American History – June 2019

(John Hannent) #1

12 AMERICAN HISTORY


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Connor Scott


Brown


Jessica Wambach Brown (“Man vs.


Mountain,” p. 40) writes on a wide range


of topics from Kalispell, Montana. The


U.S. Army Historical Foundation has cho-


sen Brown’s most recent article, “Great


War in the Big Woods” (December 2018),


as a finalist in the foundation’s 2018 Dis-


tinguished Article competition.


Retired prosecutor Joseph Connor (“Born


in the USA,” p. 30) writes about historical


topics with resonant current-day connec-


tions. His most recent article was “High


Crimes” (February 2019).


Sarah Richardson (“Passing Fancy,” p. 50)


is senior editor of American History.


Archaeologist Stuart D. Scott PhD


(“Hard Labor,” p. 58) is retired from a


professorship at the State University of


New York at Buffalo. A former Fulbright


scholar, he has written extensively on


fieldwork in Latin America and the


South Pacific, including the 1837 Rebel-


lion narrative, To the Outskirts of Habit-


able Creation (iUniverse, 2013). He


writes in Tucson, Arizona.


On the Money


Thanks for a very fine publication; I enjoyed your article about Eliza-


beth Powel. William Bingham, to whom Mrs. Powel sold her house


(“Washington Danced Here,” April 2019), was not only a neighbor but


a relative through his marriage to Anne Willing, daughter of Eliza’s


brother Thomas and well known in numismatic circles. Family lore


has it that Anne’s was the face of Liberty gracing American silver and


copper coins 1795-1808. As the story goes, Anne posed for Gilbert


Stuart, from which portrait engraver Robert Scot fashioned the “Draped


Bust” of Liberty, above. No contemporaneous accounts confirm the leg-


end, but it’s nice to imagine that this was the face of Eliza’s niece.


David W. Lange, research director


Numismatic Guaranty Corporation


Sarasota, Florida


Maine Squeeze


If, as a result of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1963 decision in Gideon v.


Wainwright, every other state has public defenders (“Trumpeting


Change,” February 2019), what’s the hitch in Maine’s legal getalong?


Barbara J. Thomas


Houston Texas


The editor replies: Rather than employ public defenders, the state of


Maine through its Commission on Indigent Legal Services hires pri-


vate attorneys at $60 per hour to provide representation.


Resettlement House


Members of my family always spoke highly of Hull House (“Secular


Saint Scorned,” April 2019). My mother, Eva Katz, her sister Ita, and


their brothers Abraham and Gregory, who arrived around 1925 from


Ekaterinaslav, Ukraine, in the Soviet Union, took English and civics


courses at Hull. The Katzes came in through Ellis Island. Their father,


Aaron, had been a prosperous baker in Ekaterinaslav. In 1923 he and


Abraham fled, winding up in Chicago. His wife, Anna—my grand-


mother—followed in 1925 with Eva, Gregory, and three much younger


children—Morris, Reuben, and Morton. Ita had to remain behind in


Hamburg, Germany, until she, too, was able to get to Chicago.


Robert Bermant


Thousand Oaks, California


Class Act


Eva Katz, on floor right,


graduated from the Hull


House school in 1925 with


sister Ita, in chair at far


left, and brothers


Abraham, in chair far


right, and Gregory, third


row, third from left.


Gregory Katz wed


teacher Emma Leavitt,


in third chair from left.

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