Sunday, January 31, 2021

Gleaning Facebook: The Black Sparrow

Another great story...

 From the Facebook of Will Stenberg:

 

They called him the Black Sparrow, and from the beginning of his life, all he wanted to do was get to France.

He was born in Georgia, his father descended from Haitian slaves, his mother full-blooded Creek. He ran away while still a child, determined to fulfill his destiny.
He lived for a time with a group of English Romani, learning the art of horsemanship and working as a jockey. He kept traveling and working until he made his way to Norfolk, where he stowed away on a ship bound for Scotland.
He wouldn't see America again for thirty years.
In Glasgow he got work as a lookout for gambling operators, saving money until he had enough to get to England: one country closer to his goal. In Liverpool he did hard labor until his muscles developed and he turned to boxing.
He became part of a whole expat community of Black boxers — some of the finest fighters in history — who had fled to Europe to find opportunities denied them in the States. Soon he was fighting regularly as a welterweight, racking up an impressive record, even fighting on the undercard of a few Jack Johnson bouts.
His boxing career earned him a decent amount of money, and eventually took him to Paris, where he won his bout and promptly hopped off the tour.
He was home.
Imagine, if you will, being a young, handsome Black/Creek man, escaped from the American South, newly arrived in Paris in the springtime with your own apartment and a pocketful of money.
Then imagine it is 1914.
Fighting for France was a no-brainer. After all, in his heart at least, it was his country. He joined the French Foreign Legion, training to fight in the 3rd Marching Division alongside wealthy Ivy Leaguers, mariners, farmers, doctors, executives, refugees, cooks, and plenty of characters from all over the world running from undisclosed situations. These were Belgians, Italians, Russians, Greeks, Americans, a handful of Black Americans; Muslims, Catholics, Jews and Protestants — the legendary rabble of the Legion.
Sent directly to the front along the Somme, he was thrust into a world of filthy, bloody trenches still filled with the body parts of the dead and the rancid smell of shit and blood as his unit experienced some of the worst losses of the war.
At the end of this stint, what was left of the 3rd was disbanded and he had only the briefest respite before he joined the 170th Cavalry and was sent straight to Verdun to participate in what would become one of the worst battles in the history of the human race.
(The 170th were known to the Germans as "the black swallows," due to folkloric associations of the swallow with misfortune, and during his service he picked up another name, separate but similar from the Black Sparrow: "the Black Swallow of Death.")
Now a corporal, he led a machine-gun crew and again was front-and-center for the worst of the fighting, suffering first a shrapnel wound to the face that he simply fought through, then finally sidelined by a massive, nearly fatal wound to his thigh that finally sent him away from the front.
Decorated with the Croix de Guerre for his valor at Verdun — one of France’s highest military honors — he was well within his rights to find a desk job in the military.
He had other ideas. He wanted to fly.
Already viewed as a hero, he was able to pull the necessary strings to enter flight school, and became the first Black American fighter pilot in history.
He flew a SPAD VII C1 with a distinctive alteration to its appearance. Painted on the outside of the fuselage was a red heart with a dagger through it. Above the heart was his personal slogan, one he would later use for the title of his unpublished memoir: Tout Le Sang Qui Coule Est Rouge; roughly, in English: “All Blood Runs Red.”
He flew with honor and distinction until his career in the air came to an abrupt halt. The Americans had entered the war and the involvement of a certain Dr. Gros, a US Army Major with racist attitudes, led to the end of the Black Sparrow's career as a pilot.
But the French continued to celebrate him. He ended this part of his military career with the Military Medal, Croix de Guerre, Volunteer Combat Cross, Medal for Military Wounded (twice), World War I Medal, Victory Medal, Voluntary Enlistment Medal, Battle of Verdun Medal, Battle of Somme Medal, and the American Volunteer with the French Army Medal.
And that is when his life got interesting.
The Great War over, he found himself in Paris in the 1920s at the onset of the Jazz Age. He got back in shape, took work as a sparring partner and fought a few more times. But it wasn't sustainable with his injuries.
So he learned to play the drums and became a jazz musician. He gigged frequently, saved money, and ended up in a business partnership with a biracial American blues singer whose birth name was Ada Beatrice Queen Victoria Louis Virginia Smith — known as "Bricktop" for her red hair.
Together, they opened the Le Grand Duc, and thus he became proprietor of the hippest nightclub in the hippest city during the birth of hip.
He got married around this time to a Frenchwoman named Marcelle and they had two daughters. For reasons that remained private, Marcelle ended up leaving him with their children, to whom he would remain devoted for the rest of his life, as we will see.
But he had to balance the duties of being a single parent with Le Grand Duc — and later his other club, L’escradille, which was connected to a boxing gym so that patrons could party, then exercise, take a steam bath, get a massage, and start partying again.
To name the personages that frequented his clubs is basically to list the greatest names in art and culture in the renaissance that was the 1920s.
Langston Hughes was a busboy and dishwasher. Arthur Wilson — you may know him as "Sam" of Casablanca fame — was part of the house band. Charlie Chaplin was a favorite. Gloria Swanson. Fatty Arbuckle. The Prince of Wales. Staff would move tables when Fred and Adele Astaire came in to tear up the floor. Picasso would stop by, and Hemingway was there often enough that he wrote about it in "The Sun Also Rises." Josephine Baker could not be missed, and even babysat for the Sparrow. F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda were frequent, notorious guests. Cole Porter would come in; he adored the way Bricktop interpreted his songs. When Louis Armstrong encamped in Paris, he and the Sparrow became close.
But the good times couldn't last. In 1933, Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany. In France, the Deuxième Bureau was created as a counter-intelligence service and the Sparrow was recruited to work with the beautiful Alsatian spy, Cleopatre "Kitty" Terrier, whose father's murder by Germans in the disputed border region had instilled in her a lifelong hatred of German expansionism.
Kitty and the Sparrow worked as a team at the club. He would serve tables and play dumb, exploiting German prejudices that would never suspect he was fluent in German. She would flirt her way into privileged information. It was a highly successful (and probably romantic) pairing, but with rationing, blackouts, and other wartime austerity measures, keeping businesses running became harder and harder.
He tried. He procured a wagon and would visit markets at the end of the day for discounted goods, throw them in a stew at the club. Come evening he would feed everyone for free, plus a free glass of wine per person and a pack of cigarettes per table. He tried. But of course, things got worse.
He pulled his daughters out of their convent school to keep them close. Closed the club. Many were fleeing as the Nazis came storming through Belgium. He wouldn't run.
He continued to work with Kitty in the Resistance until 1940, when the Nazis marched down Champs-Élysées and through L'arc de Triomphe.
Tens of thousands fled the city only to be bombed from the skies. He left his daughters in the care of Kitty, who promised to do what was necessary to keep them safe, packed his gear, and headed for the frontlines, determined, despite his age and multiple injuries, to find his old unit and rejoin the Legion.
When he arrived, it was only to find that his unit had been destroyed. Returning to Paris, he couldn't enter; it had been completely overrun.
But he heard rumors that the French 51st was holding out at Orléans. He started off on foot. The roads were full of starved, half-mad refugees. Bombings were frequent.
When he got there he discovered that his lieutenant from the last war was the commander of the 51st, and, in what must have felt like the world's worst case of déjà vu, he was once again in charge of a machine-gun crew, fighting the Germans.
He fought with his usual bravery. But it was a hopeless last stand. A shell that killed 11 men threw him forty feet and cracked a vertebrae.
His fighting days were over. Using his rifle as a crutch, he struck out for a military hospital in Angoulême, trying to stay out of sight.
But there was little they could do for him there: painkillers, some bandages, and a few cans of sardines with a suggestion to head for Bordeaux and into Spain which, although Fascist, had maintained official neutrality, and was tacitly allowing Allied rescue efforts on Spanish soil.
He made it, somehow, received his first passport, and was put on a Navy ship to finally return to the United States he had fled decades before.
Life in Manhattan wasn't easy. He had to start from scratch. He worked odd jobs — longshoreman, salesman of French perfume. Through a contact in the State Department he was able to get in touch with Kitty, who was true to her word: his daughters were safe. They came to the States without a word of English between them and moved in with their beloved father in Spanish Harlem.
He became involved in Free French groups, working to support General de Gaulle, head of the Free French government in exile, and was also filmed getting beaten by police as part of a human chain to protect Paul Robeson when his concert was disrupted by white supremacists.
Times were tight but he was doing okay. His old friend Louis Armstrong came to help, hiring him as a tour manager and occasional drummer. He even tried to recover his club and gym in Paris, but the postwar situation was hopelessly complicated and he had to give up.
In 1959, via the French Embassy in New York City, he was made a chevalier (knight) of France. He said at the ceremony, "My services to France could never repay all I owe her.”
Working at the time as an elevator operator at 10 Rockefeller Plaza, he was wearing his medal on his work uniform when Dave Garroway, the host of The Tonight Show, asked him about it. Naturally amazed by what he heard, Garroway saw that this elegant elevator operator got the day off of work so he could come to his office for an interview.
It took a week to confirm facts. They all checked out: the elevator man at 10 Rockefeller Plaza was the first Black American fighter pilot in history — and a lot more.
He appeared on The Today Show, which led to a slew of other appearances and speaking engagements. At least in parts of America, he became a celebrated figure, his heroism recognized.
During his one return visit to Georgia, though, things were not so bright. His family has been scattered. One brother had been lynched by squatters when he'd tried to recover ancestral Creek land.
He never returned to the South, living out the rest of his life in New York City. But there was one final honor.
In 1960, General Charles de Gaulle, leader of Free France, came to visit Eisenhower. A million people greeted him in the streets when he arrived in New York. Hundreds of children sang "La Marseillaise." He gave speeches at City Hall and the Waldorf Astoria, then went where he truly belonged, to the Seventh Regiment Armory. Five thousand French were there.
And the Sparrow. His presence had been requested.
After de Gaulle's speech, he looked into the crowd as though searching for a friend. The thousands gathered, and assembled press, may have wondered what was going on as the general left the podium and headed into the sea of faces to find a lone Black man, his chest gleaming with medals.
The man stood at attention and saluted. De Gaulle returned the salute.
Then the general stuck out his hand and, when it was received, pulled the old soldier into a massive hug.
"All our country is in your debt," he said.
Crying, the man whose journey began as a stowaway, bound for an uncertain future, sure only that he belonged in France, could only respond, "Merci, mon general. Merci beaucoup."
Not long after, he entered the hospital with stomach pains. He'd been ignoring them, but the insistence of his daughters finally prevailed.
The cancer was advanced. He turned 66 on October 9, 1961, and died on the 12th.
The woman who had been helping him with his memoirs visited him on the day he died. She was crying at the bedside where he lay, seemingly lost to the world he was leaving. Hearing her sobs, his consciousness returned from wherever it had been.
He pulled the tube out of his mouth. He had something he wanted to say to her.
The old horseman, boxer, soldier, pilot, spy, club-owner, musician, and father turned to his friend and smiled.
"Don't fret, honey," he said. "It's easy."
His name was Eugene Bullard.
They called him the Black Sparrow.

Comments:

Candace Chisholm Holmes
What an adventure this story took me on! Just as I was thinking it was already a great story there was this "That's when things really got interesting" 

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This is worth a re-read after I make my tea!


Ralph Davis
Excellent!!
Thanks for sharing


Pamela Davis
Thank you for sharing. Such an amazing life, of which I am sure was duplicated across the world: resilient and magnanimous people. Salute to you, Eugene Bullard!


Mary Nisbet Asbury
What a fascinating story. He lived well.

Angela Greear
Hero indeed!!! 

Gleaning Facebook: Button Surprise!

 

Once again some anonymous Secret Santa has left me a present on the front porch. Y'all know I've been collecting political items since 1964. Today Sheila found this beautiful button in an unmarked envelope on the porch. I love it! "Copyright Peter Loose" is printed on the curl. Thank you!

----------------

Karen Suzanne Wilkes
Bongo Peter Loose is terrific! He's in my hometown of Athens (or just outside of it) and also did great Obama pins in 2008 and 2012. If I can get my hands on some, I'll make sure you get them.

Terrell Shaw
Karen Suzanne Wilkes, did you leave this button? I see it is your profile pic!

Karen Suzanne Wilkes
I wish I had! And, yes, it is my profile pic. But, no, I'm not the Secret Santa.


Terrell Shaw
Well, now I still don't know who this was... Buddy Childers? You? 

Saturday, January 30, 2021

Gleaning Facebook: New Steamboat Display

One of Rome’s great storytellers has lots of other talents....

From the Rome Area History Center Facebook: 

We would like to say a very special thank you to Bob Harris and Ben Harrison for creating and installing the pedestal for the big pilots wheel in the recreation of the steamboat Dixie’s pilothouse!!

If you’re in town, please stop by and see what’s new!




 

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

My Mischievous Pet Peeve

I have some language pet peeves. I still resent the replacement of the perfectly good word "sex" with the term "gender", for example. It has always seemed euphemistic to me to use the label "gender" on forms in place of the simpler "sex".  They place the blame for that one on one of my heroes: Ruth Bader Ginsberg. From Wikipedia: "Her strategic advocacy extended to word choice, favoring the use of 'gender' instead of 'sex', after her secretary suggested the word 'sex' would serve as a distraction to judges"

Tonight my pet peeve is the frequent mispronunciation of "mischievous". 

It is mis·​chie·​vous | \ ˈmis-chə-vəs 

NOT

 mis-ˈchē-vē-əs  (nonstandard)

Just ask Ms. Mirriam-Webster.

I learned this in about fourth grade. Miss Matilda Brown sometimes found occasion to describe my behavior and, being me, I had to consult the dictionary to discover what that beloved but strange woman was saying about me. Besides being "mischievous" she once found me "impudent"; that sounded bad! 

Along the way I learned that mischievous has THREE, count 'em, three, syllables. It has driven me nuts for sixty years now that so many otherwise intelligent and articulate people, including many TV news readers, invent a nonstandard four syllable substitute! AAAAIIIIIIIIIiiiiiii!  Tonight it was a guest on the Chris Hayes show, a NYT Reporter named Erin Griffith. C'm'on folks. Look at the word. There is NO "i" between the "v" and the "o". 



Living Color

 I fell for click-bait on Facebook again and downloaded the free version of a colorizing app. Here are the nine formerly black & white photos I managed to convert to color before it cut me off pending my coughing up about thirty dollars. The first three b&w photos handy were in frames in the den where I was sitting. Then I went to the shelf where I keep my grandmother's -- Lillian Ophelia Wilkerson (Shaw) -- albums and picked out a few more. 

A photo Mike Bock took of us in the early seventies along the Tear-Britches Trail in the Cohutta Wilderness. The colors in our clothes are about right! How about that.

Here Sheila enters our cabin on Lake Creek in southern Floyd County Georgia about 1973. Mike also took the photo.

This b&w was taken in the Colegian offices at Asbury College Sheila's senior year when she was the editor of that newspaper.

I had no idea my great-grandmother's blouse was red.  Eula Amanda Childers (Wilkerson) died at only 29 in 1911 leaving three young daughters. Her only son had died as a three month old baby in 1907.

My great-grandparents Charles Rueben Wilkerson and Eula Amanda Childers (Wilkerson)

My great-grandfather Charles Rueben Wilkerson and his second wife, my "Grandma Wilkerson" Mattie Kiser (Wilkerson)


My "Grandma Wilkerson" Mattie Kiser (Wilkerson) milking a cow

My great-grandfather Charles Rueben Wilkerson and his second wife, my "Grandma Wilkerson" Mattie Kiser (Wilkerson) with their blended family. The eldest, my grandmother Lillian Ophelia Wilkerson (Shaw) is not in this photo.

The three daughters of my great-grandparents Charles Rueben Wilkerson and Eula Amanda Childers (Wilkerson): Ruby Allene Wilkerson (Norton), Jessie Mae Wilkerson (Mills), and Lillian Ophelia Wilkerson (Shaw)



Give The Man A Break?

Three weeks ago today Trumpists attempted to overthrow the American republic.

That is fact. 

Every Congressman and Senator was implicitly threatened with death if he/she resisted, and several including the President of the the Senate and the Speaker of the House were specifically sought for execution. Zip-tie handcuffs were ready, a gallows was erected on the grounds, guns, knives, pipe bombs, were at the ready.

It was no secret that among the garden variety Trumpist fools livid over an imagined "stolen election" were the "Proud Boys", American Nazis, KKK, and "militia" nuts who have been threatening and carrying out violence (Oklahoma City, Charlotteville, Charleston, etc., etc., etc.) Still the Great Narcissist egged on the mob. 

Less than three weeks later, a majority of Republican (how I despise the use of that noble word to describe these anti-republican wimps) senators voted to dismiss the impeachment of the man who made up a "stolen election" from whole cloth and spent months arm-twisting officials, haranguing anyone and everyone, and lying to the nation in a desperate attempt to illicitly maintain power despite his historic defeat in the vote of the people. And yesterday one supposed-aspirant to our highest office, Nikki Haley, dismissing the assault on the very temple of our republic --- there are still physical repairs being made -- calls on us to "give the man a break".

I applaud President Biden's attempts to mend the horrible rent in our national fabric. But even he realizes that we must garner "enough" unity to recover. There are some who will never rejoin the "union". Josh Hawley, Ted Cruz, Matt Gaetz, Jim Jordan, and others have betrayed their country and deserve no further consideration as leaders in this republic. 

Perhaps at some point they will have a Damascus Road experience. If so I'll welcome them back. Until then they deserve to be utterly ostracized from polite society in America.

Monday, January 25, 2021

The Traitor Has been Impeached a Second Time




 ARTICLE 1: INCITEMENT OF INSURRECTION

The Constitution provides that the House of Representatives “shall have the sole Power of Impeachment” and that the President “shall be removed from Office on Impeachment, for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.” Further, section 3 of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution prohibits any person who has “engaged in insurrection or rebellion against” the United States from “hold[ing] and office ... under the United States.’ In his conduct while President of the United States — and in violation of his constitutional oath faithfully to execute the office of President of the United States and, to the best of his ability, preserve, provide, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States and in violation of his constitutional duty to take care that the laws be faithfully executed — Donald John Trump engaged in high Crimes and Misdemeanors by inciting violence against the Government of the United States, in that:

On January 6, 2021, pursuant to the 12th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, the Vice President of the United States, the House of Representatives, and the Senate met at the United States Capitol for a Joint Session of Congress to count the votes of the Electoral College. In the months preceding the Joint Session, President Trump repeatedly issued false statements asserting that the Presidential election results were the product of widespread fraud and should not be accepted by the American people or certified by State or Federal officials. Shortly before the Joint Session commenced, President Trump, addressed a crowd at the Ellipse in Washington, D.C. There, he reiterated false claims that “we won this election, and we won it by a landslide.” He also willfully made statements that, in context, encouraged — and foreseeably resulted in — lawless action at the Capitol, such as: “if you don’t fight like hell you’re not going to have a country anymore.” Thus incited by President Trump, members of the crowd he had addressed, in an attempt to, among other objectives, interfere with the Joint Session’s solemn constitutional duty to certify the results of the 2020 Presidential election, unlawfully breached and vandalized the Capitol, injured and killed law enforcement personnel, menaced Members of Congress, the Vice President, and Congressional personnel, and engaged in other violent, deadly, destructive and seditious acts.

President Trump’s conduct on January 6, 2021, followed his prior efforts to subvert and obstruct the certification of the results of the 2020 Presidential election. Those prior efforts included a phone call on January 2, 2021, during which President Trump urged the secretary of state of Georgia, Brad Raffensperger, to “find” enough votes to overturn the Georgia Presidential election results and threatened Secretary Raffensperger if he failed to do so.

In all this, President Trump gravely endangered the security of the United States and its institutions of Government. He threatened the integrity of the democratic system, interfered with the peaceful transition of power, and imperiled a coequal branch of Government. He thereby betrayed his trust as President, to the manifest injury of the people of the United States.

Wherefore, Donald John Trump, by such conduct, has demonstrated that he will remain a threat to national security, democracy, and the Constitution if allowed to remain in office, and has acted in a manner grossly incompatible with self-governance and the rule of law. Donald John Trump thus warrants impeachment and trial, removal from office, and disqualification to hold and enjoy any office of honor, trust, or profit under the United States.

America I Gave My Best To You


If you click on the picture of this young singer you will find a beautiful program of patriotic music from the Kennedy Center celebrating the Inauguration of Joseph Biden and Kamala Harris. Rehanna Thelwell's performance of "American Anthem" was the highlight for me. You can find it at 12:30 if time is short. Don't miss this song.  When President Biden quoted from it in his inaugural address tears welled in my eyes as I thought of the work and prayers of my forebears --- for example my own young father leaving his daughters and his beloved wife to spend two years half a world away risking his life to save America from fascists like those incited by the previous president to attack our Capitol only two weeks ago. 

Here's that snippet from President Biden's eloquent address ---

   It’s a story that might sound something like a song that means a lot to me. It’s called “American Anthem” and there is one verse stands out for me:

“The work and prayers
of centuries have brought us to this day
What shall be our legacy?
What will our children say?…
Let me know in my heart
When my days are through
America
America
I gave my best to you.”
 

Let us add our own work and prayers to the unfolding story of our nation.  If we do this then when our days are through our children and our children’s children will say of us they gave their best. They did their duty. They healed a broken land....

(from President Joseph Biden's First Inaugural Address) 


I have added the full lyrics below.


All we've been give

By those who came before

The dream of a nation
Where freedom would endure
The work and prayers
Of centuries
Have brought us to this day
What shall be our legacy?
What will our children say?
Let them say of me
I was one who believed
In sharing the blessings
I received
Let me know in my heart
When my days are through
America
America
I gave my best to you
Each generation from the plains
To distant shore with the gifts
What they were given
Were determined
To leave more
Valiant battles fought together
Acts of conscience fought alone
These are the seeds
From which America has grown
Let them say of me
I was one who believed
In sharing the blessings
I received
Let me know in my heart
When my days are through
America
America
I gave my best to you
For those who think
They have nothing to share
Who fear in their hearts
There is no hero there
Know each quiet act
Of dignity is
That which fortifies
The soul of a nation
That never dies
Let them say of me
I was one who believed
In sharing the blessings
I received
Let me know in my heart
When my days are through
America
America
I gave my best to you
Source: Musixmatch
Songwriters: Scheer Gene A
American Anthem lyrics © Gene Scheer D/b/a Gene Ink, Gene Ink

It was not inevitable, listen again.


 With tears of hope and joy I recommend that you give 34 minutes of your life to listening—-really listening—- to these words that matter. (Click on the image above.)



Saturday, January 23, 2021

Fifty Years Ago today...

Fifty years ago today I asked Sheila Shaw the most important question of my life.  I wish we had a picture from that day. I've written about that day before.   And here are a couple of posts commemorating this anniversary in previous years...

January 23, 2008

January 23, 2006



Here are a hodgepodge of photos from the intervening years that I could gather from my blog...


Teen Sheila



Sheila was in the audience where she was the quiet support for so many performances


Christmas with Lil, Sheila, Jimmy, Nora, and Sally

Well, now this ain't Sheila, but without her my signature 'Possum story would not be


During 1983 when Sheila was pregnant with our first baby, Brannon.
with Mildred & Philip, Jim Williams, and Walter Mondale

With Lillian and the Carters



At the Georgia Aquarium

At Pigeon Mountain

In the Library Tent waiting to hear Donald Davis.

At the National Storytelling Festival with my favorite companion.

The Red Light was on!

Yum! With coffee.

With her new Camry

With Clementine at Rady Children's Hospital

On the Ross Pedestrian Bridge over the Oostanaula

Decked out for Trunk or Treat

With Clementine and Ruth

With my mother for Baby Recognition Sunday -- little Ruth's picture had to do.

In Vista CA for Ruth's baptism

With Ruthie

In Helen to celebrate Mildred's 100th birthday.

Just this week with the house decked out to celebrate the restoration of the republic on Inauguration Day.