Military Monday: The Big Picture

Sometimes you do an internet search and find something completely unexpected and better than what you were looking for in the first place.

That’s what happened the other day when I typed in “1950 map Ottumwa” – or something along those lines – and one of the returns was a link to the National Archives and Records Administration page titled The Big Picture: Ottumwa, U.S.A.

Hmmm…. a segment of a television series produced by the United States Army…. featuring my hometown.

As explained on the website of the Army Pictorial Center:

At the start of World War II, the U. S. Army acquired a defunct motion picture studio at 35th Avenue and 35th Street in Astoria, Long Island City, Queens, New York, taking over  in February 1942.  The studio became the Signal Corps Photographic Center, later Army Pictorial Center, home to filmmakers and still photographers who covered the war and who produced countless training films.

“The Big Picture” was the Army’s ground-breaking television series. The half-hour weekly program featured famous or before-they-were-famous actors and actresses in top quality productions, filmed on the Astoria stages…… The series covered a wide range of subjects, telling the Army’s story in history and in current events.

“The Big Picture” ran on ABC-TV from 1951-1964 and continued in syndication into the 1970s on local television stations. The series even won a couple of Oscars.

I’ll do a separate post on The Big Picture: Ottumwa, U.S.A. In the meantime, here are a couple of episodes that have a different focus than most of the series.

First up (since we are in the midst of the 2012 Olympics) is an episode titled Big Picture: Olympics, which highlights members of the military participating in the 1952 Olympics.

Next is another non-military military film – The Big Picture: Army Talent Show. If you ever watched The Andy Griffith Show, Mayberry RFD, The Carol Burnett Show, or F Troop you’ll recognize one of the performers.

The National Archives and Records Administration has made individual episodes of The Big Picture available via Amazon and the Internet Archive, where they can be viewed or downloaded for free. Type “the big picture” in the search box and you will get results for available films. In addition, a catalog listing is available. You can find many of the films on youtube.com. Each episode is just under 30 minutes long.

I don’t remember The Big Picture. Do you?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Follow Friday – August 4, 2012

I sure spend a lot of time reading on the internet these days. I hear it’s bad for my health, but I enjoy it!

This week I spent a little time exploring Finding Eliza. Not only does Kristin have an interesting family, but I enjoyed the creative ways that she presents her family history.

Nancy at My Ancestors and Me provided this tip for reading nearly every issue of Harper’s Weekly published between 1861 and 1865.

I do indeed have a lot that I need to “tame” around here, so I’ll be keeping up with Marian’s Roots and Rambles for the series “Taming All That Information!”

More resources to read – Tangled Trees led me to a digital library of local and trade directories for England and Wales…. although I’ve only had time for a peek to see if there were any from County Durham.  There were.

And this. Every time Brad Buchholtz has a piece in the Austin American Statesman, I am taken in by his writing. As a transplanted Texan, one who has visited Camp Rio Vista with Girl Scouts, similarly remembers the assassination of JFK and his brother Robert, and has found solace in nature, it hit home on several levels.

 

 

Illuminating Blogger Award

 

Jana at Jana’s Genealogy and Family History Blog nominated my blog for the Illuminating Blogger Award, which is presented by Food Stories. That was certainly a surprise and just the encouragement I needed today! Thank you, Jana! I enjoy your blog and always hope to have content as interesting as yours.

Here are the rules as posted on the Food Stories blog:

If you are nominated then you have been awarded the Illuminating Blogger Award. Just follow the steps below:

1. The nominee should visit the award site (http://foodstoriesblog.com/illuminating-blogger-award/) and leave a comment indicating that they have been nominated and by whom. (This step is so important because it’s the only way that we can create a blogroll of award winners).

2. The Nominee should thank the person that nominated them by posting & including a link to their blog.

3. The Nominee should include a courtesy link back to the official award site (http://foodstoriesblog.com/illuminating-blogger-award/) in their blog post.

4. Share one random thing about yourself in your blog post.

5. Select at least five other bloggers that you enjoy reading their illuminating, informative posts and nominate them for the award. Many people indicate that they wish they could nominate more so please feel free to nominate all your favorites.

6. Notify your nominees by leaving a comment on their blog, including a link to the award site (http://foodstoriesblog.com/illuminating-blogger-award/).

I’m supposed to share something random about myself….. well, since I’m sitting here drinking my chai tea latte while I type, I’ll just share that my sister Kim got me hooked on chai. Rather than making a daily trip to Starbucks, I make frequent trips to Target to buy the concentrate so I can have one any time I want. My daughter likes them over ice, but I like mine hot – even during long, hot Texas summers. I guess that qualifies as random.
My nominations are … drumroll…
1. SaveEveryStep by Helen Spencer
2. Many Branches One Tree by Linda
3. Mnemosyne’s Magic Mirror by Meldon J. Wolfgang III
4. Georgian Gentleman by Mike Rendell
5. The Bees Knees Daily by Queen Bee
And just because I have a talented cousin and a talented friend whose blogs I enjoy (not genealogy/history related)
7. REM Cooks by Richard
There are so many more … I spend waaaay too much time reading other people’s blogs that I enjoy. But I must stop.
Thanks again, Jana!