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2/14/10 - Small Business – the Job Creation Engine?
Surely just plain common sense would tell one that small business job creation is not the engine to pull the U.S. out of "The Great Recession." If all the jobs really came from small companies, by now we’d all be working for small companies.

So, what good is singling small businesses out for tax cuts? Most small companies don’t hire a single person. There are about 26 million private sector companies in the U.S., and 20 million of them have 0 employees. It’s only the remaining 6 million that do any hiring at all.

Ah, but companies with fewer than 500 employees are still the ones responsible for most of the “net job growth” in the last decade, isn’t that right? Well that’s the word on the street. But “companies with fewer than 500 employees” covers a lot of ground.

Benjamin Disraeli said there are three classes of lie: The Lie, The Damned Lie and Statistics. The small business job machine myth kind of falls into that third category. Companies with fewer than 500 employees comprise about 99.7% of all hiring companies.

So what are folks really saying? That an overwhelming majority of companies provide a bit more than half of all jobs? The rest, a bit less than half, are at the approximately 18,000 large companies with “more than 500 employees.”

BLS statistics show that small companies created jobs coming out of the 2001 recession. Larger companies, on the other hand, continued to hold back on hiring even after the recovery was well established.

However, one can't conclude, on that basis, that our future will be in a world where small companies do all the hiring in the U.S. and large companies don’t. That would be akin to concluding that global warming is a hoax just because it snowed a lot in our nation’s capital this winter.


Let’s give those big guys the tax breaks. They actually seem more capable of creating large job swings than their smaller brethren. It’s just in the last decade they’ve been swinging the other way. Maybe we should concentrate on getting them to change direction with respect to the U.S. worker.

Maybe a bribe would work. Because when they do get around to hiring, the big companies have the capacity to put a lot more people to work.

By the way, in this recession in particular, it’s the smaller companies that seem even less eager, or able, to build their labor force. In this modern era, large companies, ever-obsessed with pesky distractions like profits and shareholders, shed jobs early in a recession and start rehiring late in the recovery. But the chances of small companies blazing a path to Boomtown this time are worse than usual, economists fret. "Harper's Index" in that magazine's March issue reports that, as of January 2010, small businesses account for 60% of the job cuts in this recession.

But the overall employment landscape really hasn’t changed much over the long term. Here’s what employment by different-size companies looks like, according to U.S. Census Bureau statistics. These numbers have declined in the last few years, more so for large companies—that’s why they call it a recession—but over time the proportions stay pretty much the same.
U.S. Private Sector Employment Grouped by Company Size
  2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
No. of firms (000s) 5,886 5,984 6,022 6,050 5,930
w/ <20 emp 5,132 5,355 5,378 5,408 5,296
w/ 20-99 emp 647,436 520,569 535,969 532,370 527,782
w/ 100-499 emp 88,287 89,753 90,332 90,745 88,952
w/ >500 emp 17,657 17,951 18,066 18,149 17,790
Employees (000s) 115,076 116,317 119,917 120,604 120,904
w/ <20 emp 21,174 21,286 21,585 21,829 21,521
w/ 20-99 emp 20,713 20,472 21,105 20,865 20,675
w/ 100-499 emp 16,686 16,866 17,508 17,126 17,531
w/ >500 emp 56,502 57,693 59,719 60,785 61,177
U.S. Census Bureau, Statistics of U.S. Businesses

The thing is, in terms of sheer game-changing power, the hiring champs could very well turn out to be that small minority of big companies. That’s where the real action could be, and for the same reason Willy Sutton robbed large banks. There may be far fewer of them and their employee numbers have been sliding the last few years, but when they do get around to hiring, each one of them hires loads of people.

The only way to make small companies the hiring champs, as the US Chamber of Commerce (they’re a lobbyist, by the way) has apparently done, is by declaring just about everybody a small business and just not mentioning that fact. People are so gullible.

By the way, The Washington Post recently noted that the U.S. economy has lost more than 7 million jobs in the past two years, and said: “The country would need to create more than 200,000 net new jobs each month for the next seven years (italics added) to get unemployment back to what was once considered a normal 5 percent.”

J.D. Salinger once said he was a sprinter, not a long distance runner. See, this is the opposite. Try not to be too impatient, Obama haters. He didn’t do this to you; you did this to him.





9/16/09 - Having a Bad Hair Day? Try Bashing Some Republicans
That Ann Coulter is a fairly smart cookie. She graduated cum laude from Cornell, which is probably more than you did, and she got her law degree from Michigan and made the Law Review there. And she’s sold more books in her time than I did when I worked at Barnes and Noble for several months.

But then she went and raised the question on the Bill O’Reilly show, when talking about health care, of whether “the government ever ran anything better than the private sector has, in the free market .. and the answer is ‘no.’” Such a statement is migraine headache-inducing even for those who only try to dwell on it momentarily.

One suspects that the “in the free market” phrase was tucked in there as a safety clause intended to help her escape the gravitational bonds of logic. But its inclusion is akin to trying to shed light on interplanetary motion relationships using Ptolemaic astronomical precepts.

The government isn’t in the free market, nor when it gets itself directly involved in almost anything is it trying to be. And without that little weasel phrase, why her statement can’t support even its own delicate weight.

The government does lots of things the private sector would, or could, never aspire to do. The space program comes to mind, or the military, or the interstate highway system.

There’s the National Parks Service. The National Weather Service. The Center for Disease Control. The federal and state courts systems. Disease research and vaccine development. Disaster and emergency response. Air traffic control. Local law enforcement and fire fighting. Geez, even the Post Office. And careful before you challenge that last one.*

The plain fact is, little in life is as simple as Coulter’s remark would make you think a public vs. private sector discussion is. The government is good at doing some things. The private sector is good at doing some things.

Both may screw up from time to time or even wander away from their purpose, but rarely if ever are they trying to do the same thing, even when as is often the case they work in concert with each other.


* “The current financial bind for the United States Postal Service is directly related to the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006, which required the Postal Service to deposit $75 billion over a 10-year period into a fund to guarantee payment of the employer's share of health care premiums for future retirees. No other federal or private entity is required to pre-fund this obligation” (Gina Meade, President Keystone Area Local American Postal Workers Union, AFL-CIO). How ironic is that?
Ann Coulter debated Al Franken on TV once, and he tied her up in knots.

If you can’t understand that, then maybe there’s no one who can explain it to you. It should be pretty self evident, but anyone still having trouble should think about this. Why is it that the Post Office will get a first class letter, generally for less than a dollar and in three days or fewer, to places in this country that Federal Express and UPS wouldn’t consider delivering to?

And in the end, why even pick on Ann Coulter about this? She doesn’t pretend to be an objective analyst of the health care or any other situation. Ann has described herself as a polemicist who likes to stir up the pot and, unlike broadcasters, does not pretend to be impartial or balanced. Or even, it would appear, factually accurate, as one suspects she’s proven time and again to the satisfaction of critics.

What, and how large a, role government should play in economic development is a legitimate political topic. Indeed, so is the whole subject of economic development, or at least it ought to be. (For instance, Fred Charles Ikle, former Reagan Undersecretary of State, once warned National Review readers that economic growth invariably leads to bigger government. Imagine that!)

Certainly, whether or not the government should be all or some part of the country’s health care delivery mechanism is an argument worth having. With the traditional caveat that honest people will differ in their views. Honest. But, please, the “reason against” argument shouldn't be shaped around the notion that the government can’t do anything better than the private sector, or even do anything well. This is nonsensical. One is hard pressed to imagine how people as smart as Coulter could allow themselves to stumble into such a simplistic and clumsy contention.

Hell, the government has run this nation for the past 200+ years, and even most pundits think (in this country at least) that it’s done a reasonably good job, all things considered. Certainly, there’s no one yet looking to outsource the task to anyone in the private sector, even if the government can’t seem to turn a profit on it yet.

Bonus Video Feature, Piling On Department: On how the intrinsic nature of the good things in life is to keep on giving, or Saddam you’re rocking the boat.


There now, don’t you feel better? I know it always works for Keith Olbermann. Coming soon in a future posting: Equal time for Democrats. We'll wait for Obama to do something Eric Cantor and John Boehner agree is funny. Shouldn’t take much longer. And those guys know funny.

8/4/09 - "If I could go back in time, I know somehow you’d still be mine...."
The August 1966 issue of Esquire magazine called for an immediate end to the decade of the ‘60s.

Given the frenetic activity of the previous six years, too much had already happened, the editors complained. They were tired. It was time to take a few years off and then just start in with a new decade. How little they knew. If the first six years of the '60s had been a roller coaster ride, the next four would be an acid trip.

The rocking and rolling crescendo came in the summer of '69. With a quick succession of events from mid-July to Mid-August that would leave today’s journalists, who think they live in the maelstrom of an unrelenting news cycle, gasping for air: The Moon Walk, Chappaquiddick, the Manson Family murders and Woodstock, all in a period of 30 days.

Even today, few people have it fixed in their minds that these four seismic events, unconnected save in time, unfolded within such a brief period. Any one of them was capable of changing the way we looked at things forever.

Possibly people were already too benumbed to take lasting notice of the timing. The truth is, contrary to the fond wishes of the Esquire editors, in 1966 the '60s were just beginning to heat up.

Saturday, July 19: the morning after. Sen. Ted Kennedy's '67 Oldsmobile Delmont 88 gets pulled out of Poucha Pond on Chappaquiddick Island.

The summer following the Esquire protestation was the “Summer of Love,” a fairly mind-altering indication, felt mostly in San Francisco but well reported on everywhere, that things were not slowing down any. Then, in 1968, Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy would be gunned down, and Lyndon Johnson, faced with the terribly gone-wrong war in Vietnam, announced he would not seek another term as President.

That summer Chicago hosted the riot-torn Democratic convention. Mayor Richard J. Daley defended his police against charges of brutal overreaction with a malapropism for the ages: "The police are not here to create disorder, they're here to preserve disorder."

Saturday & Sunday, August 8-9: The Tate/LaBianca murders. Manson Family members Susan Atkins, Patricia Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten at the time of their arrest.

But surging upon us one after the other, the events of the summer of '69 simply overwhelmed life as we knew it. They obliterated whatever sense of context we had left on top of all that had gone before. Whatever we had been thinking about, or thought we knew, just didn’t matter anymore.

Wednesday, July 16, the Apollo 11 Space Mission carried Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin, Jr., from Kennedy Space Center to the moon. The following Sunday, July 20, Armstrong and Aldrin became the first humans to walk on the moon.

In 2009, NASA officials marked the fortieth anniversary of the historic event by admitting they'd somehow misplaced the original video footage. No matter. A dedicated minority of Americans persist in believing even today that the whole thing was a hoax. Probably the same people who are convinced Obama was born in Kenya.

But in truth, the fuzzy images being broadcast back to earth and shown in every home and restaurant and bar in America that Sunday looked and felt every bit as otherworldly as they actually were. It seemed eerily like it was not just the astronauts on some weird new journey, and it was as strange and unsettling as it was exciting.

Friday night, July 18, after the lunar launch but before the landing, Sen. Ted Kennedy drove a car off a narrow bridge on Chappaquiddick Island, just off Martha's Vineyard, into a pond deep enough to drown a car. He escaped from his sinking vehicle, but his passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne, 28, from Wilkes-Barre, Pa, did not. Kennedy would report the accident some 17 hours later, after police had already found the submerged car.

Aug. 15-17: Woodstock. Billed as "Three days of Peace and Music," and that's pretty much what it was, although more crowded than expected.

The press did not treat the incident, or the Senator, gently. Too many questions, too few straight answers. It might have gone far worse had the accident not occurred amidst the distractions of Apollo 11. Kennedy got off with a slap on the wrist, pleading guilty to leaving the scene, with the sentence suspended.

Who knows what plans he might have had for that night, or for the years thereafter? No matter. All undone by a wrong turn. He made a late and half-hearted Presidential run in 1980, losing the nomination to incumbent Jimmy Carter.

Over the years, Kennedy built a distinguished Senate career. But the family mystique was lost to him. Scratched out by unplanned-for events on the dark night in the summer of '69, along with the life of Mary Joe Kopechne.

Sunday, August 9, Angelinos awoke to the unsettling news that actress Sharon Tate and four other people had been savagely murdered in a grisly attack the previous evening at the home the actress was renting in Beverly Hills. Tate was eight months pregnant; her unborn baby died with her. One of the assailants wrote the word “pig” in Tate’s blood on the front door. The victims in the Tate home had been stabbed 102 times.

The next night, an elderly wealthy couple, Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, were killed in their Los Angeles home in equally brutal fashion. Rosemary LaBianca was stabbed 16 times. Leno LaBianca had twelve stab wounds including a knife stuck in his throat, along with seven fork wounds. The word "war" had been carved on his stomach. On their living room wall, in blood, were the words "Death to pigs" and "Rise," and on the refrigerator door was written, "Healter Skelter," the misspelled title of a Beatles song from the "White Album."

Patricia Krenwinkle, Susanne Atkins, Linda Kasabian, Leslie Van Houten and Charles "Tex" Watson were eventually charged with the murders. All were members of a quasi-religious cult led by Charles Manson, a charismatic drifter, aspiring musician and petty criminal.
Sunday, July 20: Buzz Aldren salutes the flag, on the surface of the moon

Manson (who took part in the LaBianca but not the Tate killings) was accused of directing his followers’ actions. It was believed he regarded the killings as the impetus that would ignite an apocalyptic race war.

Another plausible theory was that the murders were merely intended to distract law enforcement authorities from some drug deals that had gone dangerously bad and had put Manson and his coterie on the wrong side of some Black Panther members. See Denise Noe's reportage in "The Manson Myth" on the Crime Magazine website.

Eventually all those charged were convicted. Manson has remained a figure of morbid public fascination for forty years. In most of his pictures, he certainly looks crazy.

Fri.-Sun., August 15-17, The "Woodstock Music & Art Fair" was held at a 600 acre dairy farm in the rural town of Bethel in upstate New York. Bethel is 43 miles southwest of Woodstock, the site originally intended for the festival. Thirty-two of the best-known musicians of the day appeared in front of nearly half a million "concert-goers." Woodstock is still regarded as one of the greatest moments in popular music history. It is included on Rolling Stone's list of 50 Moments That Changed the History of Rock and Roll.

Woodstock started out as a venture capital project, more or less. John Roberts and Joel Rosenman, looking for investment opportunities, got together with record producer Artie Kornfeld and concert promoter Michael Lang, and eventually they came up with the idea of producing a Rock music festival. It succeeded beyond their wildest dreams.

The festival was promoted on New York radio stations. Tickets were sold at record stores and by mail. A three-day pass was priced at $18 ($24 at the door). There were a reported $1.3 million in advance ticket sales, and overall 186,000 tickets were sold before promoters bowed to fate and reality and declared the festival a free event. Total attendance mushroomed to about 400,000.

Dr. Frankenstein: "Damn your eyes!"
Igor: "Too late."

There were two deaths (a heroin overdose and an occupied sleeping bag accidently run over by a tractor in a nearby field). There were four miscarriages and supposedly two births.

It's estimated the concert eventually cost the promoters $2.6 million. It had immediately outgrown its original Woodstock site, and it soon outgrew the Bethel site as well. Huge additional provisions of food and fluids had to be rushed in over the weekend, as well as some 50 doctors. Eventually the festival got so crowded it had to be closed to new admittances. New York radio stations aired public service messages urging people to stay away.

In time the festival proved too big for the entire state of New York. Traffic headed to the festival began to back up so many miles that troopers reportedly closed the New York State Thruway. An additional 250,000 people, it's estimated, tried and failed to reach the site.

Those who made it to the scene experienced three days of a remarkably peaceful, joyful and love-filled (literally and figuratively) social scene, a couple of downpours and some exceptionally good music. The festival took on a life of its own, evolving into a raised-consciousness, countercultural hippie nation, at peace with itself and the world.

As the only reporter at the Festival for its first 36 hours, Barnard Collier had to struggle continuously with his New York Times editors who were looking for stories of social mayhem and disaster. They were simply not prepared to hear stories of cooperation, caring and politeness on the part of 400,000 long-haired freaks stoned in a cow field in the rain. (There were about 450 cows in attendance inside the fence with the audience. The cows were straight mostly.)

Woodstock was not a financial bloodbath either. The venue itself, obviously, lost money, but just the movie filmed of the event, arranged for in advance by Kornfeld in a deal with Warner Bros. and released in theaters in 1970, eventually grossed $50 million.

What was it that had so worn out Esquire's editors way back in 1966? Well, mostly it was "luminaries coming and going faster than a speeding bullet,” and “fads and fashions flaming up and burning out in a week.”

They cited Kennedy’s assassination, of course, and the Oswald shooting, the Civil Rights struggles, the Christine Keeler Affair—Profumo Affair if you’re more interested in politicians than hookers. Okay, but also James Bond, Liz and Dick, Happy Rockefeller, the execution of Caryl Chessman, Malcolm X., the Beatles, Mary Poppins, Sinatra taking a poke at an insurance salesman, Barbra Streisand, Eichmann, Valachi and Bobby Baker. Tired yet?

In fairness, such a list probably did seem like a lot to adjust to coming out of the ‘50s. But today that stuff wouldn’t wear us out if it all happened before lunch.

A different era, to be sure. You need no more proof than this. It wasn’t until the summer of 1967 that Time magazine declared the bikini had finally gained acceptance among “the young set” on American beaches and the mature crowd was expected to shortly follow suit.

The editors at Esquire be damned. The decade of the '60s was not going to end until the fat lady sang about triumph, disaster, horror and bliss. A last, lingering 30-day exclamation point at the end of a ten-year-long adrenalin rush. That's the way it was, as Uncle Walter would have said.

You’ve come a long way, baby.

10/20/08 - Civil War, Cradle to Grave, All in One Day

Manassas: where The Civil War began.
This is the stone bridge in Manassas, VA, where on July 21, 1861, Union canons fired the opening shots of the first major land battle of the Civil War.

The fire was aimed at Confederate troops on the opposite side of the stream, and the attack was a ruse. A Union Infantry detachment was, all the while, circling around upstream in an attempt to outflank the main Confederate force. It didn't work.

That first day of the war turned into a long one for the Federals and the last one for the nearly 900 who fell on the field.
Survivors trudged off cleansed forever of the romantic fantasy that had fueled their passion to fight one another.

Both sides had been confident that their bravery alone would carry the day against a less committed and less valorous foe and make for a short, glorious war.

The name of the stream that runs under the bridge in the picture was (and still is) Bull Run.

Appomattox: where it ended.
This is the home owned by Wilmer McLean in Appomattox Court House, VA, where Lee surrendered to Grant. It was the biggest house in the area, with a large enough parlor to accommodate all the officers involved in the surrender.

McLean was living with his family in Manassas at the outbreak of the war, and he liked to say that the Civil War started in his front yard and ended in his parlor. Not exactly true, but only a slight exaggeration. The McLain farm in Manassas was slightly southeast of the fighting, but their house served as Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard's headquarters during the opening battle and was supposedly slightly damaged in the fighting. At least, a stray canon ball may have rolled up on their lawn.

(Note: there were actually two Battles of Bull Run, in 1861 and again in 1862. The outcome was the same; the Federals lost. If your sympathies lay with the South, it was First Manassas and Second Manassas. Yup, they even named them differently.)

In any event, McLean headed south to put some distance between himself and the fighting. One could say it found him anyway, but the truth is he never really left it.

During the war McLean made a good living as a sugar speculator, working on behalf of the Confederate army. One reason he resettled in Appomattox (named Clover Hill-before it got its courthouse) was its proximity to the railroad. Unfortunately for McLean, he was paid for his work in Confederate War Bonds.
Like so many of our national treasures, the McLean House is a reconstruction. The original was dismantled in 1893 by speculators who intended to reconstruct it in Washington, DC, as a tourist attraction. It didn't pan out.

One would be hard put to improve on the prose of the National Park Service brochure: "But the piles of bricks and lumber were never moved. Exposed to the elements, they eventually disappeared. The little village was either going up in smoke or crumbling into dust."

Fortunately, the speculators, whatever their shortcomings, left behind meticulous plans and specifications. The National Park Service rebuilt the McLean House in the 1940s as part of the restoration of the entire village.

Start to finish, the Civil War spanned four years of brutal, bloody fighting. At the end, the Union was pretty much back where it started, albeit with some deeply bruised feelings, an end to slavery, the South in ruins and more than 600,000 dead on both sides. The most costly war in US history.

The distance from Manassas to Appomattox Court House is 137 miles, mostly all on US 29. We drove it in under three hours. It only takes an hour or so to see Appomattox, but at Manassas you can spend as much time on the battlefield as your appetite will allow.


5/20/08 - On This Day in History, Colonial Charlotte Stood Up for Liberty, Maybe
Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence in two days, faster than college kids finish a term paper. Term papers are generally consigned to oblivion the moment they’re done. Jefferson’s words have endured for over two hundred years, to the minds of most Americans and a good many historians around the world the most eloquent expression ever created of the ideals that shaped the American vision of liberty.

John Adams thought it an embarrassment. James Madison apologized for its lack of originality. Jefferson himself was distraught over changes the Continental Congress made to his text. He took pains to record his original draft with the Congressional edits annotated out. To his fellow Virginians he complained they had destroyed his document.

Jefferson never claimed it was original. This was the Age of Reason. He, like his contemporaries, was consumed with notions about the rights of man and the legitimacy of rulers being promulgated by great minds like John Locke. Madison’s apology was more defense than criticism: "The object was to assert, not to discover truths."

But some of Jefferson’s critics went so far as to accuse him of plagiarism. The record doesn’t show whether any of them hailed from Charlotte, but they could have. Every May 20th, with varying degrees of fanfare, Charlotteans celebrate the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, written and distributed on that date in 1775.

The “Meck Dec” was published a full year before the Declaration of Independence, and yes, a copy was sent to the Continental Congress. It contains some of the very same resonant phrases that would make Jefferson famous. Word traveled fast even in those days, and good ones got reused.

It didn’t pretend to be so portentous as the more celebrated National Declaration, but it evoked the same “mad as hell” tone and the same invocation of independence. It was written in committee, by twenty of Charlotte’s leading citizens in reaction to news about the battle of Lexington, which had taken place a month before in Massachusetts.

The state flag of North Carolina, approved by the North Carolina Convention on June 22, 1861. The top date commemorates the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence. The bottom date marks the publication of the Halifax Resolves, the first official action by a colony calling for independence. The flag originally carried a different bottom date: May 20, 1861, representing the date of North Carolina's secession from the Union.

One signer was Hezekiah Alexander, whose homestead still stands east of town on Shamrock Rd. between Sharon Amity and Wendover, a part of the Charlotte Museum of History. It’s open to tours, which on Sunday are free. The kind of place everybody's kids have probably visited on a school trip, but is for the most part unknown to the local populace. (As noted on other occasions, Charlotte is not a place that dwells too much on the past.)

Herewith, the Meck Dec's phrasing that resonates so closely in Jefferson's declaration:

“ …we do hereby Declare ourselves free and independent people; that we are, and of a right ought to be, a sovereign and self-governing people …”
and
“ … to the maintenance which independence we solemnly pledge to each other our mutual co-operation, our lives, our fortunes and our scared honor.”

Whoa! Pretty close, huh? So did the Author of our Country filch those stirring words from his colonial brethren to the south? Adams, a close friend of Jefferson’s despite a long history of stirring disagreements, supposedly asked him as much in a letter some years later. Jefferson in his response invoked the Bart Simpson defense: “I didn’t do it, nobody saw me do it, nobody can prove anything.”

The original Declaration of Independence sits today behind glass in the Library of Congress. The Meck Dec? Well, it sits nowhere. There is no original. Just like all the earthly possessions of a number of panhandlers on New York subways who obviously studied their craft under the same tutor, all copies of the document were evidently lost in a fire.
Everyone in the county celebrates on May 20th, the day the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence was signed. We have been doing so since at 1825. It is to honor the men who signed the declaration in 1775. Throughout this week in May there are eating contests, races, patriotic bands and orators. In 1909, William Howard Taft the President of the United States is the guest of honor.
Image and text lifted from "Turn of the Twentieth Century Life in Charlotte 1900-1910," a website of Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County. http://www.cmstory.org/1900/default.asp?heading=10&page=87. Click on image for larger version.

In 1819 The Raleigh Register published a version of the Meck Dec said to have been reconstructed from memory 40 years after the fact by John McNitt Alexander, another signer and the meeting’s recording secretary (Hezekiah’s brother; five different Alexanders are recorded as having signed the Meck Dec.) He acknowledged his reconstruction might not be completely accurate. For one thing, he had rewritten the whole thing in the past tense.

Historians today are by and large dubious about the Meck Dec’s authenticity. Folks in Charlotte need no convincing. A Charlotte Public Library website poll says that 77% of respondents believe the document is real. Of course, there were only 471 voters, and there’s no record whether any of them were bona fide historians (or descendants of the Alexander clan). Anyway, it's kind of like taking an opinion poll on global warming.

Let the doubting Thomases doubt. History makes clear that there was a meeting on May 19-20, 1775, that was memorialized in some kind of written outrage and stated opposition to British rule. Charlotte’s founding fathers were among the first to take a public stand against British tyranny and for American Independence. The North Carolina state flag and seal proudly bear the date, May 20, 1775.

And what of the actual words? Even if they matched exactly, Jefferson is off the hook. It turns out the passages in question probably weren’t ones he put into the Declaration of Independence. They were inserted in place of sentiments of his that had been rejected by the Continental Congress.

The replacement passages were most likely penned in by Richard Henry Lee, another notable founding father from Virginia. (He was the first cousin once removed to the father of Henry Lee III, known to those who were paying attention in elementary school history class as Light Horse Harry Lee, a military hero of the Revolution and in turn the father of another notable military hero, Robert E. Lee.)


The Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence was supposedly signed by more than twenty-five prominent citizens of Mecklenburg County on May. 20, 1775. Biographies of each can be found on the Charlotte Library Website at http://www.cmstory.org/meckdec/bios.asp?id=1492844342
Abraham Alexander Adam Alexander
Charles Alexander Ezra Alexander
Hezekiah Alexander John Alexander
Waightstill Avery Hezekiah Balch
Richard Barry Ephraim Brevard
John Davidson Henry Downs
John Flennekin John Foard
William Graham James Harris
Richard Harris Robert Irwin
William Kennon Matthew McClure
Neill Morrison Duncan Ochiltree
Benjamin Patton John Phifer
Thomas Polk John Queary
David Reese Zaccheus Wilson


Richard Henry Lee, among many notable accomplishments, served as sixth President of the United States in Congress assembled under the Articles of Confederation, from Nov 30, 1784, to Nov 22, 1785.

That's right. On top of everything else, George Washington wasn't really—at least not technically—our country's first President. Plus, Paul Revere never really made it to Boston. The Battle of Bunker Hill was fought on Breed’s Hill. Washington wasn’t even standing up in the rowboat. And Jefferson? Well, who knows what he really did? They don't in Charlotte.

History is full of stuff like that.

Text presented as the "Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence" by the Raleigh Register on April 30, 1819:

1. Resolved, That whosoever directly or indirectly abetted, or in any way, form, or manner, countenanced the unchartered and dangerous invasion of our rights, as claimed by Great Britain, is an enemy to this County, to America, and to the inherent and inalienable rights of man.

2. Resolved, That we the citizens of Mecklenburg County, do hereby dissolve the political bands which have connected us to the Mother Country, and hereby absolve ourselves from all allegiance to the British Crown, and abjure all political connection, contract, or association, with that Nation, who have wantonly trampled on our rights and liberties and inhumanly shed the innocent blood of American patriots at Lexington.

3. Resolved, That we do hereby declare ourselves a free and independent people, are, and of right ought to be, a sovereign and self-governing Association, under the control of no power other than that of our God and the General Government of the Congress; to the maintenance of which independence, we solemnly pledge to each other, our mutual cooperation, our lives, our fortunes, and our most sacred honor.

4. Resolved, That as we now acknowledge the existence and control of no law or legal officer, civil or military, within this County, we do hereby ordain and adopt, as a rule of life, all, each and every of our former laws - where, nevertheless, the Crown of Great Britain never can be considered as holding rights, privileges, immunities, or authority therein.

5. Resolved, That it is also further decreed, that all, each and every military officer in this County, is hereby reinstated to his former command and authority, he acting conformably to these regulations, and that every member present of this delegation shall henceforth be a civil officer, viz. a Justice of the Peace, in the character of a 'Committee-man,' to issue process, hear and determine all matters of controversy, according to said adopted laws, and to preserve peace, and union, and harmony, in said County, and to use every exertion to spread the love of country and fire of freedom throughout America, until a more general and organized government be established in this province.



4/28/07 - Queen's Cup Steeplechase: A Little Jewel in Charlotte's Crown
Charlotte is nicknamed the Queen City (just like San Francisco, Cincinnati, both Marion and Terre Haute. IN, Bangor, ME, Cumberland, MD, Springfield, MO, Seattle, WA, Spearfish, SD, and a host of other towns—the list is too long to tick off in its entirety here).

But Charlotte is named for a real queen (just like the borough of Queens, NY, which was named for Catherine of Braganza, queen-consort to Charles II). Charlotte of Mecklenburg was the wife of England's King George III—yeah, that King George.


A statue of Queen Charlotte (which looks like she's skateboarding) adorns the airport, and there's another one in "Uptown" Charlotte.

The folks of the Piedmont region showed little affection for their British monarch in the period leading up to the rebellion (the first rebellion).
During the American Revolution, Lord Cornwallis described Charlotte as "a hornet's nest of rebellion." (Hence Charlotte's first basketball team's name—now they're the Bobcats, but that's a whole 'nother story.)



The locals did take a big shine to George's German-born queen for some reason, and the affection remains, even today. Charlotte is the county seat of Mecklenburg County, named for Queen Charlotte's home town. All the street



signs are decorated with a little crown shaped like an articulated "M." Lots of things in the area are named after Charlotte or acknowledge her in one way or another. Queens College is one. The steeplechase is another. It's a namesake of which she would likely approve. I'm not really royalty, but I was pretty impressed, too.



The Queen's Cup Steeplechase is an annual event, a day of races measured in miles rather than furlongs and run over a rolling, verdant course set in a place called Brooklandwood, which is located not in Charlotte actually, and not even in Mecklenburg County, but in a little town called Mineral Springs, pop 1,370, in neighboring Union County. It's approximately 30 miles southeast of downtown—or as they say here, "Uptown"—Charlotte. It's rural. Our trip there was delayed at one point when traffic stopped because two farmers were trying to rope a runaway calf along the side of the road. The mother cow could be heard lowing with concern in an adjacent field. True.

(Where I am is already about 20 miles south of Charlotte, and the sign at my exit on the beltway says "Downtown," so I figure that's actually where I am. I don't think they mean it that way, but that's the way I figure it.)

Charlotte does not have, even locals will admit, the smack and feel of a city of the deep South. The city fathers don't stand much on tradition or history. No Civil War monuments. No major battlefields, from either the Revolutionary or the Civil War. Three famous encounters with the British, the Waxhaws Massacre and the battles of Kings Mountain and Cowpens did take place nearby, but Charlotte saw virtually no military action during the civil war, although it did serve as the location for the Confederate Mint. Before that, it was a Federal Mint, but after the war it didn't get its old job back.
Thrills and spills. Steeplechase means hurdles, both hedges and, as they say, timber, and they can be dangerous to both horse and rider. Several spontaneous dismounts of the sort depicted above occurred this day, some of which we got to examine up close. Tough way to make a living.

Charlotte was also the site of a Confederate Naval Yard, even though it's 150 miles from the coast and not on a major river. But that was because the naval yard was basically a munitions dump. The Norfolk Yard was too close to the Yankee lines and subject to attack. So they moved the munitions here and then wound up blowing it up themselves by accident, and that was the end of that.



It's worth noting that Charlotte is where Jefferson Davis was when he got word that Lincoln had been shot. History records he knew right away that without the moderating influence of Lincoln a far more vengeful attitude toward the rebellious South would take hold in Washington. He is quoted as having said, "Next to the destruction of the Confederacy, the death of Abraham Lincoln was the darkest day the South has ever known."

Today uptown Charlotte features the thinnest of historical districts, and no "old town" per se. For years they've been dedicated to putting up new, and they tear down everything that gets in the way. I've been living here a year, and only recently I came upon Old Settlers' Cemetery a couple of blocks off the center of downtown. It has graves going back to the 1700s, and that's the first thing I've found around here that predates 1970.

But the Steeplechase is one venue that exhales a fairly deep breath of Southern charm. A Mint Julep in hand would feel right at home here. The women are all turned out in stylishly cut sundresses and wide-brimmed hats.



The men sport blazers, seersucker suits, striped ties and suspenders. There's not a pair of jeans in sight except on a few grooms. Tables and tents are set up along the hills that rise from the track replete with candelabra, flowers, stem glassware and fine china.

We were guests of Providence Day School. Our real estate agent, Mark Joyce, was president this year of the school's alumni association , which arranges the space and caters the food for the school and its guests. No candelabra but a fine spread, including some of the best Southern Fried Chicken I've ever had and an endless supply of beer. We were grateful for their hospitality, and they treated us graciously even though we were nothing but freeloaders. By way of saying thanks, a brief profile of the school.

Providence Day School, founded in 1970, is an independent, coeducational college preparatory school set on a 45-acre campus in southeast Charlotte. The school stresses academic excellence, personal integrity and social responsibility. During the 2006-07 school year 1490 students were enrolled in Transitional Kindergarten thru grade 12, 13% of whom represented minorities.

The school’s faculty comprised 168 full-time and part-time men and women. 42% hold advanced degrees in their field. Last year, 100% of graduates enrolled in four-year colleges or universities, and 95% of the Upper School students participated in extracurricular opportunities.

More than seventy-five percent of students take Advanced Placement courses. Typically, twenty-five percent of graduates qualify as second semester college freshmen and another ten percent graduate with enough credits to enter college as sophomores. In 2006, 233 students took 416 AP exams in 23 subject areas 93% of the scores were a "3" or higher. 70 % were "4's" or "5's". Fifteen students were named National Merit Finalists and 17 were named Commended Students by the National Merit Scholarship Corporation (NMSC) over the past two years. Two were named National Achievement Scholars, and 98 were named AP Scholars during the fall of 2006. Fifty-six percent of the graduating class were offered 2.6 million dollars in scholarship awards.

Providence Day School fields 56 interscholastic teams in 19 varsity sports. Last year, 1,030 student-athletes (grades 7-12) participated on one or more teams, and 74 seniors played one or more sports. There were 7 college signings, 86 student-athletes received All Conference Honors, 37 were named to all-state teams and two were named Academic All Americans.

In 2003, Providence Day was recognized as a Blue Ribbon School of Excellence by the United States Department of Education.

Next year's Steeplechase will be the thirteenth annual (April 26), and we're already fixing to go. I've been shopping around for some seersucker, and it would do my heart good to see June (my wife, not the month) in some cleavage again. Y'all find yourselves down this way the last week of April, you might consider paying a visit, too. Dress up nice.
 
The Queen's Cup Steeplechase: some facts and figures

Sanctioned by the National Steeplechase Association, the sanctioning body of steeplechase racing in the United States. Held annually in April.
Six races: 4 over national fences, one over timber, one flat.
Distances: Longest, three miles and one furlong; shortest, mile and a quarter.
Total of Day's Purses: $105,000 plus trophies for all races.
Feature Race: 4th, Queen's Cup Allowance Hurdle, two miles and one quarter over national fences, $25,000 purse.
Average Attendance: 10,000 - 15,000.
Money raised for Charity through Steeplechase venues: $350,000+ since 1995.
General Admission Fee: $23 in advance ($30 on race day) + $10 parking.
Website: www.queenscup.com