Friday, March 7, 2014

Harriet Beecher Stowe - the woman who helped start the Civil War

Harriet Beecher Stowe penned Uncle Tom's Cabin in 1851 amid mounting pressures between the Northern and Southern states that would eventually result in the Civil War. Compelled to speak out against the recently adopted Fugitive Slave Act, a component of the Compromise of 1850, in which citizens of all states, both free and slave holding, were legally bound to capture and return escaped slaves from the south. The Fugitive Slave Act made it illegal to assist escaped slaves by providing them passage, food or shelter and was punishable with six months in prison and $1000 fine to anyone known to assist escapees, as she and her husband had done. That the Act financially rewarded officers who actively pursued escaped slaves made it all the more heinous.
Based on an escaped slaves memoirs,  Uncle Tom's Cabin was a fictionalized story that sought to bring to life the reality of slavery to the hearts and minds of those in the north. Initially it had been published as a once a week installment in the abolitionist National Era newspaper, but finding immediate success was published as a novel that following year. Stowe had struck a cord in a nation bitterly divided. Selling out of its first and second print runs, the novel quickly became a stage play and was  stated to have been the most popular book of its time second only to the bible.

After the start of the Civil War, Harriet Beecher Stowe had been invited to the White House where she met Abraham Lincoln. It is said that when the two met, Lincoln was quoted as saying "So this is the little lady who started this great war."  The following year Lincoln passed the Emancipation  Proclamation and in 1865, the war was brought to an end. Stowe spent the rest of her life advocating for the rights of women, making comparisons to the treatment and legal status between women of the time and slaves.
Though the book had come under scrutiny in the modern era, it was credited by historians as having helped to ignite the war that brought an end to slavery in the United States. Ms. Stowe lived to see the passage of the Fifteenth Amendment (1870) which allowed persons of all color, race, creed or previous condition of servitude,  the right to vote. Only narrowly, did she miss the passage of the Nineteenth which permitted women to vote. She died in 1896 at the age of 85.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Rose Valland and the Monuments Men

It is 1940 and World War II had been raging for two long years. France had just fallen to the Germans, who occupied much of the northern part of country, including Paris; home to the Jeu de Paume Museum. Within the museum worked a highly educated young woman named Rose Valland, who received multiple degrees in fine arts and art history from prestigious universities such as the Ecole de Beaux-Arts, Ecole de Louvre and Sorbonne University.  Having gained the position of assistant before the German Occupation, she was required to stay once the city fell to maintain the museums records.
For four years, the Germans used the Jeu de Paume as their sorting ground for art and objects looted during the war by the Nazi's, most of which was taken from private Jewish collectors, though some was also looted from French National Galleries. Once in the gallery, the art was sorted, with some pieces going to Hermann Goring's own collection (he chose 594 pieces) while the rest was to go to Adolf Hitler's Furhermuseum in Linz, Austria. The Nazi's cataloged and wrapped the art before shipping it by train or truck to hiding spots throughout Germany all the while not realizing that Rose spoke German and could understand what they were saying and where they were taking the nations art.  With her close proximity to the looting, she kept records of her own, working in affiliation with loyal truck drivers, packers and guards. She shared in bits and pieces her information with her former colleague, Jaques Jaujard, the Director of the Musees Nationalaux and the French Resistance. It wasn't until six months after the Allied Invasion of France in (June) 1944 that she finally divulged the entirety of the information she held to James Rorimer of the Monuments Men, a group of men and women tasked by Franklin D. Roosevelt to protect cultural properties during the war. Rose Valland not only was absolutely instrumental in the discovery of where the looted art had been hidden but in the restitution of nearly twenty thousand pieces of art.
Because of the risk she took to her own life to preserve hundreds of years worth of art, she became the most decorated women in French history having gained the following titles and honors:
French Legion of Honor
Medal of the Resistance
Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters (by the French government)
Presidential Medal of Freedom (by the U.S. government 1948)
Officers Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
And after twenty years of service to French art museums, finally received the title of "Curator" in 1953.

Many books and movies have been made about Ms. Valland including  the new George Clooney-written and directed film, The Monuments Men, based on the book of the same name by Robert M. Edsel. Rose Valland is portrayed by the character Claire Simone played by the lovely Cate Blanchett.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Women of the French Resistance - Helene Studler

It was 1939 and within the year France would fall to the German Third
Sister Helene Studler
 Reich.  In the northeast corner of France, where the borders of France, Germany, and Luxembourg intersect sits, what is now, the capitol city of the Alsace- Lorraine region, Metz. Being the last of the Medieval fortified cities in France, Metz held a particular interest to the Germans, and would eventually be captured and occupied by the Third Reich.
It was during these desperate times that the one hundred thousand villagers of Moselle were evacuated, being given less than a day to leave the city and thus many had to leave behind all their personal belongings. Witnessing this, Sister Helene Studler (1891-1945), from the Daughter''s of Mercy, used her truck to personally collect and deliver the villagers' belongings to them after their evacuation. That truck would be indispensable in months to come. After organizing a group of volunteer nurses to provide care and food for a column of prisoners being marched toward Metz, she then used that truck to bring food, supplies and clothing to those prisoners in the stalags. Once there she had to force open the door to get the supplies to them. Knowing that desperate times call for bold action, Helene Studler took it upon herself to set up an organized group of smugglers to make an escape system for the prisoners. During that time she saved over 2000 Frenchmen by helping them to escape to the border and to their safety.  She also used her truck to hide prisoners that she herself drove to safety.
But by 1941 the Gestapo had figured out who she was and what she was doing and had her arrested. During her imprisonment Sister Helene's health declined and she (amazingly) was released early because of it.  She must have had an iron will to survive because she continued her work immediately upon her release smuggling prisoners to the border. However, it wasn't long before the Gestapo was onto her again. Fleeing to Lyon for her own safety, she left the Daughter's of Charity behind using her connections to come to the aid of the French Resistance where she helped them with General Henri Giraud's escape.
It is said that at her sick bed (1945) , the General pinned on her the Legion of Honor and kissed her hand. She never lived to see the U.S. Third Army liberate the city of Metz nor the end of the war but thousands of men who survived those horrors have her to thank for her courage, bravery and ultimate dedication to the assistance of those in need.
She is laid to rest in Metz where her liberated prisoners erected a memorial in her honor in front of the hospice from which she worked during her time with the Daughter's of Mercy.  

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Joan of Arc

The Hundred Years War had been raging for nearly the entirety of the
Fourteenth Century. Having employed "scorched earth" tactics against
its enemy, England had laid to waste many of the villages and much of the agricultural land in France,  financially crippling the French population.
By the time Joan of Arc is born on January 6, 1412, France had barely overcome the ravages of the Black Plague, which devastated the European Continent in the first half of the century before they were again assaulted by the dynastic Hundred Years War in which a very "Game of Thrones" battle ensued for the French throne  for the remainder of the 14th century and into the next.
England enjoyed a long series of victories over the French that lasted generations, beating down the French peoples so greatly as to reduce their population significantly not only by means of war, but through the resulting epidemics, civil wars, and famine.
It is not until 1429, nearly one hundred years since the wars inception, that France finds a glimmer of hope in a young woman named Jehanne d'Arc. (Some records show that she was also referred to as Jehanne Romee, her mother's maiden name, though at her court trail she referred to herself as Jehanne la Pucelle, or "Joan the Maid".)
Having had a vision, while alone in a field as a young twelve year old girl, Joan stated that the Saint's Catherine, Michael and Margaret appeared to tell her to held rid France of the enemy and bring the Dauphin (uncrowned King) of France, Charles, VII to Reims for his rightful coronation. For five years her vision fuels her destiny until at last,  she travels to the French garrison commander to make a military prediction that was laughed off until she was deemed to be correct. The credibility of her prediction gained her an audience with the Dauphin Charles in which she so boldly asked to travel as the leader of his Army on a relief mission  to the town of Orleans. It is said that her request was granted due in part to her courage and intelligence but also that France having tried every other tactic was out of options and thus decided to try something different.
Joan changed the way the French military met their opponent in the field thus reversing the tide of fortune in France's favor (for the first time since the war's start) and gained her the support of previous naysayers. With her standard and sword she lead her men into a series of successful battles that ultimately lead to King Charles coronation.
Her success was short lived though as she was captured by the English, tried and convicted of heresy shortly after in 1430. King Charles VII who, without her help, never would have ascended the throne, betrayed her by apathetically refusing to save her life when he could.  Joan was ultimately burned at the stake as a result. Nearly a quarter of a century later, her trial was reviewed and nullified by the Pope, claiming her trial illegal and her death unjustified. He deemed her a martyr. She has become a symbol of French national pride, and a patron saint to many including women of the armed forces.  

Happy Birthday Jehanne.