Saturday, March 14, 2020

Warren G. Harding by John W. Dean

Due to COVID-19, the City of Industry, which owns and funds the Homestead Museum, has asked the Museum to suspend all public programs through the end of May. The Book Club will, therefore, not meet on April 3rd. I will keep you posted as I get more information.

As for Warren G. Harding by John W. Dean, I have listed below, for your enjoyment, the links that I would normally send in my weekly reminders. I hope that you will have the opportunity to read the book.

Please stay safe and heed the advise of the CDC.



History of McGuffey Readers























Friday, February 28, 2020

Destiny of the Republic

You are all invited to join in on the discussion of Destiny of the Republic by Candice Millard on Friday, March 6th at 10 am.

Please let me know whether or not you plan to attend.

This book has provided me with a great deal of ideas that I have linked for your reading pleasure.

1. From our own Kate Kelly


2. Finally, in 1967, we address Presidential and Vice-presidential succession

3. Pioneer Female Doctor

4. Bad Blood (Not the song by Taylor Swift)

5. Not Saved by the Bell

Friday, February 21, 2020

Destiny of the Republic

Please join us for a discussion of Destiny of the Republic by Candice Millard on Friday, March 6th at 10 am.

Please let me know whether or not you plan to attend, if you have not already done so.

Here are a few links that you might enjoy.

1. The Site of the Assassination 

Friday, February 14, 2020

Destiny of the Republic

We will meet on Friday, March 6th at 10 am to discuss Destiny of the Republic by Candice Millard. 

As usual, please let me know whether or not you plan to attend.

1. Candice speaks

Friday, January 31, 2020

Unreasonable Men by Michael Wolraich


The Book Club will meet in one week to discuss Unreasonable Men by Michael Wolraich on Friday, February 7th at 10:00 am.

If you have not already done so (and you know who your are), 
please let me know whether or not you plan to attend.

Friday, January 24, 2020

The Book Club will meet in two weeks to discuss Unreasonable Men by Michael Wolraich on Friday, February 7th at 10:00 am.

If you have not already done so, please let me know whether or not you plan to attend.

1. President Roosevelt waited until after the election to order the dishonorable discharges (Page 85).
From Wikipedia: The Brownsville affair...was an incident of racial injustice that occurred in 1906 in the southwestern United States due to resentment by white residents of Brownsville, Texas, of the Buffalo Soldiers, black soldiers in a segregated unit stationed at nearby Fort Brown. When a white bartender was killed and a white police officer wounded by gunshots one night, townspeople accused the members of the African-American 25th Infantry Regiment. Although their commanders said the soldiers had been in the barracks all night, evidence was planted against the men.
As a result of a United States Army Inspector General's investigation, President Theodore Roosevelt ordered the discharge without honor of 167 soldiers of the 25th Infantry Regiment, costing them pensions and preventing them from ever serving in federal civil service jobs. The case aroused national outrage in both black and white communities. After more investigation, several of the men were allowed to re-enlist.
Following publication of a history of the affair in the early 1970s, a renewed military investigation exonerated the discharged black troops. President Nixon pardoned the men in 1972 and restored their records to show honorable discharges, but it did not provide retroactive compensation to them or their descendants. Only one man had survived to that time; Congress passed an act to provide him with a tax-free pension. The other soldiers who had been expelled all received posthumous honorable discharges.

One of the most significant events during the time period of the book (May 18, 1904 through March 4, 1913) was the Panic of 1907. The following links help explain the economic activity during this period.

2. Trading in the Curb (Page 94).

3. Moore & Schley brokerage house (Page 102).

Thursday, January 16, 2020

Welcome back, everybody!

The theme for the first three books of the year is American Presidents. We start the new year with a discussion of Unreasonable Men: Theodore Roosevelt and the Republicans Who Created Progressive Politics by Michael Wolraich. 

The Book Club will meet on Friday, February 7th, 2020 at 10:00 am. Please let me know whether or not you plan to attend.

1. I had the following email exchange with the author, Michael Wolraich.

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Michael Wolraich
To: "tciarriocco@yahoo.com"
Sent: Monday, December 30, 2019, 12:31:17 PM PST
Subject: Re: Form Submission - - Unreasonable Men

Hi Tony, thank you for choosing Unreasonable Men for your book club. I hope that your members enjoy it.

To answer your first question, there are many lessons to be taken from the Progressive Era. The question that I focused on was, “How does political change happen?” In the early 1900s, the U.S. emerged from a long period of political stasis and entered one of the most dynamic political periods in American history. How did the early progressive leaders help bring this transformation about?

To your second question, I focused on two leaders in particular: President Theodore Roosevelt and Senator Bob La Follette of Wisconsin. Both were progressive Republicans, but they had very different styles and strategies. TR was cautious and pragmatic; La Follette was audacious and defiant. In the book, I explored which strategy was more effective for creating change. (I should also note that I meant the term “unreasonable men” ironically. It’s a reference to a famous line from playwright George Bernard Shaw: “The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.”)

On the third question, the Progressive Movement was certainly a reaction to the Gilded Age, but the term “excesses” makes the issue seem simpler than it was. The problem wasn't simply that some people had become extravagantly rich. Progressive reformers were also responding to political corruption, predatory business practices, deplorable working conditions, environmental degradation, and other social ills associated with the Gilded Age.

I hope these answers are helpful. Thank you again for choosing Unreasonable Men.

Best regards,
Michael Wolraich


On Dec 30, 2019, at 10:38 AM, Squarespace <no-reply@squarespace.info> wrote:
Name: Tony Ciarriocco
Email Address: tciarriocco@yahoo.com
Subject: Unreasonable Men
Message: Your book, Unreasonable Men, will kick off the new year for the Homestead Museum's Nonfiction Book Club. In 2020 the Book Club will discuss books about Presidents, Women's Suffrage, and local, southern California history. 

The Homestead Museum is in the City of Industry, CA, where I am a docent and book club facilitator. The Museum covers local and American history from 1830 to 1930 through the lives of the Workman and Temple families.

Progressivism had a major impact on California history in the early 20th century and has evolved into the 21st century.

What are the main lessons from this era of U. S. history? 
Is there a specific "unreasonable man" that we should consider?
Did Gilded Age excesses contribute to the development of progressivism?

Thank you for your book and any additional thoughts that you may have.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. "Uncle" Joe Cannon - Speaker of the House

3. Louisiana Purchase Exposition of 1904

4. Railroad Regulation

5. Link to TR Center

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Fraud of the Century
Rutherford B. Hayes, Samuel Tilden and the Stolen Election of 1876

As the sub-title of the book, "Fraud of the Century”, states, this book concerns the stolen election of 1876. This is a significant year in the history of the United States as well as the Rancho La Puente. Also significant are the years leading up to that fateful year.

President Grant’s administration was infamous for its scandals. The Whiskey Ring scandal involving the diversion of tax revenues and bribery of politicians caught President Grant’s private secretary, General Orville E. Babcock, although there was no direct evidence of Grant’s involvement. General Babcock was indicted, but acquitted. Secretary of War William W. Belknap was accused of illegal weapons sales and illicit kickbacks. He was impeached by the House, resigned and then acquitted by the Senate.

The election of 1876 occurred only eleven years after the end of America’s bloodiest war. The wounds were still very raw. The election was seen as the last battle of the Civil War, whereby Republicans won the Presidency and the Democrats won control of the South. As an omen to future violence, the Hamburg, South Carolina, massacre resulted in the murders of six Freedmen, indictments, but no prosecutions. Violence would continue through the Jim Crow era and Civil Rights era. The author stated that the scandal ridden Grant administration and Reconstruction played a large role in the campaign and the resolution of the election results. Lastly, the Hays administration would signal the end of the Reconstruction Era as Federal troops were pulled out of the South.

In the summer of 1876, an express train from New York City arrived in San Francisco less than four days after departing. The promise of the transcontinental railroad was being fulfilled. The beginning of the Gilded Age coincided with the explosion of the railroad and its affect on society. In May of 1876, the Centennial Exposition opened in Philadelphia as the nation celebrated its 100th birthday. The Exposition featured new consumer products such as, the telephone, the typewriter, bananas, Heinz Ketchup, Hires Root Beer and kudzu, an erosion control plant species that thrives in the South. Also Mark Twain, whose book, “The Gilded Age”, gave us the name for the era that would last for two more decades, published “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer”.

The discovery of gold in Indian territory caused the federal government to offer to buy the land from the Native Americans. Many Native Americans refused and the Cavalry was sent to enforce the federal ruling. The Great Sioux War of 1876 included the famous Custer’s Last Stand and resulted in the federal government officially annexing Sioux land, including what is now Mount Rushmore, and permanently establishing reservations. This was the beginning of the end of the western frontier.


The Panic of 1873 was the nation’s most severe financial depression until the Great Depression of the 1930’s. There were several contributing factors to this depression, which caused financial havoc in Europe as well as the United States. These factors include an equine flu, fires in Chicago and Boston and over-speculation, especially in railroads following the Civil War. Another factor was the passage of the Coinage Act of 1873, which placed the nation firmly on the gold standard. The effect of this law was the devaluation of silver, causing banks, which were heavily invested in silver mines, to fail. The cascading effect of these failures reached Los Angeles and caused the Temple and Workman Bank to close temporarily (bank holiday). It re-opened with a loan from Elias “Lucky” Baldwin, but was doomed to fail given the harsh terms of the loan. Baldwin’s foreclosure of William Workman’s share of Rancho La Puente and other property was a proximate cause of William Workman’s suicide on May 17, 1876.

Friday, January 15, 2016

History Book Club at the Homestead Museum


A Country of Vast Designs
Robert W. Merry

The Book Club is three short weeks away from its first meeting of 2016, and its second year. The Book Club at the Homestead Museum will start the year with the topic of "Politics and Presidents". The country is currently immersed in a seemingly never-ending Presidential campaign with loud, vulgar candidates launching misleading and inaccurate charges against fellow candidates. Candidates are making strategic alliances, raising money and introducing bills that could never become law. All this is happening as part of our countries tradition of electing its President from the beginning.

One of candidate Polk's promises was to reestablish the independent treasury system. This system provided that government funds remain within the Treasury's own buildings and that payments by and to the government were to made in specie, i.e., gold or silver. This system essentially remained in effect until the Panic of 1907 resulted in the creation of the Federal Reserve System.

From the beginning of our nation to current days, political factions have debated the role of the federal government in managing both its finances as well as managing the country's economy. The nation's first Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton was a leading proponent of a strong federal government. He proposed to consolidate national and state debts, to create a national bank modeled after the Bank of England, to establish a mint, to set up a revenue cutter service (now the Coast Guard), and to tax whiskey (a proximate cause of the Whiskey Rebellion).

The Bank of North America, chartered long before George Washington was inaugurated, became the first central bank of what would become the United States. It was succeeded by the First Bank of the United States as Alexander Hamilton successfully achieved one of his objectives as Treasury Secretary. One of the First Bank's objective was to create a common currency. Thomas Jefferson objected to Hamilton's financial program, stating that Hamilton's financial system was designed "to exclude popular understanding and inquiry"... and " as a machine for the corruption of the legislature". The charter for the First Bank expired in 1811 and was followed by the Second Bank of the United States.

The Second Bank was chartered for twenty years on from February 1816, with the federal government as the largest stockholder. The Second Bank was the exclusive agent for the federal government. So the federal government was its largest customer as well as its largest shareholder. It was in fact a national bank.

The charter for the Second Bank came up for renewal during the Presidency of Andrew Jackson, a strong opponent of a central bank. He succeeded in defeating attempts to renew the charter and the Second Bank, like the First Bank, became a private institution. Shortly thereafter, the Panic of 1837 occurred due to some degree from a shortage of hard currency, exacerbated by the lack of a central bank that could provide liquidity.

All this history set the stage for James Polk and his plan for an independent treasury. This system also had its problem. "In periods of prosperity, revenue surpluses accumulated in the Treasury, reducing hard money circulation, tightening credit, and restraining inflation of trade and production. In periods of depression and panic, when banks suspended specie payments and hard money was hoarded, the government’s insistence on being paid in specie tended to aggravate economic difficulties by limiting the amount of specie available for private credit."

This system presented problems during the Civil War when federal expenditures skyrocketed. It also failed to stop depressions, or panics as they were known. Panics in the 19th Century, after Polk, occurred in 1857, 1873, 1884 and 1893. The Coinage Act of 1873 placed the United States on the gold standard and depressed the price of silver and related stocks in silver mines. This cause the failure of the Bank of California, which in turn caused the ultimate demise of the Temple and Workman Bank.

We hope this bit of history will encourage you to read the book and to attend our Book Club discussion on Friday, February 5 at 10:00 AM at the Homestead Museum.


Wednesday, December 09, 2015

History Book Club at the Homestead

The History Book Club at the Homestead has completed its first year, during which we read books that covered the Twenties, Aviation and Water.

In the upcoming year, the topics will be Presidents and Politics, Film and Ethnicity. Please check here for dates, times and book titles. If you are interested in joining, please contact the Homestead Museum in the City of Industry, CA.

The first book that we will discuss is "A Country of Vast Designs" by Robert W. Merry. "In a one-term presidency, James K. Polk completed the story of America’s Manifest Destiny—extending its territory across the continent by threatening England with war and manufacturing a controversial and unpopular two-year war with Mexico."

The first meeting where we will discuss this book is Friday, February 5, 2016. In the interim, I will publish from time to time my take on topics from the book that I find interesting but may not one of the main topics of the book and our subsequent discussion. I will start with this post and discuss the migration of people from the borderlands of England. On page 13, Chapter 1 of his book, Robert Merry writes, "beginning in summer 1717 there arrived upon American shores a new breed of immigrant from the British Isles, far different from the Puritans, Quakers and Cavaliers who had already settled in their chosen locales."

We know that the Puritans were the first arrivals from England in America who established a permanent settlement in the New World. David Hackett Fischer wrote a lengthy tome (898 pages) titled "Albion's Seed" that describes these immigrants and three other significant groups that came from England. One group came from East Anglia and settled in Massachusetts; another group came from South and West England and settled in Virginia; a third group came from the North Midlands and settled in the Delaware Valley; the fourth group came from the Borderlands and settled in the backcountry of America.

Even though all these groups came from England, they each had distinct characteristics reflecting their station within the English hierarchy. Fischer discusses these characteristics in great detail in "Albion's Seed."

For the first two hundred years of our nation, virtually every President was descended from these groups. Most of these men came from the North British borderers and include Andrew Jackson and James W. Polk (subject of the Merry's book). The second largest number came from the Puritans of Massachusetts. The next largest group came from Virginia's Cavaliers. The fourth group from the North Midlands contributed the least and include Warren Harding and Richard Nixon.

As a side note, William Workman, co-founder of Rancho La Puente, was from the North British borderland and exhibited a tough, don't-take-any-prisoners attitude toward squatters on his ranch.

Monday, September 07, 2015

History Book Club at the Homestead Museum

The fall session of the History Book Club at the Homestead Museum is set for its Fall kick-off on Friday, October 2 at 10:00 AM.

The theme for the Fall session is WATER! Very appropriate during this severe drought that is gripping California.

The first book is a biography, William Mulholland, and the Rise of Los Angeles.

In November we will discuss the building of the Panama Canal after reading David McCullough's book, The Path Between the Seas.

Finally, in December we will read Cadillac Desert.

The Homestead Museum is providing a great experience at no charge, where readers can gain a greater appreciation for California and U. S. history. 

To enroll, please call the Museum at (626) 968-8493

Sunday, July 05, 2015

Come join the Book Club at the Homestead Museum!


"The Edge" Book Club

The Edge is a facilitated history book club that makes use of the Homestead's rich and diverse collection. Each series focuses on a subject that relates to the Homestead's areas of interpretation, often focusing on the Los Angeles region between 1830 and 1930. Museum staff curate mini-exhibits for each session sharing items that pertain to the subject of each book. Participants exchange ideas, share opinions and critiques, and assess the impact of various fiction and non-fiction works.
We ask that participants read the assigned book in time for each meeting. Books are available at your local bookstore, online, or at your local library.

 

The Roaring Twenties 

Friday, February 6
Friday, March 6
Friday, April 3
• 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
• $15 for 3 meetings
• Space is limited; advance registration is recommended, starting December 20.
February 6: Bill BrysonOne Summer: America, 1927. 2013.
March 6: Daniel OkrentLast Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition. 2010.
April 3: Margaret Leslie Davis. Dark Side of Fortune: Triumph and Scandal in the Life of Oil Tycoon Edward L. Doheny. 1998.

 

Aviation 

Friday, June 5
Friday, July 10
Friday, August 7 
• 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
• $15 for 3 meetings
• Space is limited; advance registration is recommended and can be made online, by phone, or in person starting April 24.
June 5: Lawrence GoldstoneBirdmen: The Wright Brothers, Glenn Curtiss, and the Battle to Control the Skies. 2014.
July 10: Barbara Hunter SchultzPancho: The Biography of Florence Lowe Barnes. 1996.
August 7: Kris Jackson. Above the Fray: A Novel of the Union Balloon Corps. 2009.

California Water & Waterways

Friday, October 2
Friday, November 6
Friday, December 4
• 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
• $15 for 3 meetings
• Space is limited; advance registration is recommended, starting August 21.
October 2: Catherine Mulholland. William Mulholland and the Rise of Los Angeles. 2002.
November 6: David McCullough. The Path Between the Seas. 1978.
December 4: Marc Reisner. Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water. 1993.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

The Edge History Book Club

The second meeting of The Edge History Book Club at the Homestead Museum in the City of Industry is coming up on Friday, March 6 at 10:00 AM. The current topic is the Roaring Twenties and the second book is "Last Call" by Daniel Okrent. This book was used by Ken Burns as a source document in the making of his documentary "Prohibition".

Please call the Homestead Museum at (626) 986-8493 to reserve your space.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

This year saw the inauguration of a history book club, which we call "The Edge", at the Homestead Museum in the City of Industry where I volunteer as a docent. I am fortunate to be the facilitator of the book club, which commenced on February 6. The topic for the first three-meeting session is the 1920's with the following books for discussion:

One Summer-America 1927 by Bill Bryson
Last Call by Daniel Okrent 
Dark Side of Fortune by Margaret Leslie Davis

At our first meeting, we had a group of eight individuals who shared their opinions of the book, "One Summer", and the incidents that occurred during the summer of 1927 in the United States. The meeting was kicked off with a short video of an interview with the author Bill Bryson. Paul Spitzzeri, Assistant Director of the Homestead Museum also spoke about sports in the Los Angeles area and displayed artifacts from the Museum's collection of sports memorabilia from the 1920's.

The next meeting is at 10:00 AM on Friday, March 6, when we will discuss Prohibition and "Last Call". Call the Homestead Museum at (626) 968-8493 for details. Please join us at one of the few history book clubs in the San Gabriel Valley.

Friday, August 15, 2014


By Jean Pfaelzer

The author provides a very detailed “litany of hate” heaped on Chinese immigrants primarily in northern California and throughout the western United States. These abuses range from murder to theft. This era was highlighted by the mass lynching of Chinese in Los Angeles in 1871. Chinese came to America to work hard and provide for their families. They panned for gold, worked in agriculture, were lumberjacks and, of course, constructed the railroads, but were rewarded with hatred and abusive behavior, both legal and illegal. The question becomes: why did they continue to come to the United States where, by the early 21st century, they became a prosperous minority. The author chose not to address that question, but dwelled on racial hatred and abuse during the 19th century, a time when such hatred and abuse was rather pervasive in society from slavery to the persecution of religious sects, such as the Mormons. A greater story would have been to describe what in American society changed for the better.

The author commented that Chinese immigration continued in the face of all this abuse, but neglects to point out that, during the last half of the 19th century, internal turmoil in China took tens of millions of lives. America looked pretty good in comparison. The abuse of the Chinese often came to the hands of organized labor who saw the Chinese as competition for jobs. Similarly today often affirmative action for minorities in colleges does not apply to the Chinese minority who have succeeded on their merits.

There was lengthy discussion of the Geary Act, which both extended the Chinese Exclusion Act and made life more onerous for Chines in America. Chinese protested this Act and filed a lawsuit that eventually worked its way to the Supreme Court, which upheld the Act. The author lamented the decision, but failed to appreciate that one should not seek morality in the law and the courts. The Chinese Exclusion Act reduced immigration from China for a half century after President Franklin Roosevelt signed legislation repealing the Act. 

Immigration boomed in the last half of the 20th century and continues today. Unfortunately the author mentions only this repeal and provides no other information on the continued immigration and success of Chinese immigrants. Even though the book was written in 2007, there was no mention of President Nixon’s rapprochement with then Red China in the early 1970’s. The United States today has the largest number of Chinese outside of Asia.

The treatment, both good and bad, of immigrants to the United States, is an important topic that should be explored in detail. Contributions to American society of peoples from every corner of the world has been significant, especially from the Chinese, who built the railroad, brought their cuisine and their spiritualism. As important as it is to know about why the Chinese were “driven out”, Americans should be proud of creating a society that welcomed them back.

Friday, July 18, 2014


By Paul McClure

This book purports to be a “folk history” but is, in fact, a detailed history of the major players in early California history from Juan Cabrillo to Crawford Teague, founder of the town of San Dimas. There is also detailed discussion concerning Native Americans who lived in southern California before the arrival of Europeans. The format consists of a brief narrative followed by a poetic summary of the topic covered and a cartoon highlighting an event or circumstance in the previous narrative. The chapter ends with citations of source material. The narratives read like a Wikipedia entries and, indeed,  the author cites some Wikipedia entries. The poetry is pedestrian with enough treacly political correctness to make them both annoying and totally unnecessary. The cartoons are just plain awful with an intellectual panache of a junior high schooler.

This volume, covering the Settlement Years from 1542 through 1878, is the first of three volumes. The next two volumes will cover the Citrus Years and the Subdivision Years. The book divides the Settlement Years into five Eras: Discovery, Mission, Rancho, Statehood and Valley. Each section of the book provides a detailed history, listing the important players in each era. It does, however, read like a textbook.

The Discovery Era covers Juan Cabrillo, Sir Francis Drake, Sebastian Vizcaino and Gaspar de Portola. Most early explorations were by sea along the treacherous coast of California. The Portola Expedition was the first overland penetration of California by Spain, which was concerned with encroachment by Russia and England. Spain determined that it needed to populate the northern provinces of New Spain. 

The Mission Era covers Father Junipero Serra, Juan Bautista de Anza and Jedediah Smith. These men laid down the foundation of what became Spanish California. Their efforts were not enough to prevent encroachment by Americans, led by traders and then by settlers.

The Rancho Era covers Ygnacio Palomares, Rowland and Workman, Henry Dalton, Olive Oatman and Ricardo Vejar. These men settled the area after Mexico won its independence from Spain. They owned the prominent ranchos of southern California.

The Statehood Era covers John C. Fremont who spearheaded the effort to survey and conquer the land for American settlement. Fremont was a popular pioneer who later fell out of favor and was courtmartialed by the Army.

The Valley Era covers the development of the valleys into townships populated by farmers, merchants and craftsmen. The first layer of civilization was the establishment of schools and churches providing for education and spiritual needs. 

Overall, the book is a fine read for anyone interested in the history of southern California.

Sunday, June 29, 2014


By Leigh Eric Schmidt

This author uses a plethora of polysyllabic words, where a good author would eschew obfuscation. One need not be a home-schooled National Spelling Bee contestant to understand a straight-forward history book. The topic of consumer rites is subsumed by a vocabulary only an Ivy League Professor of Religion can understand, such as epithalamium, afflatus, charivari and jeremiad.

The book covers the major American holidays of Christmas, Easter, Valentine’s Day and Mothers Day. Christmas and Easter have their origins as Christian holy days that over time evolved into consumer holidays. Some sects of Christianity held to a strict observance of the holy days without the trappings of consumerism. With the advent of consumerism, sparked by the Industrial Revolution, these holy days became holidays highlighted by spending on food, decorations and gifts. This evolution was abetted by some churches that promoted the elaborate decorations that even today grace our churches. These same churches, however, decry the blatant consumerism and focus on the birth and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Valentine’s Day and Mothers Day were created with a semi-religious theme of honoring one’s loved ones and were somewhat supported by the church, but greatly abetted by the floral, and restaurant industries. These holidays have spawned even more ersatz holidays, such as Fathers Day, Grandparents’ Day and Secretaries Day. These are days of recognition rather than holidays and are promoted by the merchants selling gifts, greeting cards, flowers and food. The Homestead Museum Docent should focus on the impact of these holidays on the Workman and Temple family, as shown by artifacts and house decorations.

As important as what the author wrote is what he left out. Even though this book was written about twenty years ago, holidays have evolved into sports-centered days. Super Bowl Sunday is now celebrated with parties, festivities and, oh yes, a football game, frequently surpassed in notice by its half-time show. Only NFL sanctioned sponsors are entitled to use the name “Super Bowl”. All others fear offending the pigskin deities and their litigious counselors. On Christmas day, the NBA showcases its marquee teams and on Thanksgiving Day, careless folks may be afflicted by a glut of football laced with tryptophan. March Madness viewing at work chokes company servers nation wide.

The important lesson to take away from this book is the need for any people to rally around a common interest, whether it be religious or secular. The individual must choose whether the primary focus of the celebration is temporal or spiritual. For the child, the choice is easy. For the adult, the choice should also be easy.