Soothing Drops

Soothing Drops

Saturday, August 25, 2012

THE BEST THINGS ABOUT WORKING IN THE FINANCIAL DISTRICT

Never in a million years would I have guessed that I would ever be working down town in a city.  Nor did I ever think I would enjoy it....don't get me wrong I love going out to a happening place which would be in a city where things are going on.  But to work there never would have thought I would.  So this is my office building:




And the reason why I enjoy working down in the Financial District is because there is never a dull moment...especially if I wander out during my lunch break.  There are always people walking around, lounging in the park at Post Office Square (in the summer of course) and there are many different eateries to visit within probably a good ten blocks.  You come across great people, stupid people, jerky people and mean people.  As much as I do enjoy working here, it really irritates me the attitudes of the people here.  (My co-workers are awesome though)  But even though I come across a lot of jerks here, I see some pretty funny stuff too.  And I have met some great people on the bus and the train during my commuting travels and I see them every day during my commute.  One of which I have become friends with and one who is my honey...which I'm sure you all know who I'm talking about. :)

But granted down town here is definitely not like the down town in New York...but there are alot of similarities.  For instance, we have a Chinatown, and a Little Italy.  In the winter, you see steam rise from the manhole covers, people bundled up but still being fashionable in their clothes.  Then there is Downtown Crossing which is filled with stores, delicatessens, restaurants...and of course bums.  But hey bums are everywhere...one time I was in Downtown Crossing with my co-worker and he was in McDonalds and I was waiting outside because I was not wanting to be tempted to get something from there.  Well I was approached by a bum and he asked me if I could give him some money to buy a sandwich for lunch and I didn't have any cash so I told him that.  He responded with "Well why can't you use your debit card".  Wow really????  Anyway where was I, then you have Faneuil Hall, Quincy Market (which is a foodie dreamland), and different stores to shop at. You always see lots of tourists walking around, taking tours, visiting the aquarium, riding the duck boats and more.  It is to my understanding that the area has changed quite a bit and it was much better years ago...but I can only go by with what I am able to experience myself.

So if you use your time wisely, you can really visit several things during your lunch break.  I always like to walk around with my co-worker Brian...he is like a walking Wikipedia seriously.  There is a ton of history here, and right around the area where I work.  Some of the old buildings and architecture are amazing.  The one place I haven't gone to yet, which is on my bucket list is the Boston Public Library...I have seen pictures and have heard that this place is amazing inside.  So when I do go, believe me there will be a blog about it.  

Even though this transition has been a difficult one, I'm glad that I have been given the opportunity to go through this experience.

Well....until next time.


THE DARK SIDE OF BOSTON TOUR - THE ITALIAN BRINKS JOB? 1950

So this here is the old Brinks building:


You can kind of see the top of it in the upper right hand corner of the picture. It was a shame we weren't closer but this was the best picture I could get.

The date January 17, 1950  the crime of the century happens.  The Brinks building on Prince Street was robbed, $1.2 million dollars in cash as well as $1.6 million in checks and securities.  They say it was gang members...but according to our tour guide it actually ended up being 11 workers who worked at the building and had been planning the robbery for a year.  And they did this very meticulously by observing the employees daily routine from a building across the street.  As well as removing lock cylinders of many doors and had locksmiths make keys.  They also went into the building several times after hours to memorize the layout and practiced their entrance and escape.  They also reviewed the plans of the security system inside the Brinks building. 

So it took 6 years and it cost the FBI over $2 million dollars to solve the case by rounding up every suspect they could find when the only evidence was rope, adhesive tape, one hat and a witness observing a getaway car.

So one day one of the members involved in this heist confessed to the robbery after he was being held facing unrelated criminal charges and I guess he cracked and started singing like a little bird.  So on January 11, 1956 11 men were indicted and arrested for this huge heist.

I tell you what I'm always intrigued by these crimes that people pull off...granted these men were caught but look at all the detail they put into it.  These people are not stupid and you would think that they could use their brains for useful things in a career or something?  But then again...most people like this who has these talents will never get a chance to land a fantastic job because they will be looked over because of the fact they do not have a college degree.  Goes to show you that just because a person does not have a college degree...does not mean they are less intelligent than a person who does have one.  In many cases, the person without the degree is really the intelligent one.

Well....until next time!

THE BRITISH ARE COMING!!!! THE BRITISH ARE COMING!!!!

I was really upset that the tour we were on did not include anything about Paul Revere...but I found out that Paul is on a different tour.  Because there was nothing "DARK" about his part in history.  But since we went past his statue as well as his house I just had to take a picture and share...so here you go!



Yeah...so my finger got in the picture...but the group was walking fast and I had to take this picture while I was in motion!

Well....until next time!

THE DARK SIDE OF BOSTON TOUR - THE INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS!!!!

So remember when I mentioned Copp's Burying Ground in a previous blog...well here it is:


Now back in the late 1700's there were quite a few people who were called ressurectionists, ressurection men, grave robbers or body snatchers as I would like to call it.

This was needed because many professors needed cadavers to use during their lectures to teach and mold up and coming doctors.  How can you come up with new medical techniques or learn body parts without the body?  Some of these people were so good they would search the obituaries or hear about people who have died.  Then they would wait and watch to see when they were buried and in the middle of the night dig up the grave and remove the body.  Some were so good that they would only dig up a portion of the grave, put a rope around the underarms of the deceased and pull them out of the casket.  They were so good that they could do all of this less than an hour....but the only problem was some of the bodies were damaged by the time they got to medical schools that they did not last the entire semester.

Well this brings us to the best "body snatcher" of all. And he goes by the name of John Collins Warren, Jr. who was the son of James Collins Warren who was the founder of Harvard Medical School.  At first James Sr had no idea that his son was a "body snatcher" as he thought that he was getting the cadavers legally.  Even though he was the best and could produce a body in perfect condition that would last the entire semester he was very sloppy about it.  He was so sloppy he was lucky he didn't get caught.  

John Collins Warren, Jr. wrote this statement:  "Having understood that a man without relations was to be buried in the North Burying Ground, I formed a party...When my father came up in the morning to lecture, and found that I had been engaged in this scrape he was very much alarmed."  

I wonder how proud James Collins Warren Sr was after he found out his son was a body snatcher???

Well.....until next time!

THE DARK SIDE OF BOSTON TOUR - THE GREAT MOLASSES FLOOD 1919

So when I think of molasses....I definitely do not think of floods....but this story was VERY interesting.  

So picture this...a tank that is six stories tall....filled with 2.5 million gallons of molasses.  (Geez....that's alot of molasses!)  It is January 15, 1919 and it is pretty warm at 40 degrees...that's warm in these parts...especially in January.  So between the unseasonably warm weather and then a faulty tank with cracks in it (which were covered by brown paint) this monster of a tank EXPLODES!!!!  Huge sheets of iron flying through the air in pieces...I guess kind of like shrapnel destroyed several nearby buildings including a fire station that was crushed by a huge chunk of the steel tank.  

A huge wave of 40 feet high flowed down Commercial Street moving buildings off their foundations, destroying wagons, carts, horses and cars.  The streets were flooded with this sticky debris of ruined buildings and by the time things got settled there was molasses sludge up to three feet deep.  Rescue efforts started right away but this molasses was so sticky that people who tried to help ended up needing to be rescued themselves.  

Commercial Street 1919




So in the end after it took two weeks of clean up there were 21 fatalities and 150 people were injured.  Purity Distilling Company's (owner of the tank) lawyer arrived on the scene very quickly and tried to blame anarchist saboteurs for this disaster.  But the company had to pay out about $1 million dollars in settlements which was a HUGE amount of money back then.  And the harbor remained brown throughout the remainder of the winter and spring.  It also took about 6 months to clean the structures and the cobblestone streets of this sticky mess.

Commercial Street today:




And even though it has been 93 years since this disaster...some say that on a hot day some of the streets in some parts of Boston still bleed molasses.  Now THAT is something I would like to see.  And if you are a history buff and would like to know more...pick up a copy of The Dark Tide by by Stephen Puelo it's supposed to be a good read and I'm wanting to read it.  

On a side note:  Did you know that molasses not only can be used as a sweetener, but can be used into making ethyl alcohol for drinking liquor and ammunition???  Talk about a very versatile ingredient!

Well....until next time!

THE DARK SIDE OF BOSTON TOUR - THE DISAPPEARANCE OF OLD CHIN AKA DR. GEORGE PARKMAN

Okay....okay, so I have been slacking in the blogging department lately so let me continue the remaining stories on the Dark Side of Boston Tour.

Sooo...this story is a little interesting, you have three main people involved and they are:


  1. Dr. George Parkman, who comes from a very wealthy family.  Every one knew him.  Always traveled by foot and was very shall we say frugal.  Owned many properties and was always lending money to people so was always collecting rent and payments on loans.  And in my opinion he kind of sounds like a loan shark pretty much.
  2. John White Webster, was a popular lecturer and a mineralogist at Harvard Medical College.  And had many financial troubles.  His family has been forced to give up a mansion that he built in Cambridge.  He was in debt to a number of friends and one of the people he owed money to was Dr. George Parkman.
  3. Ephraim Littlefield, was actually the janitor at the new Harvard Medical College.  He and his wife actually lived in the basement of the medical college, right next to professor John Webster's laboratory.  And he knew Webster as well as the other Harvard doctors well.  

So here the story starts where John Webster borrowed $400 from Parkman in 1842, and 1847 rolls around where little of the loan was repaid.  But he gave Parkman a note for $2,432 and this included what was unpaid from the $400 he already owed Parkman as well as another loan.  But this time the loan was secured by a mortgage of some of Webster's personal property which also included a cabinet of minerals.  

One year later he was still in financial distress and borrowed $1,200 from another person and secured this loan with the same cabinet of minerals that he used for the loan he got from Parkman.  Well the word was out on the street and it got back to Parkman that Webster had done this.  This outraged Parkman and then went to Harvard and demanded to receive the money from the sale of Webster's lecture tickets to repay Webster's debt.  So of course Webster was bothered by this as he didn't get paid so on November 23, 1849 after Parkman was done running around town collecting debts Webster visited him at his home and asked Parkman to meet him at the medical college that afternoon.  Parkman agreed and the last time anyone saw Parkman was about 1:45pm entering the college on North Grove Street.  Well later that afternoon Ephraim Littlefield found it odd that Webster's rooms were locked from the inside and hear a bunch of water running.  This was odd indeed.  On November 24th, Littlefield saw Webster with a bundle and he was asked to make a fire and he did so and didn't think anything of it at that time.  The following day Parkman's nephew along with a police officer was questioning Webster if he had known of Parkman's whereabouts.  And he did tell them that he had met with Parkman regarding his debt of $483.64 and was making an installment payment.

Well on November 26, this is 3 days after Parkman disappeared, Parkman's family not only contacted the police but then offered a $3,000 reward if Parkman was found alive.  Wanted posters printed up, posted and distributed; a little later $1,000 was offered if his body was found.  

As the days go on...Littlefield began to grow more and more nervous as some people began to link him to the disappearance of Parkman.  And he even became more suspicious as Webster's behavior increasingly became very odd. So he began spying on Webster watching from underneath the door and even though he could only see as far as his knees....he notice some weird movements.  At least 8 trips back and forth to the furnace.  After Webster left, Littlefield let himself into the room through a window since all the doors were bolted.  And he found kindling barrels that were empty even though they had been recently filled.  So wanting to know more he borrowed a hatchet, drill, crowbar and a mortar chisel and then asked his wife to stand guard. He got through two layers of brick but the stopped because he had to go to a dance, leaving the remaining layers for the next day.

He returns and is chiseling away and finally managed to get a hole in the wall and there was a strong draft and it blew out his lantern.  As he looked around he was ignoring the foul fumes coming from the room, he saw something.  And this was a human pelvis, as well as a dismembered thigh and the lower part of a leg.  When he saw this he began to tremble quite a bit as this is very disturbing and yelled for his wife and told her exactly what he had seen.  He immediately rant to the home of another professor, Dr. Bigelow who then found the Marshal and they all returned back to the room.  Now of course Ephraim Littlefield is thinking that the remains were of Dr. George Parkman.  But the Marshal didn't want to jump to conclusions and dispatched several officers to arrest Webster for the charge of murder.

At first Webster denied being involved and then blamed Littlefield for ruining him and tried to point out that Littlefield was the one involved.  

This case gets more and more interesting as not only was the few body remains found was identified by Parkman's wife as well as his brother-in-law, confirmation was made by Parkman's dentist.  And how...now remember my title is called The Disappearance of Old Chin...which was Parkman's nickname due to the protruding jawline he had.  And his dentist had to make a mold of his jaw to make a set of false teeth.  And he had kept the plaster impression because Parkman's jawbone was very unique and he identified  the jawbone found fit his plaster mold exactly.

And there you have it folks...the first usage of forensics to help solve a crime.

So no one really knows what exactly happened between Parkman and Webster...but word on the street was that Parkman demanded Webster to give him the collection of minerals since he had borrowed more money from someone else and neglected to pay anything back to Parkman.  

So...Webster was found guilty and sentenced to execution by hanging.  So in June of 1850 as a last bid to save his neck, Webster ended up writing a confession.  Admitting to killing Parkman but in self-defense and killed him with one blow to the side of Parkman's head with a stick of wood.  One blow...was all it took.  So the sentenced remained unmoved even with his confession and he was publicly hung on August 30, 1850.  He was buried in Copp's Hill burying ground which is still located in The North End of Boston.

So there you have it...one of the most famous murder cases happened right here in Boston...see so much to learn in Boston.  Lots of history and everything definitely was not perfect here.

Well....until next time!

Monday, August 6, 2012

JUST BECAUSE I WENT TO NUT ISLAND DOESN'T MEAN I'M A NUT!

So apparently on top of all the beaches located here in Massachusetts they have several islands as well and these islands that make up the Boston Harbor Islands.  http://www.bostonharborislands.org/  Alot of people go camping, fishing, or if they are fortunate to own a boat they go there and just spend the day at several of these islands.

Fortunately my friend Ann has so much knowledge of the Quincy, Milton, Weymouth and Hingham area.  So every once in awhile after church she will take me around and show me these areas so yesterday we went to Nut Island.  A very quiet little quaint island where people stand on the pier and go fishing, or just look at the beautiful views of the area and the Boston city skyline.




There is just something that is just so peaceful and calming about looking out on the water.




And there was several people on the pier some were fishing, and some were just looking out on the water


I'm not so sure about fishing in this water because Ann told me that the old sewage plant that closed years ago is still on this island but not in operation. So I wouldn't feel confident about eating any fish that came out of this water.  Ha ha!

Then I saw this weird seaweed by the rocks...it was pretty cool.  


You can't really see it in the picture but as I was taking this picture, I started to feel drops of water.  So I ask Ann "is it raining?"  And she said "What???"  I said "I feel water I think it is raining."  So she said "no it isn't."  Then I thought that maybe it was the water splashing up from the rocks.  Well nope...that wasn't it because I look up and see this


Okay don't mind my finger in the picture but these dark clouds rolled in and as soon as I took the picture a clap of thunder scared us and Ann said "let's go it's raining!"  Geesh....I thought I just said that!  Anyway it was fun as we had to speed walk back to the car and got just a little bit wet but we survived.  All in all we had a good afternoon.  She is such a nice person.

Well until next time....

THE DARK SIDE OF BOSTON TOUR - MONEY MAKING SCHEME 1919

During this tour that I took, I still can't believe that Boston was a city of many trials and tribulations.  You would think that people would stop coming here.  But you have a guy who came to Boston from Italy.  This guy was a smooth talking guy....everybody liked him and when he talked people listened.

So he comes selling this idea to several of his friends to where if they invested their money he could double their money in 90 days.  Sounds like a good deal right?  Sounds like a familiar deal right?  It is because this gentleman was the one and only Charles Ponzi.  So now you are getting where the term "Ponzi" scheme comes from.  Bernie Madoff wasn't the only one who got busted big time.

So after a few of investments of Charles Ponzi's friends went through with no problem he decided to start his own business called "Securities Exchange Company" so he could "legally" promote his scheme.  Now in the meantime when he is getting tons of investors because word is spreading like wildfire!  So he goes to the Hanover Trust Bank of Boston and started depositing money he got from investors in this account so once he had a large enough balance in the bank he could impose his will on the bank and possibly become president.  He eventually bought a controlling interest in the bank after he deposited $3 million in the bank.  My July 1920 he had made millions of dollars and when people saw how successful his idea was they were mortgaging their homes and investing their life savings.  Alot of them didn't take their profits but they reinvested the money so they could make even more money.  People started to get greedy!!!!

Well the more money people made the more popular Charles Ponzi became until a Boston financial writer said that there was no way Ponzi could legally deliver such high returns in a short period of time.  Well when Ponzi got word of that he immediately sued this person based on the fact that he had no proof.  Ponzi won and received $500,000 for damages and was glad because it kept the focus off of his scheme as he knew it would eventually fail

And shortly after that things started to crumble, he got furniture that he received on credit that he could not pair for.  And people were thinking how could this guy that could double your money can't even afford furniture.  Then they found out he was putting his money away in a bank yet telling them not to use the services of a bank.  This turned many heads and things were good for awhile until.....the United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts  requested an audit to be done on the books of the company Charles Ponzi owned.  More people started asking questions and once the audit was done it revealed that he was $7 million dollars in debt.

So what ends up happening???  August 11, everything came crashing down Ponzi was arrested and charged with mail fraud and his investors lost in total of about $20 million dollars!!!  That was alot of money back then, just like when Bernie Madoff's scheme collapsed his investors lost a total of $13 billion dollars!!!  I understand when you have money you should invest it.  But like you always hear...if it's too good to be true then it is.  And alot of people back in the 1920's as well as recently in 2008 had a hard lesson to learn.  And it's not fair and I definitely feel bad for people who trusted these crooked men.  Who would have thought that this scheme started right here in Boston Massachusetts?  I would have never guessed in a million years.

So I guess the moral of the story is be happy when you are broke...because at least you won't be mad when you lost money you don't really have!

Well until next time....

Thursday, August 2, 2012

ZOEY'S FIRST TIME AT THE BEACH

So a few weeks ago I had a rental car and decided while I had it, I was going to get done everything I needed to get done.  And since I'm not far from the beach I decided I would go and I wondered how Zoey would react to the beach.


Well we get there and at first she didn't like the way the soft sand felt on her feet but she got used to it and was anxious to head to the water.




She looks pretty happy and just getting used to things.  But she was really fascinated about the hermit crab we found and the seaweed...




And for one brief moment Zoey forgot about water being at the beach, saw a can floating in the water and tried to go get it.  Boy was she surprised!


I never saw her move so fast OUT of the water.  But all in all we had a great morning and Zoey got to see pigeons and thought about running after them but changed her mind.  I'm glad that I live not far from the beach and hope to go there more in the upcoming months.



Well until next time....

THE DARK SIDE OF BOSTON TOUR - GREAT INFLUENZA 1918

Oh here we go again, another sickness.  Kind of makes you wonder why people lived here in Boston.


It started August 27, 1918 at the Commonwealth Pier in Boston.  After many sailors got sick they were transferred to Chelsea Naval Hospital.  At the same time some ships left to head out to Philadelphia and New Orleans carrying the virus.  The more people who had the flu it spread quickly.  During the height of this epidemic at Camp Devens, approximately 100 soldiers were dying per day.


By September 1918, the virus was not isolated with troops now it spread throughout the United States and many people that came in contact with the troops were infected.


The death toll in Boston was horrible.  It was so bad that schools and draft boards temporarily closed to decrease public gatherings, and even some retail stores reduced their hours to avoid having alot of people in one place.  


By October 1918, 3,147 people dies of influenza or pneumonia in Boston.  On October 1, 1918 202 people died in Boston just on that one day.  The tour guide also mentioned something interesting....she said that I guess there were some soldiers (62) were locked up for one reason or another.  And they were asked to become test subjects to receive a flu vaccination and were warned they could possibly die.  But if they didn't die they would be released and could go about their business.  All 62 subjects survived and were released.  Guess the government thought some of them were going to die...joke was on them.


So there you have it the flu shot was born!  Hang with me for a minute....the last few subjects were a little boring but it gets more exciting.  We have murder, financial schemes, waves of molasses, stealing, mob family and body snatchers coming up!


Next up....the Ponzi Scheme???? 


Well until next time....