I
am the bride who has the font on her wedding invitations picked out before
going on the first date. California history is my potential husband, who
likes me, but keeps saying we really need to get to know each other better
before we start making plans. And you all are my bridesmaids, who are
going to have to listen to me yammer on for the next six weeks about every
piece of minutia on my mad rush to the alter (btw, ladies! I picked out the
most amazing band to play the wedding, but more on that once I actually get the
song).
Speaking
of alters, I had always thought the word libation to simply be another word for
an alcoholic beverage, but I figured if I’m naming my podcast The Bear Flag Libation, I should have a
better idea of the actual meaning. It turns out a libation is any liquid
that is used as a ritual offering to a god or the dead, usually poured out on a
grave or alter. So when you pour out some of your 40 oz. of Old English
malt liquor on to the sidewalk for all your dead homies… that is a libation!
I like this meaning and that sealed the deal with the name.
To
strain this wedding metaphor even further, I wanted your guys’ opinion on where
I should get the knot tied and do my inaugural episode. I even created a nice looking poll from
the CHNM tool builder that asks this question, but does not record any votes
(see below post). Deciding where
and when to begin a history is a tricky thing; here is the case for my top five
prospective starting points:
Dana Point- Besides the fact that Richard Henry
Dana gives a lot of insight into what California was like before there were
many Americans here, there is my own sentimental value in Dana Point, having
grown up there. The first bar that
I was ever served booze in was actually in Lubbock, Texas, but that’s another
and unrelated story, but the second bar was a place called Turks in the Dana
Point Harbor. I believe I’m older
than this bar, but it’s the only dive in town and was known as the place they
don’t look at your ID too close.
Turk himself is an interesting character because he was this huge, burly
old guy with a white beard that had been a B-movie actor in the 40’s and
50’s. He always played a pirate or
sailor or rapscallion of some sort.
I think there is a good angle about the contrast between R.H. Dana (true
rugged sailor and icon of California History) and Turk (the Hollywood image of
a rugged sailor, but Hollywood images are just as important to California
history than the real deals).
Sutter’s Fort- I still don’t know much about the
eccentric Swiss adventure and impresario who established New Helvetia (New
Switzerland) at the spot where Sacramento now stands. I’ve heard he had sailed up the Sacramento River from the
San Francisco Bay with the plans of carving his own empire out of the unsettled
and wild American West (ala Heart of
Darkness and Apocalypse Now). I know his was the first non-native
settlement in the Central Valley. He
seems to have been of the dodgy sort, always swearing his loyalty and giving
aid to both the Mexicans and the Americans at the same time. It’s interesting that he was able to
safely hedge his bets for so long and see who came out the winner.
So
hopefully you guys can help me chose a good place to begin. I’d have you vote on that nice looking
poll below, but unfortunately my technological inadequacies outweigh my
ambition. So I said screw it and
started a twitter feed: https://twitter.com/#!/BearFlagHistory.
This is hilarious! I love the great little wedding metaphor that you used to describe your relationship with history. My technology skills are inadequate (I'm sure more then yours) as well and I really don't want to set up a twitter account because I already don't follow my facebook but I vote for Monterey. I'm probably biased having lived there for four years but every vote counts right? Also, nice job in picking your places; it's nice that you had a backstory for each and that they weren't just picked out of a hat.
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