Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York. Show all posts

August 2 - Happy Birthday, Frédéric Bartholdi

 Posted on August 2, 2021


This is an update of my post published on August 2, 2010:


The sculptor who created the Statue of Liberty - Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi - was born on this day in 1834 in France.



The Statue of Liberty was a gift to the United States from the people of France, but the entire project of building the statue was a joint project, with the U.S. responsible for funding and building the pedestal.



Of course, Bartholdi couldn't build the entire statue all by his lonesome! In addition to all the workers necessary to construct the huge copper statue - and then deconstruct (take apart) and ship across the ocean - and then reconstruct in its place in New York Harbor - an engineer named Gustave Eiffel (yes, the guy who helped build the Eiffel Tower!) was responsible for the interior structure of the statue.




The real name of the statue is Liberty Enlightening the World. It has been rumored that the face of Lady Liberty is modeled on Bartholdi’s mother, and the body is modeled on his wife.

The organization that raised the money needed for the monument (approximately 300,000 U.S. dollars for the pedestal and 1,000,000 francs for the statue) formed in 1874, and starting in 1879 Bartholdi was allowed to sell small copies of the proposed statue to raise more money to build the monument. On July 4, 1884, the 151-foot tall statue was formally delivered to the U.S. Ambassador in Paris—then the 225-ton statue was dissembled and packed into 214 wooden crates to make the trip by ship to the U.S.!

Bartholdi created many other statues, including some displayed in France, Switzerland, and the U.S.


How big is it?

Seeing the Statue of Liberty in person, I thought it looked smaller than I'd expected. It's practically all by itself on an island in New York City's harbor, and my size-comparison faculty had been strained by being in Manhattan, where SO MANY buildings are super tall. I think a more important factor in my expectations is that the statue is very, very important in the American psyche, so I expected it to be even larger than it is.

Still, don't get me wrong: Lady Liberty is a large gal! From heel to head, she is more than 111 feet tall, and her arm alone is 42 feet long—which is about 7 of my husbands stacked up! And her nose - just her nose! - is 4-and-a-half feet long!!!



Because Liberty Enlightening the World is so large, it is considered a colossal sculpture. The word colossal, which means “gigantic,” comes from the Latin colossus, which literally means “large statue.” A long time ago, a huge statue called the Colossus of Rhodes was considered one of the Seven Wonders of the World because it was one of the largest human-created structures of its time. It was destroyed in an earthquake in 226 B.C. Apparently the Statue of Liberty deliberately mimics the design and size of this ancient statue, and the oft-quoted poem written about Lady Liberty (“Give me your tired, your poor, / Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free...”) is titled “The New Colossus.”

Learn more about the Statue of Liberty, here, and learn A LOT MORE here.

Build a 3-D paper model of

the monument.

July 26 – New York's Statehood Anniversary

Posted on July 26, 2016



From the skyscrapers of New York City to the powerful Niagara Falls...

From the iconic Statue of Liberty to the glittering lights of Broadway and Times Square...


From prestigious universities to gorgeous gorges...


New York state is home to some of the most admired culture and diversity, some of the most visited tourist spots, and some amazing natural beauty!

The eleventh state to ratify the Constitution, on this date in 1788, New York isn't as large as most of the state in the West, but its population is fourth in the nation. Of course, this is partly due to the one-of-a-kind bustle that is New York City, the largest city in the United States.

I live near a really large city, Los Angeles, but NYC is more than twice as large! (But loads of cities in the world are larger than New York, New York, including FIVE cities in China and even such unlikely cities as Lima, Peru and Lagos, Nigeria.)
Here are some of my very, very favorite things about New York:


I love, love, love Watkins Glen State Park.



Niagara Falls is spectacular. See it from the top, both sides, see it from Goat Island, and of course see it (and FEEL it in every bone in your body) from the Maid of the Mist boat.




Central Park, in New York City, is pretty great. Two favorite things, for me, are the Alice-in-Wonderland statue and the boulders that crop up here and there.



NYC has amazing shopping and food. One thing I loved are the macarons that were as pretty as they were delicious!


My husband, on the other hand, is more of a huge-sandwich kind of guy.


I liked exploring the Adirondack Mountains and the Finger Lakes, of course. We saw plenty of wonderful waterfalls, such as the Ithaca Falls.


This is something I didn't get to see – but would love to someday: New York in the fall!



Also on this date:






























The FBI's birthday







One Voice













Plan ahead:

Check out my Pinterest boards for:
And here are my Pinterest boards for:

December 7, 2012 - Anniversary of the first concert by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra

The New York Philharmonic is the oldest professional orchestra in the U.S. It played its first concert on this date in 1842—and its 15,000 concert in 2010! No other orchestra comes close to that record!


That first concert was held at the Apollo Rooms in what is now TriBeCa, in lower Manhattan. Guests had to pay 83 cents apiece. Now, we all “get” that 83 cents used to buy a lot more in those days—it won't even get you a bottle of water or can of soda, most places, these days!—but surely even then it was an awkward sum to have charged. I guess 3 quarters, one nickel, and three pennies would do it...but why not 80 or 85 cents??!


The musicians wore formal wear and white gloves and greeted the 600 guests as they entered the room. When the music began, all the musicians remained standing as they played, except the cellists. That was the fashion then. It was, perhaps, grueling to play for THREE HOURS while standing!

First on the concert program was a work that was new to most of the listeners: Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. The orchestra also played chamber music and several operatic pieces—with a vocalist, of course.

One thing that is interesting about this first concert is that the musicians voted on which pieces they would play and who would conduct. The orchestra members also voted when new musicians wished to join. At the end of the season, all the musicians would divide any proceeds (profits) among themselves.

(I'm pretty sure the NY Philharmonic doesn't operate in such a democratic fashion any more!)


Also on this date: