I was coming from. My dictionary provides mostly definitions that carry hints of criminality or misdeeds for the word culprit. I mean that Tilghman was the person who supposedly started the project. He is the culpable human that must take responsibility for starting something which seemed to consume a lot of the time available to his wife and also the time of Alcanoan Grigsby.
Who knows, there may have been a lot of others involved in some way or other, which we have no way at present of knowing about.
I know that it has consumed a lot of my hours over the last year and a half. My time is explainable as perchance, a bit of obsessive behavior, which I prefer to call following a line of coincidences.
The slight change in perspective which has appeared in my life, in retrospect, seems almost inevitable, but it required a catalyst . The persons I’ve run up against, through out my life include several who could have been that catalyst, but for some reason it took a 114 year old book.
Some have said the book is a very good read, I hate that type of talk. A good read can be equated with finally taking a long awaited “good elimination of water”.
The reality is that it is an intriguing book, it is something which I appreciated spending time reading. I also reveled in researching the who, what for, and where ever of its appearance. It’s pages carry adventure. It’s pages carry and lay out succinctly, IDEAS worth PONDERING. I am also of the opinion that there are at least two levels at which one may read the book.
I am positive that Dr. Tilgman A. Howard Lowe started putting the book together.
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