Wednesday, May 12, 2010
24 BLOGS .... I DID IT
HTML
Family Montage
BIG MEATBALLS!
Reed Drawing
Foam Rollers
Sketchers Shape-Ups
Soupy Island
“A pioneer charity of the country”: NJ’s “Soupy Island” Sanitarium
Sanitarium Playground, better known in the hearts of thousands of Philadelphians and South Jerseyans as Soupy Island, appeared at the end of Red Bank Ave. with its mirth subdued by barbed wire. The compound’s shabbiness belied its significance to scores of young Philadelphians whose lives were spent in the stifling airlessness of Philadelphia’s red brick canyons. Founded in 1877 by an organization called the Sanitarium Association of Philadelphia, the compound is a specimen of the late nineteenth century social hygeine movement bound up in well-meaning upper/middle class paternalism. Though the social philosophy that gave rise to Soupy Island implied that poor immigrants were constitutionally unable to care for their own health, by all accounts Soupy Island was — and continues to be — a much needed outlet for the region’s kids.
[SOUPY ISLAND SIGN IN THOROFARE, NJ]
With the support of Philadelphia type-founder John F. Smith, the Sanitarium Association of Philadelphia began ferrying Philadelphia kids to spend an afternoon on the now-defunct Windmill Island in the Delaware in 1877, the efforts of the organization garnered the accolades of public health experts. By 1886, the Sanitarium Association purchased 15 acres on the then-bucolic eastern shore of the Delaware river in West Deptford, New Jersey. As William Hale Beckford put it in his The Children’s Crusade of 1916, the free service was “a pioneer charity of the country”:
The same year that the Sanitorium Association began its retreats across the Delaware, the Reverend Willard Parsons of Sherman, Pennsylvania opened the homes of his congregation to New York tenement children, now known as the Fresh Air Fund. To nineteenth century Americans, lung diseases were a paralyzing threat. Prior to Dr. Robert Koch’s identification that tuberculosis spread by the bacillus Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which so happened to thrive in dark apartments with several families, the curious causal scientific wisdom of the day suggested that the disease was innate to poor, immigrant populations in urban areas. But public health reformers did not see that tenement conditions were just sufficient and not necessary for the propagation of the disease. American health leaders of the late 19th century (many of whom were also religious leaders) attributed the spread of disease to a combination of moral corruptness and ignorance which kept immigrants in conditions of squalor. It was not entertained that conditions of poverty tended to determine whether immigrants lived in habitations where the photophobic bug thrived. For health reformers interested in offering “uplift” or instruction in social hygeine, some were motivated by altruism while others feared that sickness, absenteeism, and social disorder posed a grave threat to American industrialized society.
[SANITARIUM PLAYGROUND SIGN AT FRONT AND RED BANK AVE.]
So from the discovery of the bacillus in 1882 to the discovery of streptomycin in 1946, the main mode of treatment was the sanitarium approach: a combination of “taking the air” and labor. But unlike the typical adult sanitarium, the youth sanitarium on the Delaware was designed to be carefree and fun. A carousel designed by Frederick Heinz was installed in 1901 and six years later a slide was added. Today, two pools and a wading pool help kids from Philly and Camden cool off during the summer. Soup seems to have always been a constant, and during the Depression it seems that strictness slackened and consumption was not a precondition for getting a cup of soup. Ferries would leave daily from Penn Treaty Park for the six mile trip down the Delaware.
[MAIN GATE, SOUPY ISLAND]
In 2004, Soupy Island went through 70 cases of soup a season and survives on an endowment. Though it is unclear whether nearby Campbell’s Soup has had any affiliation with the facility, a team from the Camden company came out last May to fix up a couple ballfields. The caretaker of the facility lives in a 12-room dormitory that once housed the doctors and the nurses who for years treated Philadelphia’s consumptive children.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Sewing
Doe's anyone still sew?
A Juicer-A Gift to Myself
You can add a wider variety of vegetables in your diet. Many people eat the same vegetable salads every day. This violates the principle of regular food rotation and increases your chance of developing an allergy to a certain food. But with juicing, you can juice a wide variety of vegetables that you may not normally enjoy eating whole.
MAUREEN GASS-BROWN Watercolor Artist
MAUREEN GASS-BROWN
Maureen is my favorite watercolor artist and I've had the pleasure of attending several of her painting workshops over the years. She has a unique style of painting. Her underpainting is done by placing watered down colors on a piece of glass and pressing watercolor paper over the paint. After lifting the paper, she lets the paint dry. Then, the magic happens..........she paints over the wonderful background, not knowing, in advance, what she will paint. She just lets it happen. If you like to paint, I suggest you go on her site and see where she will be teaching. You won't be disappointed!!
Born and raised in Massachusetts, Maureen received her B.F.A. degree in Painting and Design from Massachusetts College of Art (“Mass Art“) in Boston (1971). It was there that she discovered her appreciation, awe, and natural affinity for the medium of watercolor.
Trigger Finger
My Daughter, Allison
Allison is my youngest daughter.
Sunday, May 9, 2010
Watercolors
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Yummy Mangos
Please Comment!!
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Reed Painting Workshop
Just to give you an idea as to the diversity of the AENJ Saturday workshops i'll tell you about the one I attended last Saturday. A professor from Gloucester County College taught us how to paint and draw with reeds in the style of Van Gogh. We made our own quill pens out of bamboo and other dry reeds. Walnut ink, made by soaking and simmering actual walnuts, then straining the liquid/nut mixture to produce a beautiful, dark, sepia ink, was used to draw with our hand cut pens. The professor had provided the ink, since producing it is quite a lengthy process. It was a fun and informative workshop, as usual.
AENJ South Workshops
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Polka Dancing!!
I love Polka Dancing!!!
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Playing Blog Catch-Up
I have to admit, blogging isn't very much fun if no one but yourself is reading what you've written!! I guess I have to think of this as journaling.