Yearly Archives: 2017

Manhattan, 1949

The one and only Parky.

Looking at the images on my walls, there are two by Norman Parkinson, both of his future wife and one of the first ‘supermodels’, Wenda Rogerson. There’s another eye catching one in his archive which is perfection, this time of Lisa Fonssagrives, a contemporary of Wenda’s who went on to become Mrs. Irving Penn, and it has everything you could possibly want – the beautiful model, the wonderful clothes and that magical blur of the New York cab.

The narrative reads: “Oxford flannel finger-tip coat: Newest of coat-lengths in one of the newest of not-blacks. Worumbo flannel with rolling velvet collar; skirt, same flannel, paler. Tilted hat. All designed by Hattie Carnegie.’ Swedish-born model Lisa Fonssagrives photographed on Park Avenue for American Vogue, 1949.”

You can find the Parkinson archive here.

Harvard University

A spring visit.

For an alphabetical index of the New England College series of pieces, click here.

My son and I visited Harvard University in the winter of 2015 when he was beginning to look at New England prep schools. Because the size and significance of Harvard are so overwhelming, we opted for the guided tour on this, our first visit, so as to get a good introduction. It seems appropriate that this somewhat belated piece on the best educational institution in the world should run on the most important day in American history.

The school is very large as private schools go, with a heavy focus on research. The 6,700 undergraduates are greatly outnumbered by 14,500 postgraduates.



The school is totally integrated into the city of Boston. The local subway is paid by the University for slowing down as it passes, to avoid damage to the ancient buildings.


The best way to get an introduction.


Our enthusiastic guide was a mechanical engineering Junior.


Harvard Yard. John Harvard’s statue is rear center.


Architecture to die for.


Harvard is as much tourist mecca as university.


John Harvard, a Cambridge grad, started it all in 1636 with a gift of 400 books and some £779. Yup, he was an immigrant.


Millions have rubbed Harvard’s foot hoping their offspring would get an offer.


The (vegetarian) beggar woman may go hungry, but be assured that the Harvard Industry will sell you branded goods.


Totally integrated into the civilized city that is Boston. This is Wigglesworth Hall, a freshman dorm.


78 Mount Auburn Street is distinguished by its porthole style dormer ventilators. It was constructed in 1839.


In mock Flemish style, this strange 1909 building appropriately houses the Harvard Lampoon, one of the oldest satirical newspapers still published.


The Class of 1920 keeping fit.


As George Bernard Shaw reminds us, there is no truth in the rumor that the same tongue is spoken on both sides of the Atlantic.


Claverly Hall was built in 1893.


Lowell House dates from 1930.


Can you say ‘Gorgeous’? Straus Hall, a freshman dorm, dates from 1926.


The Holden Chapel. Built in 1744, this is one of the oldest surviving buildings at Harvard.


Winston at Harvard. Ahem! This is the Geological Museum, part of the Museum of Natural history.


Bessie the Rhino.


The Harvard endowment:

The most successful schools graduate the most successful pupils who return the favor with mighty gifts. Here are the top ten (from Wikipedia):

For subscribers to Disraeli’s ‘Lies, damned lies and statistics’ view of the world, here are the top ten sorted by endowment per pupil:

Harvard alumni – whether graduates or drop-outs – excel in all fields of human endeavor, and include Barack Obama, Mark Zuckerberg (drop-out), Bill Gates (drop-out), JFK, Matt Damon (drop-out), FDR, Natalie Portman, John Adams, Teddy Roosevelt, Larry Summers, Al Gore, JQ Adams, John Lithgow, Conan O’Brien, RFK, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Tommy Lee Jones, Henry Kissinger, John Hancock and John Roberts. More Harvard alumni hold CEO spots in the Fortune 500 than from any other school. The faculty list is no less impressive.

The official website is here.

Mark Zuckerberg’s luminous 2017 Commencement Address is here and it’s an absolute blast.

Warwick Fire Department

True to the spirit of place.


Click the image for the map.

The fire department’s building may have sprouted numerous aerials, antennas, receivers and transmitters in recent years, but the architecture remains true to the spirit of Massachusetts.

Panny GX7, kit zoom.

Thayer Public Library

Rural new England defined.


Click the image for the map.

Located in Ashuelot, New Hampshire, the library dates from 1902. The architecture is typical of the region.

Panny GX7, kit zoom.

Reader comment:

A reader writes:

“Dartmouth’s Thayer School of Engineering is named after the same Thayer (Sylvanus).”

The iPhone is 10

Ubiquity in a decade.

It’s easy to remember the date as it’s the one on which I shelled out a shocking amount of money on a device the likes of which no one had seen before.

Seldom has technology been so compelling, so obvious in its promise of fulfillment of an unknown need.

Mercifully I was living in central California at the time so the lines at the local Apple Store in San Luis Obispo, a poor college town, were nothing like those in affluent San Francisco with all those memorable images of crowds around the block. Indeed, the device was so costly that Apple refunded $200 of the purchase price some months later after crafting the now famous financial subsidy model with AT&T. And AT&T was the sole carrier, there were no apps or AppStore and you pretty much enjoyed what the device came with. And you were deliriously happy that something so magical fitted in your pocket.

I paid my small tribute to Steve with a snap taken – where else but in San Francisco? – on the day of his death, October 5, 2011.

Pacific Stock Exchange building, Pine and Sansome, San Francisco.
G3, kit lens @ 71mm, 1/1250, f/7.1, ISO 1600

The iPhone roll out some months before the availability of the gadget remains the greatest promotional video ever.


Click to watch.

If one looks at the global penetration of smartphones – the iPhone and its many knock-offs, the device’s acceptance has been faster than that of all the key technologies which make life livable. Vaccines, modern medicine, transportation, electricity, sewers and so on, none has reached most of the world as quickly as the smartphone.

We now know Steve’s presentation to be some of the best showmanship since P.T. Barnum was a boy. He had multiple prototypes hidden on his body each barely capable of doing one thing. The iPhone was still months from a production model and was insanely buggy. But the master showman and carnival barker got away with it and the device remains one of the most reliable and bug free computers ever made. Watch that presentation. It is seamless. And today, for most consumers, a smartphone is the only computer they own.

Will Apple’s pricing and profit hegemony at the top end of the market prevail? The device has already taken Apple from a rounding error to being the world’s largest business and the single product dominance of its profitability, along with a chief executive who has yet to have an original idea, does not augur well for continued leadership when it comes to tech income statements. But no matter. This remains the most transformative device in human existence. And it was Steve who bashed all those engineers’ heads together and brought it to market.