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Copyright © Jim Austin
Breakfast at Chick & Ruths Delly in Annapolis.
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Cream Cheese with Olives
As I photographed the early
morning light illuminating cobblestones on Main
Street in the “sailing capitol of the world,” a bay breeze
wafted food smells through the moist air. In search of
breakfast, I passed a sign that advertised a Ghosts of
Annapolis Pub Crawl.
Seeking a less spectral breakfast, I entered Chick and Ruths
Delly. It was 8:29 a.m. As the clock struck the half hour,
the business and tourist crowd stood up from their seats and
faced the flag in the corner. Prompted by restaurant manager
Ted Levitt, everyone recited the Pledge of Allegiance, a
long-standing daily tradition at the restaurant.
I ordered an “Ellen Moyer.” The sandwich, cream cheese and
olives on toast for $2.50, was named for Mayor Ellen O.
Moyer, a family friend of the restaurant’s owners Ted and
Beth Levitt. Moyer was the first woman in the town’s
300-year history to become its mayor.
Moyer, in 2007, welcomed the Middle East Peace Conference to
“Naptown.” It was attended by the Israeli Prime Minister,
Palestinian President, American President, and Saudi Arabian
officials. A regular customer next to me at breakfast
observed that the distinct taste of the olive-laden
breakfast sandwich far outlasted any olive branch of peace
prompted by the conference.
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Floating Before the Eye
Having sailed into Annapolis with a wooden tiller in one hand
and a digital camera in the other, I chose to depict its two
different sides. First, I made exposures of the town, and later,
I took snaps of the U.S. Naval Academy.
William Eddis, a 1769 town resident, noted that Annapolis
commanded a “variety of views highly interesting; the entrance
to the Severn, the majestic Chesapeake, and the eastern shore of
Maryland, being all united in one resplendant assemblage.
Vessels of various sizes and figures are continually floating
before the eye.” Today the beauty of Annapolis still floats
before the eye, inviting one to walk its side streets in search
of historical scenes and figures.
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Copyright © Jim Austin
Bronze statue
of Thurgood Marshall.
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I
found just such a historical figure, shown at right:
Thurgood Marshall. He stood in perfect silence, with bronze
eyes that seemed to follow me, glancing down with a generous
expression, I imagined, as if to say: “I give you the city.
Photograph it.”
Marshall, the first African-American appointee to the
Supreme Court, was honored by an 8 foot statue depicting him
as a young lawyer. His statue stands on the exact spot in
Annapolis where Marshall polished key arguments for the
landmark civil rights case Brown vs. Board of Education.
Having admired Marshall’s progress on civil rights, it was
thrilling to see and photograph his memorial, as it was a
fitting tribute to a cooperative spirit that built
Annapolis. Marshall once said, “None of us got where we are
solely by pulling ourselves up by our bootstraps. We got
here because somebody–a parent, a teacher, an Ivy League
crony or a few nuns–bent down and helped us pick up our
boots.” I pointed my boots towards the waterfront.
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Copyright © Jim Austin
The Compass Rose at the waterfront.
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It was a quick ramble
down Main Street to the harbor. At water’s edge by the
city dock, colorful newpaper vending machines lined the
brick walk next to a granite and bronze compass rose.
The compass showed a world map with Annapolis at its
center, and celebrated the arrival of Kunta Kinte to the
spot on September 29, 1767.
The southwestern compass arrow pointed to a statue that
honored Alex Haley, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of
the novel Roots; a seated Haley tells three rapt
children the story of his family and their fight for
freedom. Nearby, a plaque read, “Kunta Kinte,
immortalized by Alex Haley in Roots, and all others who
came to these shores in bondage and who by their toil,
character and ceaseless struggle for freedom have helped
to make these United States.”
Not all who came to Annapolis lived here as free people,
despite the town’s expansive motto: “I have lived, and I
shall die, free.”
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Copyright © Jim Austin
Students at St. John's College.
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Mids
and Johnnies
As I strolled across town toward the
Naval
Academy, I passed a group of guys who wore T-shirts that advertised Dutch and
German beer gardens. They were students at
St. John’s college known as
“Johnnies.” Their college, famous for its Great Books program
shares borders and history with the Naval
Academy. The two schools were age-old rivals.
At times this rivalry between the Johnnies and the
USNA midshipmen, “mids”, was
intense. When the mids marched to their football stadium for a
game, Johnnies stole their white Navy caps. The mids quickly
adapted, and learned to open a gap in their ranks. Unsuspecting
Johnnie’s were lured in, and then captured when the mids closed
ranks. On some occasions, a college student was held captive
inside a Navy group, and marched all the way to the stadium
before being released at midfield at the start of a Navy
football game.
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Chapel of the Navy
Crossing a narrow street, I arrived at the Naval
Academy, and saw the Chapel ahead. The
USNA security guard cleared me
past the west gate. I mounted the camera on a home-made tripod
and entered the Naval Academy Chapel. Accompanied by the chapel
organ, a group of Navy midshipmen sang lines from The Phantom of
the Opera as they tried out for a campus production. Their
voices punctuated the shafts of diffused sunlight that
illuminated gold-leafed details within the huge dome.
In the Chapel’s basement, I found the crypt of John Paul Jones.
America’s first naval hero, who spoke the famous phrase: “Don’t
give up the Fight.”
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Copyright © Jim Austin
Dome and entryway to
the
chapel of the Navy. |

Copyright © Jim Austin
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A
Fighting Spirit
Another Navy hero who never gave up the fight was Admiral John
A. Dahlgren, the father of modern naval ordnance. The building
that bears his name has shells of two WWII-era submarine
torpedos in front of it. Side-stepping the torpedos, I walked
inside. Built in 1909 to feed 1800 midshipmen, Dahlgren Hall
holds an ice rink and restaurant. It looked like an airplane
hanger built around a gym, done in Beaux-Arts architectural
style.
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Copyright © Jim Austin
Second floor view of the
Dahlgren Building at the Naval Academy.
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Overhead, the white shape of a small airplane graced the ceiling. The
airplane was a reproduction of the B-1 flyer, the first Naval
airplane, assembled inside of Dahlgren Hall after the Wright
Brothers won the commission to produce it. With determination
and a fighting spirit, Lieutenant John Rodgers flew the B-1 for
15 minutes on September
7, 1911, taking off from a field next to Dahlgren Hall. Later
that same day he flew the B-1 to Washington D.C.
With
Honor Over All
Photographing the record-setting flyer, and seeing the cavernous
space of the hall around it, I recalled the last verse of
Anchors Aweigh, the Navy hymn, written at the Naval Academy
Chapel organ by Alfred Hart Miles, Zimmy Zimmermann, and Royal
Lovell: “By Severn shore we learn Navy’s stern call . . . Faith,
courage, service true, with honor over, honor over all.”
As I left Annapolis, I reflected on the ways that its residents
have embodied all these values: the faith of the early Maryland
colonists, the courage of Thurgood Marshall, and the service of
Navy officers. Today, people of Annapolis keep their faith and
honor by pledging allegiance each morning in Annapolis at Chick
and Ruths Delly.
Jim Austin M.A. ,
A.C.E , is the author of a hardcover photography book titled
Sight Lines: Thinking in
Pictures on sale at
http://www.viovio.com/shop/14884
An Adobe Certified Expert,
Jim Austin has many HDR articles on Apogee, and teaches Photoshop for
Photographers at the
Apogee Online Campus. His HDR work is also featured at
http://www.flickr.com/photos/jimaustin/sets/.
To find other articles by Jim, just type his name in
the Search Box.
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