Archive for June 26th, 2006

We’ll Try

Posted in Fall River News on June 26th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

welltryI have always wondered why Fall River, MA, has such a goofy motto. In case you don’t know, it is “We’ll Try.” Odd isn’t it? Sounds sort of half-hearted, kind of like we will get to it when we feel like it sort of customer service excuse.

Fall River used to be the “Spindle City” — because it was the textile capital of the world.

Well, I found out where this feeble sounding motto came from, and while I still don’t care much for it, it helps explain the why of things. I found it in an April 6, 2003 Knight-Ridder Tribune Business News article by Daniel Barbarisi.

The motto was born of one of Fall River’s many great fires — this one, in 1843. The city’s residents resolved to rebuild from the ruins, and their efforts spawned the hopeful “We’ll Try.” It stuck, and for years has adorned both police cruisers and the city seal.

Ok. It came from adversity and from a time long ago when “We’ll Try” was a positive spin on a dark and tragic era. But now this phrase is without teeth. And the chief of police agrees:

But it’s not easy being a tough cop, when “We’ll Try” is emblazoned on your sleeve. “Other departments have always poked fun at the Fall River Police Department for that motto,” said Police Chief John M. Souza. “They have seen it and ridiculed it.”

One of Souza’s first actions, upon becoming police chief two years ago, was to have the city seal and its wimpy motto stricken from Fall River’s police cars, and replaced with a codification of the department’s mission statement: Service, Pride and Commitment.

The article details Mayor Lambert’s attempt to change the motto to the “Scholarship City”, saying, “Honesty, I think it’s a good name for the future.” In an informal poll of ten Fall River residents, 80% thought that their city’s nickname was “Spindle City.” The article concludes with words of wisdom from Michael Martins:

Michael Martins, curator of the Fall River Historical Society, said that whether it’s spindle or scholarship or another title, these are trivia questions, at best. They are the realm of the historian, the public relations person, or, perhaps worse, the know-it-all.

“None of those are really used in conversation anymore,” Martins said. “In the 19th century, sure, Fall River would have been known as the Spindle City.” Now, he said, “I think using it would just be someone’s attempt to be pretentious.”

To date, Fall River’s motto is still “We’ll Try.” If they don’t change it, they might at least consider removing the contraction. Perhaps “Well Try” would make people find it quaint instead of foolish.

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Not too pretty Lizzie

Posted in Borden Buzz, Lizzie Web Images on June 26th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

lizziepaperSome 35 years after the murders of Andrew and Abby Borden, and soon after the death of Lizzie Borden, a newspaper ran a brief piece wondering if a lawsuit to break her will would revive interest in the crimes.

Miss Lizzie Borden bequeathed virtually all of her money, estimated at $1,500,000, to institutions for animal relief in Fall River, Mass., the scene of the murder. No institution caring for human unfortunates was a beneficiary under the will. Miss Borden said: “I intentionally have omitted to provide in this will for relatives and next of kin other than those mentioned herein.”

Interest Renewed. Interest in Miss Borden and the murder, which has remained a mystery to this day, was renewed this week when Henry L. Shaw, a farmer living near Girard, Kas., and four sisters and a brother filed suit in Boston to break the will of Miss Borden, their cousin.

According to Len Rebello in his Lizzie Borden Past and Present, the Shaws sued the estate of Emma Borden, not Lizzie. In fact, the part of the will quoted in the article is from Emma’s will. The Shaws later decided to drop the attempt to break the will. Read all about it in Rebello, page 342-343.

Along with the story ran an artist’s representation of “Miss Lizzie Borden” — and it looks like the paper took a photo showing a much younger Lizzie and altered it to fit the age of Lizzie at her death. I think they made her quite ugly, don’t you?

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Lizzie sign debate

Posted in Borden Buzz, Fall River News on June 26th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

From the August 13, 1997, New Standard:

Council takes a whack at Lizzie signs
By Ric Oliveira, Standard-Times staff writer

FALL RIVER — City councilors wanted to kill four signs directing tourists to the Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast, but buried the hatchet and allowed the measure to pass. The signs depict Lizzie Borden and have a maroon silhouette of an ax pointing in the direction of the bed and breakfast, located in the house where the celebrated murders were committed. Several councilors felt the ax was an inappropriate symbol, considering the city’s efforts to stop violence.

The proponents of the signs have spent more than $500 in design work and had received the proper permits to place the signs on public ways. However the last hurdle was the council, which debated the issue longer than any other issue on the agenda last night. In a city trying to boost tourism, the debate over the ax seemed ironic considering the dozens of signs depicting Battleship Cove scattered throughout the city.

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Lizzie Borden in Antartica

Posted in Borden Buzz, On the Web on June 26th, 2006 by Stefani Koorey

gibbsWell, not the person Lizzie Borden. The boat Lizzie Borden. In a children’s book by Wolcott Gibbs titled Bird Life at the Pole by Commander Christopher Robin. The book was published in 1931, soon after Lizzie’s death. From a recent eBay auction description:

THE BOOK IS A VERY HUMOROUS AND RISQUE THINLY DISGUISED SATIRE ABOUT WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST, COMMANDER RICHARD BYRD AND BRYD’S SHIP “ELEANOR BOLLING” NAMED FOR BYRD’S MOTHER.

THE CHARACTERS IN THE BOOK ARE IDENTIFIED AS MR. HERBST A NEWSPAPER PUBLISHER, COMMANDER CHRISTOPHER ROBIN, A JUNIOR LEAGUE GIRL, MISS SVENSON AND THE SHIP “LIZZIE BORDEN” TO ANTARICA.

THE AUTHOR, WOLCOTT GIBBS WAS A WELL KNOWN HUMORIST, PARADIST, DRAMA CRITIC AND SHORT STORY WRITER FOR THE “NEW YORKER” MAGAZINE FROM 1927 UNTIL THIS DEATH IN 1958. HE WAS ALSO A COUSIN OF NOVELIST EDNA FERBER.

THE ILLUSTRATORS BRUTON & BRUTON ARE HELEN AND ESTHER BRUTON WHO WERE BEST KNOWN FOR THEIR WPA MURALS IN CALIFORNIA AND TERRA COTTA TILE WORK IN VARIOUS PUBLIC BUILDINGS INCLUDING THE ZOO IN SAN FRANCISCO. HELEN BRUTON WAS EMPLOYED BY GLADDING MCBEAN TILE WORKS IN CALIFORNIA AS A DESIGNER.

THE SISTERS HAD MOVED TO NEW YORK TO TRY THEIR HAND AT ILLUSTRATING FOR SOME NEW YORK PUBLISHERS. THEY DID WORK FOR THE “FORUM” MAGAZINE AS WELL AS SOME BOOK PUBLISHERS. DUE TO THE HARDSHIPS OF THE DEPRESSION IN NEW YORK, THEY SOON MOVED BACK TO CALIFORNIA TO PURSUE THEIR CAREERS THERE. A THIRD SISTER MARGARET WAS ALSO AN ARTIST.

There are several available on both abebooks and bookfinder. Most are without a dustjacket, so if you are planning to add this to your collection and wish the book to increase in value, you should invest in a very fine copy with a unmarked dustjacket. Happy hunting!

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