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UPDATE below....

I found an error in Robert Caro’s The Passage of Power.

It’s in the section on JFK’s fatal trip to Texas in November, 1963. On page 300, Caro states, “The President was set to land at San Antonio’s Bergstrom Air Force Base at 1:30 on Thursday afternoon.” Then he says, “…the Johnsons left the ranch in their Beechcraft Bonanza for the short flight to Bergstrom, where they would greet the President….” The following paragraph says, “The President’s arrival at Bergstrom brought with it more trouble for Lyndon Johnson….” Then, on page 301, Caro describes Kennedy aide Ken O’Donnell being angry about John Connally and the Texas political situation and exiting Air Force One and “…[coming] down onto the Bergstrom tarmac….”

Okay. Bergstrom Air Force was in Austin, not San Antonio. (Bergstrom closed in 1993, was repurposed, and is now the site of Austin Bergstrom International Airport).

When I read this I thought Caro might have gotten the city wrong, that he might be saying that Kennedy landed at Bergstrom in Austin, then drove to San Antonio for his visit to the medical center and the motorcade, etc. Even though that would be totally impractical. But Caro says the motorcade to the hospital was 16 miles. Driving from Bergstrom would be 90 or so miles.

So I did a bit of poking around and found a map of the Kennedy visit to San Antonio on November 21, 1963.



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Kennedy's San Antonio Motorcade (photo from Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library)
You can see that Kennedy arrives at San Antonio International, then drives to the medical center, then drives to Kelly Air Force Base, where he departs for Houston.

Caro’s placing the landing at Bergstrom is a small error—an error of fact-checking or research. Caro’s notes are unclear on his sourcing—he says the bit about O’Donnell’s “rage” toward Connally comes from his book, "Johnny We hardly Knew Ye": Memories of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Maybe O’Donnell had the arrival details wrong, and Caro didn’t bother to check? Don’t know. I don’t think the errors imperil Caro’s argument about the character of Lyndon Johnson, or his narrative about the assassination of Kennedy, or his overall picture of life in mid-20th century America. But I can’t help but wonder if other errors snuck in somehow….

At any rate, I really love this brilliant series of books. I’m on the downhill side of The Passage of Power now, and I am going to be sorry when it’s over.



May 19.... UPDATE!

On page 503, the first page of Chapter 21:

“From Bergstrom Air Force Base, outside Austin, three big olive-green Army helicopters lifted off and wheeled west.”

Caro has the base in the correct city now. And, apparently, he’s using different sources: “Much of the description of these two weeks on the ranch comes from the many hours of newsreel footage, including outtakes, taken at these events” (683). For the description of the flight from Bergstrom to the LBJ Ranch, he is also using a book by Frank Cormier, LBJ: The Way He Was.

 
 
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I was as at the prison and we were writing about lying— about liars and lies told —when an instructor came by the classroom and said that the education building was being shut down, and the inmates needed to return to the units. So I gave everyone a homework assignment and the students left and I began packing up, when one of the students stuck her head back in the classroom and said, “It’s raining! You’ve got to see this!”

We’ve been in a hard, hard drought this year, and then, as of today, 23 straight days of over 100 degrees. It’s been rough.

I went out into the hallway and the instructor said, “Well, it’s trying to rain. Been a long time!”

One of the rules of the institution is that in times of thunder and lightning, inmates are restricted to the units, and so my students went all excited back to the barracks. I closed up my briefcase and went outside—and was half-blinded by dust. We’ve been so dry there’s not much but dirt and dust in this area, and the storm winds were picking up the dirt and blowing it around. I signed out at the security station and went to my car.  A few drops of mud came from the sky. There were sudden blasts of cool air—cool!—from downdrafts, followed by the buffets of hot air. I could smell rain.

I drove back through the neighborhood—the sky was sort of open to the north, and stormy in the east and south.  In this photo, looking north, you can see a field of dead grass. Texas right now is a sad, khaki-colored state….


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Then it really started to rain!  Amazing. I made a video of my drive home….
(Remember, I was a professional driver for six years—don’t try this at home!)

I stopped by the grocery store to get some supplies, and people were lined up under the awning gazing heavenward with looks of wonder on their faces.

Readers in damp climates, don’t take for granted the miracle of water from the sky.

And—why not?—some rock and roll….


Just hope I don't have to wait a long time to play this again.....
 
 
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I really love these photographs.  No up or down about it.

I came across them when searching through public
photo archives for work I could use for the cover of my book, Long Time Ago Good—and from first glance I was wholly captivated.  They’re the work of Marc St. Gil, who produced them for the Environmental Protection Agency as part of the Documerica Project.

Documerica hired 100 or so photographers to document the American environment of the mid-1970s.  Over 15,000 photos were taken for the project, and every one I look at I find consistently amazing and astonishing and miraculous.  I can—and have—lost hours staring into the computer screen, connecting with this past world, or trying to….

Though the project as a whole covered the entire US, I’ve concentrated on St. Gil’s Texas pictures. They really fit well with the stories in my book.

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Who are these kids?  What happened to them? There is an intense mystery here in these images that totally captures my heart…they're part of the great forgotten....
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I don’t just love the photos—I love these people, too. I hope they’re all alive and well and happy….
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In addition to the book cover, I used a series of these St. Gil photos to make a trailer for Long Time Ago Good:

As I mentioned in an earlier post, this was the original shot for the book cover
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Which became this….
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Documerica website is here

http://ej.msu.edu/documerica/Home/home.htm



A flickr gallery of St. Gil’s work is here….

http://www.flickr.com/photos/usnationalarchives/sets/72157621172730860/

 
 
 
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UPDATE 06/27/2011

We all really had a splendid time--Diane Wilson and Lee Grue gave terrific readings and there was fine music from Ponty Bone.  An inspiring evening of poetry and activism...

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Please join us for readings and reception, celebrating the arrival of new books by Texas environmental activist Diane Wilson and New Orleans poet Lee Meitzen Grue, with musical guest Ponty Bone. The Texas Louisiana Gulf Coast Shindig & Soiree will take off from 4-7pm on June 25, 2011—at Pine Street Station, studio of Austin artist Reji Thomas, 1101 E 5th at Waller.

Diane Wilson, author of An Unreasonable Woman, will read from her latest book: Diary of an Eco-Outlaw. A Dobie-Paisano Fellow and 4th generation Texas Gulf Coast shrimper, Diane has been arrested more than 50 times for civil disobedience.

Lee Meitzen Grue, author of Live on Frenchman Street and Goodbye Silver, Silver Cloud will read from her latest book: Downtown. A New Orleans native, editor of the New Laurel Review and owner of B.J.’s Bar in the Bywater, Lee captures the rhythms and ambiguities of the Gulf region with her critically-acclaimed poetry.

Bookwoman, the only feminist bookstore in Texas, will help with the book sales. Diane and Lee will be delighted to autograph copies.

Lee’s Hurricane Party will be there with his Cajun food trailer.

It's going to be a lot of fun!

Time: Saturday, June 25 · 4:00pm - 7:00pm

Location: Pine Street Station 1101 E 5th (5th & Waller) Austin, TX

Website: http://www.txlagulfcoastshindig.com/