First, unrelated . . . thanks to Norman Brouwer for his corrections/additions to my “Circum …2” post; once I get any other comments, I’ll make corrections and re-post. Norman, maritime historian, thank you.
Horns , , , well, actually, more than one. But can you identify this one below, which awed me? Joel–over 6 feet tall– gave permission to use this foto, in which he serves a “scale model.” Considering the size of this horn, what is its origin? Answer follows. For the record, I asked Joel to show how “awed” he was; he may have heard my garbled request in a very noisy powerhouse as “odd” instead.
The person behind the horns in Brooklyn (you can hear them below) is Conrad Milster, engineer at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. Conrad–posing here with a few of his horns– says horns have fascinated him since the days he worked on the Hudson River Day Line. See a vintage Day Line TV commercial here.
And here’s more. Notice the ruler projecting downward from upper left side of foto. Conrad has manufactured the “brassier” of these horns, as
he did this calliope.
Notice the white marble base outside the window beyond the calliope on the left side of the foto above. Here’s an apt figure carved there and
some others, intriguing although slightly marred by ancient–no doubt– vandals . . or bowdlerists
Back to the horns, the one in the middle–note the size–dates from just post-Civil War era, when it was safety equipment on the ferry Landsdowne, running between Detroit and Windsor. Yes, you will hear it at the end of this post.
Conrad also collects gauges from the era of steam. Here are some previously of the the steamer Orange, running between Newburgh and Beacon, New York. Many thanks to Steve Turi for passing along the following two links: live steam voices on New York harbor the sixth boro from 1987 here and here. If you read the first paragraph of the first brochure, you’ll see Conrad listed as “special consultant.” If you look at the second foto in the second link, you’ll see this traveling steam horn exhibit got towed through the Canal by none other than the 1929 tug Governor Cleveland, recently part of the River Day trip.
By the way . . . horns or whistles ? . . . I can’t quite sort it out. Steam horn/whistles have largely disappeared from our lives. As a kid in an agricultural town way upstate, I recall the whistle atop the cannery, announcing shift changes.
OK, give a listen to Conrad’s whistles here. Conrad is the man in the one-piece wearing the green/yellow ski hat. Blowing the horns is an annual New Year’s Eve ritual at the Pratt campus. Other videos can be found in the links on the YouTube page.
The mystery horn from foto 1 blows at between 2:20 and 2:30 of the clip above. Guess its provenance?
SS Normandie!!! The horn was saved from the scrap pile and lives on to sing another day and another . . . . Thanks to Allen’s suggestion, I went looking for a Normandie video: here it is including the ecstasy, a horn, and the agony.
Hear’s my call to action: let’s get all the horns we can available on YouTube. And I’m directly appealing to someone from Kristin Poling–whose horn I recently heard–to help me set up a time/place for me to film/record the horn. I’ll sit on the appointed riverbank and record the sound, the song. And here’s another, anyone looking for a harbor culture project . . . organize a reprise of the 1987 “live steam voices in NYC harbor” event? Here’s current info on Arden Scott, of that event.
Many thanks to Conrad Milster.
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August 12, 2009 at 7:18 am
bowsprite
See you all New Year’s Eve at Pratt, then! for Conrad lets off steam, BLASTING in the new year in a MUCH more heart-racing, awe-inspiring way than watching a glittery dot sink amid flashing ads and suffocating crowds.
August 12, 2009 at 6:45 pm
Allen Baker
“She has a noble voice.”
Captain Anton “Tony” Huseby, Moran Towing Co. Senior Docking Pilot
and the docking pilot assigned to dock “Normandie” on her maiden voyage to New York on 02 June 1935.
If you folks don’t mind, an excerpt from “TUGBOAT, The Moran Story” by the son of the founder, Eugene F. Moran recalling “Normandie’s” grand entrance into New York harbor.:
“The Normandie’s journey up the bay was a characteristic blend of pageant and tumult. Planes swarmed over the ship, dropping flags and flowers on her decks. Blimps, excursion steamers, yachts, and fishing boats of every description followed her. Fireboats spouted streams of water. The din echoed through the bay and across the city. I was conscious at first of sound. Screams from the crowds, the shouts from various deckhands, the noise of planes, hoots and boat whistles, all swelled into one roar.”
Her “voice” lives on. Thank you Conrad.
It must have been some era to live through. Magnificent.
Allen Baker
Baltimore
August 12, 2009 at 7:27 am
tugster
in both the video clip in my post and in bowsprite’s comment . . . listen to the reactions . . . either crowd like at a rock concert or individuals responding more personally . . . there’s a thirst for these “blasts” from the past.
August 12, 2009 at 2:09 pm
Mage Bailey
Yes, If we lived back there, we would be dancing to the tune of those horns and whistles on New Years Eve too. Wow.
August 12, 2009 at 6:55 pm
tugster
allen- thanks a bunch for that quote. wouldn’t it be grand to find on youtube a “newsreel” of the occasion. as a “time capsule” remark, notice that helicopters–de rigeur today–were NOT mentioned in the list of vehicles making the procession up the upper bay.
August 12, 2009 at 7:32 pm
Allen Baker
Will,
It’s not maiden voyage materiel but, still working on that, this is some wonderful color footage.
It’s long. Enjoy.
and arrival & death in New York.
August 13, 2009 at 11:10 am
Daniel Meeter
What a great post, Will.
August 13, 2009 at 4:45 pm
Philip Martin
The Normandie video is great. I was a small child when it burned, and didn’t know much about it, and always wanted to know more.
To dampen the euphoria though, if it was a coal burner, that means soot on the decks, all decks. I found that out riding another French Line ship some years ago.
August 13, 2009 at 6:46 pm
Daniel Meeter
Which, I guess, is why they wanted to keep the Saarland.
August 17, 2009 at 9:10 am
Maritime Monday 175
[…] tugster: a waterblog has photos of lots of steam whistles with “A Horn Blows in Brooklyn“. […]
February 16, 2010 at 8:12 am
Jim Miller
Im just finding out from Conrad Milster that one of these horns blowing is from The SS Lansdowne, Same Horn DAD Capt Nick Saad used to hang me from as a boy on the cord thru the wheelhouse to the stack ,for 8 second “Departure”Blow as he notated in log. How amazing to relive this memory 55 years later
February 16, 2010 at 8:51 am
tugster
jim– if conrad says it’s true, i believe him he’s an amazing repository of this history. and with all respect, i hope attention is given so that the history of these horns lives on and on … altho i’ve never been to the new year’s eve event at pratt, i know they are amazing and i hope a tradition that lives on too. obligations move me out of NYC too often around 12/31. thanks for writing. do you have any fotos/stories from your dad you’d be willing to share on tugster?
February 21, 2010 at 9:41 pm
Jim Miller
Jeez i Got All kinds of Stuff If I can Figure out how to add Scans/Photos
February 21, 2010 at 10:00 pm
tugster
jim– email me and i’ll help you figure this out?? i’d love to see what good old stuff you have.