THE AMERICAN STUDIES BASEBALL
ROAD TRIP
Introduction
TASK: To create a visual presentation using Microsoft
PowerPoint, or other multimedia programs of images of a trip to
the baseballgame, incorporating music, poetry and prose, archival
photography, painting and film.
Break up into groups of 5. Each group must pick an historical
period in which to visit New York and baseball, the most exciting
city in modern times, and asked to imagine a three-day fantasy
vacation to New York's most important sites. First, the students
will research New York and will focus on a particular decade of
the city's life, looking closely at three to five events in this
time frame. They will be expected to keep concise notes on their
readings. Third, the students will immerse themselves in particular
places and events, actually taking on the persona of a visitor
by writing a multimedia diary recording the highlights of the
trip to New York and to a baseball game.
The Decades: Important: Each group must pick
a decade that is not takent by any other group. The decades are:
1800-1900; 1900-1920; 1920-1939; 1940-1949; 1950-1959; 1960-1969;
1970-1979; 1980-1989
Time Frame: Expect one week to complete this task. The final
due date for all multimedia presentations is May 5th.
Persona: It will be important for you to describe
your fictional personalities--where you are from, your interests,
and those little personal details that describe your status life.
Foe example, if you are wealthy, you might also include a trip
to Delmonico's and to the Opera.
Process:
| Work in groups of five. Use the website below
to help you plan a day in New York. Consider the following
questions: |
| |
1. Who will you go to New York with?
2. Which places will you visit?
3. How long will you need to spend in each place?
4. What will you buy? (T-shirts, souvenirs, meals, etc) Describe
these items in detail.
5. Who did you see? (Celebrities, odd balls, etc)
Remember: The best reports will have an historical accuracy
and a certain idiosyncratic details (status details) which
brings that part of history and life in New York alive. |
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New York Neighborhoods
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Harlem
The
Harlem Renaissance: PBS
The
Harlem Renaissance: An Overview
Encarta
Online-Harlem Renaissance Comprehensive overview of
the Harlem Renaissance. Read: Intro, Beginnings, Characteristics,
Ending, and Influence.
Harlem:
An African American Community View a timeline of
main events that occured from 1900-1940.
Interactive
Map of Harlem
African
American Odyssey: The Harlem Renaissance and the Flowering
of Creativity
Exploring
the meaning of the term, Harlem Renaissance
Great
Days in Harlem: The birth of the Harlem Renaissance
Harlem
Renaissance: The Capital of Black America and the Cost
of White Patronage
Drop
Me Off in Harlem: The Kennedy Center Presentation
Harlem:
Mecca of the New Negro (hypermedia/primary source)
Harlem
Speakeasiess
Black
Migration: Library of Congress
Black
Migration and Its Influence on Jazz
Jazz: PBS and
Ken Burns
The New
Negro: An exploration of the Allan Locke's ideas.
Home
to Harlem
Marcus
Garvey
WEB
DuBois
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The Upper East Side
Fifth
Avenue: Songlines-Virtual Walking Tours of Manhattan
This is a great site that includes information about the
buildings and people who lived along these streets.
Fifth
Avenue: Millionaire's Row
Along
Millionaires' Row, at the Crest of Lenox Hill-Real Estate
The Upper West Side
This is Jerry Seinfeld's old neighborhood (he lived at
West 81st Street and Columbus Avenue in the 1980s).
NY Upper West Side: Maps
Upper
West Side Maps
Broadway Information
Greenwich Village
Greenwich Village: New
York Government Site
Greenwich
Village Architecture Images
Greenwich Village
history and maps
Greenwich
Village Photo Gallery
Greenwich
Village: American Masters
History
of Village Vanguard
Village
Vanguard: Greenwich Village and History
Village
Vanguard Website
The Artist's Club, 10th Street and Fourth Avenue (Feb.
15,1959, Kerouac, Ginsberg, Corso, Leroi Jones (now Amiri
Baraka) read poetry)
Washington Square Park
Café Bizzare
Gaslight Café- MacDougal Street
San Remo Café - MacDougal Street
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General Resources on The Roaring Twenties
|
New York Restaurants
|
| Classic
Restaurants |
Mr. Ryan's Favorite Food in New York |
| Tips
on Tables.com: This site features vintage reviews of
famous Nightclubs and Restarutants, mostly from the New
York area from Mr. Robert W. Dana, entertainment columnist
for the now-defunct New York World Telegram and Sun.
Dining
in the 1920s: Food
Delmonico: The
original restaurant
Delmonico's
Restaurant: Wikipedia
Russian
Tea Room (1926)
Tavern
on the Green: Look at the menu
Grimaldi's Pizzeria
Patsy's Restaurant in
New York The Place Where Frank Ate
Lombardi's Pizza:
First pizzeria in NY
McSorley's Old
Ale House
Toots
Shor's Restarurant: Wikipedia
Katz deli
The
Stork Club
The
21 Club
Dorthy Parker's
New York (includes a listing of her favorite speakeasys)
The
Cotton Club
The
Noble Booby Prize (Speakies of New York)
Harlem
Speakeasiess
Food Timeline:
Culinary History Timeline
Sardi's
Old
Homestead Restaurant
Top Restaurants
in New York
Culinary
History: New York Public Library
Alice
Statler Menu Collection—San Francisco
Cornell
University Menu Collection
Cullinary
Institute of America Menu Collection
1890-1900 Au-Chat-Noir
Hotel
Illustration: Menu, Au Chat Noir Hotel, New York, N.Y.,
February 28, 1897.
1800s
Menu Collection of New York: Selections from the Buttolph
Collection
U
of Washington Digital Menu Colllection—Mostly
Seattle, but you can get a general idea of the type of food
offered during the different historical periods
The Food Timeline
1894 Delmonico's
Recipes from a “Gilded Age”
“A look at the menus of nineteenth century restaurants
shows that a vast majority of them offered a dish featuring
Terrapin. It was most likely the Diamondback Terrapin that
brought bliss to the palates of many a patron.”
Eggs Benedict:
Eggs
Benedict
1894 Waldorf
salad—New York, Waldorf-Astoria
Popular
Foods and Restaurants 1910-1950
Speakeasy
Dining
Popular
20th Century American Foods through the decades
Historic
Food Prices: including groceries and restaurants
Bridge
Cafe: the oldest surviving tavern in New York
Fraunce's
Tavern: 54 Pearl Street, New York
The oldest restaurant in the US, built in 1719
A
Restaurant Timeline
American
Feast: The history of food in America
1911—Delicatessens
of New York
New York Food Museum:
Great Site, with menus and descriptions
|
New
York Menu Pages—great interactive map
Dumpling Man
Rosa Mexicano
Crumb's Bakeshop
Crumb's
Reviews
Zen Palate
Cleopatra's
Needle (Jazz)
2485 Broadway
New York, NY 10025
Patsy's Pizzeria
Gray's
Papaya
Babbo: Mario
Batali
Mario
Batali's Restaurants
Hints:
Pretend to have a grilled cheese sandwich at:
Grilled Cheese NYC --Now Closed
168 Ludlow St. (Lower East Side)
between Houston and Stanton Sts.
You've got to walk across the Brooklyn Bridge
and have a pizza at:
Grimaldi's Pizzeria.
Located under the Brooklyn Bridge
Take a few steps to:
The
Brooklyn Ice Cream Factory
Fulton Ferry Landing Pier
Brooklyn, NY 11201
Then take a walk across the Brooklyn Bridge.
You may want to stop at Tribeca
Grill.
(Robert DiNero's place)
Have at least two meals at
Patsy's Restaurant in
New York
the place where Frank ate. |
Baseball
| Baseball General Resources
Baseball
Almanac:
Yankee's
History
Classic
Baseball Humor
Baseball
Stories and Quotes
Baseball
on PBS
Historic
List of Players
Major League Baseball(The
Official Site)
Major
League Baseball History
John Skilton's
Baseball Links
National Baseball
Hall of Fame
Baseball Reference
Minor League
Baseball
Field
Museum Baseball as America Chicago baseball trivia,
a baseball timeline and a unique "beyond the ballpark"
section with baseball sayings and resources.
The American Memory section of the Library of Congress
The
American Memory: Baseball
Baseball
Links
Play
Ball Articles on "How Baseball Began," Jackie
Robinson and the "Hall of Fame of Pitchers" from
the Library of Congress.
Baseball
Reference.com
Baseball
411 History
Major Leagu
Baseball Team Histories
Major
League Baseball History
Baseball
Resources from PBS
Historic Baseball
Baseball history with player and team profiles, articles
and a large section on South Carolina baseball.
National Baseball
Hall of Fame
The Cooperstown museum dedicated to preserving history,
honoring excellence and connecting generations through the
sport of baseball.
Negro Leagues Baseball
Museum
Complete information from the museum located in Kansas City,
Missouri.
Baseball
Quiz on PBS
Chicago
Cubs History
|
History, Baseball, and the Art of
the Narrative
Who's
On First: Original radio broadcast
Speeches:
Babe Ruth
Speech
of Lou Gehring
Studs
Turkel on Baseball
Ken
Burns: Inning One
Ken
Burns First Inning Part I
Part
II
Part
III
Part
IV
Part
V
Part
VI
Part
VIII
Ty
Cobb on PBS
Ken
Burns: Murderers Row
Billy
Crystal on Baseball in New York
Ken
Burns The Cubs
PBS
Video Clips: Crystal, Mantle, Goodwin
Doris
Kerns Goodwin's article "Fan"
Doris Kerns Goodwin: Voices
from the Smithsonian
Doris Kerns Goodwin: Love
of Baseball on Charlie Rose
Podcast
of Alibi Ikee: old radio program
Description:
Baseball Historian presents The Lux Radio Theatre. April
19, 1937. Alibi Ike A baseball comedy about the pitcher
whose talent on the mound was equalled only by his ability
with his mouth.
Short Story Links:
Alibi
Ike
You
Know Me Al
Baseball
Jargon: |
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