Irish Daily Mail

The show must go on

-

QUESTION What became of Ford’s Theatre in Washington, where President Lincoln was assassinat­ed?

ON April 14, 1865, five days after Confederat­e States Army leader General Robert E Lee’s surrender, ending the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln attended a performanc­e of Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theatre in Washington. He was shot by John Wilkes Booth, an actor with Confederat­e sympathies.

Following the assassinat­ion, the government appropriat­ed the site, with Congress paying $88,000 in compensati­on. They decreed it not be used as a place of public amusement and it was handed over to the War Department.

It witnessed a second disaster on June 9, 1893, when part of the building collapsed, killing 22 clerks. There were claims that the theatre was cursed.

The building fell into disuse until World War I when it once again took up War Department duties. In 1933 it was transferre­d to the National Parks Service.

Following lobbying by the Ford Theatre Society, a Bill was passed through Congress in 1955 to restore the building.

It reopened on January 30, 1968, with a gala of songs, readings and dances in memory of Lincoln, directed by John Houseman and featuring Henry Fonda, Harry Belafonte and Andy Williams.

President Lincoln was a great theatre lover. He once said: ‘Some think I do wrong to go the opera and the theatre, but it rests me...A hearty laugh relieves me; and I seem better able after it to bear my cross.’

Today, you can see musical comedies, classic American drama and new plays at Ford’s Theatre, but the p residentia­l box is never occupied during a performanc­e. Jill Rey, Thame, Oxfordshir­e.

QUESTION Who made the first quartz watch?

ON Christmas Day 1969, Seiko released the world’s first quartz regulated wristwatch, the Seiko Astron 35SQ.

In a limited edition of 200 in a solid 18-carat gold casing, each watch cost 450,000 yen, the price of a small car at the time.

It marked a dramatic shift in the world’s watch industry.

Swiss neutrality during World War II had enabled its traditiona­l watchmaker­s to acquire a virtual monopoly in time-keeping. But the Swiss fell behind commercial­ly because they were wedded to the idea of mechanical, wind-up wristwatch­es.

Ironically, the first electronic wristwatch­es had been developed in Switzerlan­d. In 1954, Max Hetzel came up with the Accutron wristwatch, which used an electrical­ly charged tuning fork that resonated at 360Hz to regulate the hands of the watch. Ignored by Swiss manufactur­ers, it was marketed by Bulova in New York from 1960.

Meanwhile, the time-keeping properties of quartz crystal were becoming apparent. A battery sends electricit­y to a quartz crystal in the watch through an integrated electronic circuit. The crystal oscillates at a precise frequency of 32,768 times each second. The circuit counts the number of vibrations and uses them to generate regular electric pulses, one per second. These pulses drive the gear train that spins the clock’s hands.

The technology was groundbrea­king, eliminatin­g winding and improving accuracy to within one minute per year.

Swiss watch giants Patek Philippe, Piaget and Omega had tried to develop the first quartz wristwatch, but they had pulled out of the race by 1967. It left the field open to the Japanese.

The Seiko Crystal Chronomete­r QC-951, a desktop quartz regulated clock, was used as a back-up timer for the marathon in the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

After Seiko produced the groundbrea­king Astron 35SQ in 1969, other Japanese firms such as Citizen and Casio flooded the market with accurate, well-priced quartz watches. The impact was devastatin­g to the Swiss watch industry, which declined from 1,600 watchmaker­s in 1970 to 600 in 1983, a period called the quartz crisis. In 1974 came the Omega Marine Chronomete­r, which incorporat­ed a quartz circuit that oscillated at 2.4million vibrations per second and was accurate to within 12 seconds a year.

Oliver Simonds, Truro, Cornwall.

QUESTION Did dancing routinely take place ‘at the crossroads’ in Ireland?

FURTHER to the earlier answer, in late February, Dunleer in Co. Louth saw the passing of John Flanagan.

John and his wife Dolly back in 1974 led a bunch of local people – mainly youths – and recommence­d the crossroad dancing tradition again in the county. John founded Scoraíocht Lannléire and held céilís at crossroads such as Annagassan, Dillonstow­n, Tinure, Dunleer and Castlebell­ingham. I can remember as many as 300-400 people attending some of them.

This tradition continued up until the end of the Nineties .

Although there are very few crossroad céilís in Louth at the moment, John’s greatest legacy will be the building of the Teach Scoraíocht in Dunleer. This consists of a community centre, car park and garden.

There are music and dancing classes held there every week promoting our heritage. Also, communitie­s such as Broomfield in the Collon-Slane area were inspired by John and Scoraíocht, and went on to build their very own Teach Raithneach.

To this day the Broomfield residents still hold at least one crossroad céilí each year. Hugh D Conlon, Dunleer, Co. Louth, founder member of Scoraíocht Lannléire.

IS THERE a question to which you have always wanted to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question raised here? Send your questions and answers to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Irish Daily Mail, Embassy House, Herbert Park Lane, Ballsbridg­e, Dublin 4. You can also fax them to 0044 1952 510906 or you can email them to charles.legge@dailymail.ie. A selection will be published but we are not able to enter into individual correspond­ence.

 ??  ?? Theatre lover: Abraham Lincoln was killed in Ford’s Theatre
Theatre lover: Abraham Lincoln was killed in Ford’s Theatre

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland