Thursday, February 3, 2000
Queen City's moments to shine reflected in book
Photos, prose capture essence of caring people
BY CLIFF RADEL
The Cincinnati Enquirer
There's a new book about a city that is hard not to love. It's a city of romantic sites and daring deeds, of caring people and good times, a place that treasures small-town values as it pursues big-city dreams.
The book is about Cincinnati, and it's titled Cincinnati Moments, a Celebration of Photographs from The Cincinnati Enquirer.
|
IT'S SOLD OUT, BUT...
|
|
There will be a second printing if enough readers are interested. If you still want to buy Cincinnati Moments, email your name, address and phone number to gnoble@enquirer.com. Cost is $26.95, plus shipping.
|
Wrapped in 148 pages are 121 photographs from the Enquirer's archives. The photos span 96 years, from 1904 through 1999. Every decade of the century is represented.
I researched and wrote the story behind every picture. So, now you know where I was for five months in the summer and fall when a little box at the bottom of this page declared, Cliff Radel is on assignment. I was on book duty.
But I was not alone. Cincinnati Moments is a team effort. Enquirer Photo Director Liz Dufour edited the photographs. News Editor Sue Lancaster ed ited the text.
Researching the photos gave me the opportunity to rediscover my hometown. Through scenic photos of Fountain Square and Tall Stacks and a sudsy Oktoberfest shot, I saw a city that takes great pride in its storied past. Stunning accomplishments are honored with vintage images of Procter & Gamble's Ivorydale plant and Greater Cincinnati's airport, as well as a photo of Pete Rose, a homegrown west-sider and Cincinnati Red, standing by first base and atop all of Major League Baseball just after breaking Ty Cobb's record for most hits in a career.
Beyond the rich history, the significant accomplishments and official headlines, I was most impressed by a theme that ran through many of the photos: This is a caring city.
Forget the claptrap about Cincinnati being a town with no pity, a haven for conservative stick-in-the-muds with no sense of humor and no heart. The photos in Cincinnati Moments portray a big-hearted place.
Cincinnati's caring nature leaps from photos of people struggling to save the city and themselves from the '37 flood. Rescue workers board lifeboats in the middle of a river-laden Third Street. Volunteers grab brooms and shovels to remove slimy flood mud near the Suspension Bridge. A shaken mother, her house victimized by the flood's waters, watches and worries as a doctor and nurse examine her son.
In a photo from 1979, a little girl has just come home from school on a rainy day. Horror greets her. A fire killed four playmates who lived next door. The little girl is in tears.
Paying no mind to the rain, friends from school hold her in their arms. As grown-ups do in times of great sadness, they give her comfort.
There is one more photo I must share. It's from 1962. Dr. Albert Sabin holds an eyedropper as he gives his polio vaccine to a baby.
Gives is the key word in that sentence. Dr. Sabin never patented the life-saving medicine he developed at Children's Hospital. Instead of making money, he cared only about saving lives.
Every time I see this photo I have a renewed sense of pride in my hometown. The efforts of Dr. Sabin and other generous citizens have been multi plied 100-fold over the years. Their caring contributes to the close-knit fabric of life in Cincinnati.
Columnist Cliff Radel can be reached at 768-8379; fax 768-8340.
Schools get tough on bomb threats
Public defenders' pay near lowest
Bush win is no sure thing in Ohio
Taft: Bush's Ohio campaign energized by challenge
Gore asks students for help
Lawsuit just an invitation to go shopping
County to pitch in on pilings
Family sues in home invasion, dog shooting
Lebanon can ask retirement refund
Liquor sales likely for Ky. Speedway
Possible vote fraud examined
Street grid for new riverfront readied
Take a kid to work day
UC professor's process cleans chemical from water
Clerks must ask if you're marryin' kin
Ludlow blaze destroys houses
State aid sought for Riverfront West
Patton pushing tax plan up steep hill
BenGal takes pompoms to Pro Bowl
Sweeps offer a few sweets
GET TO IT
Getting married? Be in our 'Love Story'
Queen City's moments to shine reflected in book
Area's ready for tornado season
Booby-trap case heads for trial
Churches win right of refusal in House
City report finds no systematic bias
Coalition discusses historic preservation
House passes cap on makers' liability
Jury gets brothers' case
Man, girl arrested after police chase
Man safe from fire, but not fall
Monroe looking at school bond
Norwood intimidation case dismissed
Norwood, police reach tentative deal
Policeman fired, dog out of job
Road name carries memory
TRISTATE DIGEST
TV veteran channels energy into serving city