Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Monday, May 29, 2006

20060528 Disappointment with suburbs leads some back to small towns by Diane Reynolds Carroll County Times

Disappointment with suburbs leads some back to small towns

By Diane Reynolds, Times Staff Writer Sunday, May 28, 2006

As Americans fled to the suburbs in the decades after World War II, small towns suffered, according to Linda Semu, associate professor of sociology at McDaniel College.

As small towns became depopulated, many downtown retail stores closed, said Semu. Family-owned businesses were unable to compete with large chains that could buy products at deeper discounts and sell them at lower prices.

But some began to sour on the suburbs. As described by Andres Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk and Jeff Speck in their book "Suburban Nation," the suburban dream for many turned out to be a nightmare.

Suburban migration continues, however. Much of it is now exurban migration as people move beyond suburbs ringing cities to suburbs on cornfields near towns far from major urban centers.

With a better understanding of the social costs of suburbanization, rising energy prices and a growing appreciation of the livability of small towns like Union Bridge, some residents express optimism that the coming wave of suburbanization can be managed in a way that will enhance life for everyone.

Sobering reality

Many sociologists and urban planners have taken a close look at the suburban building binge of the last half-century and found it wanting.

A scathing 1996 article by Karl Zinsmeister in The American Enterprise sums up many of the problems caused by suburbanization.

Individuals and families get isolated in cul-de-sac communities. People become dependent on cars, because there is nowhere to walk, no sidewalks to walk on, and no community to walk in. People don't see their neighbors.


Men began working far from their homes, and, Zinsmeister argued, mothers quickly fled the overwhelming isolation of the suburban lives - where they were trapped with the daunting task of raising children without the traditional supports of friends and family - to seek jobs where at least they interacted with other adults. As women left the home, children were increasingly farmed out to paid caretakers, and large suburban houses stood empty day after day.

Children suffered, too. With nowhere to walk, they became completely dependent on adults with cars to do the simplest things. They turned to television to experience the community that was missing from their lives, Zinsmeister argued.

"In this respect," quotes author Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, "families living in today's richest suburbs are barely better off than families living in the slums."

By 1996, a Gallup poll showed that more people - 37 percent - wanted to live in a small town than wanted to live in a suburb - 25 percent.

But suburbanization had led to boarded-up main streets in the very small towns people decided they were longing for.

In the 1990s, new urbanism began to become more popular as planners discovered that houses on smaller lots, with big front porches and garages tucked behind homes, led to more neighborliness and interaction, improving people's quality of life, according to Philip Langdon, author of "A Better Place to Live: Reshaping the American Suburb."

Small-town alternative

Read the entire article here: Disappointment with suburbs leads some back to small towns

Governance Planning Sprawl Growth Development Strain

20060528 Disappointment with suburbs leads some back to small towns by Diane Reynolds Carroll County Times

20060528 KDDC Dinner at Baugher's last Friday


20060526 Baugher's Memorial Day
(c) Kevin Dayhoff

Sunday, May 28, 2006

20060528 18680505 Memorial Day Origins

Memorial Day Origins

According to the Historical Society of Carroll County:


“Miss (Mary Bostwick) Shellman began Westminster's observance of Memorial Day on May 30, 1868 when she organized local schoolchildren to place flowers on the graves of Westminster's Civil War dead.”


From unattributed notes in my file, the origins of Memorial Day go back to:


Three years after the Civil War ended, on May 5, 1868, the head of an organization of former Union soldiers and sailors - the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) - established Decoration Day as a time for the nation to decorate the graves of the war dead with flowers.


Maj. Gen. John A. Logan declared it should be May 30. The first large observance was held that year at Arlington National Cemetery, across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C.


The cemetery already held the remains of 20,000 Union dead and several hundred Confederate dead.


Presided over by Gen. and Mrs. Ulysses S. Grant and other Washington officials, the Memorial Day ceremonies centered around the mourning-draped veranda of the Arlington mansion, once the home of Gen. Robert E. Lee.


After speeches, children from the Soldiers' and Sailors' Orphan Home and members of the GAR made their way through the cemetery, strewing flowers on both Union and Confederate graves, reciting prayers and singing hymns.


Local Observances Claim To Be First


Local springtime tributes to the Civil War dead already had been held in various places.


One of the first occurred in Columbus, Miss., April 25, 1866, when a group of women visited a cemetery to decorate the graves of Confederate soldiers who had fallen in battle at Shiloh. Nearby were the graves of Union soldiers, neglected because they were the enemy. Disturbed at the sight of the bare graves, the women placed some of their flowers on those graves, as well.


Today cities in the North and the South claim to be the birthplace of Memorial Day in 1866. Both Macon and Columbus, Ga., claim the title, as well as Richmond, Va. The village of Boalsburg, Pa., claims it began there two years earlier.


A stone in a Carbondale, Ill., cemetery carries the statement that the first Decoration Day ceremony took place there on April 29, 1866. Carbondale was the wartime home of Gen. Logan. Approximately 25 places have been named in connection with the origin of Memorial Day, many of them in the South where most of the war dead were buried.


Official Birthplace Declared


In 1966, Congress and President Lyndon Johnson declared Waterloo, N.Y., the "birthplace" of Memorial Day. There a ceremony on May 5, 1866, was reported to have honored local soldiers and sailors who had fought in the Civil War. Businesses closed and residents flew flags at half-mast. Supporters of Waterloo's claim say earlier observances in other places were either informal, not community-wide or one-time events.


By the end of the 19th century, Memorial Day ceremonies were being held on May 30 throughout the nation.


State legislatures passed proclamations designating the day. The Army and Navy adopted regulations for proper observance at their facilities. It was not until after World War I, however, that the day was expanded to honor those who have died in all American wars.


In 1971 Memorial Day was declared a national holiday by an act of Congress, and designated as the last Monday in May.

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