Текст
                    THE STRANGE AFTERLIFE OF PABLO ESCOBAR’S HIPPOS
HOW AMERICA CLAIMED THE MIGHTY MISSISSIPPI

MAINE’S WILD BLUEBERRY HARVEST

JULY + AUGUST 2024 • SMITHSONIANMAG.COM

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Vol. 55 | No. 03 July + August 2024 features 34 76 A city buried in the Egyptian desert reveals fascinating connections among civilizations all across the ancient world by Jo Marchant How surveyors trekked through swampland to chart a growing America by Boyce Upholt Trading Places Mapping the Mississippi 88 50 The Wild Harvest The Next Big Wave Every August, Maine’s blueberry fields beckon photographs by Greta Rybus text by Kate Olson To protect the busy port and coastal resort of Galveston from future hurricanes, a fleet of engineers have come up with an ingenious Texas-size plan by Xander Peters 100 The Strange Afterlife of Pablo Escobar’s Hippos 64 G E N A ST E F F E N S ; D E TA I L : H E R I TAG E AU CT I O N S Handing Over the Reins A pathbreaking South African show jumper shares his love for the sport with young riders photographs by Karabo Mooki text by Ryan Lenora Brown 74 Plight of the Bumblebee Scientists are racing to prevent these perfect pollinators from buzzing off for good by Alex Fox While dangerous, the hippopotamuses descended from a drug lord’s abandoned zoo have charmed many, prompting tributes like this sculpture in the Colombian town of Doradal. prologue 04 Discussion 09 American Icon Dungeons & Dragons • The serpents in myth 114 Crossword Our monthly puzzle 12 Art: Tying the knot 14 Flight: Global goodwill tour 20 Civil War: Fueling the battle • The discovery of java 28 Origins: The bowling shirt 30 National Treasure Libba Cotten’s guitar 32 Competition: Tango in Paris 06 Institutional Knowledge by Lonnie G. Bunch III A proliferation of exotic African animals creates chaos in South America by Joshua Hammer 20 120 Ask Smithsonian You’ve got questions. We’ve got experts Cover: The head of a marble Buddha statue found at Berenike exhibits both Eastern and Western styles, from a typical beatific expression and topknot to a Roman coif. Photograph by Steven Sidebotham July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 3
discussion MAGAZINE X (TWITTER): @SmithsonianMag INSTAGRAM: @smithsonianmagazine FACEBOOK: smithsonianmagazine California. Use of that term anywhere along the northern two-thirds of the route instantly marks the traveler as a Los Angeleno and may produce an eye roll and even a polite correction. From Monterey Bay to Puget Sound, the road is known to locals simply as 101. Mike Gaynes | Bremerton, Washington More to Explore “I was intrigued by the idea of going into one that was still warm.” Having hiked in an old lava tube in Iceland about ten years ago, I was intrigued by the idea of going into one that was still warm (“Earth Quest,” June 2024). I appreciated the views expressed by the scientists in the article about the geology, mineralogy and microbiology—and how this was not only a rare opportunity to study earth, but might pertain to other planets, too. Brenda Bell Brown | Santa Clara, California The Weight of It All A Stellar Statesman As an admirer of Benjamin Franklin, the first polymath and autodidact of note in the American colonies, I thought this was an excellent article (“Start the Presses,” June 2024). He is the one historical individual who I believe would fit in the 21st century because of his well-rounded intellect and understanding of people. Printer, scientist, diplomat, celebrity, signer of the Declaration of Independence, author and the one individual in U.S. history who embodies American freedom and American exceptionalism. Not perfect, but an exemplar for curiosity and personal dynamism. Thank you for this wonderful work. Eric S. Hall | Cary, North Carolina Meet Smithsonian’s journalists on our new podcast, “There’s More to That.” SCAN TO SUBSCRIBE Congratulations on a well-written and informative piece on Dr. Lulu Hunt Peters (“The Calorie Countess,” June 2024). Michelle Stacey told her story well, suggested smart lines of further inquiry and related it to the current day. Peters is a great subject for the Ozempic and Mounjaro moment. (I wrote about Peters in my 1988 book Fasting Girls: The History of Anorexia Nervosa.) It’s wonderful to see women’s history writing that extends beyond the feminist canon. Joan Jacobs Brumberg | Ithaca, New York I admire Lulu Hunt Peters’ achievement of acquiring her doctorate and the research she did, but at the same time want to curse her for the unintended consequences of that same research! C. Chalker Whitworth | Greenville, South Carolina A Route by Any Other Name Writer Teddy Brokaw (“Taking the Scenic Route,” June 2024) describing Highway 101 as a California postcard means he missed out on the spectacular Oregon beaches and Washington’s magnificent Olympic Peninsula. Also, the highway is “affectionately” known as “the 101” only in Southern C O N TA C T US 4 SMITHSONIAN Ancient Architects The fact that so many remnants of the past are still around 2,000 years after being built is a testament to what our ancestors could do with minimal tools (“Lost Treasures of Pisidia,” June 2024). John Weghorst | Newtown, Pennsylvania Send letters to LettersEd@si.edu or to Letters, Smithsonian, MRC 513, P.O. Box 37012, Washington, D.C. 20013. Include a telephone number and address. Letters may be edited for clarity or space. Because of the high volume of mail we receive, we cannot respond to all letters. Send queries about the Smithsonian Institution to info@si.edu or to OVS, Public Inquiry Mail Service, P.O. Box 37012, Washington, D.C. 20013. | July • August 2024
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institutional knowledge Whole of Our History THIRTY YEARS AGO, WE DISTILLED THE NATION’S STORY INTO A SINGLE TRAVELING EXHIBITION. WHY THE CHOICES WE MADE STILL RESONATE TODAY D A replica of the Star-Spangled Banner welcomed visitors to “The Smithsonian’s America” exhibition in Chiba, Japan, in 1994. 6 SMITHSONIAN URING MY FIRST YEAR at the Nation- al Museum of American History, I accepted the enormously daunting task of curating “The Smithsonian’s America: An Exhibition on American History and Culture” for the American Festival in Japan. Imagine not only having to encapsulate the nation’s spirit in one installation, but also doing it for a Japanese audience. At that point, the only knowledge I had about Japanese culture came from my tenth-grade Japanese language class. But the opportunity to think broadly about the scope of American history and culture and to help bring the Smithsonian to another part of the world was one that I could not pass up. It also turned out to be a proving ground for our ability to reach far beyond our physical museums in Washington—the exhibition later traveled across the United States for the Smithsonian’s 150th anniversary. It took three years of work and 15 trips to Japan and back to bring it | July • August 2024 MAGAZINE to fruition. Overcoming language and cultural barriers was challenging. The Japanese team wanted the exhibition to reintroduce the ideals of the United States to a new generation of Japanese citizens for whom the facade of the “American dream” had fallen away. They urged us to focus on technological advancements, the presidents and the Wild West. We insisted on telling a more comprehensive and complicated story, and in the end, the sprawling 60,000-square-foot exhibition was unified by the throughline of the contested promise of American life. For instance, the exhibition included the original model for the Statue of Liberty, with broken chains at Lady Liberty’s feet to symbolize the end of slavery; it discussed the incremental expansion of civil liberties to women and African Americans; and it told the story of how migration diversified the American West far beyond the “cowboys and Indians” stereotype. Our Japanese counterparts were nervous that we would further tarnish America’s reputation by telling fuller and less flattering stories. But on opening day, former President Jimmy Carter walked through the exhibition with former Japanese Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu. Carter told him that this was the true strength of America: to tell the whole of our history. It has been 30 years since that meaningful representation of the whole of America first opened. More than half a million people attended in just the first month. The exhibition was a marked success, bringing to bear the full complexity of our history on an international stage. Today, I am proud to oversee an institution that remains committed to the full telling of history around the globe. Portrait illustration by Jurell Cayetano S M I T H S O N I A N A R C H I V ES ; I L LU ST R AT I O N R E F E R E N C E P H OTO : M I C H A E L BA R N ES / S I A R C H I V ES LONNIE G. BUNCH III, SECRETARY
SECRETARY Lonnie G. Bunch III BOARD OF REGENTS CHANCELLOR Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr. CHAIR Dr. Risa J. Lavizzo-Mourey VICE CHAIR Hon. Barbara M. Barrett MEMBERS Vice President Kamala D. Harris (Ex Officio) Hon. John Boozman Hon. Catherine Cortez Masto Hon. Gary Peters Hon. Garret Graves Hon. Doris Matsui Hon. Adrian Smith Ms. Toni Bush Mr. John Fahey Mr. Roger W. Ferguson, Jr. Mr. Michael Govan Mr. Michael M. Lynton Ms. Denise M. O’Leary Hon. Franklin D. Raines What’s Your Legacy? SMITHSONIAN NATIONAL BOARD Dr. Jorge G. Puente, Chair Ms. Donna F. Zarcone, Vice Chair Mr. Todd Krasnow, Vice Chair Creating a greener planet? ■ Providing greater access to the arts? ■ Inspiring the next generation? Leaving a gift to the Smithsonian Institution through your NATIONAL BOARD will is a wonderful way to secure your legacy and advance Mr. Kenneth J. Bacon, Dr. Trudi Bellardo Hahn*, Ms. Patricia S. Bellinger, Mrs. Lisa Bennett, Mr. Harold M. Brierley, Mr. John F. Brock, III, Mrs. Ellen Bruss, Mr. Steven A. Cahillane, Ms. Donelle Dadigan, Mr. Trevor Fetter, Mr. Matthew Finick, Ms. Michele J. Hooper, LL COOL J, Mr. David G. Johnson, Mrs. Ashley Duchossois Joyce, Mr. Dale LeFebvre, Mrs. María Amalia León, Ms. Stephanie Mellin, Mrs. Jo Michalski, Mrs. Cheryl Neal, Ms. Emilie M. Ogden, Ms. Anne MacMillan Pedrero, Mrs. Sarah Perot, Ms. Joyce A. Phillips, Mr. G. Jeffrey Records, Jr., Mr. Kenneth C. Ricci, Mr. John C. Ryan, Mr. Morgan M. Schuessler, Jr., Mr. Roger Jerome Sit, Ms. Diana Strandberg, Ms. Naoma Tate your values for decades to come. Giving Docs Makes It Easy Free, Simple Estate Planning Online With the help of Giving Docs,* a free online estate planning service, supporters of the Smithsonian can designate a gift in three simple steps. That’s all it takes to ensure that future generations can enjoy the museums and research centers that mean the most to you. To get started, scan the QR code to visit: givingdocs.com/smithsonian-institution HONORARY MEMBERS Hon. Max N. Berry, Mr. L. Hardwick Caldwell III, Dr. G. Wayne Clough, Ms. Sakurako D. Fisher, Mrs. Patricia Frost, Mrs. Jean B. Mahoney, Mr. Paul Neely, Mr. Wilbur L. Ross, Jr., Mr. Lloyd G. Schermer, Dr. David J. Skorton, Mrs. Gay F. Wray *Giving Docs is an independent third party platform, completely separate from the Smithsonian Institution. Its services are provided without review from the Smithsonian Institution, and the Smithsonian Institution is not liable for its use. Giving Docs is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. *Ex Officio July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN ■ 7
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T H E PAST I S By David M. Perry Illustration by Zlatina Zareva A M E R I CA N I C O N Changing the Game The wizardry of Dungeons & Dragons sparked a revolution in how we play just about everything July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 9
prologue A M E R I CA N I C O N O K M C CAU S L A N D N FEBRUARY 1973, Dave Arneson, a history major at the University of Minnesota and part-time security guard, drove with a friend from the Twin Cities to the resort town of Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. They were on a quest to meet Gary Gygax, an insurance underwriter. What brought the three together was a deep devotion to playing strategic tabletop war games. Gygax had co-written a medieval fantasy game inspired by The Lord of the Rings, full of elves and orcs. Together, the trio embarked on a novel approach: Instead of pitting player against player, Arneson suggested having all characters fight their way together through a mystical realm—sometimes as friends, sometimes as foes—under the watchful eye of what Arneson envisioned as a “sadistic referee.” Gone was author J.R.R. Tolkien’s Shire. In its place? The Dungeon. That cold visit in Wisconsin convinced Arneson and Gygax that this nascent game was worth pursuing, so the two quickly established the basic rules for what they decided to call Dungeons & Dragons. The following year, Gygax’s new gaming company, Tactical Studies Rules (later TSR), published the first publicly available rules for D&D, explained in three slim booklets: one on how to make a character, another on monsters and treasure, and a final one of scenarios for adventures. The illustrations were amateurish; the print quality low; the concepts mere sketches of ideas about how to create characters and goals. But over the past 50 years, those first booklets revolutionized tabletop games— and established the imaginative basis for the video games that were about to consume a huge chunk of the entertainment industry. As Dan Rawson, senior vice president of Wizards of the 10 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Caleb Cummings, Maxim Allen, Victor Ocasio and Amy Williams play Dungeons & Dragons in 2022 at The Brooklyn Strategist, a board game store and play center in New York City. Coast, the company that makes the game today, says: “The nerds emerged from the basement.” The early game was a mess, requiring players to improvise constantly. What really helped develop it was a national network of gamers who collaborated at conventions and communicated via self-published magazines. This network was primed to analyze any new tabletop game, figure out what did and didn’t work—and then spread the word. Compared with war games of the era—which tended to model real-world military conflicts with lots of tokens or pieces, so you could play out a Civil War battle with Gettysburg, for example—D&D of- Here Be Dragons THE MYTHICAL BEASTS HAVE FIRED UP CULTURES AROUND THE GLOBE. HERE ARE THEIR (ALLEGED) ORIGINS FROM EAST TO WEST By Sonja Anderson A MONSTROUS MARRIAGE In legends of Persia—the region now known as Iran—dragon-like serpents are known as azi. A particularly ruthless, three-headed azi called Azi Dahaka once stole a shepherd’s two lovely daughters and made them his wives. A hero, Thraetaona, rose to the now-familiar challenge: He slayed Dahaka and brought the girls home. SCALING BACK According to the Rig Veda, an Indian text more than 3,000 years old, a dragon once presented a challenge for a Hindu god. The draconic demon was withholding water, to the dismay of a people suffering through drought. When Indra, the deity of war and storms, battled and killed the serpent, he freed the rain, enabled sunlight and created a new order.
fered something immersive and even serene, enchanting gamers in college dorms around the country by allowing groups of players to tour an imaginary space in collective wonder. When a character did come upon a battle, they could level up indefinitely, growing in power session after session, even year after year, attaining higher ranks with more experience points as they moved through the game. D&D thus offers a sort of comforting feedback loop, where improving in the game feels good, so you want to keep gaming, so you can keep improving—and the story never has to end. Both experience points and collective exploration were new. People loved it. Within its first decade, D&D sales soared to more than $16 million a year. But its success also provoked a bitter legal fight between Gygax and Arneson over royalties and credit. During the 1980s, some Parent Teacher Associations and school administrators began to denounce the game, full of occult lore, as un-Christian and even devilish, and many schools banned D&D amid periodic paranoias now known as the “Satanic Panic.” When I was a Boy Scout in Nashville in that era, my Baptist scoutmaster told me I had to choose between playing D&D, which he equated to demon worship, and “leveling up” as a Boy Scout. I never became an Eagle Scout. Today, leveling up is everywhere. It has become the norm among the games for which consumers spend hundreds of billions of dollars every year—not to mention a key strategy by game-makers to keep players glued to the screen in hopes of everlasting advancement. But D&D’s legacy goes far beyond tabletop or video games to include the “gamification” that you encounter every time you gain a new badge or rank with a credit card or hotel loyalty program. As D&D marks its 50th anniversary this year, and amid massive ongoing enthusiasm for fantasy realms, the newest versions of the game have become wildly popular: Between the recent Dungeons & Dragons movie, video games and the tabletop original, the franchise, now owned by Hasbro, claims 54 million fans worldwide. And the game itself is more accessible than ever—not least because of YouTube, where you can watch people playing D&D and learn new gambits. It turns out that what Gygax and Arneson and all their first-generation wizards and clerics created was a vehicle for human imagination—the power to create and inhabit fantasy worlds where the delights and marvels have not dimmed after half a century. In other words, we’re all nerds now, no basement required. D&D OFFERED SOMETHING IMMERSIVE AND EVEN SERENE, ALLOWING PLAYERS TO TOUR AN IMAGINARY SPACE IN COLLECTIVE WONDER. WATERY KING Dragons have enjoyed 4,000 years of reverence in East Asian cultures. In Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism, these legged, fanged serpents are guardians of water who bring nourishing rain and breathe clouds from their nostrils. Said to reside at the bottoms of pools and lakes, dragons symbolized majesty and power in ancient China. As one scholar wrote in the 11th century, “None of the animals is so wise as the dragon.” B R I D G E M A N I M AG ES ; P U B L I C D O M A I N ; A L A M Y (2 ); S M I T H S O N I A N A R C H I V ES ELEPHANT HUNTER Roman scholar Pliny the Elder wrote a good deal about dragons, once reporting that the beast was capable of strangling an elephant with its tail. Alas, Pliny was not exactly an unimpeachable authority on animal facts: He also recorded the veritable traits and habits of the unicorn. FOUNDING MOTHER In a Mesopotamian creation myth, the god Marduk battled the goddess Tiamat, the mother of the gods and embodiment of the sea, sometimes portrayed as a serpent or dragon. Marduk drove an arrow through Tiamat’s heart, then severed her body in two, creating the heavens from one piece and the earth from the other. In Dungeons & Dragons, the character of a five-headed, draconic deity bears the goddess’s name. July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 11
prologue A RT By Amy Crawford K N OTA B L E WO R KS P RINTMAKING, which dates to ancient times, was long considered a craft, useful mainly for reproducing religious illustrations. But with his intricate woodcuts and engravings, Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528) elevated it to a fine art. “One cannot overstate the influence of Dürer on the history of the print,” says Naoko Takahatake, curator of a new show at the University of California, Los Angeles’ Hammer Museum, “Sum of the Parts,” which covers 500 years of printmaking. “From a purely technical point of 12 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 The First Knot (with heartshaped shield), Albrecht Dürer, woodcut, 1506-1507. VIEW ALL SIX prints in the series at Smithsonian mag.com/knots view, engraving and woodcut for centuries have been measured against his example.” A series of the German master’s “knot” prints, which are based on designs by Leonardo da Vinci, is a highlight of the exhibit, which aims to demonstrate how artists use sequential prints to explore ideas, develop a theme or tell a story. “Often, in exhibitions, a single print is shown alone, extracted from a series—it’s like a quote from a book,” Takahatake says. “But when you have the whole series, you can see how one image interacts and connects with the next.” U C L A G R U N WA L D C E N T E R F O R T H E G R A P H I C A RTS, H A M M E R M U S E U M The ornate series of woodcuts that transformed printmaking
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prologue FLIGHT Illustration by Scott Bakal Around the World in 113 Days Congressman Peter F. Mack’s soaring diplomatic ambitions made aviation history 14 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 by Paul Glenshaw N MAY 1951, REPRESENTATIVE Peter F. Mack was in his southern Illinois district on what promised to be an unremarkable listening tour among his constituents. Amid the usual glad-handing and baby-kissing, Mack received a surprising challenge from his friend John W. Hobbs, an automobile parts manufacturer. Hobbs noted how scary things looked worldwide: Europe was still a mess after World War II, the Soviet Union had recently gotten the bomb, conflicts were raging in Korea and French Indochina, and anti-Western protests had begun in Iran. Conventional diplomacy had failed at the mighty task of bringing peace, Hobbs argued, in large part because U.S. diplomats rarely tried to communi-
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prologue FLIGHT Congressman and pilot Peter F. Mack arrives in Hawaii in the Friendship Flame in January 1952, on the final leg of his global goodwill journey. I CLIMBED INTO THE SMALLEST AIRPLANE EVER TO ATTEMPT A SOLO FLIGHT AROUND THE WORLD. constituents. Once Congress went into recess, on October 7, 1951, Mack set off on his adventure. On the way, he became one of the very first humans to complete a solo flight around the world, and the first to cross the Pacific Ocean alone in a light airplane. Today, his unique and perhaps quixotic quest stands for a simple but powerful notion: the potential each person has to make the world a better place. As Mack said 16 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 at the time, “Goodwill is everyone’s job, and I am thoroughly convinced that it is the responsibility of every American citizen.” MACK WAS BORN in rural Carlinville, Illinois, in 1916, and from a young age he worked in coal mines and in the family business—the local Ford dealership. A devout Catholic, Mack “was always interested in others and what he could do for them,” recalls Mona Mack Melampy, one of his two daughters. His passion for aviation started early, and after a first ride at age 13 in an old World War I trainer, Mack was hooked. He served in the Navy in World War II as a flight instructor, though he never flew overseas in combat. Once peace was declared, Mack found another way to serve. He was elected to Congress in 1948, gaining acclaim for his promise to provide underprivileged children a free trip to Washington, D.C. to see Congress in action—at his own expense. (It was a promise he kept throughout his congressional career, ultimately bringing more than 1,200 kids.) He also gained fame for campaigning by air throughout his district, with “Mack for Congress” splashed on the side of the plane he owned at the time. Ahead of the 1951 flight, Mack rechristened the Bonanza the Friendship Flame and painted “The Abraham Lincoln Goodwill Tour” on the side. (Lincoln’s C O U RT ESY O F T H E M AC K FA M I LY cate with ordinary citizens in other countries. “Our top brass just talks to the top brass of other countries,” Hobbs told Mack. “They never get down to the level of the people themselves.” Hobbs had a novel suggestion for solving the problem. “Why don’t you fly to some of these countries and talk to the people?” he asked his friend. Hobbs knew the 34-year-old Mack had a deep passion for helping others—as well as a passion for flying. So Mack and Hobbs worked out an idea for an unusual global goodwill tour, starting and ending in Springfield, Illinois. Mack would fly around the world alone, serving as both daring pilot and unofficial ambassador as he represented the people of his district and extended their wishes for peace. When Mack returned to Washington, D.C. for that spring’s congressional session, he discussed the idea of the globe-trotting tour with his friend Paul Garber, curator of the Smithsonian’s National Air Museum (now the National Air and Space Museum). Garber had recently acquired an airplane that was perfect for the journey: a single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza, which racing pilot Bill Odom had used in 1949 to set a world record for nonstop long distance in a light plane, flying 4,957 miles from Honolulu to Teterboro, New Jersey. The Bonanza’s extra gas tanks on the wingtips and in the cabin would serve Mack’s mission well. But now the Bonanza was in storage. Not in the habit of loaning out artifacts, the Smithsonian temporarily gave custody of the airplane back to the Beech company. Mack paid Beech $3,200 to have the airplane reconditioned, and the company agreed to let him use it for the flight. Mack and Hobbs budgeted $10,000 for the trip, largely raised through $5 and $10 donations from
N AS M name then, as now, was known around the world, and Mack’s district was home to Lincoln’s longtime residence.) At Springfield airport on October 7, Governor Adlai Stevenson, Hobbs, Mack’s parents and some 2,000 well-wishers bade him goodbye. As Mack later recalled in a speech following his flight, “I climbed into the smallest airplane ever to attempt to make a solo flight around the world.” At the controls, he felt galvanized: “filled with enthusiasm, and with the determination to carry out the idea of the citizens of this area—to express their friendship to people throughout the world.” What faced him, though, was an entirely new challenge. Mack had never flown across oceans or deserts and, for the next 113 days, would face extreme tests of his endurance and concentration as pilot, navigator and goodwill ambassador. The airplane cabin was cramped with the extra gas tank. There was no room to stretch, and little for any luggage. He’d packed only a couple of suits, several small knives, a flashlight, some cash, a parachute and a small movie camera. Mack made brief stops in Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C., before heading to a U.S. naval base in Newfoundland. Well-fed on lobster, he headed out over the Atlantic, first to the Azores islands to refuel. “Hurricane-inspired tail winds carried me along at speeds up to 210 miles per hour” before he reached the Azores, he later wrote in Collier’s Weekly. At his next stop, Lisbon, he found a large crowd waiting, as he also did in Madrid, Amsterdam, Oslo and Helsinki. Unable to gain entry to the Soviet Union, Mack then zipped off to the epicenter of the Cold War: West Berlin. He noted wryly that the ordinary Germans with whom he spoke displayed a newfound appreciation for the United States, thanks to the Marshall Plan and the Berlin airlift of 1948-49: When Mack met a retired Berlin schoolteacher, he later wrote, the teacher “ostentatiously announced, ‘I take off my hat to you!’”— and promptly did. Mack’s tour of Europe also included London, Glasgow, Belfast, Dublin, Paris, Luxembourg, Bonn, Geneva, Nice, Rome and Athens. At each stop, his routine was the same: check into a local hotel, deliver a “friendship scroll” to the mayor from the people of his district, and then head into the streets and shops, speaking to anyone who would talk to him. In Belgium, he visited a coal mine similar to those he’d worked in back in Carlinville. He descended 4,500 feet into the earth, talking with miners as they toiled in sweltering heat. When he resurfaced, a huge crowd had gathered to marvel: Local officials had never bothered to make the descent. “They welcomed me to their village and had a reception in the city hall.” Mack had his first close calls in the air during the BYLINES Writer Paul Glenshaw is the co-writer and co-director of the documentary The Lafayette Escadrille. The work of illustrator Scott Bakal has been featured in museums and galleries worldwide. European leg. While flying from Madrid to Amsterdam, he was terrified to find he’d fallen asleep at the controls. “The towering Pyrenees were below me, and every time I nodded, the plane’s nose headed toward them. I dozed, fought my way back to consciousness, dozed . . . drank black coffee, dozed and caught myself again,” he recalled. More troubling, Mack narrowly avoided death when the engine quit over the unforgiving Alps—because he had forgotten to reroute the fuel from depleted tanks to full ones; he adjusted just in time. He had to contend with dangerous icing while flying from Dublin to Paris, not to mention a bouncy landing in Switzerland “in a cow-pasture airport so rough that I’ll bet even the cows couldn’t keep their feet.” Throughout the journey, Mack shot footage with his movie camera—the canals of Amsterdam, palm trees in Lisbon, and bustling streets in Madrid and Helsinki. Moving on to the Middle Eastern leg of the trip, he filmed the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers as he flew down into Baghdad. FLYING SOUTH, Mack filmed the oil fields of Saudi Before Mack’s trip, the same airplane was flown by Bill Odom to set a light-plane, nonstop distance record, from Hawaii to New Jersey, in 1949. Arabia, where he made a brief refueling stop at the Dhahran Air Force Base. He then skipped due east across the Persian Gulf and, hugging the coastline of southern Iran, made his way to India and Pakistan in early December. The countries were still reeling from partition in 1947, which had led to war and millions of displaced Muslims and Hindus on either side of the border. Yet Mack saw each country’s vibrant, bustling streets and schoolchildren playing and “was impressed with the enthusiasm and vitality of these new nations,” he later recalled. Still, he recorded: “The poverty was awe-inspiring. . . . I got the impression that if Russia wanted to move into any part of South Asia east of Turkey, it July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 17
prologue would be like walking through a paper bag.” Mack made brief stops in Rangoon and Bangkok before arriving in Saigon. The First Indochina War had been raging since 1946 between France and the Communist army of Ho Chi Minh. Given China’s intensifying involvement in Korea on the side of the North, there was growing fear China might offer similar aid to Vietnamese Communists. But Mack also found hostility against the U.S. One man he met on the street in Hanoi was a nationalist who told the congressman: “We don’t like the United States because you forget your own struggle for independence and do not support ours.” Although Mack found a warm welcome in the Philippines, “The physical strain of the trip had caught up with me, and as I stepped from my plane, my knees buckled,” he recalled. “A doctor in Manila had warned me that I was near collapse, so I spent the rest of that day in bed.” But the following day was Christmas Eve, so despite his fatigue, Mack pressed on. He attended midnight Mass in a little church in Taipei, then flew 900 miles into the Korean battle zone on Christmas Day. He landed at a U.S. Navy base in terrible weather and had Christmas dinner on the base with two constituents who happened to be stationed there. “I didn’t expect you to come halfway around the world to hear a constituent’s complaints,” one of them joked. Mack spent around a week in Japan, and although he filmed the busy streets of Tokyo and the devastation of Hiroshima, the goodwill portion of the journey was over. Mack transitioned to preparing himself and the Friendship Flame for the most challenging part of the trip—the trans-Pacific leg. He would have to navigate with absolute precision in order to 18 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Mack’s Friendship Flame on display at the National Air and Space Museum. Introduced in 1947, the Beechcraft boasted retractable landing gear. LEARN MORE about Mack’s plane at the National Air and Space Museum at Smithsonian mag.com/bonanza find tiny islands—mere specks in the vast ocean— where he would rest and refuel. On January 8, 1952, Mack started for his first trans-Pacific stop, Iwo Jima, and encountered turbulence and rain squalls “all of the 660 miles.” He landed on the little island in the dark, grateful for his high-functioning instruments. That luck didn’t hold. The next day, Mack set out for Wake Island. Soon, his artificial horizon—an instrument that tracks the airplane’s orientation to the earth’s horizon—failed, and even after he spent ten and a half hours using other instruments to keep the plane level, the tiny atoll was nowhere in sight. “It was then that I thought for the first time of Amelia Earhart’s disappearance near this same area of the Pacific,” he recalled. “I could hear other airplanes calling to me by radio, but I could not get through to them—and I couldn’t find the tiny island. I never felt so lonely in my life.” After another torturous 30 minutes, Wake came into view. Mack pointed the movie camera out the window as he circled before landing—grateful to be alive. The rest of the trans-Pacific leg was exacting but uneventful: Midway, then Hawaii, where he stayed for a week for repairs and well-deserved rest. On January 21, after flying 2,400 miles from Hawaii, Mack landed in San Francisco—completing the world’s first solo crossing of the Pacific in a light plane. After stops in Tucson and Dallas, he returned to Springfield on January 27, 1952. He had flown 33,000 miles, and visited 45 cities and 35 countries. This time, Stevenson, Hobbs and Mack’s parents awaited him— along with 10,000 joyful citizens. Mack returned the airplane to the Smithsonian and himself to Congress, where he served until early 1963. Mack himself could be surprisingly diffident, especially by the standards of a politician, and he never really exploited the trip for personal gain. He wrote two articles about the adventure and gave a few talks, but he sought no further publicity or notice. As his daughter Melampy told me, “Once he had done something, he moved on.” Put a different way, “He was a workhorse, not a show horse,” says Congresswoman Nikki Budzinski, who represents Mack’s Springfield area today. Reflecting later on what he’d accomplished in his article for Collier’s, Mack recorded how the long hours in the air had given him a new perspective— and hopes for peace. “From where I sat, I could see no international boundaries and no squabbles among nations,” he wrote. “During those lonely hours, I thought more and more of peace and of the folly of man fighting man, and wherever I went I found people echoing my sentiments.” N AS M FLIGHT
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prologue C I V I L WA R by Bronwen Everill For Union soldiers, a cup of coffee made hardtack biscuits more palatable. How the North’s fruitful partnership with Liberian farmers fueled a steady supply of an essential beverage 20 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 EN MONTHS INTO the Civil War, the Union was short on a crucial supply, the absence of which threatened to sap the fighting strength of the Northern army: coffee. This critical source of energy and morale was considered almost as vital as gunpowder; Union General Benjamin Butler ordered his soldiers to carry coffee with them always, saying it guaranteed success: “If your men get their coffee early in the morning, you can hold” your position. But by 1862, imports of coffee were down by 40 percent since the start of the war. Though coffee was cultivated around the world from Java to Ethiopia to Haiti, Brazil had been the main supplier to the United States. The Union blockade of Southern ports, including New Orleans, had slowed coffee imports H E R I TAG E AU CT I O N S A Jolt to the Union
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prologue from Brazil to a trickle—and Union merchants and military contractors were able to reroute only a portion of that Brazilian coffee northward; even with Union port cities trying to pick up the slack, the U.S. imported 50 percent less by value from Brazil in 1863 than it did in 1860. Demand, meanwhile, had quadrupled since the fighting began, fueled by a commitment to provide each Union soldier with a generous 36 pounds of coffee per year. Finding a new source of coffee had become a matter of survival. Luckily for the Union, Stephen Allen Benson, president of the relatively young Republic of Liberia, had a plan. In February 1862, he sent a message to Americans in the North: “In Liberia there are about 500,000 coffee trees planted . . . [and] there is now more coffee exported from Liberia than in any previous period.” Born in Maryland to free Black American parents, Benson had emigrated with his family to the West African colony at the age of 6. By the outbreak of the Civil War, in April 1861, he was one of the largest coffee farmers in Liberia—and he hoped that this new country, to which several thousand Black Americans had fled to escape American racial animus, could provide an essential fuel in the Union’s own fight against slavery. A ship that left the port at Monrovia in August 1862 carried 6,000 pounds of premium African coffee. It was the first major shipment to the Union—and would prove vital in the North’s victory. COFFEE REPLACED TEA as the U.S. drink of choice around the time of the American Revolution. From the moment patriots tossed chests of tea into Boston Harbor in December 1773, drinking coffee—and boycotting tea—became a sure sign of loyalty to the cause of independence. Pretty soon, the country was obsessed: By the 1830s, coffee consumption was outstripping tea by five to one. In 1832, Andrew Jackson replaced army alcohol rations with coffee, in hopes of energizing the troops and reducing instances of drunken insubordination. By 1860, the U.S. was importing six pounds of the stuff each year for every man, woman and child in the country—and at the outbreak of the Civil War, Americans were drinking twice as much coffee as they were 30 years before. But the war introduced a problem for the Union’s coffee drinkers. The sudden demand for more coffee as a crucial army provision combined with the blockade of the Southern ports created a crisis. What the Union could import was hardly enough to keep its army sup- 22 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 BYLINES Writer Bronwen Everill is the director of the Center of African Studies at the University of Cambridge. Born in Maryland, Stephen Allen Benson emigrated to Liberia, where he later became the nation’s president—and a major coffee grower. Philadelphia merchant Edward Morris traveled to Liberia in 1862, urging farmers there to grow coffee for the U.S. market. plied, let alone to caffeinate Northern civilians in the manner to which they’d become accustomed. Yet there was a promising workaround: An early alliance between Northern abolitionists and the Liberian people had begun to bring small quantities of Liberian coffee to the North before the war. In 1848, before his presidency, Benson had formed a partnership with the Quaker merchant and activist George W. Taylor, whose “Free Labor Warehouse” in Philadelphia exclusively sold goods, food and clothes made without enslaved labor. Benson shipped roughly 1,500 pounds of coffee to Taylor that first year, and their partnership continued fruitfully throughout the next decade as they supplied coffee drinkers who were looking for slavery-free alternatives. Just as some consumers today boycott brands that trouble them, buy fair trade products and otherwise vote with their wallets, some abolitionists used commerce to fight slavery. Liberian coffee was especially attractive to the American Free Produce movement, with its explicit mandate of using ethical commerce to undermine the global slave trade. Coffee had long been championed by Quakers and other Free Produce advocates like Taylor. It was a product that free laborers could grow and that consumers could support with their purchases, even if it cost a little more to pay the farmers. At the time, the United States had not yet officially recognized the Republic of Liberia, and no formal trade treaties existed between the two countries. Southern states had stood in the way of recognizing Liberia since its independence in 1847, arguing that it would be inappropriate for the U.S. to host a Black diplomatic representative in Washington. But secession created an opening, and right away, Benson began lobbying the U.S. government to extend “treaties of friendship and commerce” that would allow Liberian farmers to bring in coffee on equal terms with other coffee-producing countries. By the start of 1862, Benson was not alone in his conviction that the farmers of Liberia could bolster the Union war effort. Mercifully for Union generals, President Abraham Lincoln officially recognized the republic that year and raised the tariff on coffee imports to 4 cents a pound as a war-funding effort. That created an opening for imports of Liberia’s more expensive, but also more ethical, coffee—now not so different in price from more established coffees like those from Java. Taylor’s Philadelphia Free Produce store expanded its LO C (2 ) C I V I L WA R
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prologue C I V I L WA R 24 SMITHSONIAN | Monthtk 0000 An 1863 coffee package featured a nonchalant Uncle Sam seated on a cannon, whittling, with a torn Confederate flag under his foot. that he charged just 40 cents per pound for his prime Liberian beans, described by one arbiter to be of “superior” quality compared with non-Liberian coffee; one longtime Philadelphia customer extolled Liberian coffee’s “strength, flavor and aroma.” Confederate soldiers, huddled over their campfires in the predawn light, had to make do with unpalatable coffee substitutes brewed from acorn grounds, sweet potatoes and other dubious ingredients. Military discipline was reportedly difficult to maintain in the Confederate Army, where, one Union soldier noted, “they get no tea or coffee but plenty of whiskey.” One desperate Confederate soldier wrote a hastily scrawled, undated note to Union troops across the line in Fredericks- DRINKING COFFEE THREE TIMES A DAY HAD HOOKED AMERICA’S SOLDIERS. Union General Benjamin Butler is said to have waited until his men were most wired by coffee to go into battle, hoping to give his soldiers an edge. burg, Virginia: “I send you some tobacco and expect some coffee in return . . . yours, Rebel.” The lack of coffee was fast eroding Confederate morale. The Union Army acted decisively to press its caffeine advantage. At the end of August 1864, the Alexandria Gazette in Virginia lamented that the Union troops in Sherman’s siege of Atlanta had “destroyed 500 sacks of genuine Rio coffee” intended for Confederate consumption—about 55,000 pounds in all. At this point in the war, Union supplies of coffee, including those from Liberia, were so assured that Northern soldiers could even afford to destroy the Confederate stock rather than confiscate or consume it themselves. An article on the same front page of the Gazette noted that a ship had recently arrived in New York with “40,000 pounds of ‘Liberia-Mocha’ coffee.” Benson’s small individual contribution in 1864, around 220 pounds of coffee sold through Taylor’s Free Produce Warehouse that same year, would have been enough to supply six soldiers for the full final year of the war. At the Confederate surrender at Appomattox in April 1865, Michigan LO C (2) network in Liberia, bringing new coffee to market from Liberian farmers like Othello Richards and Thomas Moore. The Union also sent advisers to Liberia, including Edward Morris, a Philadelphia merchant, who visited in 1862 to give free lectures to farmers about best practices for planting coffee—and to ask farmers what support they needed to increase the scale of this new coffee economy. His success was conspicuous. One Liberian settler, William C. Burke, who had been manumitted to emigrate to Liberia by Confederate General Robert E. Lee, wrote to his American contacts that after Morris’ visit, “the attention of almost every [Liberian] farmer has been lately turned towards raising coffee” for the U.S. market. Newspapers from Maine to Ohio to California reported encouragingly on the supplies of Liberian coffee. On the ground, meanwhile, the Union’s ability to purchase and distribute coffee from Liberia, alongside other sources, was helping the army’s morale. In December 1862, one soldier wrote that “what keeps me alive must be the coffee.” The North was gaining a powerful caffeinated edge over the Confederacy, where importers, stymied by the Union’s ongoing blockade, were having far less success. Indeed, by 1863, coffee had become ludicrously scarce throughout the Confederacy. A Vermont soldier, marching through Louisiana, noted: “The richest planters have had no tea or coffe [sic] for over a year—when any poor coffe has been brought here it sold for $8 a pound.” In contrast, a receipt issued by Taylor’s Free Produce shop in Philadelphia in 1863 shows
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prologue C I V I L WA R 26 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Coffee Talk MANIC BIRDS, EXCITABLE GOATS AND OTHER INVIGORATING TALES BEHIND THE BIRTH OF OUR JAVA ADDICTION By Sonja Anderson GET YOUR GOAT According to legend, a ninth-century Ethiopian shepherd named Kaldi noticed his goats acting hyper after eating berries from a strange tree. He harvested some for himself and, upon consuming them, enjoyed a similarly energizing effect. Kaldi shared his zippy discovery with some nearby monks, who disapprovingly threw the berries into a fire—accidentally roasting their seeds, which we call beans. The fragrant beans were scooped from the coals, crushed, and soaked in water—creating the first cup of joe. Originating in Ethiopia, the shrub Coffea arabica is believed to be the first coffee plant cultivated. It is now grown in high-elevation tropical climates around the world. SEA FARE Ethiopians took nourishment from the coffee shrub in various ways: brewing its leaves and berries into tea, grinding and mixing the seeds with animal fat, or simply chewing on them. Some say that enslaved Northeast Africans—captured and forced across the Red Sea during a 1,300-year period of slave trade that began in the seventh century—may have carried such sustaining snacks onto ships, accidentally transporting the crop to another region that calls itself the birthplace of coffee: Yemen. EARLY BIRDS In a different account, a 13th-century Moroccan mystic named Sheikh al-Shadhili saw a flock of amped-up birds soaring overhead, chewing unfamiliar-looking berries as they flew. After munching on some of the morsels the birds had dropped, Shadhili felt strangely alert—and he formed a habit. ENERGY FOR DAYS Yemen’s coffee origin story credits one of Shadhili’s disciples: Omar, a healing priest once exiled from the town of Mocha for moral transgressions. Stranded in the hills, nearly starving, Omar plucked some red berries from a shrub. Finding the raw fruits’ seeds inedibly bitter, he opted to cook them over a fire, which hardened them beyond edibility. To correct this mistake, Omar boiled the roasted seeds, watching while the water turned brown and sweetly fragrant. Omar drank the dark liquid and, it is said, enjoyed days of sustained energy. ALAMY soldier William Smith noted that the Confederate soldiers present were licking their lips hopefully, with “a keen relish for a cup of Yankee coffee.” The end of the war and Benson’s much-mourned death in 1865— an Ohio newspaper noted his passing as a “great loss”—did not put a damper on Liberian coffee exports to the U.S., where, after the war, coffee from the republic was increasingly available far beyond Free Produce shops. For their part, Liberian farmers counted their trading partnership with the Union a success. The war had created a new and durable market for their coffee, thanks in part to cooperation with the Free Produce Movement. As more people tried Liberian coffee, they tended to become devoted to it. As one Yale University chemistry professor recorded at the time, “Its quality was so much superior to most coffee in common use in this country that I at once ordered a sample.” Coffea liberica, as it was officially dubbed in 1876, was not only delicious, but also resistant to diseases that affected other varieties, and it won Liberia plenty of new trading partners: By 1885, its annual exports to countries including Britain and Germany reached an impressive 800,000 pounds—and then, only seven years later, a whopping 1.8 million. The U.S. coffee market, in turn, was forever changed by the war. Indeed, Smithsonian curator of political history Jon Grinspan says that drinking coffee three times a day had hooked America’s soldiers, with the enlisted men “developing lifelong peacetime habits while camped at Shiloh or Petersburg.” By 1885, the U.S. was importing 11 pounds of coffee per person, per year—nearly double prewar levels. Some news reports from this period—written, perhaps, after a third or fourth cup of Liberian brew—sometimes described coffee as a universal remedy, even touting its alleged benefits as a disinfectant. And in 1880, after the end of Reconstruction, with many reformers turning their attention from racial justice to temperance, the Philadelphia Times expressed the hope that “coffee houses would yet win the victory over gin palaces.” With the help of the prolific Liberian coffee plant, nothing seemed out of reach.
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prologue ORIGINS by Gabe Bullard UNCOMMON THREADS The gaudy shirt went from practical necessity to vintage treasure fered a sports-friendly fit and boasted that it was “pre-tested by actual bowlers.” Readers today would be surprised by ads for the Skipper, in which a model wears the shirt with a necktie and appears to be buttoning the cuffs of his long sleeves. At the time, this decorous attire was standard at bowling alleys, where women often wore dresses or skirts. But over the next decade, sprawling suburban developments and innovative automatic pin-setting machines inspired a boom in family-friendly bowling centers: Between 1945 and 1957, at least 20,000 new lanes cropped up across the country, some in new establishments sporting flashy chrome, bright upholstery, swanky lounges and other hallmarks of midcentury design. By 1958, the American Planning Association declared that the bowling alley was fast becoming an important hub for recreation; in some suburbs, it was called “the poor man’s country club.” The massive uptick in popularity—membership in the American Bowling Congress tripled between 1940 and 1958—and the dominance of league tour- 28 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 naments (some lanes even offered child care so women could compete during the day) led to a demand for shirts that were both comfortable as athletic wear and distinctive as uniforms. During this boom, clothing makers offered roomier shirts with shorter sleeves, longer tails to stay tucked in and softer collars meant to be worn without a tie. They were often made of soft rayon or gabardine, with bright colors for easy team identification. All of these features coalesced into the now-classic bowling shirt, a casual, sporty garment that could move from the competitive lanes to the relaxing atmosphere of the lounge. Not every shirt with a camp collar, short sleeves and button front was meant for bowling, but the name stuck as the shirt entered the regular rotation of casualwear. Of course, serious bowlers likely replaced their uniforms regularly to accommodate new team names and sponsors. “Would it be an exaggeration to claim that half the men and a healthy percentage of the women of the Buffalo area have closets stuffed with old bowling shirts?” a writer in the Buffalo News asked in 1982. That same decade, league bowling fell out of style for younger and more casual players—but retro fashions caught on. With teens chasing vintage looks, these classic shirts became a symbol of alternative, sometimes kitschy, cool. Soon, the bowling shirt was like tennis shoes or baseball caps—fashion with a cultural cachet independent of its sporty origins. Today, vintage bowling shirts can be haute couture—or simple, nostalgic treasures. But they aren’t uniforms anymore. The pros long ago switched to zip-up jerseys, or sometimes shirts with a different sporty name: polos. THESE CLASSIC SHIRTS BECAME A SYMBOL OF ALTERNATIVE, SOMETIMES KITSCHY, COOL. Some credit menswear company Nat Nast with creating the classic bowling shirt, distinguished by its boxy shape, bright colors and short sleeves. G E T T Y I M AG ES T HE NEW SKIPPER bowling shirt of 1940 of-

prologue N AT I O N A L T R E AS U R E Photo illustration by Kelly Marshall A Style All Her Own What made Libba Cotten one of the most distinctive guitar players in American music 30 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 HEN ELIZABETH “LIBBA” COTTEN was around 8 years old, she would slip into her older brother’s room when he was at work, take his banjo off the wall and toy around with it. Immediately, though, little Libba ran into a problem: She was left-handed, while the instrument was right-handed. No matter. The determined young girl simply turned the banjo upside down and taught herself to play that way. For the treble, or higher notes, she used her thumb; for the bass, her fingers. In time, this distinct finger-plucking approach—characterized by its rhythmic, percolating sound and its lively, emotive melodies—would become known as “Cotten Style,” and these early years of musical exploration served as a prelude to a life and career in which Cotten did everything on her own, wholly original terms. Born Elizabeth Nevills in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, around 1893, Cotten saved money from her jobs as a babysitter and domestic worker and bought her first guitar for $3.75 (around $130 today) when she was around 11 years old; she
By Brandon Tensley named the instrument Stella. By 12, she had written “Freight Train,” a lilting song that movingly captures the sense of liberation that trains symbolized for Black Americans in the South. “Freight train, freight train, run so fast,” Cotten sings on the chorus. “Please don’t tell what train I’m on / And they won’t know what route I’m going.” Though Cotten is now something of a legend among folk-music enthusiasts, she didn’t achieve commercial success until quite late in life. Intensely religious, she gave up playing the “worldly” music of folk and blues when she was 15, choosing to marry a man named Frank Cotten and to devote herself to family and God. She and Frank had a daughter, Lillie, when she was 16, after which the family moved to New York City, where Cotten remained until divorcing Frank in the mid-1940s. Relocating to Washington, D.C., where she helped Lillie, by then in her 30s, raise her new baby, Cotten found work cooking and cleaning at the home of the Seegers, a musical family that included singer Pete; his musician half-brother, Mike; their ethnomusicologist father, Charles; and Charles’ composer wife, Ruth. One day, Cotten picked up one of the FROM THE SMITHSONIAN N AT I O N A L MUSEUM OF AMERICAN H I S TO R Y HEAR A CLIP from “Freight Train” and other Cotten recordings at Smithsonian mag.com/libba
prologue COMPETITION 32 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 First Tango in Paris BREAKING IS MAKING ITS DEBUT AT THIS SUMMER’S OLYMPICS—A CENTURY AFTER ANOTHER DANCE ROCKED THE CITY By Jaimie Seaton W HEN THE INTERNATIONAL Olympic Committee announced the 2024 Paris Games would include breaking for the first time, not all athletes danced with joy. Indeed, some considered these street stylings to be an expression of anarchy: Michelle Martin, an Australian who dominated international squash in the 1990s, said the move would make “a mockery” of these noble competitions. The flap brings to mind another curious Parisian panic around a new, upstart dance competition—one that, more than a century ago, agitated everyone from nobility to church elders. The rebellious dance was called the tango, and it originated in the brothels and streets of Buenos Aires in the late 1800s. Though the Argentine upper classes associated the tango with violence and illicit sex, their more rakish sons encountered it in downtown cafés and dance halls and carried it abroad during their obligatory European travels. When the tango arrived in Paris, in the early 1900s, it created a sensation. “The chests are touching, and the legs are going in between each other’s legs,” says Mark Knowles, author of The Wicked Waltz and Other Scandalous Dances. “And that’s very suggestive and naughty.” According to GabrielLouis Pringué, a chronicler of Parisian society, the evocative moves led one French countess to remark, “Don’t you have to be lying down to dance that?” Despite or perhaps because of its bawdiness, the tango soon caught on in working-class clubs in the Montmartre section of Paris, where handsome men offered lessons to swooning young women, helping launch the craze (above, painter Hugo Scheiber’s Dancers; The Tango). Dance impresario Camille de Rhynal wanted to take the tango to London, but knew it was too risqué for the Brits. So in 1907, he and the Grand Duchess Anastasia Mikhailovna of Russia “experimented with the tango to take away its naughtier, more objectionable features, so it could be presented in a ballroom,” Knowles says. That same year, de Rhynal created the first tango championship at the Imperial Country Club in Nice; the events quickly spread to Paris, leading to Tangomania in cities across Europe and in New York. But powerful skeptics remained. In 1913, Pope Pius X declared the tango immoral and off-limits to Catholics, and the archbishop of Paris, Cardinal Amette, banned tango teachers from the city. Today, the critics have come around: For instance, Pope Francis fondly recalls dancing the tango as a young man in Argentina. As breakers make their Olympic debut amid some controversy, perhaps they can take solace in the enduring truth that today’s scandal is often tomorrow’s respectable pursuit. C H R I ST I E ’S I M AG ES / B R I D G E M A N I M AG ES Seegers’ guitars and started plucking—and her employers were floored. Realizing her immense talents, the family encouraged her to pursue a career as a musician. Mike Seeger produced Cotten’s debut album, Folk Songs and Instrumentals With Guitar, in 1958. Two years later, she held her first public performance, alongside Mike Seeger at Swarthmore College. In the ensuing decades, Cotten became a highlight on the folk music circuit, playing at the Newport Folk Festival and many others. Soon, she was a breakout star, finding fans nationwide, as well as advocates among music icons including Joni Mitchell, who struggled to imitate Cotten’s style in her own playing. At the age of 85, Cotten finally performed at Carnegie Hall in 1978. Her lively stage presence is in joyful evidence on her fourth release, Elizabeth Cotten Live!, which won a Grammy Award in 1985 for Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording. She died two years later, at 94, leaving behind a legacy that influenced players from Jerry Garcia to Rhiannon Giddens. Cotten never shied away from talking about the steep challenges she was forced to confront while learning to play the guitar. “No one helped me. Everything I play for y’all tonight, I give myself credit, ’cause nobody helped me,” she half-jokingly told an enthusiastic crowd in 1983. One of the most striking artifacts from Cotten’s life is her 1950 Martin guitar, which curators at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History believe she played for many years—possibly including at that Carnegie Hall show. The instrument has a mahogany body and neck and a rosewood fingerboard and bridge, and it sits on display at the museum’s Sounding American Music exhibition. What’s especially remarkable about the guitar, says John Troutman, a curator at the museum, is how it reveals, through its wear, the upside-down style of playing that made Cotten unique: “You can see the grooves worn from her index finger where she was plucking the bass notes.” In this way, Cotten’s instrument exemplifies, in powerful fashion, the ways in which she made the instrument adapt to her, and to the notes that she heard in her head, transmuted through her unique picking into something immortal.
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Workers inside one of nine trenches excavated during the recent dig season this January. 34 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
I N E G Y P T ’ S E A S T E R N D E S E R T,W O N D R O U S N E W F I N D S from the ancient port of Berenike ARE CHALLENGING OLD IDEAS ABOUT THE MAKINGS OF THE MODERN WORLD by JO MARCHANT photographs by ROGER ANIS
On a sunny morning this past January, Ingo Strauch, an expert in ancient Indian history, crouches in the courtyard of what was once an Egyptian temple. The floor is littered with fallen stones and columns. Nearby, carved hieroglyphs are visible on the salt-corroded walls, which in some places still stand nearly eight feet high. Located just a few hundred steps from the glittering water of the Red Sea, in Egypt’s eastern desert, this remote shrine was dedicated to the mother goddess Isis some 2,000 years ago. Today, the ruins form the most prominent feature of a barren, windswept landscape, inside a restricted military zone a few hours from the modern border with Sudan. But Strauch, scrutinizing a recently unearthed slab, is immersed in a different world. Just beneath the sand lies a once-bustling, cosmopolitan port city from which mighty ships laden with gold and wine sailed across the ocean and brought back spices, jewels, perfume and other exotic cargo in return. 36 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
OTHER WORLDS, OTHER WONDERS Ingo Strauch, a historian of ancient India, examines a third-century A.D. slab inscribed with Sanskrit. The dedication (opposite, in close-up) was arranged by a wealthy Indian merchant and conveys a Buddhist message—a surprise for an object found in an Isis temple. W H AT K IN D OF PL ACE B OAS T S Buddhists W H O W O R S H I P A T T H E T E M P L E O F A N Eptian goddess? In antiquity, this site, known as Berenike, was described by chroniclers such as Strabo and Pliny the Elder as the Roman Empire’s maritime gateway to the East: a crucial entry point for mind-boggling riches brought across the sea from eastern Africa, southern Arabia, India and beyond. It is hard to imagine how such vast and complex trade could have been supported here, miles from any natural source of drinking water and many days’ arduous trek across mountainous desert from the Nile. Yet excavations are revealing that the stories are true. Archaeologists led by Steven Sidebotham, of the University of Delaware, have revealed two harbors and scores of houses, shops and shrines. They have uncovered mounds of administrative detritus, including letters, receipts and customs passes, and imported treasures such as ivory, incense, textiles, gems and foodstuffs such as pots of Indian peppercorns, coconuts and rice. The finds are not only painting a uniquely detailed picture of life at a lesser-known but critical crossroads between East and West. They are also focusing scholarly attention on a vast ancient ocean trade that may have dwarfed the terrestrial Silk Road in economic importance and helped sustain the Roman Empire for centuries. The ruined Isis temple alone has yielded inscriptions and ritual offerings made by Egyptian, Greek and Roman worshipers over hundreds of years, from painted pharaohs on the walls to bronze statues and gilded figurines. But these treasures aren’t what Strauch, from the University of Lausanne, in Switzer- land, has traveled thousands of miles to see. Laid out before him on a blue blanket is a two-and-a-half-footlong block of curiously inscribed white gypsum. Near the top of the stone’s rough, corroded surface are three lines of elegantly curved Sanskrit script. Strauch, wearing sunglasses and a Panama hat, traces the curling letters with his finger. “In the sixth year of King Philip,” he reads, “the kshatriya Vasula gave this image for the welfare and happiness of all beings.” Then he points to a single line, in Greek, written by the same person but in a cruder style, that says simply: “Vasula set this up.” If not for the Greek translation and the reference to a Roman emperor—Philip the Arab, who ruled in the third century A.D.—this dedication could be mistaken as coming from India, Strauch says. The words are Sanskrit, expertly written in Brahmi script. The message itself, with its reference to universal happiness, is undeniably Buddhist. And the author, Vasula, who arranged for the dedication, proudly describes himself as kshatriya, from the warrior caste. The stele is just one of a series of remarkable finds that have specialists scrambling to reassess their understanding of Rome’s connections to the Eastern world. Others include a magnificent Buddha statue, July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 37
carved from Mediterranean marble and mixing Indian and Roman-Egyptian features, the first ever found anywhere in the ancient Western world. A second stele features a carved Greco-Roman arch that frames a triad of early Indian gods. Nothing like these objects, with their unmistakable blend of Eastern and Western styles, has ever been seen in the Roman world. Peter Stewart, a historian of classical art at the University of Oxford, described himself as “flabbergasted” by them. Shailendra Bhandare, an expert in ancient India at Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum, said that when he heard about the Indic triad, “I fell off my chair.” Now Sidebotham and his team have returned to dig for more. What kind of place boasts Buddhists 38 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Steven Sidebotham, the excavation co-director, photographing the site toward the end of the 2024 season. The University of Delaware archaeologist has been excavating at Berenike since 1994. who worship at the temple of an Egyptian goddess? Who was creating such original religious artworks, and why, and what can these treasures tell us about trends of ancient cultural exchange that have remained mysterious until now? To visit Berenike is to discover war elephants and pet monkeys, emperors and sailors, camel caravans and tax collectors. It’s a paradoxical place where luxurious baths sprang from the desert, where houses were built from ships and coral, where nothing grew yet unimaginable fortunes could be made. In some ways it was a wild frontier at the edge of an empire, but it was also the center of something much bigger: a beating heart that drove the makings of the modern world.
THE MORNING AFTER STRAUCH’S VISIT, archaeologists are THE BUDDHA The 28-inch marble statue is the first Buddha from antiquity found west of Afghanistan. Exhibiting Eastern and Western styles, it includes a characteristic beatific expression, elongated ears and topknot, plus a Roman hairstyle and Mediterranean-style sun rays. ST E V E N S I D E BOT H A M buzzing around a prominent spot to the north of the site, overlooking the sea. Excavations here have uncovered a series of small shrines that the team has dubbed the “northern complex.” It is almost the end of the dig season, but as the archaeologists are cleaning up their trenches, they notice an unusual stone, paler than the rest, embedded at the base of a roughly built wall. It looks head-shaped; just visible is an upside-down ear. Sidebotham, cheery but businesslike, with gray stubble and a blue, floppy sunhat, arrives within minutes. “Oh, geez,” he says. “You’re going to have to do an emergency.” The archaeologists were supposed to have finished digging at this part of the site already, he explains. “But we gotta get this out.” Four workers with trowels are soon dismantling the blocks. A local Bedouin boy brings empty baskets to hold the sand. A small crowd gathers; Sidebotham points a camcorder. “The magic moment is almost with us,” he says, hamming it up for the film. “This better be good.” Soon a handsome statue head, a little larger than life-size, is extracted from what’s left of the wall. As it’s turned upright, there’s a gasp at the sight of a round mass on the back, reminiscent of a Buddha’s characteristic topknot hairstyle. But as it’s brushed clean, the mass falls away, revealed as a clump of dirt. The head is instead identified as a first-century ruler, possibly Nero, with a creased forehead, cropped curls and a slight double chin, although there’s something distinctly Egyptian-style about his round, bulging eyes. (Later analysis will suggest it may actually be a portrait of an important local official involved in the Eastern trade.) A few feet away, the team had earlier uncovered the bottom half of a carved stone relief showing the sandaled legs of an unidentified warrior god accompanied by a mysterious creature—perhaps a lion. “It’s so strange!” says Marianne Bergmann, an expert in Greco-Roman sculpture visiting from the University of Göttingen in Germany, as she and her colleagues gleefully Google on their phones for comparison. But it’s just another day at Berenike, which has been keeping Sidebotham on his toes for 30 years. Now 72, Sidebotham knew he wanted to be an archaeologist from the age of 14. When his father, who was in the U.S. Army, was posted in Turkey, the family moved to Ankara, and the teenager spent his free time photographing ruins and collecting Roman coins. After training in Cairo, Ath- July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 39
ens and the United States, he excavated sites in Italy, Greece, Libya, Tunisia and elsewhere before working on the Red Sea coast for the first time in 1980. “I just fell in love with this place,” he says. “I love the desert, the Bedouin, the sites, everything about it.” He became friendly with the local tribespeople, who showed him ruins that archaeologists didn’t know existed. “They’ll take you to places—the last Westerner was some Roman guy,” he jokes. His aim, though, was always to get to the famed port of Berenike. “All the ancient sources talk about this place,” he says. One Greco-Roman text, known as the Periplus Maris Erythraei, or “Voyage around the Erythraean Sea”—which Bhandare, of Oxford, described as “a kind of Lonely Planet guide for the first century A.D.”—lists the port as a hub for maritime trade routes stretching south as far as modern-day Tanzania, and east, past Arabia, to India and beyond. But Berenike’s location was lost for centuries, until the Italian explorer Giovanni Belzoni, after nearly perishing from thirst in the search, rediscovered it in 1818 and hired a Bedouin youth to dig in the Isis temple with a giant seashell. A handful of European and American travelers followed, but the entire area fell back out of reach for decades, designated off-limits by an Egyptian army keen to control the coastline close to Sudan. “I never thought I’d be able to visit the site, let alone dig here,” Sidebotham says. He excavated farther up the coast for years, patiently building contacts in Egypt’s antiquities service before finally winning a permit in 1994. Now he brings an international team of specialists for a few weeks each winter, watched over by a sand-colored military base just up the coast. The archaeologists sleep in small, white tents. Water is brought in by truck. Phones and laptops run off a solar panel, food is cooked by locals, and toilets are dug into the sand. The only permanent fixture, a simple brick building, provides a few small offices and storerooms set around a central courtyard. Daily finds are meticulously sorted under canvas shelters: one for pottery, one for bones. Gradually, the team has uncovered the colorful history of a port that endured for more than 800 years, both predating and outlasting its masters in Rome. ACCORDING TO ANCIENT SOURCES, the city was founded by Pharaoh Ptolemy II, the son of the Macedonian Greek general who ruled Egypt after the death of Alexander the Great, and who named Berenike for his mother around 275 B.C. Alexander, during his military campaign in India, had pioneered the use of the coun40 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 R O M A N T R A D E R S L E A R N E D T O ride monsoon currents F R O M T H E H O R N OF AFRICA ACROSS THE INDIAN OCEAN.
try’s elephants in his battles against Persia, and afterward the animals became a military must-have, like tanks today. But when Alexander’s empire split into rival kingdoms, the Seleucids, who ruled western Asia, cornered the overland supply. So Ptolemy II turned to African elephants, shipping them up the coast from present-day Eritrea, Djibouti and Somalia to the sheltered, south-facing bay of Berenike. Berenike today is barren desert along the Red Sea. In its Roman-era heyday, it was a bustling port city with homes, shops, shrines and baths. Excavations have turned up elephant skull fragments and teeth, as well as a V-shaped dry moat that contained the beasts as they recovered from their sea voyage. When the use of war elephants declined in the second century B.C., Berenike’s importance waned, too. But after the Romans conquered Egypt in 30 B.C., the port found a new purpose. Now Roman traders learned to ride monsoon July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 41
currents from the Horn of Africa directly across the Indian Ocean. The waters flow northeast in summer before reversing each winter, so if they timed it right, they could make the journey in a couple of months, then wait until conditions were right to return. Suddenly, fleets of huge merchant ships, capable of carrying extravagant cargoes, set out from Roman Egypt to India. And Berenike was the first convenient place in the empire for these vast, oceangoing vessels to unload on the return trip, rather than battling further against the Red Sea’s relentless north winds. From Berenike, cargoes were carried by camel caravan to Coptos, on the Nile, shipped down the river to Alexandria, and from there to Rome and the rest of the Mediterranean world. Excavations are now confirming the wealth and breadth of the goods passing through Berenike in both directions, yielding pottery from Spain and Morocco; frankincense and resin from South Arabia; beads from Thailand or Vietnam and even Java. And “just tons” of Indian material, says Sidebotham, including gems and pearls, woven mats and baskets, as well as rice and a jar containing more than 16 pounds of peppercorns, the largest such cache from antiquity ever found. At the same time, the archaeologists are discovering what the literary sources don’t describe: the mechanics of life in an ancient intercontinental port. Around the main harbor they have found the remains of planking from ships built on both sides of the ocean (cedar from Lebanon, teak from Kerala); workshops and storehouses; and huge ropes and torn sails. From the sea, a main street led up through the town over a central crossroads—probably the location of the city’s Roman baths—to the Isis temple. On either side of this thoroughfare were streets lined with houses and shops, some two or three stories high. In early Roman times, the main construction material was a white, local stone called anhydritic gypsum; later builders used coral and Indian teak, recycled from the ships. Only a tiny proportion of the city has been excavated so far, but the coral fragments that litter the ground are heaped in slightly raised linear mounds, unremarkable to the untrained eye until Sidebotham runs along their tops, pointing out hidden streets, rooms, courtyards and doorways, effortlessly conjuring a city from the sand. THE TOWN THEY ARE UNCOVERING W A S a vibrant tangle O F G O D S A N D RITUALS, LIFESTYLES AND LANGUAGES. On the edge of town was a trash dump. This is the source of most of the 100 or so texts unearthed so far this season, which are analyzed back at the storehouse by papyrologists Rodney Ast, a co-director of this season’s excavation, and Julia Lougovaya, both of Heidelberg University in Germany. Most of these are pottery fragments, inscribed, for example, with customs passes or receipts for precious water. While I was there, the pair were particularly excited about an exqui42 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 sitely preserved papyrus, as thin as silk, that took them hours to painstakingly unroll. Written in Greek, probably in the late first or early second century A.D., it is one of the most extensive texts they’ve discovered so far. It turns out to be a letter, although details about the sender and recipient are lost; the writer, apparently located somewhere between Berenike and the Nile, was asking his correspondent in the port to send him money and supplies, including olive oil, veal and two wooden tent poles. “It shows that this was a place of supply,” Ast says, that despite the remote, barren location, “people here had access to resources.” Intriguingly, the site of the trash dump has also yielded separate archaeological layers with buried animals. The team has found hundreds so far from the first and second centuries A.D., mostly cats but also dogs and young monkeys, laid to rest wrapped in matting or covered with broken pottery. Many are wearing leashes or collars and were nurtured into
old age. “People were caring for these animals,” says Marta Osypińska, an archaeologist from the University of Wroclaw in Poland, as she shows me the bones. “This is the first site in the ancient world with a pet cemetery.” Finds this season include a miniature dog from the Mediterranean area; a white, long-haired cat possibly imported from Asia; and, Osypińska says, “a monkey hugging a kitten,” found just a few days earlier. At first, she assumed the monkeys buried here were from Africa, but when she analyzed their skulls she found they were rhesus and bonnet macaques from India. It would have been a huge investment to care for them for months at sea, she says. “We can imagine these were very special pets.” Her colleague Iwona Zych, of the University of Warsaw, says the monkeys in particular conjure Berenike’s colorful, adventurous spirit. “Imagine a sailor with a monkey on his shoulder, or, In the Isis temple, the pedestal that may have held the statue of the Egyptian goddess, with carvings of the Roman emperor Tiberius holding up the sky. in a tavern, there’s a guy with a monkey doing tricks.” Perhaps the most prominent feature of the town, though, is a profusion of shrines. “You stumble from one religious institution to another,” Sidebotham jokes. There’s the northern complex, which featured chapels of various cults built over the centuries, including one that contained the remains of 15 falcons. Elsewhere, there’s a third-century A.D. shrine dedicated to deities from Palmyra, Syria, and a Christian church, dating to the fifth century, in which archaeologists found a lamp inscribed with the message “Jesus, forgive me.” On the highest ground, facing the sea, was the Isis temple—a walled rectangle roughly 100 by 40 feet. In 2020, the team discovered a Greek inscription above the entrance gate, announcing that the temple was built by a merchant named Marcus Laelius Cosmus around A.D. 20, during the reign of Emperor Tiberius. July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 43
Gateway Between East and West Berenike was the Roman Empire’s southernmost port, from which fleets of merchant ships rode monsoon winds across the Indian Ocean—and fueled an ocean trade that rivaled, and likely surpassed, the terrestrial Silk Road in economic importance. Now findings on both sides of the ocean are driving a broad reassessment of the interconnectedness of the ancient world. . ris R Tig GREECE G GR RE EE EC E CE Nile R. Mediterranean Sea Allexan A exxandria xan andr and dria ia EG E G YP YPT YPT TE TEH T TEHRAN EH EHR RAN AN AN Tyre BAG AG AGHDA GHD HDA H DAD DA Qift Qif Ba B a arb rbar rb arikkon arik on RIY RIY YADH DH H d Re a Se MODERN CITY ITY TY Y G an ge sR . KAR K KA A AR RAC ACH ACH HI Qus Qu Q us usei eir e iirr al al-Qa -Q Qa Q adim dim d im m A R AB ARA AR ABIA Ancien e t trrad de ro out u es to and from om Ber erenikke R. us d In G rr Ge rrrha ha h a My M yos yos os Horrm mo os Beren Be ren re niik ke e Modern name me PE P E RS R S IIA A CAI CA C AIIRO A O Co C op pttoss Anci c ent siite BAG B AG A GRA RAM AM A M Pa P almyr alm lm myr yra M sc Mo sch ha a Liime L men Kho Kh K ho or Ro ori rii Qa Q ana’ na a’ PAT PA P ATNA A A Bary Ba ry g ga aza za Bha B Bh h harruc uc ch h Indian Ocean IND DII A Bi’ Bi ii’’r Ali Allii Ad A du ullis is AD ADE A D DEN Oc O ce ellis lis is Arikamedu Dioskourides Socotra Island Muziris* 200 MI. Pattanam * Muziris is thought to be modern Pattanam. Melting Pot The gate led to a paved courtyard where the people of Berenike made offerings and dedications. The arThe city boasted two harbors. The multi-lingual, multi-ethnic desert chaeologists have uncovered the remains of multiple outpost welcomed merchants, sailors and traders of many statues here, as well as accompanying inscriptions religions and backgrounds. “It’s on stone blocks: a gilded, wooden figure of the Grea great example of ancient cosmopolitanism,” Sidebotham co-Egyptian god Serapis, probably carved from a brosays. He estimates that only 2 percent or so of the city has ken ship’s mast; a stone head with tight curls, thought been excavated so far. to represent a king from Meroe, in what is now Sudan; and two bronze fingers, suggesting that bronze statTRASH DUMP/ ues, life-size or bigger, once adorned this space. These PET CEMETERY would have been hugely expensive. Or, as Sidebotham puts it, “There’s some beaucoup bucks being made.” The dedications offer prayers and thanks for safe ocean travels, but the intent wasn’t purely religious; PTOLEMAIC BATHS some figures honor administrative officials such as the local tax collector. “I think everybody who came through went to that temple,” says Bergmann, of the UniPTOLEMAIC ERA versity of Göttingen. “If you have C. 275 B.C. – 30 B.C. some economic interests, you’d want to be represented here.” Beyond the courtyard was Berenike’s most sacred space: a series of small, richly decorated rooms at the temple’s rear. Olaf Kaper, ISIS TEMPLE an Egyptologist from Leiden UniPET CEMETERY versity, in the Netherlands, and The city has the world’s earliest known pet burial one of the excavation’s co-direcground, including this tors this year, offers a tour. The monkey from India. SOURCES: STEVEN E. SIDEBOTHAM; PTOLEMAIC BERENIKE: MAREK A. WOŹNIAK, STEVEN E. SIDEBOTHAM, MARTA OSYPIŃSK A, ALFREDO CARANNANTE, JOANNA K. RĄDKOWSK A, OPEN ACCESS ON AJA ONLINE; P OLISH CENTRE OF MEDITERRANEAN ARCHAEOLOGY: STEVEN E. SIDEBOTHAM, IWONA Z YCH, MARIUSZ GWIA ZDA NORTHERN COMPLEX ECCLESIASTICAL COMPLEX ROMAN ERA 30 B.C. – C. A.D. 550 Maps and graphics by Guilbert Gates
design recalls better-known sites along the Nile—Luxor, Aswan, Edfu—but is extremely rare for such a remote location. “We all know famous temples from Egypt, but not out in the Egyptian desert,” he says. “It’s remarkable.” The once-painted stone is badly corroded from exposure to the salty air, but the carvings are still visible: hymns to Isis on every doorway, and papyrus and lily garlanding the walls. On the floor are fallen ceiling blocks carved with stars and vultures, and the sacred pedestal that may have once carried the statue of Isis herself, decorated with the Roman emperor Tiberius holding up the sky. Taken together, the finds conjure an atmosphere of creativity and opportunity that clearly appeals to many of the archaeologists working here. The town they are uncovering was a vibrant tangle of gods and rituals, lifestyles and languages, with the whole fragile enterprise dependent on winds and currents and the seasonal ebb and flow of the ships. One of the archaeologists describes Berenike as “a beautiful window to the outside world.” Another says it evokes “a bar in a Wild West film,” an eclectic mix of outsiders drawn together by the promise of fortunes and the call of the unknown. For a Roman citizen or subject, when you reached this harbor, you were already on the edge of the world, far from safety, comfort and civilization, at the most remote and southerly corner of the entire empire. Yet from this precarious spot, people reached even farther, sailing to India, thousands of miles away. What scholars are now realizing is that the rewards for such audacity, both for individuals and for the entire Roman sphere of influence, were huge. chored in deeper water, and thousands of pottery sherds from the Mediterranean: amphoras used to transport wine, olive oil and garum (a beloved Roman fish sauce). They’ve also unearthed spindle whorls and gaming counters; fragments of marble, iron, copper and gold; nearly 100,000 glass beads and thousands more of semiprecious stone; and, in 2020, a rare seal ring made of banded agate, an Indian gemstone, yet carved with an elegant Egyptian sphinx. (Augustus Caesar wore one just like it early in his political career.) The ring hints at the presence of Greco-Roman craftsmen working with local gems. As on the Egyptian side, Cherian says, the trade route didn’t end at Muziris but would have continued across land and sea to India’s east coast and on to China. From his perspective, it was Muziris, not Berenike, that formed the “junction between East and West,” the central hub that connected the known world. And as archaeologists are busy analyzing the growing material finds, other scholars are reassessing literary sources to “ I T T A K E S cultural exchange to a different level T H A N W E H A V E O B S E R V E D A N Y W H E R E E L S E .” NO PORT CAN OPERATE ALONE. To understand the signifi- cance of this outpost, says Matthew Cobb, an ancient historian at the University of Wales Trinity Saint David, it’s critical to look across the sea to uncover what he calls “an intricate web of overlapping connections.” Off the coast of what is now Yemen, for example, is a rocky island called Socotra, mentioned in the Periplus as a stopping point for ships passing between the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea. Socotra’s cliffs boast a deep cave with hundreds of inscribed messages, graffiti left by sailors written in South Arabian, Ethiopian, Palmyrene, Bactrian and Greek scripts and languages. In 2019, Strauch analyzed inscriptions from more than 100 Indian visitors written between the second and fifth centuries A.D., concluding that a number of sailors and ship captains hailed from Gujarat, on India’s northwestern coast. And then there’s Pattanam, on India’s southern Kerala coast, today a quiet, palm-shaded village that Sidebotham describes as Berenike’s “sister site.” Archaeologists believe this was likely once the great port of Muziris, described in literary sources such as a Tamil epic poem from around the second century A.D., which told how Greek traders exchanged their gold for Indian pepper. In 2006, Indian researchers, led by P.J. Cherian, of the PAMA Institute for the Advancement of Transdisciplinary Archaeological Sciences in Kerala, began excavations at Pattanam and have since found a wharf area, a 20-foot-long wooden canoe apparently used to ferry goods to ships an- better evaluate the economic impacts of these intercontinental networks. They already knew that trade was robust. In the early first century A.D., before trade reached its peak, the Greek geographer Strabo described eastbound fleets of more than 100 merchant ships. Another key source, a contract known as the Muziris papyrus dating from the second century, is more specific, describing a loan between an Alexandria-based businessman and a merchant for a return voyage to Muziris. On the reverse side, the text details the cargo of a ship called the Hermapollon, which included 140 tons of pepper, 80 boxes of nard (an aromatic oil used for perfumes, medicines and rituals), and around four tons of ivory. Its value, after payment of the Roman Empire’s 25 percent import tax, was nearly seven million sesterces, which scholars have calculated was easily enough to buy a luxury estate in central Italy, or, if you prefer, to pay 40,000 stonecutters for a year. That translates into some vast fortunes. Meanwhile, Rome’s emperors were filling their own coffers. In 2014, the independent historian and author Raoul McLaughlin used sources including the Muziris papyrus to estimate that by the first century A.D., the Roman tax revenues from Indian Ocean trade may have generated as much as onethird of the empire’s total income. Cobb puts the figure lower, perhaps at 10 or 15 percent, but he agrees that the volume of such goods would have likely dwarfed those transported along the Silk Road—the network of overland routes that connected China with Rome—which have received much more scholarly and public attention. Just think of the number of camel or donkey loads you would need, he says, to transport the several hundred tons of cargo that could fit onto just one ship. The huge incomes from these maritime connections would July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 45
have been vital for supporting Rome’s territories and conquests across an empire that stretched from Hadrian’s Wall, at the border with Scotland, to the waters of the Persian Gulf. And just as global trade today impacts more than economics, the cultural influences were profound, too. For instance, historians have long thought about Roman trade with the East in terms of luxury items enjoyed by small numbers of Roman elites: Pliny mentions a rock-crystal ladle worth 150,000 sesterces, for example, and an opal ring that cost two million sesterces. But what Berenike emphatically drives home, Sidebotham says, is that trade among the Mediterranean world, Asia, Arabia and Africa “just exploded,” with land and maritime routes complementing each other. “There was a global economy, such as they knew the globe back then. It’s not just being used by the tiny elite.” By the end of the first century, Eastern herbs, spices, clothing and even animals would have changed ordinary people’s lives, from the tigers, rhinoceroses and wild boars brought for gladiatorial shows to frankincense and myrrh widely used as perfumes, as medicines and in religious rituals. And black pepper shipped across the Indian Ocean would have radically shifted the “tastescape,” as Cobb puts it, of the Western world. In a Roman cookbook known as Apicius, for example, possibly compiled in the first century A.D., pepper is called for in 349 out of 468 recipes, from mulled wine to roast pork. Elites did consume huge quantities of Eastern goods: At the funeral of Nero’s wife Poppaea, the emperor reportedly burned more incense than Arabia could produce in a year. But more modest amounts were within reach of even relatively lowstatus individuals in remote regions. A tablet dating from the second century A.D., found at the relatively remote Roman fort of Vindolanda, in northern England, records an ordinary soldier’s order for two denarii (eight sesterces) worth of pepper. The cumulative effect, Cobb suggests, would have been to give people across the empire a sense of living in “a much larger world” that stretched far beyond Roman realms. What is now coming out of Berenike, however, suggests cultural exchange of a wholly unexpected kind. “I’LL NEVER FORGET the day,” Side- botham says. It was January 18, 2022, and he was in the excavation house, examining some small finds, when a worker ran in with a note saying that something had been found in the temple courtyard. He hurried over to find the trench supervisor, Mariana Castro, grinning widely and hiding something behind her back: several pieces of carved marble, which fit together into an exquisite, haloed head. With its youthful, beatific expression, elongated ears and topknot of tight curls, it could only be a Buddha— 46 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Workers recover the head of a statue, possibly a first-century A.D. ruler, from the “northern complex,” a series of Egyptian and GrecoRoman shrines. Kamila Braulinska, an archaeologist, later prepares the head to be photographed. First thought to show a Roman emperor, the head may portray an important local official.
A first- or second-century A.D. papyrus letter, written in Greek, requesting provisions, including olive oil, veal and tent poles. the only such find from antiquity anywhere west of Afghanistan. Two years later, the archaeologists are still trying to make sense of it. In the team’s shared office, Bergmann flips through photographs of the carved head on her laptop screen. (The sculpture itself was quick- ly removed for safekeeping by Egyptian authorities, who have said they plan to display it in a museum in the northern Egyptian city of Ismailia.) From examining photographs, the team is confident the head belongs to a robed, marble body found in 2018, making a statue a little under 28 inches tall. The figure is carved from white marble quarried from the island of Prokonnesos, near present-day Istanbul. And it doesn’t look like any Buddha found before or since. “It’s clearly a Buddha, because of the gestures and the way the garments are worn,” Bergmann says, referring to the right hand raised in reassurance and the left hand holding the robe. “But it does not look Indian at all.” The drilled, spiral hair, which Bergmann has dubbed “tortellini curls,” appears to be influenced by a hairstyle fashionable with elite Roman women up to around A.D. 140. Likewise the triangular sun rays added to the halo appear more in keeping with Mediterranean sun god traditions than with conventional Buddhas. Remarkably, the team has also found pieces of other, smaller Buddhas, made from local stone. Bergmann suggests they were all carved here by Greco-Roman sculptors, some of whom may have traveled from Alexandria. Perhaps they were given models to copy, possibly little bronze or wooden figurines brought over on ships, and they filled in the details using their own knowledge and expertise. At the time, in the early centuries A.D., the Indian subcontinent was dominated by three powerful dynasties. The Kushan Empire ruled the north, including Gandhara, a region covering areas of present-day Pakistan and Afghanistan. The Western Kshatrapas controlled western India, including what’s now Gujarat, while the Satavahanas prevailed in the south. Scholars aren’t sure precisely where the model for the Berenike Buddha originates from, but Bergmann sees the closest parallels in artistic style with second-century A.D. Buddhas from Gandhara. The Sanskrit inscription, which was found near the Buddha’s head barely half an hour later, seems to have a different origin. It dates to A.D. 249, more than a century later, and has its closest parallels in texts from Gujarat. It, too, appears to have been carved at Berenike, however, uniquely combining Eastern and Western features. July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 47
“It’s the first Buddhist inscription that we find in Egypt,” Strauch says. “The first inscription in Sanskrit. It’s the only one with a Roman emperor mentioned.” The carved triad is also unprecedented. Bhandare, of the Ashmolean Museum, identifies the figures as early Indic deities: Balarama, holding a plough; Vasudeva, who later became Krishna, with a wheel and a club; and the goddess Ekanamsa. The closest comparisons he can find are on coins from Mathura in northern India (a region associated with the Kushan dynasty). But the Berenike figures are carved from local stone and are surrounded by a typically Greco-Roman decorative arch. Bhandare tentatively dates the stele to between A.D. 50 and 150. “It is absolutely stunning that intimate knowledge of Indian iconography seems to be available in Berenike at this time,” he says. Lougovaya, the papyrologist from Germany, points out just how unexpected it was to discover such items in the Isis temple. “It’s like having an Indian sanctuary in the Vatican,” she says. “It takes cultural exchange to a different level than we have observed anywhere else.” Kaper, the Egyptologist, wonders how worshipers of local cults would have responded to the statues, noting that followers of polytheistic religions were generally welcoming of new faiths. We know that Greeks and Romans tried to recognize their own gods in the Egyptian gods, he says. “They must have done that with the Buddha. It’s completely fascinating.” “ T H E C O L O N I A L T R A D I T I O N S AY S T H AT P E O P L E O N LY C A M E H E R E — W E N E V E R G O T H E R E . But it was two-way.” A handful of objects related to ancient Indian religions have previously been found in the Roman world, most notably an ivory statuette of a yakshi fertility spirit, dated to the first century A.D., unearthed at Pompeii. But the Berenike finds are not just traded objects that have been “picked up from one place and dropped at the other,” Bhandare says. “That’s what sets these things apart.” These locally made items show that people must have been traveling from India and bringing their traditions, religious beliefs and languages with them. “We knew they were bringing in Indian goods,” Ast says. “We didn’t know they were living their lives here, pursuing their cults and rituals.” As recently as 2019, Strauch published an article arguing that there was no material evidence for Buddhist communi48 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 ties in the ancient West. Now he has torn up that conclusion. There must have been a community of Indians not just passing through but living and worshiping in Berenike, he says. “This is a social act. They want to have a presence here.” That presence, he goes on, may help to explain how Latin and Greek authors who mentioned Buddhism in their texts, such as the secondcentury A.D. Christian theologian Clement of Alexandria, learned about the Eastern faith. Scholars have occasionally suggested that Buddhism influenced aspects of early Christianity, from the practices of early Christian monasteries in Egypt to similarities between the life stories of Buddha and Jesus Christ, although most researchers emphasize that there is little evidence for direct links. Even accounting for the new finds, Bhandare says, it would be “a bit of a jump” to assume significant direct influence. Nevertheless, the finds show that “these people were there, they were exchanging ideas,” he says. “It’s definitely plausible.” What has researchers most excited, though, is how the finds are helping to change ideas about the people driving the trans-ocean trade. Take the Buddha statue. Shipping the marble and the specialist stonecutters required to work on it
from Alexandria to this remote desert port would have been a major undertaking. “It’s definitely a high-status dedication,” Bhandare says. Whoever commissioned the statue must have been wealthy, presumably a shipowner or merchant, and was keen to display that wealth. Similarly, the Sanskrit inscription was carved by an accomplished Indian scribe, and the donor took pains to point out his high class. In other words, the Indian visitors to Berenike weren’t simply hired hands on Roman ships but wealthy, influential players in their own right— agents, merchants and shipowners—who contributed to the community and stayed for significant periods of time, if not for good. Strauch’s work on the Socotra inscriptions showed that hundreds of Indian travelers stopped over on the island, and they came from multiple levels of Indian society, including Kshatriyas (warriors and rulers) and Vaishyas (farmers and merchants). By contrast, there are no Latin inscriptions and only two in Greek. Such finds make clear that it’s no longer possible A Greco-Roman arch framing Indic gods, from left: Balarama, with a plough; Ekanamsa; Vasudeva, who later became Krishna, with a wheel and club. BYLINES Jo Marchant last wrote for Smithsonian about scientists who extract proteins from artifacts to investigate the past. Roger Anis’ photographs from Saqqara’s tombs were published in the magazine in July 2021. to think of the trans-ocean trade as a “Roman” endeavor. By the first century A.D., Strauch says, India was “one of the main powers in these transcontinental trade routes.” Profits from this trade were “extremely important” for the success of all three ruling dynasties, Strauch says, and for the growth of Buddhism, which they supported. In fact, he suggests, it may have been the Indians, not the Romans, who instigated and drove Indian Ocean trade: “I think the Indians were the main agents.” Cobb says that the traditional view that Romans primarily built and sailed the ships, reaping the riches they found in exotic lands, “has fallen to the wayside,” a shift in historical understanding that has been “hammered home” by the accumulating finds at Berenike and Socotra. This shift is also reframing our view of Western impacts on India, where Greeks began to settle after Alexander’s conquests. Indo-Greek kings of the second century B.C. famously blended Greek and Indian languages, symbols and beliefs. But these influences are often seen as examples of Western colonizers imposing their culture and dominating other lands. For Strauch, Bhandare and others, the importance of the Berenike finds is to refocus the lens, drawing attention to the Indian merchants, ship captains and sailors who carried their own culture across the ocean, and the role they played in shaping the Western world. “The colonial tradition says that people only came here—we never go there,” says Cherian, the archaeologist in Kerala. “But it was two-way.” LATE ONE AFTERNOON, as the sun dips toward the mountains, Sidebotham takes a walk to the beach, where the sand is strewn with traces of modern ocean trade: water bottles and Pepsi cans and shredded plastic bags. On the way, he passes a small Egyptian temple by the old harbor. It was used during Berenike’s final phase, in the fourth and fifth centuries, after the Roman Empire had begun to weaken. At the time, the temple may have stood on a little island, surrounded by the sea. All that’s visible now is a rectangular mound of coral fragments, but when the team excavated, it must have felt as if the worshipers had only just left. Inside were stone benches and mats made from tamarisk twigs, an altar and a heap of cowrie shells apparently once strung up in a curtain across the door. Ritual items included a bronze bull’s head, carefully placed lotus seeds, a terra-cotta jar containing 50 crescents of silver, C O N T I N U E D O N PAG E 116 July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 49
by Xander Peters photographs by Trevor Paulhus I N T H E WA K E O F H U R R I C A N E I K E , E N G I N E E R S H AV E B E E N 50 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
C R A F T I N G A $ 3 4 B I L L I O N P L A N T O P R O T E C T G A LV E S T O N . WILL IT BE BIG ENOUGH FOR TEX AS? Water breaks against Galveston Island’s century-old seawall. The barrier was an engineering marvel in the early 1900s, but the island needs more protection today.
Southeast Texas’ coast is flat A VULNERABLE SITE Texas City, across the bay from Galveston Island, is home to major oil refineries (above and right). The Army Corps of Engineers started fortifying the city as early as 1914, but sinking ground and larger storms have left the petrochemical corridor open to damage and environmental disasters. 52 SMITHSONIAN and twiggy, bordered mostly by the sea and emblems of the region’s biggest economies— high-rise hotels and oil and smoke-puffing gas refineries. The coastal resort city of Galveston, about an hour’s drive southeast of downtown Houston, transports more tons of cargo than any other port in the United States. It’s a peaceful, watery place. Two long, thin bodies of land stretch toward each other along the Gulf Coast—Galveston Island and Bolivar Peninsula, separated by less than three miles of water at the entrance to Galveston Bay. Each is about 27 miles long and 3 miles wide at its widest point. In between the two is the mouth of the Houston Ship Channel, which provides an estimated $906 billion in economic value to the U.S. each year. Much of that comes from oil and gas entering and leaving the refineries that cluster around Houston. | July • August 2024
From the eastern edge of Galveston Island, looking across the bay on an April afternoon, Bolivar Peninsula is barely visible above the sand dunes that line the shore. Cargo tankers stretch far enough to resemble mountains on the watery horizon of the Gulf of Mexico. As tranquil as Galveston may seem, it has been the site of monstrous storms. In September 1900, the Great Galveston Storm flooded the city with a nearly 16foot storm surge, killing an estimated 8,000 people, to this day the deadliest natural disaster in American history. In September 2008, Hurricane Ike smacked down onto Bolivar Peninsula, destroying 3,600 homes and leaving at least 15 people there dead. More than a million people in the Texas Gulf had to flee, and nearly 2,000 had to be rescued from the storm surge—violent waters thrust up to 20 feet above standard sea levels. Since then, Texas engineers and lawmakers have been scrambling to find a way to protect the Galveston coastline and the larger Houston region. They’re hardly alone. As climate change brings rising sea levels and as more intense storms batter coastlines, cities along the East Coast, including Miami, Charleston, and the metropolitan centers in New York and New Jersey, are working on plans for expensive coastalprotection projects. But perhaps no plan is as ambitious—or as ready to go—as the $34 billion project that has emerged in the wake of Hurricane Ike. The coastal Texas project, as it is officially known, draws on techniques pioneered by flood-prone countries like the Netherlands. But it’s been custom-designed for all the different needs of the Galveston coast. Homeowners will be able to look out at sand dunes and restored wetlands, while the city’s business district will be surrounded by reinforced concrete floodwalls. The project’s most ingenious element is a series of 36 sea gates, including two massive gates at the mouth of the Houston Ship Channel, that will seal off Galveston Bay from a devastating surge in the event of an incoming storm. And Texas is due for one. “We have a cycle here of about one every seven years,” says Kelly BurksCopes, who oversees the coastal Texas project for the U.S. Army July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 53
The Army Corps of Engineers has been protecting the nation since the Revolutionary War, when it erected barriers to fortify an area near Bunker Hill. Since then, the corps has helped plan some of the world’s largest bridges and roadways, along with the Washington Monument and the Pentagon. Its projects have included dams that are widely hailed as marvels. But fortifying coastlines against climate change presents a new set of challenges. Congress gave her a mandate, Burks-Copes says: “Look at what everybody else has done and incorporate the good parts into your efforts.” Galveston has had a seawall since the early 1900s, but the massive waves of Hurricane Ike poured right over it. The first person to put forward the idea of an offshore storm barrier for Galveston was William Merrell, a longtime marine scientist at Texas A&M at Galveston. He likes to tell the story of an epiphany that came to him on September 13, 2008, as he and his wife, daughter, grandson and two chihuahuas witnessed Hurricane Ike’s Galveston landfall from one of two 19th-century buildings he and his family had restored downtown. Merrell has spent his career studying storms—in particular, the physics of the ocean and the impacts of hurricanes. He has earned 54 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 1900 2008 OPEN TO THE ELEMENTS The Galveston storm of 1900, which claimed 8,000 lives, is the deadliest in U.S. history. In 2008, Hurricane Ike brought surges that topped the city’s seawall, but just 74 Texans died— mainly because officials warned that residents would “face certain death” if they didn’t evacuate. Despite the risk, developers continue to build luxury homes in precarious beachfront locations. awards from the National Science Foundation, where he also served as an assistant director. A novel he wrote features the Great Galveston Storm of 1900. During the storm in 2008, roughly eight feet of water filled the city’s streets; 110-mile-per-hour gales whipped the building’s brick walls. Through the wind’s howl, Merrell’s mind drifted back to a trip he’d taken in the 1970s to the Netherlands, to recruit Dutch researchers for the U.S. Deep Sea Drilling Project, a massive scientific effort that, among other things, helped support the theory of plate tectonics. In his off time, he’d toured Delta Works, an expanding series of flood-protection barriers that the Netherlands had been building since the 1950s. More than a quarter of the country’s terrain lies below sea level, and the earliest examples of flood barriers recorded in that area date back more than 2,000 years. Those barriers— known as dikes—evolved from careful stacks of earth to complex feats of modern engineering. At the time of Merrell’s visit, engineers were working on the country’s largest and most ambitious barrier project. After a 1953 storm caused devastating SCIENCE HISTORY IMAGES / AL AMY STOCK PHOTO, DAVID J. PHILLIP-P OOL / GET T Y IMAGES Corps of Engineers. “And it’s been about seven years.” Burks-Copes, who has a PhD in interdisciplinary ecology and urban-rural planning, and more than a decade of experience on storm-related megaprojects, arrived in Galveston eight years ago. I met her this past spring, when she gave me a tour of the coastline and talked me through the long, complicated journey of the project’s conception and design. With short blond hair and a bright expression, she reminded me of a favorite college professor. “What happened was the storm hit, and a bunch of universities and other entities came up with designs, but nobody could settle on one,” she said. At that point, local Texas governments petitioned Congress to step in, and in 2015 Congress tapped the Army Corps of Engineers to come up with a solution. “We went through all of these plans, and basically drew from them pieces and parts.” With its patchwork of influences and ideas, the coastal Texas project is unlike anything that has ever been put into practice. Burks-Copes and her colleagues have had to get feedback from a huge cast of characters—petroleum executives and neighborhood environmentalists, ship pilots and academics, federal and state lawmakers. The federal government has promised to pick up 65 percent of the construction costs. Texas will pay for the rest. After a lengthy review process, the final conceptual designs are now set. If the plan succeeds, it could forever change the way Americans mitigate storm damage.
Shelter From the Storm H ousto n ty Bay The proposed barrier system has three main components. Large dunes will shield residential areas, while a ring barrier will protect the business district, and gates will seal off the bay during extreme weather. Tr in i e a v o st n Ba Ba y y Bolivar Peninsula M ex ic o G GA LV E S TO N C O U N T Y l East o f G al ve ston M A P : E R I T R E A D O R C E LY; S O U R C ES : H O U STO N C H R O N I C L E , T E X AS A& M U N I V E R S I T Y AT GA LV ESTO N , C OASTA L T E X AS ST U DY, A R C G I S STO RY M A P, G O O G L E M A P S G u lf KEY Galveston Island Gate system Ring barrier Dunes Roadways 2024 July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 55
floods in the Netherlands, the country launched the Delta Works project, which closed off vulnerable inlets with an array of dams, floodgates, locks and embankments. “Evidently, it imprinted on my mind,” Merrell told me. When he sat down to sketch out a plan for protecting Galveston, he came up with a coastal spine, with barriers and gates inspired by protects land that would otherwise be underwater.) At first, other scientists argued that Merrell’s plan would be too expensive and complex for the Texas coast. Critics told him he was crazy—to his face, in the offices of elected leaders, and through headlines, which pitted Merrell’s idea against other proposals. “The idea was violently opposed,” he said. One of Merrell’s most prominent opponents was Jim Blackburn, an environmental lawyer and co-director of Rice University’s Severe Storm Prevention, Education and Evacuation from Disaster Center. “I started off saying it was nuts to put up a coastal barrier,” Blackburn tells me, sitting at a boardroom table in the Houston office of the environmental nonprofit BCarbon, where he’s the CEO. “He reminds me of the heroine in Gone With the Wind,” Blackburn adds, comparing Merrell to Scarlett O’Hara, who famously declared, “As God is my witness, I’ll never be hungry again!” That’s how Blackburn imagines Merrell having his dramatic epiphany: “As God is my witness, it’s never going to flood like this again!” He laughs at the thought. Not surprisingly for an environmentalist, Blackburn reject- “THE IDEA WAS TO KEEP THE SURGE FROM EVEN ENTERING THE BAY. AND THAT WAS NOVEL.” the multifaceted Dutch approach. The plan became known as the “Ike Dike,” a nod to both Hurricane Ike and Dutch engineering. The name was so catchy that people in the Houston area often refer to the current proposal as the Ike Dike, even though it’s significantly different from what Merrell originally proposed, and it isn’t a dike. (Technically, a dike 56 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
A container ship glides through the Houston Ship Channel, which brings in more than $900 billion each year. Parts of the channel are so shallow— and susceptible to overflow—that a fisherman is only waist-deep. rell for being the first to come up with the idea of putting a barrier out in the inlet. “What people tend to do is fortify the shoreline near the big cities,” she says. In fact, this is what Galveston had already tried to do with the ten-mile-long seawall that was built after the 1900 storm. Merrell’s idea, by contrast, was more about “putting a larger defense out front,” she says, not just walling off the land but putting gates at the entrance of the bay. “The idea was to keep the surge from even entering the bay. And that was novel.” Throughout the process, the local experts continued to give solicited (and sometimes unsolicited) advice, but it was up to the corps to come up with a plan. That also meant making sure the residents of Bolivar Peninsula were on board. Many of the homes have waterfront views. These homeowners didn’t want their properties to flood, but they weren’t happy with the idea of huge structures blocking their views or diminishing the future value of their property. (Despite rising sea levels and increasingly damaging storms, development on the Bolivar Peninsula is growing, including new beachfront communities, hotels and a planned private airport.) “Most of the people that live on these barrier islands and peninsulas came for the sea,” Burks-Copes says. “They came so that they could engage with that kind of environment, day to day and hour to hour. And so you have to be sensitive to that. They’ve invested their lives in this, and so you have to think about how you protect them but still give them the benefits that they moved there for.” Under her direction, the corps held meetings with neighborhood groups and invited local people to comment on drafts of the plan. When the corps presented its initial vision—with giant sea gates and walls on The GalvestonPort Bolivar Ferry Terminal, where people and vehicles can board a free boat to cross the 2.7-mile gap between the two long stretches of land. ed the idea of building walls and gates that would disrupt the natural habitat. He favored a plan that would spend $6 billion on green infrastructure, such as wetlands and human-made barrier islands with gates to help prevent a storm surge. He also emphasized the need for better forecasting technologies— not only to protect homeowners but also to ward off environmental disasters. A Category 4 or 5 hurricane, with at least 25 feet of storm surge, could rip refineries from their foundations. The result would be more than 100 million gallons of spilled oil and other hazardous substances requiring long-term remediation—tenfold worse than the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill, which occurred in a remote part of Alaska. “You could be talking about the worst environmental disaster in U.S. history,” Blackburn says. The experts were still debating among themselves when local Texas governments finally petitioned Congress to step in. When the Army Corps of Engineers began working on the project, the first step was to meet with the experts. Burks-Copes credits MerMonthtk 0000 | SMITHSONIAN 57
the peninsula—it got strong pushback in the form of some 13,000 negative comments. A revised plan later received only about 400 substantive complaints. “I call that a win,” Burks-Copes says. When we toured the coast in April, Burks-Copes talked me through the details of the plan. The easternmost part, she explained, will begin along Bolivar Peninsula. Instead of built structures like sea gates and walls, the corps came up with a different approach: 25 miles of parallel dunes—12 and 14 feet high—separating beachfront homes from the water. “So—big. Really big,” Burks-Copes says. The dunes will be built from sand and sediment that will be dredged from the gulf or local ship channels. This will dramatically change the landscape of this part of the peninsula; homes, which are elevated, will still have a view Ships at sunrise, as seen from East Beach. Residential areas to the west are slated to have the protection of sand dunes, instead of walls, to preserve the natural beauty. THE BRAIN STORMERS of the beach, but the beach will no longer be visible from the road, and pedestrians will have to use wooden platforms and staircases over the dunes to get to the shoreline. Between the dunes, the plan calls for “swales,” shallow channels whose slope will help manage water runoff and create micro-habitats for birds and other wildlife. In front of the dune system, the corps intends to extend the beachfront by 250 feet—actually adding areas for fishing and recreation, BurksCopes points out. A similar dune system and beachfront extension, running for 18 miles, will protect the homes on the western end of Galveston Island. Because the dunes will erode over time, they will need to be rebuilt every six or seven years. At the entrance to the bay itself—in the gap between Galveston Island and Bolivar Peninsula—will stand the project’s most impressive engineering feat: a system of 36 gates. The two main gates, nearest the mouth of Galveston Bay, will each be 650 feet wide—two consecutive football fields apiece—and 58 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 TO P L E F T: AS S O C I AT E D P R ES S / A L A M Y STO C K P H OTO William Merrell (far left), Jim Blackburn (left) and Kelly BurksCopes (bottom) have spent years puzzling out how to protect Galveston. Merrell, at Texas A&M, developed a proposal known as the Ike Dike, while Blackburn, an environmentalist, promotes a nature-based solution. BurksCopes, with the Army Corps of Engineers, has integrated many visions into one ambitious plan.
82 feet tall. Three small islands will be built between Galveston and Bolivar Peninsula to house the gates, which will remain open to ships unless a storm approaches. At that point, the gates will swing shut, fill with water and sink to reach the channel bottom. The gates will be so large that it will take an entire year just to paint each one. Those two main gates will be supplemented by a three-mile earthen levee, a steel-reinforced concrete floodwall, and two other types of gates, including 15 vertical lift gates that will rise from the bay’s muddy bottom like small skyscrapers pulling themselves up for air. Spanning a total of 4,500 feet across, those 15 gates will be suspended above the water’s surface year-round until they drop into the water to block a surge. On Galveston Island itself, the city’s entire commercial district will be surrounded by what’s called a ring barrier system. A series of floodwalls and gates, both on land and in water, will seal the city off and protect it from bayside flooding of up to 14 feet. The north and west parts of the area will see construction of a new floodwall of reinforced concrete. In normal times, dozens of gates along the wall will allow car traffic to pass through. During a storm, these gates will slide or swing shut. (Cars will be able to evacuate using a causeway elevated above the floodwall.) On the gulf side, additions to the existing seawall will create a uniform barrier 21 feet tall. (The city is also building new pumping stations in areas that frequently flood, HABITATS WILL BE DESTROYED WHEN THE OCEAN FLOOR IS DREDGED TO BUILD THE GATES. though the pumps are outside the scope of the corps’ work.) There are still questions about how the whole system will click into action when a storm hits. But Burks-Copes offers a rough idea. She points toward a shrubby spot on one of east Galveston’s banks. There, she says, the corps plans to build one of several centers where operators will constantly gather July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 59
data on incoming severe weather patterns. As soon as a storm hits the gulf’s warm waters—several days before a potential landfall in the area—the operations centers will send out alerts and trigger a series of responses. First, ships in Galveston Bay will begin to evacuate as many as 48 hours before a storm makes landfall. That’s partly be- Burks-Copes estimates that it will take seven years for engineers to finish designing the gate system. Then it will take at least 12 years to construct the gates, according to the project’s feasibility report. “That sounds enormously long,” she admits. “I get it, because I’m not an engineer, and the first time I heard it, I thought it was pretty long.” For perspective, though, storm prevention systems in Italy, the Netherlands and Russia required about 30 to 50 years to plan and build. “So, this is a very aggressive schedule.” Burks-Copes adds that while the gates are being designed, the corps can get started on other features of the plan. “We won’t be waiting seven years to put something in the ground. We’ll be working on things like beaches and dunes and ecosystem restoration all the way down the coast.” Of course, construction of any part of the plan can’t begin until funding comes through. Many restless Texans were encouraged in July 2022 after the U.S. Senate authorized the plan. In May 2024, the federal government allocated the first funds for the project—though that amount was only $500,000 out of the $22.1 billion it’s ultimately expected to cover. But locals are encouraged by that small first step. “IT’S GOING TO CAUSE AN ESCALATION OF PRICES EVERYWHERE OUT THERE IN THE WORLD.” cause of the complex process of timing the shuttering of 36 gates, Burks-Copes explains. Then the closing will begin. “We have to sequence the closing, because every time you close a gate, water gets constrained into smaller places,” she says, which could create its own damaging sloshing effect. The largest gates will require about an hour apiece to close. 60 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
The East End Lagoon Nature Preserve covers 685 acres on Galveston Island. The new plan would extend beachfront to the west by 200 feet, adding more natural habitat and recreation areas. do nothing,” Burks-Copes says. The damages from Hurricane Ike, for example, came out to an estimated $30 billion. The combined cost in Texas and Louisiana for Hurricane Harvey, in 2017, is estimated at $125 billion. Hurricane Ian, which hit southwest Florida and the Carolinas in 2022, cost an estimated $112.9 billion. “If you get this in place,” she says of the Galveston barrier project, “it’s paid for in one storm.” Some environmentalists remain worried about the impact of the project, especially the gates, which are projected to reduce the flow of seawater in and out of the estuary by up to 10 percent. This could make the water less salty, which would affect animal and plant life. Habitats along the bottom of the ocean will also be destroyed when construction workers dredge the ocean floor to build the gates. Even the color of sand chosen for the dunes is in question due to the habitat of endangered sea turtles, whose hatchlings’ sex is determined by the sand’s temperature. If the sand’s temperature gets above 88 degrees Fahrenheit, the hatchlings all tend to come out female. The darker the sand, the hotter it gets. If the conditions aren’t right, the turtles may choose not to nest there. Blackburn points to the Netherlands’ Delta Works system as a cautionary tale for how ambitious engineering projects can cause unforeseen environmental issues. The project succeeded in its flood-prevention mission, but in the more than two decades since its completion, A fishing boat at Galveston Bay, among the most productive commercial seafood areas in Texas. Water flow is crucial for keeping fish safe to eat. Nicole Sunstrum, executive director for the Gulf Coast Protection District—a body created by the Texas Legislature in 2021—said her group is “very excited that an initial allotment has been made.” The funding will help the project move from the planning phase into the construction phase, where, she said, it will be eligible for much bigger allocations. “It can take time for authorized projects to be funded, particularly when they are this large,” she noted. “Overall, the response to the project and its merits is very positive—largely because of the human life and supplychain protections it affords.” Burks-Copes points out that even the substantial cost of the project is dwarfed by the inevitable costs of being unprepared for the next storm, and the one after that. At the end of May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted that the coming hurricane season might be the worst in two decades, producing 17 to 25 tropical storms in the Atlantic. About half of those are expected to become hurricanes. “It’s getting more and more expensive to July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 61
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marine scientists have found that the ecosystems in at least three areas were damaged. Sedimentation patterns shifted in some places. Coastal erosion increased in others. “There were heavy environmental consequences, at a time when environment didn’t count. It just wasn’t in the equation back when those structures were built,” Blackburn tells me. “It is today.” Of course, the continued health, if not the very existence, of almost all of the Texas coast’s species would be even worse off if a major oil spill occurred in the area as a result of a major storm, like Ike, which narrowly missed the Houston Ship Channel when it made landfall on Galveston Island. In 2008, when Ike rolled in, Refineries seen from the Galveston-Port Bolivar Ferry. During Hurricane Ike, at least half a million gallons of oil spilled into the water. I was in my rural Texas hometown in Jasper County, about 100 miles northeast of Galveston Bay, watching the winds bend and break a towering expanse of pine trees surrounding my family’s property. I still remember being unable to distinguish between the thunderclaps and the violent snaps of tree trunks. Days later, my father and godfather talked our county’s radio station into giving them press passes that allowed them to venture onto Bolivar Peninsula before it reopened to the public. We wanted proof that our modest vacation home and my godfather’s permanent home were gone. They wore vintage fedoras, and my dad carried his 1970s Nikon camera. Law enforcement rolled their eyes and let them pass, telling them they were on their own after dark. Despite damage to both, our homes still stood—unlike those on much of the rest of the peninsula. I spent time there in the coming weeks and months to help clean up the mess Ike had left. The smell of those days has never left me. The rot within refrigerators that were thrown about the landscape, the constant waft of soggy belongings. The putrid stench of cattle carcasses. The locals who’d permanently left, or who’d stayed but gone missing after the water licked at their homes until they collapsed beneath them. I remember an excess of rodents and snakes scuttling about the area. Over the years, I’ve traded stories with friends who lived through similar experiences, especially those based in New Orleans who made it out ahead of Hurricane Katrina’s landfall in 2005, when horrified Americans watched the levee failures that killed nearly 1,400 people, displaced a million and caused roughly $125 billion in damages. C O N T I N U E D O N PAG E 118 July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 63
photog raphs by KARABO MOOKI text by R YA N L E N O R A B R O W N 64 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
I N S O U T H A F R I CA , A N U N LI K E LY CHAMPION OFFERS LES SON S IN RIDING AND IN LIFE Enos Mafokate, one of South Africa’s first Black show jumpers, sits in the tack room (a repurposed shipping container) at the equestrian center he founded in the township of Soweto. July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 65

Enos Mafokate was 16 when a punch in the face changed the course of his life. Wearing his national title show jumping jacket, Mafokate checks the reins before mounting his horse at a local competition in the township. It was 1960, and he was delivering milk for a dairy farm north of Johannesburg. It was the height of apartheid, and he knew the rules: He was to call his white employer baas—or boss—and the man’s teenage daughter kleinmiesies—the small madam. But sometimes, when the boss wasn’t around, he called the girl by her first name. One day, he accidentally did it within earshot of her father. Before Mafokate even saw it coming, his boss’s meaty fist collided with his face. “His one hand was as big as two of mine,” Mafokate remembers. One of Mafokate’s bright blue eyes swelled shut. While the girl sobbed, her father guiltily loaded him into his pickup truck and took him to a nearby clinic. Mafokate snuck out the back door and never went back to the job. “If that punch never happened, I wouldn’t be here today,” says Mafokate, 80. He found his next gig caring for horses at a local stable, and from there he became one of South Africa’s first Black professional show jumpers. His decorated career, which included major show jumping victories in South Africa and the United Kingdom, spanned the final two decades of apartheid, a time when seeing a Black man dominate an old money colonial sport had a symbolism that extended far beyond sports. “He tells us his stories when we need courage,” says Naledy Dlamini, 19, a student at Soweto Equestrian Center, the riding school Mafokate founded in 2007. She has been riding here since she was 8 years old, and like other students of Mafokate’s, she calls him ntate, the term for father in his native Sesotho. “He opened the way for us,” she says. July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 67
M A F O K AT E WA N T S H I S S T U D E N T S T O D E V E L O P L A S T I N G R E L AT I O N S H I P S WITH THE HORS ES IN THEIR CARE. Hemmed in by a tidy suburb of orange brick houses peeking over concrete fences, Mafokate’s riding school was the first in Soweto, a township of two million people south of Johannesburg. The township was originally built in the 1930s to house the Black laborers needed by the “white” city to the north, and it still bears the scars of its brutal neglect, with far fewer parks and other public spaces for leisure than historically white neighborhoods. In that context, the Soweto Equestrian Center is an unusual escape. On a recent autumn morning, bass vibrated from an old BMW parked near the riding school, where a group of men were passing around sweating bottles of beer. Inside the school’s fence, meanwhile, about a dozen horses and two squat Shetland ponies grazed in a field as Mafokate gathered a group of students for a riding lesson. His teaching style is often gruff and direct. “If you make a mistake, it’s over, you’ll see flames,” said Skylar Sultan, 10. But “when he’s proud of you, you feel like you can do anything you want.” Many of Mafokate’s students cannot afford to pay for 68 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 their lessons, but he rarely turns anyone away. “There is a saying in Sesotho,” Mafokate told me as a Shetland pony named Strawberry gobbled a carrot from his hand. “‘Whether or not you are leading at the beginning of the race, it doesn’t define how the race will end.’” Mafokate was born in 1944, in Alexandra, a township about 20 miles north of where his school now sits. For much of his childhood, he lived on a nearby farm, where he rode his family’s donkey, Dapper, to herd cattle. Sometimes, he was secretly joined by a white boy from the other side of the farm, who shared sandwiches stuffed with pink lunch meat, and who let Mafokate ride his pony. Eventually, he says, they got caught, and Mafokate’s parents warned him to stay away. “If that boy ever falls and gets hurt, you’ll go to jail,” he remembers them saying. Later, when Mafokate went to work as a stable hand, or groom, it was more of the same. Black grooms were the lifeblood of South African stables, caring for the horses and keeping them fit. But no matter how skilled the grooms were as riders, they were never allowed to compete themselves. Skylar Sultan gives a horse a final going-over. From the very beginning, students are taught the fundamentals of horse care, from proper handling to grooming and tacking up. Mafokate chats with a local BMX rider, who playfully circles him and shows off his stunts, on an afternoon ride through the streets of Soweto. Tshepo Masemola, a trainer at the center, demonstrates a vaulting exercise atop an old oil drum that’s been converted into a makeshift practice horse.

Sultan works on her riding position in a lesson. Like many young riders, she loves to jump. It’s exciting, she says. “A feeling you can’t explain.” “ WE C O U LD N’T S EE HOW BAD THING S WERE [IN SO UTH AFRICA ] B ECAU S E WE G R E W U P W I T H A P A R T H E I D .” 70 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 For trainers Masemola, far left, and Clifford Lekgau, presentation and the health of the horse are paramount. Here, they put the finishing touches on Mafokate’s horse before he enters the ring.
By the mid-1970s, however, the reins were loosening. Some equestrian clubs and competitions began to allow Black riders, and Mafokate charged in. His early successes drew the attention of a Welsh show jumping champion named David Broome, who saw Mafokate compete at a show in Cape Town in the late 1970s. In 1980, he invited Mafokate to compete in Britain, the first South African to do so in two decades. “We couldn’t see how bad things were [in South Africa] because we grew up with apartheid,” Mafokate remembers of that first trip. But England felt like a parallel universe. Riding was a lily-white sport there, too, but there wasn’t the same kind of ceiling on what was possible for a Black man. When his name was called in competition, tens of thousands of mostly white fans roared in applause. A British rider he knew in South Africa arranged for him to have dinner with members of the royal family, “I’m in another life,” he remembers thinking. “The world is another thing.” No matter how great his professional success, however, most of apartheid’s rules didn’t bend. Sitting in his office today, he traces a rubbery scar across his left forearm. In 1983, by which time he was already a decorated show jumper, a horse at a farm in Johannesburg kicked Mafokate, slicing his arm deep to the bone. But when a colleague drove him to a clinic, they turned him away because he was Black. Mafokate says he never wanted his professional struggle, or his accomplishments, turned into a political symbol. He competed at a time when most South African athletes—by choice or by force—were barred from international competitions because of apartheid. “I’m not here for politics, I’m here for the horses,” Mafokate used to say to anyone who asked. He largely retired from competition in the late 1980s and worked a series of jobs caring for rescue horses in Soweto as he and his wife raised their seven children. In his free time, he taught riding in whatever patches of open space he could find in the township. One was beside a garbage dump. He Masemola’s dedication to the school and the horses, rising at 5 each morning to feed them and turn them out, has earned him the position of head trainer. BYLINES South African photographer Karabo Mooki focuses on bringing underrepresented faces to the fore. Ryan Lenora Brown is a journalist based in Johannesburg. This is her first article for Smithsonian. July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 71
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Years of riding under Mafokate have paid off for Naledy Dlamini, who now competes at the national level. She says she hopes her success will inspire other Black women to take up the sport. One of Mafokate’s aims when he founded the equestrian center was to open up the elite world of riding to people who otherwise would never have a chance to participate in the sport. nursed a dream of opening a stable of his own. In the mid-2000s, the city of Johannesburg gave him a parcel of soggy grassland. He drained it and brought his herd of misfit rescue horses to stay. Today, the school has dozens of students from Soweto and across Johannesburg, who learn not only how to ride but also to groom, feed, wash and tack the horses as well. He says he wants his students to develop lasting relationships with the horses in their care and to see them as their teammates and friends. “Mukhulu says if you fall off the horse, it’s not your fault”—or the horse’s, explained Amogelang Kunene, 10, using another term of respect by which Mafokate is often called. “It’s just a miscommunication.” On Curious neighborhood children at Mafokate’s riding center. “He’s put his heart, blood, and sweat into this sport,” says grandson and show jumper Kabelo Mafokate. a recent Sunday morning, she was among a group of his students who traveled to a suburban stable for an informal show jumping competition. As in Mafokate’s day, nearly all of the other riders were white. But unlike then, no one batted an eye at his students’ presence. “Jumping is exciting—when you’re in the air you feel like you’re somewhere else,” said Skylar after she finished her event. “It’s a feeling you can’t explain. People who don’t ride horses don’t understand.” Mafokate says this is what he always wanted—for riding to fling the world open wide for his students. “I’ve had this thing in my blood since I was a child,” he says. “My purpose is to help a Black child in the township, and to leave something for them.” July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 73
Plight of the Bumblebee As numbers of these key pollinators decline, conservationists are eyeing new federal protections for one vulnerable species are magnets for pollen. Inside flowers, they often “slip, almost fall and somersault,” says conservation biologist Leif Richardson of the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, an international nonprofit. “They make a huge mess and get pollen all over themselves, which makes them effective pollinators for plants,” Richardson says. Being relatively big and covered in black-andyellow fuzz allows the world’s roughly 250 bumblebee species to withstand more frigid temperatures than honeybees, which are generally daintier and less hairy, and are not native to North America. This makes bumblebees key pollinators in colder, higher-elevation regions such as the Sierra Nevada, the Cascades and the Rocky Mountains of North America. Bumblebees also best honeybees as pollinators for the 6 percent of flowering plants, including blueberries, bell peppers, eggplants and tomatoes, that hide their pollen in tube-shaped structures called anthers. Such flowers require buzz pollination, when bumblebees use their flight muscles to vibrate their bodies, shaking loose a shower of pollen. Despite their ecological importance, however, more than a quarter of North America’s nearly 50 bumblebee species face some risk of extinction. The Morrison bumblebee, for example, has declined in relative abundance by 74 percent in the last decade. This large, egg-yolk-yellow denizen of the sagebrush steppe inhabits 14 states in the American Intermountain West, but recent surveys have recorded the bee in just a third of the areas it has historically photograph by occupied. Threats to this species echo those faced by other bumblebees: pesticide use; increased drought Clay Bolt due to climate change; habitat loss and degradation from cattle grazing and agriculture; and, not least, competition from the billions of managed European honeybees trucked around the United States to pollinate crops like almonds. Managed bees hurt native pollinators not only by eating up the landscape’s limited supply of nectar and pollen, but also by spreading parasites and disease. “When you pile those factors on top of each other, you put this species at a real disadvantage for survival,” says Jamie Strange, an entomologist at Ohio State University. Last year, Richardson and his colleagues filed a petition with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to list Morrison bumblebees under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. Granting the bee federal protection would mobilize government funding, create a flood of research attention and require the creation of a recovery plan to guide its conservation. This summer, the Xerces Society is also expanding its Bumble Bee Atlas project—which organizes citizen scientists to gather data on local bumblebees through surveys—from 15 to 20 states. Rich Hatfield, the Xerces Society’s lead bumblebee conservation biologist, says the expansion will deliver key information on how the bees are faring over the next three years. Residents in those states looking to help native pollinators can join their local Bumble Bee Atlas chapter or fill their gardens with native flowers such as thistles, milkweed, sunflowers and rabbitbrush to provide more food to these busy bees. – A L E X F O X B U M B L E B E E S’ R O U N D, H A I RY B O D I E S 74 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
HEROES OF THE WILD The male Morrison bumblebee relies on its enlarged compound eyes to spot—and then pursue—desirable queens to mate with. July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 75
THOMAS JEFFERSON IMAGINED IT AS THE HEART OF HIS “empire of liberty.” HOW AMERICA LAID CLAIM TO THE MIGHTY RIVER Louisiana Purchase State Park in Holly Grove, Arkansas, lies on the spot where the land surveys of the new territories originated. 76 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
MAPPI NG the MIS S ISS I P P I by BOYCE U P H O LT photographs by AS H L E I G H COLEMAN July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 77
n October 27, 1815, Prospect Robbins arrived by boat at the point in the alluvial swamps where the Arkansas and Mississippi rivers meet. He planted a post in the ground to mark his arrival, and then, along with his team, he began to trek into the muck. 78 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 A boot on one of the muddy backroads along the river, outside Natchez, Mississippi. The city is named for the Indigenous group that’s native to the area. An 1863 map shows the junction of the Mississippi and Arkansas rivers, where the land survey began. The names of the early towns reflect the land's natural features and its earlier inhabitants. LO C On the same day, a second man, Joseph Brown, embarked with a separate team at another confluence: the mouth of the St. Francis River. Both surveyors were veterans—Brown a captain, Robbins a lieutenant—of an army that a few months earlier had been fending off a British invasion. Now, they were official emissaries of the United States government: here not just to scout the landscape but also to lay upon it a perfect rectilinear grid. Decades earlier, Thomas Jefferson had formed a vision for new territory west of the Appalachian Mountains: It would fuel the creation of an “empire for liberty.” He first used a version of this phrase during the Revolutionary War, in a 1780 letter that urged George Rogers Clark, a surveyor turned soldier, to head north to wrest more land from the British. The frontiersman proved unable to muster sufficient recruits for an expedition, but Jefferson never dropped the idea. After the Treaty of Paris, which ended the Revolutionary War in 1783, Britain ceded more territory that doubled the size of the U.S. Along with the original 13 colonies, the new country now included territory that stretched all the way to the Mississippi River, to the western edges of what would become Wisconsin, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee and the northern part of Mississippi. These new lands offered the space that Jefferson needed to establish an empire of landed farmers—“cultivators,” as he called them, or “husbandmen.” Jefferson did not want the soot-stained, over-mobbed cities that were growing like “sores” on the body of Europe. Nor was untamed nature a suitable fit for the new nation. He hoped the Mississippi watershed would be converted to a garden—or a collection of gardens, spreading across the landscape like a quilt. Private property would be everywhere. The only shared resource he spoke of was the river itself, the highway into his promised land. In the Land Ordinance of 1785, Jefferson came up with a plan for parceling out the new territory: Lay out a perfect grid of townships, each covering 36 square miles, which could be broken into 640-acre sections, then split again into 160-acre quarter sections. Rather than allow an unorganized tumble of men to pick lots on their whim, the whole empire would be cataloged, then sold at auctions in land offices established across the territories. With the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, this massive effort spread into the western watershed,
A waterfall by the Natchez Trace, a Native pathway that colonial traders used to walk home after selling their goods down the river in New Orleans.
through the 530 million new acres of land on the western side of the Mississippi River. And Robbins and Brown were instructed to establish the “initial point” for the era to come. They would cross the landscape at a right angle, with Robbins headed north, Brown headed west. The coordinates of every parcel within the new territories would be measured in reference to the spot where their lines intersected—the beginning, then, from which the river’s great wilderness would be tamed into a map. Mike Fink, an early 19thcentury riverboatman immortalized in ballads and legends. His drinking, brawling, bullying persona represented a common stereotype of life on the Mississippi. BROWN AND ROBBINS assembled teams of men to Should anyone object and “take up the hatchet,” as Jefferson put it, the president was clear: The attackers should be crushed. 80 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 When the French set up a fort in 1716 in Natchez, marked on this map, they brought enslaved Bambara people—West Africans who had previously lived around the Niger River. P U B L I C D O M A I N ; LO C serve as chainmen and axmen and markers. They were instructed by their superiors to leave late in the year, so as to avoid the “inundations, the undergrowth, weeds and flies of various descriptions.” (“No mortal man could take the woods before October,” one official added.) They slept in tents and lugged drinking water in pails. These frontiersmen knew how to hunt in these forests, what gear to carry, how to create quick shelter. But don’t picture grizzled mountaineers in stinking buffalo robes. These men were well educated—the polite, churchgoing neighbors down the block. Robbins was a former schoolteacher. It’s just that in this era, in this place, you needed to be hardy to make something of yourself. As they trudged through the Arkansas swamps, they lugged chains to measure their progress, marking their passage at half-mile intervals, typically by driving stakes into the muddy ground. At the end of each mile, they selected some stout trunk and carved a mark to make a “witness tree,” the corner of a new future parcel. On November 10, after two weeks in the wet forests—plodding forward just four miles on average each day—Robbins must have spied some sign of Brown’s passage. He slashed two trees, indicating the point where the two lines crossed. The initial point was set. Robbins wrapped up his assignment two months later, hundreds of miles north, on the banks of the Missouri River in the Ozark hills. Brown traveled on across the flood plain to reach the Arkansas River. But in all of the states that would emerge from the Louisiana Purchase, as far away as Montana and Minnesota, parcels would be oriented around these trees. Not that the initial point had much to recommend itself. Brown described the terrain around the site as “low,” featuring “cypress and briers and thickets in abundance.” He seemed unimpressed, repeatedly describing this flood plain territory as second-rate land. Robbins, too, had his doubts: When his former general offered him a patch of the Arkansas flood plain as “war bounty,” the surveyor declined, figuring it would be too much work to wring out a profit. No one else was much impressed, either: More than 100 years later, no village had been built along his route. In the 1920s, a new group of surveyors arrived, in an attempt to clarify the local county boundaries. As they hacked through the overgrowth, they noticed Robbins’ slashed trees—and realized what they’d found. The locals decided to preserve this place, so today it remains a tiny island of swamp amid a sur-
rounding sea of soybeans, a little-visited state park. A boardwalk allows visitors to navigate across the wet soils to the place where, according to an official placard, “the settlement of the American West began.” Massachusetts, might have balked at the idea that he was only just reaching the west. Even Pittsburgh was considered part of the “western waters,” the jumping-off point for many journeyers headed downstream. There in Pittsburgh, in 1801, the savvy printer and bookbinder Zadok Cramer had published the first edition of his great success, The Navigator—a mile-by-mile guide to the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. Updated roughly every other year with data gleaned from letters sent east by settlers, Cramer’s book provides a portrait of the watershed in these first, not quite PROSPECT ROBBINS, BORN IN The Mark Twain Guesthouse at the 200-yearold Under-theHill Saloon in Natchez. An 1816 traveler wrote that the saloon was “the most licentious spot that I ever saw.” Adapted from The Great River: The Making and Unmaking of the Mississippi by Boyce Upholt. Copyright © 2024 by Boyce Upholt. With permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. fully American years. “This noble and celebrated stream,” Cramer wrote of the Mississippi, “this Nile of North America, commands the wonder of the old world, while it attracts the admiration of the new.” A contemporary river traveler, accustomed to a deep and wide ribbon of water, may find it hard to envision the cluttered waterways that Cramer describes. The debris began at the Mississippi’s mouth, where shoals blocked the three forking passes that lead out into the Gulf of Mexico. Colonial pilots would unload their cargo onto smaller longboats so it could be carried 100 miles upstream to New Orleans, to avoid getting stuck in the mud. The debris continued up every tributary. Sandbars and rock bars and gravel bars could be broken down into a full taxonomy describing their size and shape and orientation: chains and traps, riffles and reefs. The largest hazards earned names all their own, which combine to make a rough American poetry. Big Bone. Pig’s Eye. Glass House. Scuffletown. Where the rivers wound through softer soils, the banks crumbled easily. Whole trees—ancient, massive sentinels that might weigh as much as 60 tons—shed into the water, sometimes hundreds at a time. The sound, according to a later federal report, resembled “the distant roar of artillery.” Once in the channel, the roots grew matted with dirt and cobblestones and implanted in the river-bottom mud. The resulting hazards were known as snags, and they, too, inspired a full lexicon. “Planters” sat immobile. “Sawyers” bobbed in the current. “Sleepers” lay entirely beneath the water. “Wooden islands” were thick masses of driftwood that had gathered into a nearly solid whole. All of these obstacles could be deadly. As many as a quarter of all flatboats wrecked en route to New Orleans. Among Cramer’s “instructions and precautions,” he emphasized the importance of selecting a quality vessel, especially if you hoped to make it down the whole of the Mississippi. He recommended a certain vessel in particular: a large wooden raft, typically somewhere around 60 feet by 15 feet, with a wooden box on top that served as makeshift quarters. The raft was known by many names—ark, broadhorn—but the term that stuck was Kentucky flatboat, in honor of the place where so many trips began. Some dangers could not be solved by picking the right boat: “counterfeiters, horse thieves, robbers, murderers, etc.,” as Cramer put it. So many stories were spun that it’s hard to distinguish truth from fiction. Cave-in-Rock, a riverside cavern near the mouth of the Ohio River, became a focus of blood-soaked tales. Here crews of hardened criminals were supposed July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 81
to have enticed travelers with decoys—attractive female compatriots who asked for a ride south, or a sign that advertised “Wilson’s Liquor Vault and House for Entertainment.” The victims were said to be murdered, their cargo hauled downstream for sale by the pirates. For all these tales, Cave-in-Rock was actually a regular stopping point for river travelers, something like a curiosity or tourist attraction, rather than a dangerous cavern to be avoided. Indigenous warriors viewed the flatboats as part of an imperial invasion, enemies they needed to stop if they wanted to hold their homelands. It’s often overlooked that what Jefferson purchased in Louisiana was not the land itself, which the French had not yet fully acquired, but rather the right to negotiate for the land. With the exception of a few tracts recently acquired from the Choctaw and the Kaskaskia, the United States could not claim even the territory along the Mississippi’s east bank. In a letter to William Henry Harrison (then the governor of the Indiana Territory) on the eve of the purchase, Jefferson had laid out his preferred strategy for getting the rest. White Americans should encircle tribal villages with settlement, he said, choking off hunting lands and thereby forcing the Indigenous people to depend on agriculture. Then the government could establish trade with Indigenous leaders and “be glad to see the good and influential individuals among them run in debt.” These measures would drive the Indigenous people to sell some land, Jefferson figured. And should anyone object and “take up the hatchet,” as Jefferson put it, the president was clear: The attackers should be crushed. In 1804, just months after Louisiana changed hands, a group of Sauk hunters took up the hatchet: They killed three settlers along the Cuivre River, in the Ozark foothills, northwest of St. Louis. A few chiefs attended a conference with Harrison. There are no records of what transpired at the meeting, but the United States emerged with a new claim to 51 million acres of land in Illinois, Missouri and Wisconsin. Some was not the Sauks’ to sell. One hypothesis is that the Sauk thought the treaty was a symbolic gesture, an acknowledgment that now the United States, and not Britain, would be the imperial presence looming over their lives. The text indicated that the tribe would be permitted to hunt on the land for as long as it belonged to the United States. Perhaps the Sauk did not yet realize that the U.S. government itself did not plan to keep the land. Instead, it would sell it to private citizens to build Jefferson’s empire. JEFFERSON SAW IT as a “law of nature” that any- one who lived along the banks of a river ought to be allowed to travel its length. This was, after all, a far easier voyage than lugging crops over the mountains 82 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 to Philadelphia or New York, and the flatboat rush had commenced decades before Louisiana changed hands. In the early 19th century, hundreds of flatboats traveled down the Mississippi annually, carrying the goods of a young nation: pine planks, pork, flour, whiskey and tobacco; hemp and rope and sacks; cattle and horses; cotton, animal pelts and lead; cutlery, ears of corn, and barrels of apples and potatoes and cider and dried fruit. Theirs was a long voyage, five or six weeks of drifting atop an ever-changing river. Near Pittsburgh, the upper Ohio was transparent, revealing boulders below in its channel. Then after a few hundred miles, the terrain flattened; mud thickened the water, until it was a torrent of half-milk coffee. Even the fish in these waters seemed ungodly: Catfish could weigh 100 pounds. On some nights, they slammed against the boats so loudly that it was hard to sleep. When travelers reached the Mississippi River, they faced a choice. Those interested in acquiring furs might head north, past old French villages, to reach St. Louis. Established as a trading post in 1764, the town had grown into a frontier crossroads, 200 homes perched atop the bluff where the Missouri and the Mississippi meet. The bulk of the traffic headed south, into a valley that was flat and wet—and mostly empty for the next few hundred miles. Finally, the delta plantations would appear. A 19th-century illustration of a longboat on the Mississippi. Farmers used the waterway to transport livestock between north and south. RISING WATERS Drowned trees and erosion at Loess Bluff on the Old Natchez Trace. The river has been especially prone to flooding over the last century, partly because engineering has straightened its path and quickened its flow.
July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 83 ALAMY Those who made it safely to New Orleans sold their wares, then sold the warped wood from their flatboats as scrap. (Often the planks were laid atop the city mud to make a sidewalk.) The crews walked home overland, often following a set of Indigenous trails known as the Natchez Trace, traveling in packs of 20 or more to avoid being robbed. If a farmer bought anything bulky with his profits, it would have to be sent north by keelboat—a long and narrow vessel with a pointed bow and stern, which at the time was the only way to carry substantial cargo against the current. Typically 60 feet long and 8 feet wide, capable of bearing 40 tons, the keelboat was specially designed for the western rivers. Still, an upstream trip would require the muscle of at least ten men. If a keelboat crew were lucky, they could unfurl the sails to exploit a favorable wind. Otherwise, the work was wearying. Sometimes the boat’s best swimmer
would head to shore with a rope clamped in his teeth. The rope was attached to the mast, and the swimmer tied the loose end to a tree; then the crew dragged the boat forward, one thousand-foot rope length at a time. During floods and high water, keelboat crews grabbed at brush and branches along the shore so they could drag the boat forward. Typically, though, the men jammed spears into the mud at the riverbottom, and then, bracing their shoulders against a crutch at the top of the pole, walked forward on the narrow planks that lined each side of the boat. When a boatman reached the front of the line, he pulled his spear free, then hopped atop the cargo box at the boat’s center to sprint to the back of the line and start again. The keelboats hugged the inner bends of the river’s curves, where the water was slower, though this meant an arduous crossing after each bend ended and the next began. Often, a keelboat could manage just two crossings a day, for a total of 15 or 20 miles; afterward, their shirts bloodied, their shoulders callused, the men were rewarded with a fillee—a cup of whiskey chased by a cup of river water. These men lived a life that was, according to one traveling preacher, “in turn extremely indolent, and extremely laborious.” The indolent moments sound pleasant enough. When the boats were moored, a fiddle was always playing. The music led to dancing and drinking—which led to cussing and fighting, in legendarily elaborate fashion. On a voyage in 1808, a traveler named Christian Schultz descended to the squalid neighborhood at the foot of the Natchez bluffs, known for its flophouses and gambling dens, and found himself captivated by a handful of boatmen caught in a dispute. “I am a man; I am a horse,” one of the drunken men hollered. “I am a team. I can whip any man in all Kentucky, by God.” The other upped the ante: “I am an alligator,” he said. “Half man, half horse; can whip any on the Mississippi by God.” The men went at it “like two bulls,” Schultz wrote, “and continued for half an hour, when the alligator was fairly vanquished by the horse.” The image of the boasting boatman became a literary trope, and one boatman emerged as a particular source of fascination. Mike Fink was a real man, but the stories about him are exaggerated. He’s made to sound like a hunk in a romance novel—heavily muscled, symmetrically proportioned, so frequently shirtless that his skin had darkened. He was sometimes mistaken for an Indigenous war84 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Emerald Mound, the second-largest ceremonial mound in the United States. The Natchez built this ceremonial site between 1300 and 1600. A church in the Mississippi Delta. The riverside region was once home to large cotton plantations. Many descendants of enslaved workers live there today. A display at the Arkansas Post Museum features items unearthed from nearby Native sites, including a bowl from the Toltec Mounds. BYLINES Boyce Upholt is the author of The Great River: The Making and Unmaking of the Mississippi, from which this piece is adapted. Ashleigh Coleman is a Mississippi-based photographer who documents Southern culture. rior. He was a crack shot and a “helliferocious fellow,” as one story put it, “and there ain’t a boatman on the river, to this day, but what strives to imitate him.” An influential account of Fink was published in 1828 by Morgan Neville, who was later deemed by one scholar to be “the first notable writer of fiction to be born west of the Alleghenies.” Neville, a Pittsburgher himself, was likely honest in his claims that he crossed paths with the legendary frontiersman. Neville suggests that Fink got his start as a scout in the upper Ohio River watershed, living “as did the Indian,” spending weeks alone in the woods, eating parched corn instead of bread. He slept under the stars, rolled in a blanket. Such scouts served as the advance forces for white conquest, monitoring Indigenous warriors, ready to warn nearby settlements of any hostile approach. But the scouts themselves were often the aggressors. In a telling anecdote, Neville suggests Fink shot an Indigenous hunter for the simple offense of stalking a buck that Fink hoped to kill. In 1795, after 99 chiefs signed a treaty that opened Ohio to white settlers, the scouts were out of business. By then, apparently, Fink’s lifestyle had left him unsuited to a settled home, so he committed to a life on the river. Fink served as a fitting emblem for an era—an aspirational idea for thousands of young men, some just farm boys chafing under the glare of their fathers, feeling drawn to the motion of the river. THE AMERICAN CLAIM to the watershed had a haunt- ing backstory. Napoleon had planned to grow food along the Mississippi, which would feed the workers on his Haitian sugar plantations. The Haitian slaves revolted, successfully, from 1791 to 1804, but Napoleon
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one eulogy as the embodiment of “the had hopes of recovering the island. Once true spirit of his nation.” Technically, it became clear that he wouldn’t, his Louthat spirit had been forged east of the isiana farms became moot. Now, with the mountains, where Jackson’s father, an land in American hands, more and more immigrant from Ireland, had worked enslaved laborers were arriving on the himself to death trying to eke a living riverside farms—raising worries that they out of a Carolina farm. After his family’s would revolt as well. home was captured during the RevoluSo when in early 1811 an army of Black tion, 14-year-old Jackson refused to poland Creole men arose along the Missisish a British officer’s shoes. This act of sippi River, 30 miles upstream of New resistance earned him a sword-slashed Orleans, white Americans saw this as scar on his head and hand. Thereafa nightmare coming true. Armed with ter, it seems, any slight toward Jackson machetes and pitchforks, these fighters sparked furious indignation. seized a cache of muskets, then burned Jackson went on to join the river trade, down a mansion. They had likely gathwhere he carted swan skins, feathers, ered in the swamps behind the plantation pork and beef—and notably, enslaved to plan this attack. The rebels waved banhumans—as far south as Natchez. Evenners and marched to a drumbeat, sacking tually he established a business empire plantations as they descended on the city, in Nashville, along the Cumberland Rivrecruiting more soldiers at every stop. In Watery ground at the Arkansas site where French offi cer Henri de Tonti er, that included a tavern, a racetrack their wake, they created a zone, 30 miles created the first permanent European and, since some of his customers paid in long, where emancipation became, if not settlement in the Lower Mississippi Valley. bartered goods, a trading depot to carry the law, then the fact on the ground. the wares downstream to market. He entered politics, too, and The response was swift and strong: Within a few days, the U.S. Army, working in concert with a local militia, routed the in 1812 was prominent enough to be put in charge of the louprising. One participant called it “une grande carnage.” The cal militia. He declared to his troops that their greatest duty severed heads of rebels were placed atop pikes along River as westerners would be to defend their mother river against Road, a reminder, to anyone else contemplating freedom, invasion. Three years later, with that invasion imminent, he marched his volunteers into New Orleans. about who was in charge. Jackson’s men were mostly the hardscrabble sort who’d esEven before the War of 1812 began, conflict was well underway in the increasingly dense settlements along the Ohio tablished farms along the western rivers—the flatboaters, in River. Many Indigenous people, subscribing to the theory that other words. In New Orleans, they were joined by French-dethe enemy of my enemy is my friend, had allied with the Brit- scended pirates, Choctaw warriors and free men of color. This ish crown. Two Shawnee brothers set up the headquarters for motley assembly—“perhaps the most racially varied ‘Amera burgeoning anti-American movement in the unconquered ican’ military force ever,” according to scholar Thomas Ruys territory along the Wabash River. Late in 1811 a frontier militia Smith—routed the royal army. The Brits were perhaps too well trained: As they streamed across a fallow field of sugarcane just led by William Henry Harrison burned the village. The next year, when Congress made this a proper war, the downstream of the city, they refused to abandon their orderly legendary Sauk warrior Black Hawk knew which side to join. lines—even as they were met by a constant barrage of musket Along with a battalion of Sauk and Winnebago soldiers, he fire. A quarter of the 8,000 British soldiers suffered casualties, took part in a British attack on a small American fort. Two compared with fewer than 100 on the American side. For the Americans, the Battle of New Orleans was a triumph years later, when the U.S. Army sent a fleet upstream with plans to demolish the great Sauk village, a group of 1,000 war- after years of chaos and loss—enough of a triumph, apparently, to finally settle the issue of who owned the river at the conriors drove back the boats. To the west, traders were reporting that the rivers throughout the Missouri Valley were “shut tinent’s heart. The massive British death toll was extolled in against” the Americans, too. Despite the Louisiana Purchase, newspaper poetry, and within a few years the date of the battle, January 8, was named an American holiday. When Andrew then, the watershed could hardly be called American land. In January 1815, the British decided to seize New Orleans. Jackson ran for president, 13 years after his victory, he chose as a campaign song an old ballad that celebrated the battle. The U.S. forces were led by a lean and angry soldier named By then, the British had abandoned their Indigenous allies, Andrew Jackson, who upon his death in 1845 was heralded in which helped ensure that the length of the river was in secure American control. The U.S. Army sent a force north, to build a fort at Rock Island, Illinois, and it sent Prospect Robbins and Joseph Brown west, on their trek through the Arkansas swamps. The imagined grid of the empire for liberty was, chain by chain, laid atop the land. This motley assembly, “perhaps the most racially varied ‘American’ military force ever,” routed the royal army. 86 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
The NatchezVidalia Bridge connects Louisiana with Mississippi. The westbound side was built in 1940. A parallel eastbound bridge was finished in 1988.
Giselle Stevens, a Mi’kmaq language educator from Nova Scotia, Canada. She’s been harvesting wild blueberries since she was a child. 88 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
IN MAINE, AN UNUSUAL CONVERGENCE OF FA R M WO R K E R S RENEWS AN ANCIENT A N D I N C R E A S I N G LY T H R E AT E N E D A G R I C U LT U R A L PRACTICE photographs by G R E TA RYBUS text by K AT E OLSON
R YA N J O H N S O N A R R I V E D AT T H E W I L D B L U E B E R R Y C A M P S O N A WA R M A U G U S T N I G H T I N 2 0 2 3 . I T WA S AROUND 1 A.M. EXHAUSTED FROM THE NINE-HOUR JOURNEY IN HIS FRIEND’S T R U C K , H E F E L L A S L E E P O N T H E F L O O R O F T H E M E S S H A L L . S O M E O N E S H O O K H I M AWA K E A R O U N D 5 A S K I N G , “A R E Y O U H E R E T O W O R K ? ” H E N O D D E D Y E S . Johnson, a 42-year-old Mi’kmaq fisherman of the Eskasoni First Nation, in Nova Scotia, Canada, had grown up hearing about harvesting blueberries in Maine. His parents and grandmother came down every summer to work for several weeks, saving their earnings for school clothes and other expenses. Everyone he knows in Eskasoni had, at one point, made the trip for the harvest— simultaneously a working vacation, a source of extra income and a cultural ritual. But with a wife and seven kids at home, it was hard to get away. When he finally found the time, he hit the road with nothing but a sleeping bag and a few sets of clothes. “I was scared,” he told me. “I was scared that I would have no place to sleep. I was scared that I wouldn’t have a rake. I was scared that I went there for nothing. But I had faith in good people.” Johnson is one of thousands of people who show up 90 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 in rural northeastern Maine every August to harvest wild blueberries. Many stay in one of several company-owned camps right in the middle of the blueberry barrens, as these 46,000-odd acres of fields are called. The harvest is a remarkable convergence of people from across the continent, including those native to the region on both sides of the Canadian-American border and migrant farmworkers from Central America and the Caribbean. The blueberries they harvest are distinct from those you might see year-round in the supermarket. The most common commercially grown blueberry is the highbush, a tall native shrub that can be planted and cultivated in different climates. By contrast, wild blueberries are not planted but grow naturally as a ground cover from North Carolina to Canada. They thrive especially well in the coarse, acidic soils of northeastern, or “Down East,” Maine.
OLD FRIENDS Andrew Syliboy, in a hat, and Newell Joseph Tomah demarcate harvesting sections with twine. Opposite: Tomah reveals a tattoo that says “Skicin,” or “land dweller,” the name for the Passamaquoddy in their native language. “We hunt moose, we trap muskrat. We go and pick berries.” A truck belonging to the Passamaquoddy Wild Blueberry Company, owned and operated by the tribe—one of the industry’s biggest companies.
Smaller and sweeter than highbush blueberries, wild blueberries are high in antioxidants and are considered one of the most nutritious foods on earth. For thousands of years, the five tribal nations of the Wabanaki peoples—the Mi’kmaq, Maliseet, Passamaquoddy, Penobscot and Abenaki—have harvested these wild blueberries in late summer. Traditionally, they used their hands or hand-held rakes, which look something like a dustpan with fine metal teeth. The berries are a part of their seasonal foodways, eaten fresh, preserved for winter, stewed into tea and cough syrup, and used as a dye. The Wabanaki, whose ancestral homelands stretch across eastern Canada and New Hampshire, Maine and Vermont, have long encouraged wild blueberry growth through prescribed burning, a practice later adopted by Europeans who settled on their lands. During the American Civil War, the blueberries were used to feed the Union Army, soon driving a robust canning industry. Since then, the wild blueberry industry has been central to both the economy and culture of Maine, contributing tens of millions of dollars to the state’s economy each year. But commercial growers around the world are increasingly planting highbush blueberries year-round, crowding the market. And in Maine, wild blueberry farmers are switching to large harvesting machines to keep up with industry competition at the same time as climate change is leading to earlier harvests, high heat, periodic drought and a decline in native bee populations that are essential for pollination. These shifting economic, ecological and social conditions have led to a precarious future for this traditional harvest. As a sociologist studying the effects of climate change on rural livelihoods, I wanted to understand how shifting weather patterns might be changing this industry. But I also wanted to experience firsthand the unusual mingling of cultures the harvest relies upon. The demographics have shifted significantly in the last several decades. Several thousand migrant and seasonal workers, including Wabanaki harvesters, now participate in the wild blueberry harvest, either hand-raking blueberries, processing and freezing berries, or driving harvesting machines. Although reliable demographic data is sparse, the most recent survey, conducted by the Maine Department of Labor in 2015, suggests that seasonal and migrant workers make up around 17 92 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
Harvesters and their families share cabins in camps set amid the fields. Stevens says she returns for “family and friends, traditions and stories, laughter and company.” “ M Y H U S B A N D S TA R T E D G O I N G W H E N H E WAS A T E E N A G E R . I S TA R T E D G O I N G W H E N I WAS YO U N G E N O U G H T O AT T E N D T H E S C H O O L . ” Giselle Stevens HARVEST SCHOOL DAYS In Milbridge, a school for children of farmworkers offers instruction in English, Spanish and Mi’kmaq/ Passamaquoddy. Below, a student’s comicstyle chronicle of a day in the life of a blueberry raker. percent of all hired farm labor in Maine. Most were born in Mexico; others come from Haiti, Honduras and El Salvador. In addition to perhaps hundreds of Wabanaki harvesters, many workers follow the growing seasons up the East Coast, harvesting fruit and vegetables. Some stay in Maine through the winter, collecting balsam fir branches for wreaths, or working in the seafood processing industry. While their labor is essential, their work often goes unacknowledged in this predominantly white state. “I don’t think a lot of people know who are the folks picking the food for them in the field,” says Juana Rodriguez Vazquez, executive director of Mano en Mano, an organization that connects immigrants and farmworkers in Maine to essential services such as housing and health care. “I don’t think it’s often valued as it should be.” April Norton, of Wyman’s, among the largest producers of wild blueberries in the state, told me, “Our migrant and seasonal workforce is critical to the viability of our organization. Without them we would not get this harvest.” I visited the blueberry barrens during the first week of the harvest, arriving at the Passamaquoddy Wild Blueberry Company headquarters, in Columbia Falls, at 7 a.m. The company, owned and operated by the Passamaquoddy Tribe, cultivates 2,000 acres of blueberry fields. The land is just a portion of ancestral territory seized first by Massachusetts and then Maine beginning in the 17th century. It was repurchased by the tribe in the 1980s, using funds earmarked by Congress after lawmakers approved a settlement between Maine and Wabanaki tribes. (The two sides remain at odds over aspects of the settlement’s implementation, including a provision that hinders Wabanaki citizens of Maine from accessing federal benefits established for Indian tribes.) At the camp, I met Darren Paul, the company’s general manager, who led me to a shed full of hand rakes. We July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 93
found one that seemed to fit my hand and wasn’t too heavy, then hopped in his truck. Soon, a company camp came into view, a collection of 20 simple wood cabins that house rakers and their families during the harvest. Picnic tables and lawn chairs were set up outside. In a cabin decorated with strings of lights, I met Stephanie Bailey, 50, a Passamaquoddy harvest supervisor from Indian Township (known as Motahkomikuk in Passamaquoddy), an hour north of here. In Bailey’s kitchen, I sat at a picnic table with Connor, a Passamaquoddy teenager also from Indian Township who, like me, was preparing for his first harvest, and a family from the Eskasoni First Nation, who have come for the past 40 years. When the family shared that they have stayed in the same cabin for the last 20 years, Bailey beamed. “I love that so much,” she said. Before we could begin raking, Bailey taught us about how to spray pesticides and how to avoid spreading them from berries to our skin. I asked Connor what he knew about the history of blueberry harvesting and his people. “Nothing,” he said. This wasn’t surprising. Bailey recalled that her grandfather was punished by church authorities for hunting and foraging for his meals, part of a legacy of government-sponsored attempts dating to 1879 to replace Indigenous cultures with Christian culture. As recently as the 1970s, Wabanaki children were forced to attend boarding schools where they were forbidden from speaking their native languages or otherwise expressing their culture, and were frequently subjected to physical, emotional and sexual abuse. Even in schools on the reservation, Wabanaki people were prohibited from speaking their native languages or eating traditional foods. “We were literally taught you’re going to go to jail if you provide for yourself in the way that we’ve done it for thousands of years,” Bailey told me. This was hardly an unusual practice, as the Potawatomi Nation scholar Kyle Powys Whyte wrote in 2017. “One of the common strategies of erasure is to erase Indigenous people’s food systems.” In 2013, in an attempt to redress ongoing wrongs, Maine Governor Paul LePage and chiefs from five Wabanaki tribes established a first-of-its-kind Truth and Reconciliation Commission in the United States, which jointly investigated the state’s continued removal of Wabanaki children from their communities. For example, between 2000 and 2013, the commission found, Maine’s child welfare agency separated Wabanaki children from their families via the foster care system at a rate up to five times higher than non-Native children. On his first day at the harvest, Johnson, the fisherman from Nova Scotia, was handed a rake. Then a few other harvesters showed him how to bend over, scooping using first his back, then his legs—“like a 94 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Deborah Thiebaux, a Mi’kmaq harvester from Nova Scotia. The tribe’s ancestral lands stretch across the Canadian border. Hand-held rakes once predominated, but they’re mainly used today on hilly and rocky terrain unsuitable for harvesting machines. crab or something,” he told me. Blueberry workers make a set amount of money per box, which each weighs about 20 pounds when filled. The rate for a box varies slightly from company to company, but overall rates across the industry have remained virtually unchanged for three decades. At the Passamaquoddy Wild Blueberry Company, it’s currently set at $2.75. Johnson could not believe how hard the work was, but he filled 55 boxes of blueberries on his first day. Back at camp, there was a bonfire and a potluck dinner. Families played outside. Johnson told me that apart from a joke some of the guys made about how a bear was going to get him on his way to the outhouse—a threat that never materialized—he didn’t worry about much. “I went there with noth-
“THE CAMPS USED TO BE PA C K E D . T H E R E ’ S O N LY T W O CAMPS NOW, AND ALL THE GOOD F I EL D S A R E TA K EN O V E R BY T H E M A C H I N E S .” Deborah Thiebaux ing, and people were feeding me,” he said. “I couldn’t believe how nice they were. It felt good to be there. I felt like I reconnected with my ancestors.” On my first day out in the fields, I met John Googoo, a crew supervisor. Googoo gave me a lesson in the two raking styles: scooping and sweeping. Sweeping is for advanced rakers, who crouch and “sweep” the rake at an angle across their body, a long glide across the top of the berries, almost a dance. Scooping is a shorter movement, reaching the rake’s teeth underneath the berries, then pulling back up toward your body. Googoo said that most rakers fill between 40 and 50 boxes each day. I said I was going for five. He got four boxOne of about 40 cabins maintained by the Passamaquoddy in two separate camps. “We gather up and take care of each other like a little community,” Syliboy says.
“WE ARE THERE BECAUSE IT’S A FORCE OF HABIT FOR US. BUT IF THE HAND-RAKING G O E S O U T, T H E T R A D I T I O N S G O W I T H I T. ” Andrew Syliboy es for me and set them on the ground. As he walked away, I picked up the rake and gave it a try, but I mainly pulled up rocks and soil. Next I positioned the fingers of the rake slightly higher, but I still ended up raking the ground. Googoo’s wife, Brenda, rushed over. “Try not to dig up the whole plant,” she said. It finally clicked that it’s called scooping because you have to move the rake downward at an angle, then pull it back up and toward you, like scooping ice cream. I moved up and across the field, scooping and lifting, dropping the berries in the boxes and pulling out errant grasses. On either side of me, harvesters chatted in Mi’kmaq and Spanish. Although the Passamaquoddy Wild Blueberry Company mostly cultivates conventional wild blueberries now, to keep up with the industry, I was put on an organic blueberry field. Without pesticides, these sections are full 96 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Harvesters tend to fill 40 or more 20-pound boxes per day. “It’s a tradition that has been around for many years,” Stevens says. “It was a way of living for many.” Bryan Johnson, a Mi’kmaq fisherman from Nova Scotia. Last year was his first harvest. “I felt my ancestors’ presence when I was up there, so I felt like I belonged.” BYLINES Maine-based photographer Greta Rybus focuses on the relationship between people and the environment. Kate Olson is a writer and sociologist. A USDA tribal climate equity fellow, she has a PhD from Boston College. of weeds and are considered much harder work. By the end of the day, I had filled 15 boxes of berries and could barely walk. The next morning, I visited the Blueberry Harvest School, run by Mano en Mano, in Milbridge. The school operates as a hub for working families during the three-week harvest, transporting dozens of students from blueberry company camps and several nearby towns. While their parents are in the fields, the children read, visit the playground, have class in the woods, and take field trips to local beaches and water parks. Remarkably, the school offers instruction in three languages: Spanish, English and Mi’kmaq/Passamaquoddy (although distinct, the languages are very similar). In Maggie Burgos’ combined second- and thirdgrade class, students colored, played Legos and read books as they settled into their day. “There’s a lot of movement in what their families do for work,” she said. “I’ve heard from a lot of students that coming to Blueberry Harvest School feels like a constant in their year.” Once each student arrived, the class gathered in a circle on soft floor mats. We each took a turn saying our name and the language we felt most comfortable speaking. For most students this was Mi’kmaq or Spanish. Burgos then read a book about weaving traditions around the world. Wabanaki peoples are renowned for their baskets, often woven from strips of brown ash trees and gathered sweet-

grass. In the afternoon, the students practiced making their own weavings with paper before moving on to cloth. Finally, Burgos asked each student to name one thing that they love. One student, a Mi’kmaq boy who had been fidgeting on his mat, said, “I love everyone in this classroom.” In recent years, as spring and fall have become warmer, the blueberry season has shifted, too. Harvests used to be exclusively in August. Some rakers recall once waking up to trace ice on the berries in the morning. But these days the harvest routinely starts earlier. Last year, it began in mid-July, and that was after a late frost had damaged many flowering blueberry plants, drastically reducing the year’s yields. The three years before that had seen drought and heat at levels rarely 98 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 recorded, requiring growers to invest more in irrigation technology, a major financial expenditure that also depletes precious groundwater. Whereas summers in Down East Maine used to be relatively cool, 80- to 85-degree days are now common, which impacts the quality of the berries and the ability of the harvesters to work. This stresses plants and people alike. And the ideal growing conditions for wild blueberries are moving north from Maine into Canada. Although scientists at the University of Maine are analyzing how berries respond to heat stress and excessive precipitation, in order to help growers predict how probable climate scenarios will impact their blueberries, there are no easy solutions. “If the industry is going to stay here in Maine, there are more steps we need to take to create field tools that help farmers con-
The blueberry barrens cover some 46,000 acres. Unlike planted blueberry bushes, the wild berries grow as groundcover, which the Wabanaki encouraged through prescribed burns. The harvest faces numerous threats, from late frosts and high heat to drought. In 2000, Maine produced around 110 million pounds. Last year yielded closer to 85 million. tinue farming,” for example automated alerts that warn of a damaging frost, says Lily Calderwood, a wild blueberry specialist at the university. When the harvest is over, the blueberry fields turn bright red as autumn settles in. In the winter, a wind-whipped snow settles on them. It was in this season of dormancy that I spoke with Bailey again over FaceTime. She sat beside her woodstove in her home in Indian Township. She spoke about the sense of community at the barrens she remembered from when she would go as a girl to pick berries every summer with her grandmother. “I go there to make the community that I remember, and to connect with the people the way that I used to,” she said. “IT USED TO BE ABOUT M O N E Y, B U T I T B E C A M E A T R A D I T I O N . T H E F A M I LY Y O U M E E T AT T H E F I E L D S A R E FOREVER FRIENDS.” Giselle Stevens She runs a store at the blueberry camp, for example, where rakers can buy affordable food on credit, and she organizes meals to ensure that everyone is fed. “People don’t always show up with much money. So I always make sure, when I’m bringing a meal, I’m bringing enough to feed everybody.” She is also keenly aware of the time, not so long ago, when her people were not allowed to celebrate their culture. She now brings her grandchildren to the harvest, where they attend the Blueberry Harvest School during the day and play at the camps at night. “I’m able to create community there,” she said. “Culture isn’t stagnant.”
THE STRANGE AFTERLIFE OF PABLO ESCOBAR’S HIPPOS 100 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
by Joshua Hammer photographs by Gena Steffens DECADES AG O, THE DRUG BARON SM UG GLED THE BEASTS I N T O C O L O M B I A F O R H I S P R I V AT E M E N A G E R I E . T H E Y ’ V E B E E N M U LT I P L Y I N G E V E R S I N C E . N O W O F F I C I A L S A R E TA K I N G E X T R E M E M E A S U R E S T O C O U N T E R T H E P R O B L E M A hippo crosses a rural road near Doradal, Colombia. Experts say that left unchecked the hippo population could grow to 1,400 by 2040. July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 101
N T H E S T E A M Y H E AT O F A F T E R N O O N , YA M I T D I A Z R O M E R O s t e e r e d o u r motorized longboat around overhanging bamboo branches and islets in the Claro Cocorná Sur River, in western Colombia. Red howler monkeys swung from the cables of a footbridge and screeched in the jungle. Herons, snowy egrets, brown pelicans and parakeets darted across the coffee-colored water and soared over our heads. The river is known as a destination for white-water rafting. But these days it’s also become the scene of a more unsettling natural phenomenon. PA B LO ES C O BA R P O RT R A I T: A R C H I V I O G B B / A L A M Y Joining me on the vessel was Alejandro Mira, a veterinarian from Medellín, and Joshua Wilson, an American jujitsu champion and world traveler who had hitched a ride with Mira and me and was sharing the experience with his followers on social media. Fishermen motoring from the opposite direction gave warnings to Romero about what lay ahead. After an hour, the Claro Cocorná spilled into the Magdalena River, the longest in Colombia, which originates in the Andes and flows north for 950 miles before emptying into the Caribbean Sea. Romero, a solid man with black-framed spectacles and a pink camouflage shirt, scanned the river and pointed straight ahead. Near the opposite bank, 300 yards away, three pairs of gray ears flicked, and beady eyes darted above the water line. The boatman circled cautiously, then winced when Wilson, the jujitsu champion, suddenly launched an aerial drone and banged on the boat’s gunwale to get the animals’ attention. One an-
Alejandro Mira, a veterinarian with Cornare, an environmental agency, collects mangoes from a local farm to lure hippos into corrals where they can be sterilized. Corralled hippos near Escobar’s hacienda. Officials sometimes leave food inside with the gates open to accustom the animals to wandering freely in and out without fear. imal raised a gigantic, bulbous head and opened its mouth, exposing a sharp set of canines. “Tourists think that this is cute,” Romero told me in Spanish. “But it’s a sign of aggression.” You might not expect to encounter wild hippopotamuses, the huge, semiaquatic mammal native to sub-Saharan Africa, in the rivers—and ponds, swamps, lakes, forests and roads—of rural Colombia. Their increasingly ubiquitous presence here is an unlikely legacy of Pablo Escobar, the infamous drug baron from Medellín. Decades ago, Escobar spent part of his vast fortune assembling a menagerie of exotic animals, including elephants, giraffes, zebras, ostriches and kangaroos, at his hacienda outside Doradal, a town about ten miles west of the Magdalena. After he was shot dead in Medellín by Colombian police, in 1993, local people poured onto the property and tore apart Escobar’s villa in search of rumored caches of money and weapons. Afterward, the hacienda sank into ruin. In 1998, the government seized possession of the property and eventually transferred most of the animals to domestic zoos. But several hippos— most sources say three females and one male—were considered too dangerous to move. And that’s how Colombia’s current trouble began. The hippos multiplied. (Once they reach maturity, female hippos can produce a calf every 18 months, and they can give birth 25 times during a life span of 40 to 50 years.) Males cast out of the herd by the dominant male migrated elsewhere, started their own herds and took over new territory. Today nobody knows how many hippos inhabit the rivers and lakes of the Magdalena Basin, which covers roughDavid Echeverri López, who oversees the hippo sterilizaly 100,000 square miles and is home to two-thirds tion program for Cornare, the of Colombia’s human population. As of late 2023, agency leading the effort. the official government count was 169. David EchJuly • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 103
104 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 A HISTORY OF FLAMBOYANT WEALTH—AND VIOLENCE Clockwise from top left: Escobar, left, and a bodyguard, at a soccer game in Medellín in 1983; an exhibition at Hacienda Nápoles, Escobar’s former estate, now a memorial museum to his victims, shows the aftermath of a car bombing in Bogotá in the 1980s; visitors wander the exhibition, set in his former private villa; Escobar jet-skiing on a lake on the property. hippos in three months—a considerable achievement, but short of the estimated 40 castrations a year they believe will be necessary to control the population. “There have been sterilizations in zoos, but no information was available about doing this in the wild,” Mira told me. “We basically had to learn it as we went along.” As we circled the hippos, Romero, the boatman, kept a judicious distance. Mira and I had come, during a hiatus in the castrations, to see for ourselves the growth of the population, but viewing hippos in the wild can be risky. Half an hour into our excursion, the boat engine abruptly died. Romero yanked on the pull cord. The motor responded with a sputter. He yanked A B OV E L E F T: A P I M AG ES everri López, chief of the Biodiversity Management Office of Cornare, a regional environmental agency, says the number could be 200. Colombian biologists recently predicted that by 2040, if nothing is done to control their breeding, the population will grow to as many as 1,400. The hippos will use the Magdalena River as their primary expansion route, says Francisco Sánchez, an environmental official in the riverside municipality of Puerto Triunfo, which includes Doradal. “They’ll get all the way to the sea, because they will just follow the river.” He calls the situation “completely out of control.” The presence of these beasts in the heart of South America, waddling at night down rural paths and staring into the headlights of jeeps and motorcycles, might be comical if it weren’t so deadly serious. In Africa, hippos are thought to kill some 500 people a year, making them among the most dangerous animals to humans, according to the BBC and other sources. And while for now violent encounters in Colombia have been limited, unsettling incidents are increasing. The beasts have attacked farmers and destroyed crops. Last year, a car struck and killed a hippo crossing a highway. (Hippos tend to spend daytime hours in the water and move around land at night, adding to a menacing sense of danger striking in the dark.) This wasn’t long after a hippo lumbered into the yard of a school, sending frightened teachers and kids running for cover. The animal munched on fruit that had fallen from trees before shuffling off to nearby fields. Although nobody was hurt, the incident was widely covered in the Colombian media, increasing pressure on authorities to do something before the problem spins out of control. And the danger is hardly limited to people. Colombian scientists are sounding alarms about the impact on the region’s ecosystem. For example, a single hippo produces up to 20 pounds of feces a day. In Africa, the dung long provided nutrients for fish populations in rivers and lakes, but in recent years, perhaps as a consequence of warming temperatures, water-intensive agriculture and increasing drought, the dung has accumulated to toxic levels in stagnating pools, killing off the same aquatic life that once benefited from it. Experts fear the same thing could happen in Colombia. And competition for food and space could displace otters, West Indian manatees, capybaras and turtles. “If I lived in Colombia, I would be worried,” Rebecca Lewison, an ecologist at San Diego State University’s Coastal and Marine Institute, told me. “Colombia has great biodiversity, and this is not a system that has evolved to support a mega-herbivore.” This bizarre problem is compelling Colombian conservationists to search for unusual solutions, which is one reason I found myself with Mira on the Magdalena, staking out unsuspecting hippos. Mira is a member of a newly formed, first-of-its-kind animal control program, which seeks not to capture or “cull” the hippos but to sterilize them in the wild. But the procedure, an invasive surgical castration, is medically complicated, expensive and sometimes dangerous for hippos as well as for the people performing it. After successfully piloting the program last year, the team sterilized seven
again—nothing. With mounting frustration, and sweat pouring down his face, the boatman tugged and pulled the rope. Meanwhile, we drifted toward the hippo pod. The creatures turned toward us, watching. Wilson, the jujitsu champion, returned the stare. Then he muttered, “Uh oh.” Finally, with a powerful jerk, Romero brought the engine back to life, and we slowly motored back in the other direction toward the Claro Cocorná. WHEN PABLO ESCOBAR APPEARED in Puerto Triunfo in 1978, the government had just constructed a two-lane asphalt highway between Medellín and the Magdalena River, making the jungled region far more accessible. The 28-year-old Escobar identified himself as a “businessman” and announced that he was looking to buy property. “There was very good tree cover and good water resources,” Sánchez, the local environmental official, said, as we sat in Puerto Triunfo’s riverfront town hall, where he has worked for more than three decades. “It was the perfect place to build a retreat.” After a search, Escobar bought a 5,000-acre property near Doradal. The drug baron installed an airplane runway, a villa, heliports, aircraft hangars, horse stables, 27 artificial lakes, a dinosaur theme park and a bull ring. He also hired a staff of more than 1,000 people to run the hacienda. In the early 1980s, inspired by other Latin American drug traffickers and drawn to the symbolic power of wild beasts, he reportedly paid exotic animal breeders in Dallas $2 million in cash for the first animals in his menagerie. Many more, including the hippos, were procured from other dealers and possibly zoos. Sánchez told me that he examined the records of Escobar’s transactions in the archives at town hall, but the documentation was destroyed when the Magdalena River flooded the town in the 1990s. Escobar was picky about his animals. “He would not buy lions, tigers or other big cats,” Sánchez said. “Taking care of carnivores is very complicated. Just keeping them fed is a tremendous amount of work.” Escobar had also decided to open his menagerie to the public, and he didn’t want predators roaming freely around the grounds. Giving ordinary Colombians access “was a way of making himself popular,” Sánchez said. In the early 1980s, crowds stood in line for hours in the heat at the hacienda gates, waiting to board electric vehicles and bounce over the property past elephants, ostriches and other wild beasts. Sánchez did the tour himself in 1982. “There was a female elephant that would put her trunk inside the cars, and people loved her,” he recalled. Escobar’s days at Hacienda Nápoles didn’t last long. After he was publicly identified as a leader of the Medellín Cartel, he fled into hiding. In 1984, he dispatched a hit team to assassinate Colombia’s minister of justice. Five years after that, an unwitting courier carried a bomb onto a Colombian airliner, which blew up midflight, killing all 107 people on board. Escobar’s intended victim, presidential candidate César Gaviria Trujillo, had missed the flight; he was later elected president and made the capture or killing of drug traffickers a priority. As Colombia’s security forces hunted the narcotraficante, violence spread across the region. Rightwing death squads known as autodefensas formed an alliance with drug cartels—offering the cartel members protection in return for a cut of their profits—and declared war on the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), a Marxist guerrilla group, and its sympathizers. Puerto Triunfo became July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 105

“ T H E Y F O U N D A Q U I E T H A B I TAT HERE, WITH PLENTY OF FOOD, AND T H E Y S E T T L E D I N .” David Echeverri López A hippo in the Magdalena River, Colombia’s longest waterway, where the descendants of Escobar’s menagerie are increasingly taking up residence, threatening plant and animal life. SMITHSONIAN 107
a center of the violence, with many people kidnapped and murdered during the late 1980s and 1990s. After Escobar was shot dead and his property abandoned, the hippos survived on their own, eating the grass, fruits and other plants that proliferated on the land. Over the years, the population established new pods beyond the hacienda. Reports trickled in that the animals were trampling farmland, attacking cattle and menacing fishing boats. By 2008, the population had reached about two dozen, and Colombia’s Ministry of the Environment decided it was time to act. Echeverri López, who had recently graduated from the University of Antioquia in Medellín with a botany degree, was hired to help search for solutions. One of his first day.’” This was a time when the ongoing civil war was still claiming the lives of more than a thousand civilians per year. “And then there’s this outpouring of sentiment to protect the hippo. I couldn’t explain it.” In the face of public outrage, the minister of the environment resigned, and hippo killings were put on hold. Echeverri López was obliged to search for other methods. “I had nothing in my background to suggest I could handle this,” he admitted to me. Conservation teams prowled the region near Escobar’s hacienda at night, looking for hippos to shoot with tranquilizer darts initiatives was to seek advice from wildlife experts in South Africa, who visited Doradal to investigate. “They told me, ‘You have a problem,’” Echeverri López, a bearded, 40-yearold biologist said as we sat in a restaurant in Doradal, a lively tourist town four hours east of Medellín. “They said, ‘The only solution is to kill them.’” The next year, the government hired a hunter to begin culling the hippos, but when a photograph circulated in the media showing the corpse of a male called Pepe, who had wandered 60 miles from Escobar’s hacienda, pro-hippo protests erupted across Colombia. Echeverri López found himself puzzled by the response. “I was saying to myself, ‘Think about how many people are murdered in Colombia every while they grazed. But it took an hour for the tranquilizer to have an effect, by which time the animal had returned to the water. In 2011, veterinarians managed to anesthetize and castrate one hippo named Napolitano 50 miles from Escobar’s former ranch. A military helicopter then transported the unconscious beast in a cage back to the hacienda, to regather the wandering hippos at their point of origin. But the helicopter’s engine overheated, and the pilot barely made it down safely. To contain the hippos, Cornare tried cordoning off the hacienda with bushes, barbed wire and electric fences, but the animals kept finding escape routes. The agency approached zoos in India, the Philippines, Ecuador and other countries about adopting the animals, but the plan was criticized by the 108 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024
OUT IN THE FIELD Clockwise from top: Yamit Diaz Romero, a fisherman turned hippo-tour guide, on the Claro Cocorná Sur River, a tributary of the Magdalena, near Doradal; Katerín Corrales, left, and Sofía Fernández Africano, both biologists, examine photographs from camera traps set along the Magdalena to track the growth and distribution of the hippo population and analyze targets for sterilization; hippos lurk in a lake near a herd of wild capybara, one of several native species, including manatees, otters and turtles, that ecologists worry may be displaced by the rapidly growing hippo population. Hippo Specialist Group of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), a Switzerland-based committee of biologists and animal conservationists. A zoo relocation program, IUCN declared in 2023, “would be extremely costly, have no conservation benefit, and represents a poor use of conservation resources that are critically needed to protect common hippos” in Africa. Cornare’s initiative has yet to result in a single transfer. “Most captive facilities can’t accommodate them,” says Lewison, the San Diego State University ecologist, who also serves as the co-chair of the IUCN Hippo Specialist Group. “Hippos are difficult to keep, they’re huge, and water filtration”—necessary to account for all the poop—“is expensive. Most zoos that want a hippo have one already, and if they don’t, they don’t have the capacity for it.” Staffers also tried chemically castrating the animals with darts, a procedure used successfully in zoos around the world. But hippos require multiple shots, months apart from each other over two years, and it proved impossible to tag and track the free-ranging animals that had received the first dose. Inside the park near Doradal, they surgically castrated a dozen juvenile hippos, which are more docile and easier to maneuver than adults. But that still left an adult population scattered across the Magdalena Basin. After lunch, I followed Echeverri López in my vehicle through the gated entrance of Escobar’s former hacienda. In 2007, the Puerto Triunfo municipal government partnered with a private company to turn it into a zoo and safari park—with an all-new animal population—and it’s now Doradal’s main tourist attraction. Garishly painted statues of dinosaurs, hippos and other beasts, some left over from Escobar’s time, loomed along the shoulder of an asphalt road that wound through the rolling pastureland. We walked down a July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 109
steep slope toward what was once one of Escobar’s artificial lakes, now located outside the grounds, where a dozen hippos lolled in a cluster. “They found a quiet habitat here, with plenty of food, and they settled in,” Echeverri López said. The hippos, on seeing us, moved closer to the shore. “Don’t worry,” he reassured me. “We are halfway up the slope, so we have a certain advantage if one attacks.” The population in this lake, where the animals spend the daylight hours, had reached about 50—the densest concentration outside the park, and the initial target of the new surgical castration campaign. Echeverri López pointed to a corral a few dozen yards from the lake, one of three strategically placed enclosures built using a metal alloy that is all but unbreakable even by huge, angry mammals. The team uses a trail of carrots, cabbages and fruit to lure hippos into the enclosure; a spring-trap door then slams shut. Once lured, the animals are darted with tranquilizers, allowing the scientists to castrate them where they rest. Cornare observers conduct spot checks every evening, and if they encounter a trapped hippo, they quickly summon the surgical team to the scene. nal canal. Because they are retractable and can reside as deep as 15 inches inside the body, they can be difficult to find. Buitrago made a two-and-half-inch incision, cutting with difficulty through thick skin and layers of fat. Mira knelt beside her, hand- ALEJANDRO MIRA GOT THE CALL to assist in his first surgical castration of a hippo last October. “I was nervous,” he told me one evening, as we were driving along a rural road, keeping a wary lookout for hippos on the highway. In the predawn darkness last year, Mira arrived at the lakeshore to confront an 800-pound male—relatively junior sized—pacing inside the enclosure. A team member fired three tranquilizer darts into the hippo’s buttocks. Then the group waited outside. After 45 minutes, the animal sank into a seated position—“like a dog,” Mira said—then rolled onto its side in a pool of mud. Mira had castrated many horses, dogs and cats, but this was different from the usual neutering. “The surgery is taking place in a wild environment, with a dangerous animal, with the testicles hidden deep inside the body,” he told me. To verify that the hippo was in a deep state of unconsciousness, a team member tickled his ears. When they didn’t twitch, he signaled the others. The veterinarians tied a rope around the animal’s feet, then dragged him a few yards to a sterile canvas sheet on which the surgery would take place. The team donned surgical scrubs and raised a canvas tent to shield themselves and the animal from the rising sun. Then they swabbed the hippo with sterile wipes and inserted intravenous drips—antibiotics, anti-inflammatories and anesthetics—into the veins on his ears and tongue. Administering the anesthetic is a dangerous part of the procedure. For unclear reasons, hippos, like other marine mammals, are highly sensitive to sedation and, in zoos, have sometimes had fatal reactions. The lead veterinarian, Cristina Buitrago, knelt and palpated the hippo’s abdomen to feel for his testicles, located in the ingui110 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 A COLORFUL LEGACY After Escobar was killed, in 1993, his hacienda sat abandoned until 2007, when the regional government partnered with a private company to reopen the estate as a zoo and safari park with new animals. Some hippos descended from Escobar’s menagerie remained, becoming a major attraction. Clockwise from top left: one of many hippo statues; visitors feed hippos with greens bought at the park; a lemonade stand outside the entrance. ing her surgical instruments. Then, slicing delicately around the blood vessels, she pulled out the mango-sized testicles, “about the size of a horse’s balls,” Mira told me. The vet snipped them off, sutured the wound and sewed the incision shut. As the animal slept, the team hurriedly removed the equipment and exited the corral, monitoring the hippo until it re-
turned to consciousness and shambled through the gate and into the lake. From darting to awakening, the procedure had lasted seven hours. The team had tagged the animal’s ears during the surgery, though it is difficult to monitor hippos in the wild. Still, they were confident it would recover well. “They have a strong immune system, and there’s no reason to believe that they can’t survive,” Mira told me. In fact, biologists have discovered a pigment in hippo skin that absorbs ultraviolet light and may prevent bacteria from growing; it’s a natural antibiotic, they theorize, that can help stave off infections from the animals’ frequent tussling—as well as from castration. Throughout the fall of 2023, the Cornare team refined the procedure to as close to a science as possible. Then, in December, Mira and his colleagues faced a male hippo weighing 1,500 pounds, among the largest they had encountered. Tying ropes around the feet to pull the animal onto a sheet wouldn’t work with an animal of this size. Instead, Mira and his six colleagues stationed themselves around the hippo’s hind legs, forelegs, backside and head. After a count of “uno, dos, tres,” they pushed, tugged, yanked, dragged and inched the sleeping behemoth a few yards toward the makeshift operating theater. With a final heave, they raised the animal just enough to slide the canvas sheet beneath his bulk. (Two of the animals they operated on in 2023 were female, a fact that became known only after the hippos’ sedation. “It’s 200 percent more complicated with females,” Mira told me. “You have to access the ovaries through the flanks, cutting through thicker skin and several layers of muscle. You have to go much deeper and really use your hands.”) The operation on the 1,500-pounder was a success. But, at the end of 2023, Cornare’s contract with the government expired, and there was some question about when the program would continue. By April, however, the veterinary team was back in the field, and had castrated three more hippos. Meanwhile, Colombia’s Ministry of the Environment has apparently decided that the catch-andcastrate program isn’t sufficient to handle the hippo problem. Susana Muhamad, the minister of the environment, says that of 169 hippos so far confirmed to be roaming the Colombian countryside, “some” will have to be euthanized, although she also said that both castrations and attempts to move the beasts to overseas zoos will continue. But the sentiment for a hard-line solution is growing. After years of searching for a viable alternative, July • August 2024 | SMITHSONIAN 111
Echeverri López now acknowledged to me that a cull will probably have to happen. Indeed, more and more hippo experts around the world say that a controlled killing program is inevitable. “Castration can slow population growth down a bit, but it’s not a solution,” Jan Pluháček, a Czech biologist and hippo specialist, told me. Culling, he said, is “the only thing that makes sense.” The hippos are a menace—and a source of tourist income. One hotel advertises photos of nighttime wanderings, writing: “This is the view from your window!” ON ONE OF MY LAST DAYS in rural Colombia, I drove with Mira to a guest house called Villa Sara, a couple of miles from Hacienda Nápoles. The caretaker had notified Cornare that a hippo had moved into a pond behind the property, and Mira had been called to assess the situation. Reports like these have become more common in the last couple of years, Mira told me. We drove up the long driveway to a Spanishcolonial-style villa where Escobar is reported to have lived in the 1970s while hunting for a ranch. The caretaker, a young woman named Flor Daza, led us to the back garden. “There he is,” she exclaimed, pointing to a pair of eyes and a snout protruding beyond the shoreline. Mira said the animal was probably a young male who had been cast out of a herd by the dominant 112 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 BYLINES Joshua Hammer last wrote for Smithsonian about the Pisidia Trail, a new network of archaeological hiking trails in southern Turkey. Gena Steffens previously photographed invasive Burmese pythons in Florida’s Everglades. male and forced to live on his own. “When he first looked at me in the eye, I was terrified,” Daza told me. But, she went on, “We see him every single day, and we are no longer afraid of him.” The owners of the villa, however, who live in Bogotá, remained concerned, and Daza could not rule out the possibility of violent run-ins between the hippo and unwitting guests. Daza’s ambivalence about the hippo reflected the perspective of many people I encountered in Colombia, who couldn’t help but feel a mixture of affection and even protectiveness, along with a twinge of fear. In this beleaguered part of the country, which has suffered decades of violence, turmoil and civil war, many people see the hippos as a potential economic lifeline. At a grocery store just outside Escobar’s former hacienda, the owner has turned the top floor of his establishment into a “tourist hotel,” and he posts videos to social media showing groups of four or five hippos—“our pets,” he calls them—wandering past the shop to graze in the bush at night. Isabel Romero, who runs a nonprofit that breeds endangered river tortoises on the Claro Cocorná Sur River, recently opened a hippo-viewing concession, offering lunch and a boat ride to the Magdalena for about $100. It’s doing a brisk business among both Colombian and foreign tourists. This pragmatic embrace of Escobar’s hippos was not so unlike the response to his legacy itself, as I

Don’t Be Puzzled YOU CAN FIND TEN ANSWERS IN THESE PAGES By Sam Ezersky 1 2 8 12 1 2 3 4 5 8 10 9 10 13 11 12 4 5 6 7 18 19 20 13 14 18 16 15 17 26 21 29 28 23 26 24 27 36 30 31 32 See the solution on Page 118. 114 SMITHSONIAN 25 28 29 Across 1 Cause damage to 4 ___ pollination, technique used by bumblebees 8 How Peter F. Mack flew around the world for his goodwill tour 9 Maker of the G-Shock watch 10 Website with tutorials 11 Large animal on Pablo Escobar’s estate 12 Historic travelers on the Mississippi 14 Boxer with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame 15 Lead-in to mantle 16 Early games co. behind D&D 17 “It’s Raining ___” 18 Internet connection inits. 21 Spanish for “sun” 22 Hurricane prompting the construction of flood barriers around Galveston 23 Pharaoh who supposedly founded Berenike 26 Some natural hairstyles 28 Zap in the microwave 29 Destination to harvest wild blueberries 30 Big name in elevators 22 31 32 Group impacted during Civil War-era coffee shortages Collection Down 1 Sweater material from a goat 2 “Thanks ___!” 3 Seating spot just behind the front, on a ticket 4 Provokes on the internet 5 Org. selling envelopes 6 Kind of code on an envelope 7 Where to see lions and tigers and bears 8 Vends 9 Bit of neck jewelry 12 Butcher shop’s trimmings 13 NFL wide receiver ___ Beckham Jr. 17 Animal with antlers 18 Handy purchase to make one’s own home repairs, in brief 19 “O beautiful for spacious ___ . . . ” 20 Welcome gift in Hawaii 21 Expressionless in one’s face 23 Partner of proper 24 Mafokate with a riding school in Soweto 25 Zoom button 26 Grp. for doctors 27 A ways away | July • August 2024 realized when I visited his hacienda. The drug lord’s restored villa on the property grounds is now a memorial museum to his victims, just down a path from the pond where his original hippos once resided. (Today, the pond is home to a female hippo named Vanessa, the park’s mascot.) A high arch stands at the entrance, topped by a replica of the single-engine Piper Super Cub airplane that Escobar first used to fly cocaine to landing strips in the United States. Colombian tourists moved somberly through galleries displaying portraits of politicians, policemen and ordinary citizens killed in car bombings and crossfire, and yellowing newspaper clippings and magazine covers documenting Escobar’s atrocities. Billboards near the museum saluted the “triumph of the state” against “the worst criminal in our history.” On Doradal’s main drag a mile away, however, I encountered a different kind of commemoration. At Pablo’s Shop, which opened on the former site of one of his favorite cafés, some of those same tourists were posing for photographs alongside a life-size Escobar mannequin and browsing for coffee mugs, T-shirts and refrigerator magnets emblazoned with his portrait. Those looking for more menacing mementos could take their pick from display cases filled with replica pistols and AK-47s. The owner conceded that he had been nervous about opening the boutique—friends had warned him that he might face a backlash—but he’d had no trouble at all. In fact, business was booming. Escobar’s charisma, his extraordinary wealth and his flamboyant notoriety had conferred on him the status of permanent celebrity. Despite a recognition among Colombian officials that the hippos will have to be managed, whether by a culling program, wide-scale sterilization, targeted translocation or some combination, even in the best of circumstances Colombians will likely have to live with a vestige hippo population. Of some 3,500 invasive animal species introduced by humans into new, unsuitable biomes around the world, few have been eradicated. Whether the intruders are Burmese pythons imported by exotic pet collectors and abandoned in the Florida Everglades, or lionfish from the Indo-Pacific, eating up crustaceans, snappers, groupers and other aquatic animals along the East Coast and Gulf of Mexico, or giant African land snails, devouring native plants across Asia and Latin America, there is no realistic way to turn back the clock. Colombians may have no choice but to make their peace with this reality. At dusk, as we watched the hippo behind Villa Sara leave the lake and begin a search for food in the adjacent woods, Daza said, “I’ve accepted him, and I’ve come to view having him here as a privilege.”
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ask smithsonian YOU’VE GOT QUESTIONS. WE’VE GOT EXPERTS Q: Based on the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, the public seemed to think we’d soon travel to other planets. Why didn’t we? Johnson Alabama Kanell | Portland, Maine WHEN NASA STARTED ITS Apollo program in the 1960s, the United States was in a space race with the Soviet Union. The government gave the program high priority—and a high budget to match. But the Apollo program was expensive, and political urgency disappeared after the moon landing. NASA’s human ambitions shifted toward collaborating on the International Space Station and building reusable space shuttles. At the same time, new advances allowed exploration of the moon and planets to continue without humans on board. Since 1970, seven rovers have landed on the moon, and six others (and a small helicopter) have explored Mars, while spacecraft like Cassini and Juno have probed the outer planets and their moons. Artemis 3, scheduled for 2026, plans to send humans to the moon for the first time since 1972. The goal, according to the mission’s website, is to “build a community on the moon, driving a new lunar economy and inspiring a new generation.” NASA hopes that a successful Artemis program will lead to human Mars missions in the 2030s. Matthew Shindell, curator of planetary science and exploration, National Air and Space Museum Q: Could different backyard birds, such as a robin and a bluebird, produce viable offspring? Joseph Niemoeller | Glen Carbon, Illinois A LTHOUGH CLOSELY related species can have offspring, they typically don’t. Robins and bluebirds may be able to hybridize (there are no documented cases), but they have different plumages, songs, foraging habits and nest types, so it would be unlikely for them to choose each other. Such differences, along with geographic range and habitat preferences, prevent species from interbreeding even when it’s possible. Some species, like mallard ducks, do hybridize frequently. But the hybrid young may be a “dead end,” since they may be less likely to survive to adulthood or find their own mates. Hybrid cases help scientists learn what traits are important in the evolution and maintenance of species. Sarah Luttrell, researcher of birds and vertebrate zoology, National Museum of Natural History 120 SMITHSONIAN | July • August 2024 Submit your queries at Smithsonianmag .com/ask Q: Did Native Americans have cats and dogs before the arrival of European colonizers? Joseph A. Leist | Hamilton, New Jersey DOMESTIC CATS DID NOT EXIST in the Americas before Europeans arrived. However, there was a diverse range of dogs. We think humans brought dogs from Eurasia at least 15,000 years ago. The dogs traveled with humans, who selectively bred them for many different purposes. For example, the Coast Salish Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest bred a unique long-haired dog for their wool. They sheared or combed out hair from these “woolly” dogs, then spun it into yarn and wove it into intricate textiles for regalia, blankets and rugs. From the DNA sequenced from the only known woolly dog pelt (from 1859), currently in Smithsonian collections, we found that this woolly dog lineage is up to 5,000 years old. This dog has gene variants not seen in any other canid species. Many other dog species were kept by Indigenous groups for different reasons, including hunting and pulling sleds. The ancestors of today’s Arctic sled dogs came over from Siberia with Inuit people just 2,000 years ago. Most of the dog breeds Americans have today came much later, with European colonizers. Audrey T. Lin, research associate in anthropology, National Museum of Natural History Illustration by Marilyn Foehrenbach Wirtz
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