06/08/2026
in 1772, civil engineer Robert Stevenson was born.
He would build and design such lighthouses as Bell Rock and Sumburgh Head Lighthouse & Visitor Centre, among many others. Engineer to the Northern Lighthouse Board from 1808 to 1842.
To all of Scotland's lighthouses: Keep Shining Your Lights!!!
Photo from his son Alan's Biographical Sketch of the late Robert Stevenson, 1861
Drawing of Bell Rock Lighthouse by Robert's daughter Jane
05/26/2026
in 1803, Ralph Waldo Emerson was born.
Some of his words to lift and inspire you today and always.....
"Self-trust is the first secret of success."
"The line between failure and success is so fine that we scarcely know when we pass it - so fine that we often are on the line and do not know it."
"All great successes are the triumph of persistence."
"Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm."
"Our greatest glory is not in never failing, but in rising up every time we fail."
05/10/2026
238 years ago, Augustin-Jean Fresnel, was born.
He was a civil engineer and physicist whose research in optics led to the invention of the Fresnel lens.
I have been honored to portray the inventor of the Fresnel lens for lighthouse and maritime organizations and I'm certainly looking forward to performing for many more in the upcoming years.
05/05/2026
in 1864, Nellie Bly, (Elizabeth Jane Cochrane), was born.
She was a journalist for the Pittsburgh Dispatch and would move on to New York City in 1887 where she took an undercover assignment for Joseph Pulitzer's New York World and, pretending insanity, spent 10 days at an asylum for women on Blackwell's Island (now Roosevelt Island). Upon release, she gave her report and later wrote "Ten Days in a Mad-House" that exposed the brutalities and horrible conditions, paving the way for women and investigative reporting.
Oh, and she also travelled around the world in 72 days. Take that, Phileas Fogg! She even had time to meet Jules Verne on her way!
05/05/2026
200 years ago, American landscape painter Frederic Edwin Church was born in Hartford, Connecticut.
He was prominent in the Hudson River School of landscape painters, known for his large landscapes that included mountains, sunsets and waterfalls.
He was a student of Thomas Cole.
Frederic Edwin Church, c.1868, albumen print (cabinet card) by Napoleon Sarony, Department of Image Collections, National Gallery of Art Library, Washington, DC
05/01/2026
George Inness, American Landscape painter, was born.
"Art is a subtle essence. It is not a thing of surfaces, but a moving spirit." - George Inness
04/26/2026
we celebrate the 204th birthday of the man known as the "Father of American Landscape Architecture", Frederick Law Olmsted.
I've been honored to portray him for such organizations as the Friends of Olmsted Beil House Friends of Anderson Park US National Archives Comes Alive! Young Learners Program and Planting Fields Foundation.
Keep up the wonderful work you all do and a big Thank You to the Olmsted Network for their continued dedication and stewardship of Frederick Law Olmsted's legacy!
Speaking of which, who would be the next Olmsted partner that I could bring the performance to.....maybe Buffalo Olmsted Parks Conservancy Bayard Cutting Arboretum Emerald Necklace Conservancy Friends of Maryland's Olmsted Parks & Landscapes Louisville Olmsted Parks Conservancy Rochester Olmsted Parks Alliance? 😉
Photo of Frederick Law Olmsted 1857
Photo of Joseph Smith as Frederick Law Olmsted May 2022 courtesy of Adam Grace, Friends of Anderson Park
04/20/2026
176 years ago, Daniel Chester French was born in Exeter, New Hampshire. When his family moved to Concord, Massachusetts, they would become neighbors to Ralph Waldo Emerson and the Alcott family.
It would be Louisa May's sister, May Alcott, who would introduce Daniel to the art and eventual profession of sculpture:
"I may be permitted to record the peculiar debt I owe her in introducing me to the potentialities of sculpture. I had been whittling and carving things from wood and gypsum, and even from turnips, as many boys do, and, as usual, “the family” thought the product remarkable. My father spoke about them to Miss Alcott, the artist of the community, and she, with her ever-ready enthusiasm, immediately offered to give me her modeling clay and tools. I lost no time in harnessing the horse and driving over for them, and in experimenting with the seductive material, although I didn’t know even how to moisten it. I still have one of the modeling tools she gave me. While I know of some misguided people who will not consider that she is to be commended for this service to me, I am constantly grateful."
- Daniel Chester French,
Glendale, Massachusetts, June 14, 1926 [Prelude pg. xx-xxi, May Alcott: A Memoir]
Among his many works are The Minute Man and the seated Abraham Lincoln (collaborated with the firm Piccirilli Brothers) located in the Lincoln Memorial.
04/15/2026
in 1874, the 1st Impressionist Exhibition opened in Paris. It would feature 30 artists, among them were Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, Berthe Morisot, Pierre Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro and Alfred Sisley.
That is quite an "impressive" lineup!