Monday, January 31, 2011

Pawtucket, Rhode Island

Don't be square!  I guess the folks at Slater's Mill didn't get the memo, because here they gave us a perfect square.  But as we all learned in school:  a good short story begins with an enticing title!  Too bad the river gets no credit at all.  [2009]

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Cardiff, Wales

Don't be square!  In fact, don't even be angular.  In the British Isles, ovals and medallions seem to be used much more frequently than in the United States.  [2005]

Friday, January 28, 2011

Rehoboth Beach, Delaware

Don't be square!  'Landscape' is more common than 'portrait' when it comes to historical markers.  Nevertheless, most markers are not perfect rectangles.  Various design elements usually give them a lift at top center.  "Attracting thousands of visitors each year."  Wouldn't that go without saying?  [1995]

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Hudson, Michigan

Don't be square!  Stand up tall and stay in shape.  But, we don't seem to know what the best shape is for historical markers.  To-the-point it is, but why mention Adrian when you are trying to call attention to the importance of Hudson?  [2008]

Monday, January 24, 2011

Midway, Georgia

Too much, too little, just right?  You can jam even more words onto your historical marker if you don't have to spell out 'Union' and 'Confederacy' every time you mention them.  Using flags is a clever innovation in a realm where communication is all about words and seldom about symbols.  [2010]

Friday, January 21, 2011

West Palm Beach, Florida

Too much, too little, just right?  266 words.  Maybe more than we need to know and definitely more than we are likely to read.  Read it and answer this question:  What's the "take-away" message?  Or is it just a bottomless pit of facts?  [2005]

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Coldwater, Michigan

Too much, too little, just right?  122 words.  Stand still and read; it will take you about a minute.  Are all words necessary:  statelyvisible for milesgenerous?  Strangely, it's the bell and the clock that take center stage, not the courthouse or its site.  [2008]

Monday, January 17, 2011

Beckley, West Virginia

Too much, too little, just right?  78 words, including 14 numbers (a high count of numbers on a historical marker).  But what is blackdamp?  And what is this marker doing in the county seat instead of Eccles? [2010]

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Fredericksburg, Virginia

Too much, too little, just right?  14 words and a simple title.  Succinct but useful for anyone following the day-to-day progress of the Civil War.  Could you read this much while driving by?  or would you have to stop?  [2010]

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Cuckoo, Virginia

Places, People, and Events:  Using historical markers, we commemorate confluences of people and events as the combined engines of history.  The American Revolution could have been lost were it not for the ride of Jack Jouett, Virginia's Paul Revere.  [2007]

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Cedar Key, Florida

Places, People, and Events:  Using historical markers, we commemorate confluences of people and places as the combined engines of history.  Individual achievements are shaped, in part, by geographical realities.  'Countenances of the people' also seem to be shaped by those realities.  [1997]

Saturday, January 8, 2011

St. Albans, Vermont

Places, People, and Events:  Using historical markers, we commemorate confluences of places and events as the combined engines of history.  St. Albans Raid may have brought the Civil War to Vermont, but look at the date.  The Civil War was only 6 months from being over.  [2009]

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Nashville, Tennessee

Places, People, and Events:  Using historical markers, we commemorate events as the engines of history.  It should come as no surprise that this marker is in Nashville, the country music capital of the world.  The Ryman Auditorium provides the backdrop.  [2009]

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Emmitsburg, Maryland

Places, People, and Events:  Using historical markers, we commemorate people as the engines of history.  But only recently have women, like the United States' first native-born saint, begun to claim their share of roadside landscapes.  [2005]

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Carlisle, Pennsylvania

Places, People, and Events:  Using historical markers, we commemorate places as the engines of history, often with ceremonial ado.  The installation of an historical marker in Carlisle made history a living part of the county seat's landscape.  [1982]