People Won’t Leave After Hurricane Ike; Women Told To Take a Hike
September 18, 2008

Ike Raising the Dead?

Ike Raising the Dead?

The aftermath of hurricane Ike is unfolding like a typical big storm in a large metropolitan area. President Bush came to inspect the region and the mayor of Houston is mad at FEMA saying that it is not moving fast enough. Residents are having problems returning home. The east side of Galveston Bay, which is Bolivar Peninsula that has Crystal Beach and Gilchrist, has been largely wiped from the map. In fact, it is said that the water cut through the peninsula and it is now an island. Many people chose to ride out the storm and now they won’t leave. Prior to the storm, the government said that under Texas law, a mandatory evacuation order does not give the government the right to force someone from their property. Texans are big on property rights. Now, they have people who still refuse to leave and officials are concerned about disease and the difficulties associated with providing any service to those people. Now, they are scouring the law books trying to find a way to forceably remove those individuals who won’t leave. I can tell you now, that ain’t gonna work.  National Geographic reports Ike will cost $22 Billion.

At the bottom of the post, you will find links to more photos. Thebostonchannel.com has an interesting set of photos, the first showing a family visiting their dead mother and father…who have resurfaced courtesy of Ike.

Meanwhile, in Louisville by Wednesday afternoon about 180,000 customers remain without power.  Jefferson County (Louisville) Schools will be closed for the rest of the week.  The Governor came through by getting the EPA to relax the reformulated gas restrictions for a couple of weeks.  I wonder if prices will come down a few cents.  The clean up continues but everything is fine and dandy for the Ryder Cup where folks from all over the world are lining up for the big golf tournament. The weather will be outstanding with loads of sunshine with cool nights and warm afternoons. While a few visitors may not have power at the home they rented or maybe a hotel or two, the course is in great shape. Also, they managed to find power for Papa John’s Stadium for the UL/ Kansas State Football game….and the ESPN crews I’m sure are in fine shape.  Meanwhile, Snow White and I are heading toward our 4th night without power.  I think the items in the refrigerator are quite ripe by now.  I had leftovers from last nights restaurant meal…nothing like taking a doggy bag for the next day’s lunch.  Meanwhile, the fat cats, Nit and Wit, enjoyed Filet of Salmon.  The cats’ food is starting to look pretty good.  Here is some RAW VIDEO FROM SUNDAY as the wind was beginning to relax in Louisville.
On This Date in History:  When President Woodrow Wilson decided it was time that America get involved in the Great War, the military draft was brought back.  Millions of men either volunteered or were drafted into the ranks, leaving a gap in many civilian services.  In the early 20th Century, women who did work were usually employed as school teachers or seamstresses and perhaps in textile sweat shops.  Men made up the vast majority of the labor force.  So, that meant that public services such as mass transit were in jeopardy when all the men ran off to fight the Hun.  In 1917, the New York and Queens Railroad began hiring women to run its trolley.  By 1918, twenty-five “conductorettes” could be found on the lines in Queens.  A newspaper said that the ladies were doing such a splendid job that a few had been appointed as inspectors.  The railroad was so happy with their work that it supplied them with $17 winter overcoats and doubled their pay to $25 a week.  They then made a commitment to keep them on the payroll after the war was over.  Management said, “The women conductors have come to stay  on our lines just as long as they want to continue in their present jobs.  We now have about 50 and are taking more on as fast as they apply for positions.”  It’s good to get promises in writing. 

In May 1919, New York Governor Al Smith decided to be Mr. Helper and perhaps he was in cahoots with railroad management who wanted to back out of their commitment but needed some cover.  So Big Al signed a bill to “better the conditions of women.”  It was the kind of help the ladies could have done without.  The bill mandated that women could only work 54 hours a week.  Men of course, were able to work longer hours.  So, on this date in 1919, management of the New York and Queens Railroad prepared the pink slips for all of their female employees who were to work their last day on September 20, 1919.  But, they did get to keep the overcoats.

Guardian UK Hurricane Ike Aftermath Photos

WCVB  The Boston Channel

Spreadit photos

We’ve Had Enough of Hurricane Ike; Are Two Uncle Sams too Many?
September 15, 2008

You Think You Had Trouble Getting To Work?

You Think You Had Trouble Getting To Work?

for more photos and video of damage from Hurricane Ike along the coast and in the Ohio Valley, CLICK HERE and scroll down through several posts with numerous photo/video sources

Hurricane Ike is but a memory now.  An exiting one for some, a nightmare for others.  804 miles from Galveston, Ike on Sunday midday was situated around Terre Haute.  The pressure in Louisville was at 997 mb and the winds ran from about 40 to 60 mph from about noon until 3pm.  The peak wind (gust) at the Louisville airport was 75 mph at 1:51 pm EDT.  Snow White and I have joined several hundred thousand of our closest neighbors as being those who lost power.  The church next door has it. The people behind me have it.  The apartments down the street have it. The houses across the street have it.  The only ones who do not have it in our neighborhood is my condominium complex.  hmmm….I wonder if the Condo Association did somethng to make the mayor upset.  Speaking of the mayor, he is making certain that the Valhalla Golf Course is up and ready to go for this week’s Ryder Cup.  Maybe I should have been a better golfer.  The official forecast kept calling for Ike to get “absorbed” into a cold front.  But, on Saturday night I observed that the storm had a great integrity going for it in Arkansas and I didn’t think it would just go away in less than 24 hours.  I was concerned about pop-up low topped tornadoes.  We had none of those that I have heard of, but there was plenty of wind for everyone.  Fortunately, Ike was zipping right along and the winds diminished by late afternoon.  Now, the aforementioned front has moved through.  High pressure will build in and the week looks great for cleaning up, the Ryder Cup and for anything else.

As for Ike, there are more photos coming in. Below you will find a news story about Louisville and a slide show. The Austin American Statesman has a 265 photo slide show, found at the bottom of this here post.  My previous post I spoke of my thoughts that Galveston really got lucky that the storm wasn’t a little stronger and about 20 miles farther west.  If you look at the video from KHOU of Bolivar Peninsula and Crystal Beach, on the east side of the entrance to Galveston Bay, you will get an idea of what I am talking about.  That side got the brunt of the winds and biggest storm surge, just to the east of the eye.  It’s over 30 minutes of video but worth it. You will also find photos from CNN.

Will the Real Sam Wilson Please Stand Up?On This Date In History:  On This date in 1961, Samuel Wilson of Troy, New York was basking in the limelight shown on him the day before by Congress….or he would have been had he been alive.  He was born in 1766 in Massachusetts.  He moved to Troy and was such a kindly man, that people affectionately called him “uncle Sam.”  During the War of 1812, Sam sold 300 barrels of beef and pork to food wholesaler Elbert Anderson who stamped each barrel “EA-US”.  Anderson had a contract with the US Army and the lettering was meant to stand for Elbert Anderson and United States.  When a worker was asked what the letters stood for, he said “Uncle Sam Wilson.”  The name stuck.  150 years later, Congress passed a resolution honoring Sam Wilson of Troy, NY as the progenitor of America’s Uncle Sam.  Congress must not have had much else to do that day, even though it was but a month before the Cuban Missile Crisis.  Some things never change….like in the fact that Congress may have gotten it wrong.

Seems another Samuel Wilson was born in 1778  in Delaware and this Sam Wilson also moved to Troy, New York.  He took a job as a clerk in a store owned by…Ebenezer Anderson.   During the War of 1812, Sam oversaw orders taken from the government.  The boxes were also stamped “EA-US” for Ebenezer Anderson and Sam Wilson.  Again, someone identified the initials as those belonging to Uncle Sam. 

The first Sam was born first but only lived to be 87. The second Sam was born later but lived to be 100.  While the first Sam was the first, then the title should go to him.  But the second Sam was the last Sam, so the title should go to him.  Both were procuring orders for the military for the War of 1812 so the title should end in a tie.  You can make your choice.  But oh…those clever 19th Century Newspapermen caught wind of it and the moniker Uncle Sam as a synonym for the US government began appearing in newspapers in 1813.  So, you see, the press pack-mentality of everyone running with the same stuff began long ago and there has been no shortage of uninspiring, un-original stories in the press ever since.

You Figure it Out!

You Figure it Out!

Here’s the kicker….I’m not so sure that the photo attached and widely spread as the 1766 SAm Wilson is not really the 1778 Sam Wilson as the 1766 Sam Wilson died in 1853 which would have been prior to photographs being so easily available. Further, his attire looks more like the Civil War Era and it seems possible that it was taken during that conflict as a sort of propaganda instrument for the North.  But, I may be mistaken.  Whatever it is, he sure doesn’t look like the more familiar character that started showing up in World War I.  Funny how Uncle Sam seems so closely associated with war.  Perhaps he was a product of the military industrial complex that President Eisenhower warned us about.

 

Louisville Wind Damage From Ike video

Louisville Wind Damage Slide Show

KHOU-Bolivar Peninsula Destroyed-Video

CNN photos 19

CNN Houston Photos 8

Austin American Statesman photos 265

for more ike damage photos and video, see previous post

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