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Golden Gate Park's WWI monument finally gets recognition, a century after armistice

Golden Gate Park's WWI monument finally gets recognition, a century after armistice

Heroes Grove, the World War I monument hidden in a redwood grove in Golden Gate Park, has always been impossible to find. But everybody can find the Rose Garden next to it, and now Ken Maley, a non-veteran San Francisco parks devotee, has found a way to link the two attractions.
Maley, who is 80 and lives across town on Telegraph Hill, arranged to have a one-ton granite boulder trucked in to the entrance to the Rose Garden at John F. Kennedy Drive. It is engraved like a tombstone with the words 'Heroes Grove' and inlaid with a QR code that he says is a first for any monument or memorial in the park. The QR code works through a smartphone to access the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department website, which then gives a detailed history and description of the World War I memorial along with a park map and walking directions to the monument.
The stone marker, which was trucked in from a quarry just last week, was installed in time for Memorial Day, and on Sunday morning Maley was sitting discreetly on a green park bench near it, waiting to see if it would attract enough attention to send people up the trail behind it and onto a 10-minute nature walk through redwoods to Heroes Grove.
'I've watched people look at the QR code and walk up the trail,' said Maley, who is project director of the Veterans Commemorative Committee and has put 10 years and a $50,000 budget into installing the first signage to Heroes Grove since it was dedicated on Memorial Day 1919. 'I just felt that 100 years after the war people should understand that we have this living memorial to it.'
Heroes Grove, which began as public sentiment for planting a grove of coast redwoods to those who served, predates the city's main monument to the Great War — the War Memorial War Memorial Veterans Building and Opera House.
Its grand opening in 1932 was to feature a granite monument in the courtyard between the two buildings, contributed by the Gold Star Mothers. The 9-foot pillar was engraved with the names of 820 men and women from San Francisco. But the big oblong rock was judged to be incompatible to the Beaux Arts elegance of the Opera House and Veterans Building, so it was banished to the park, where it went completely unmarked for 100 years.
Among those who did not know Heroes Grove existed was Maj. Gen. Mike Myatt, a longtime member of the Board of Trustees for the War Memorial, who served on Maley's board. Myatt was president and CEO of Marines Memorial when Maley drove him out on a field trip.
'It really moved me when you started looking at the names,' Myatt said, 'But I could see how nobody could find it and if they found it they wouldn't know what it was.'
On Memorial Day 2019, Maley and his committee got a boulder that is 5 feet wide and 3 feet tall installed along JFK Drive in a ceremony that included a color guard and veterans in World War I uniforms.
The rock is easy to spot from JFK Drive, but there has never been an arrow or obvious path from there to the grove itself, and most people who see it are on bikes or running down the path toward Ocean Beach and not inclined to stop and investigate.
'It is amazing and so peaceful here, but I never see anyone looking at the monument,' said Julie Purnell, who lives in the Richmond District and runs her dog along the pathway. 'It is right off Fulton Street, and nobody knows it is here.'
In hopes of applying a lure, Maley last week had that stone marker on JFK also embedded with a QR code that was drilled into the rock and is the size of a compact disc.
'It's the new wave of 'interpretive' in our park system,' Maley said. 'This is the pilot project.'
It worked with Sunset District resident James Larkin and his wife, Felicia Lee.
'When we saw the stone marked 'Heroes Grove,'' Larkin said, 'I thought, 'What heroes are we talking about? Is it 9/11? World War II?' They were intrigued enough to investigate and follow the path in from JFK Drive, through the memorial and down to the Rose Garden where the path delivered them next to the bench that Maley was sitting on.
'It's spectacular,' Lee said. 'We loved walking through there and getting a hit of nature and a hit of history.'
While conducting his surveillance, Maley overheard one couple look at the rock in passing and exclaim 'Oh, it's called Heroes Grove.' That made it all worthwhile.
'For 100 years, people didn't call it anything,' Maley said.
Bruce and Kerry Grigson, visitors from Australia, knew all about Gallipoli but not about American involvement in the Great War or that they happened to be visiting on Memorial Day weekend. They felt compelled to follow the path from the Rose Garden to Heroes Grove.
'It's a bit of a privilege to be here on memorial weekend,' Grigson said, while standing at the memorial reading the engraving. 'It's amazing. I didn't know any of this.'
Maj. Gen. Myatt, who is 84 and retired in Sonoma, plans to come down with his iPhone and activate the code next week when has a medical appointment at the VA hospital.
'Then I can show it to my wife and anybody who comes along,' he said. 'It's a piece of history that says something about the people of San Francisco.'
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Former Roseland resident collecting memories of a place once called Hope
Former Roseland resident collecting memories of a place once called Hope

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time2 days ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Former Roseland resident collecting memories of a place once called Hope

Good things are in the works for Chicago's South Side Roseland neighborhood, including construction of a $48.3 million mixed use affordable housing project and new Red Line stop. But the community will always bear a history of white flight, racial division and disinvestment. Much has been written about Roseland's rapid transformation in the 1970s from an area that was predominantly white to one where residents were predominantly Black, due in part to job losses and local steel mills shutting down, but also due to Realtors stoking racism to convince longtime residents to sell. Many who left and are alive today had no say in the matter, however. They were teens or even younger at the time. And much like anyone who moves away from their childhood home, they enjoy sharing memories of where they once lived. No one seems to realize this more than Dan Bovino, who grew up in Roseland and now lives in Lansing with his wife Sue. 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Either way, becoming part of Chicago offered access to better infrastructure for sewers and roads, Bovino said. During the 20th Century, waves of Swedish, Irish, German, Polish and Italian immigrants arrived. Over time, a business district of sturdy brick and elaborately decorated terracotta facades sprang up. So did an assortment of frame houses bearing front porches with fancy gingerbread trim and plenty of brownstones and brick homes. A lot of homes were clad in shingles made of asbestos, which many people covered with siding, Bovino said. During Bovino's 18 years in Roseland, his family lived in a brick home, and later a frame home. The brick home at 113th and Prairie remains but the older wooden frame house is gone, he said. Like that home, others in the community have disappeared as well. 'There are fewer houses now on the 119th and 118th blocks of Lafayette,' Bovino said at a recent presentation at Calumet Historical Society. 'It's reverting back to prairie, but there are other parts of Roseland that are great. Sheldon Heights, near Fenger High School, looks like it never had a bad day.' Bovino also showed photos of local stores, restaurants, churches and favorite hangouts from the 1950s, '60s and '70s. Many were taken by a local dentist, Dr. Gene Osello. An Italian Catholic, Bovino attended Mendel Catholic Preparatory High School. His parents met at a popular bowling alley called The Rosebowl and celebrated their marriage with more than 400 guests at Turner Hall, a banquet venue. 'I was born a year later in 1953,' Bovino said. 'It was a race to have children. My father was the oldest of nine. Bovino also shared images of family gatherings with aunts and uncles crammed into a small kitchen, and one of neighbors hanging out together on a front porch. 'There was lots of porch sitting with neighbors back then, instead of people just waving and driving by,' he said. A circa early 1960s image taken on the day of first holy communion ceremonies shows a long line of girls wearing white dresses and veils. 'When people said be fruitful and multiply, that's what they meant,' Bovino said. Of St. Anthony Catholic Church, he said, 'The steps were made of marble, and nobody knew how slippery they would be. Lots of people fell.' He also mentioned that parishioners formed a parade procession following the delivery of the church's 12 marble columns to be installed inside the church. The truck could not make it under a nearby underpass and had to be routed an extra mile out of the way with congregants following on foot. Bovino showed many photos of churches, representing a variety of Christian denominations — First Reformed Dutch, Lutheran, Methodist, Evangelical, Baptist and related ethnic groups. A member of Holy Rosary Irish, he said, 'Even now if I say I went to Holy Rosary, people ask, 'Holy Rosary Irish or Holy Rosary Slovak?'' Besides the fun and games at church carnivals, he said, 'You could get clams on the half shell with hot sauce and sheets of pizza bread the ladies rolled out.' Bovino also showed a Chicago Park District Field House at Palmer Park painted with colorful WPA murals, and Griffith Natatorium, where at one time boys and girls were not allowed to swim together. Pictures of formidable looking local schools followed, along with Roseland Theater, Gately's Peoples Store at 112th and Michigan Avenue and nearby S.S. Kresge's, also Root Brothers hardware store, a local jeweler, Panozzo Brothers Funeral Home, and Pullman Bank. The department store photos stirred memories for Marcia Zmuda, now a resident of South Holland and one of 57 people who attended the Calumet Historical Society presentation. 'I remember Roseland as a wonderful place to live and be raised,' she said. 'I remember going to the Gately's Peoples Store, and my first job was as a store clerk at the Kresge's.' 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It went from Japp's to Jays within a week.' For Bovino's presentation, people occupied every chair at Calumet Historical Society. 'We generally have a good turnout for our meetings, but this one was really good,' said Mike Wolski, president of the 204-member Calumet Historical Society which frequently hosts historical presentations that focus on Calumet City but also the Calumet region. 'Some of our members are from Roseland and we reach out to people beyond our membership.' One of the last and more recent images Bovino shared was of tidy Roseland homes surrounded by picket fences lined with showy rose blossoms. 'And this is a photo of people living there now, just enjoying their homes,' Bovino said. Along with good things in the works for Roseland, the image harkens back to the community's original name — Hope.

7 Bible Verses To Reflect On This Independence Day
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