Category: People You’ve Never Heard Of

  • Fred Holland Day: Photographer, Aesthete, Trust-Fund Child, Pleasure-Seeker, Eccentric

    This last June, after Sebastian Horsley died in Soho at the age of 47 from a heroin overdose, I began thinking about this genre of rich wastrel louches.

    We in the white, waking world are fascinated by stories of Edies and Huntington Hartfords who have it all and waste it all.

    Of Horsley, The Guardian put it best:

    Despite his louche self-destruction–Horsley attempted his own crucifixion in 2000 in the Philippines–for the past two years he had got up at 7 am to plough up and down the local swimming pool.

    …A quote that, to this day, makes me laugh:  “Oh, and by the way, he attempted a self-crucifixion.  But!  Now about his swimming routine!”

    I was struck by the similarities between him and someone else, another rich-boy aesthete with queer artistic tendencies:  Fred Holland Day.

    Fred Holland Day
    Fred Holland Day, Self-Portrait (1911)

    I first became acquainted with Fred Holland Day’s photography on a hot day in East Africa–Kisumu, right on the fetid, humid shores of Lake Victoria–in the British Council Library.  The British Council was a quiet, blessed island of relief from the bush.

    Paging through a retrospective of early 20th century photographers, my jaw dropped when I first saw F. Holland Day’s crucifixion series, and in particular this single image:

    The Crucifixion Series

    These were the most confusing and startling images I had ever seen.  Questions abounded:

    • Is this a real person or a mannequin?
    • If real, could a person be this emaciated?
    • What is the scale of this?

    My gaze kept returning to that uplifted, delicate white left leg.  This looked like an alabaster doll.  Even a second view, from the side, did not yield much more information:

    Not until years later did I find out about this series.  The Boston Museum of Fine Arts tells us that

    In 1898 Day produced his most famous body of work, an extensive series of photographs for which he played the role of Christ. His Sacred Studies, as he called them, were both widely acclaimed for their high-art aspirations and criticized as blasphemous.

    Day crucified himself near his home in Norwood, Massachusetts, and a few of his neighbors pitched in to act as Roman soldiers.

    Now The Aesthete-Trust-Fund Child-Pleasure-Seeker-Eccentric Part

    Interested in becoming an eccentric hedonistic aesthete?  It helps if your father is a rich Boston merchant and you don’t have to work a day in your life.  Fred Holland Day was born during the Civil War (1864) and died during the Great Depression (1933).

    While much of his work concerned scantily clad young men in pastoral situations, and though it’s a safe bet that he was gay, there is no conclusive evidence.  Unfortunately, it’s mainly the homo-eroticism that Day is most remembered for.

    Not only was Day a photographer, he was a publisher who helped forward the causes of photography as a fine art and of English literature.  The Getty tells us

    As partner in the publishing firm Copeland and Day, which he founded in 1884, Day indulged his passion for English literature, publishing exquisite small-edition, hand-bound volumes by the likes of Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Day’s friend Oscar Wilde. Although Copeland and Day published ninety-eight books and periodicals, the firm was never financially successful.

    Day ranged far and wide with his subjects.  Below are a few, beginning with Negro In Hat (1897):

    And even a 6 year-old Khalil Gibran, who years later, would become author of The Prophet (1923):

  • Yestermen With Titanium Balls: F. Bert Farquharson at the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, 1940

    What to call these men who, in decades past, did fearsome things for a purpose and did so with utter aplomb?  While dangerously close to yes men, the term yestermen works for me.

    He’s the man who saves the woman from falling off of Mt. Rushmore–all without taking off his tie.  The polar opposite would be the Jackass pussies who do purposeless things with complete vanity.

    F. Bert Farquharson is one such yesterman.

    Tacoma Narrows Bridge Is Ready To Collapse

    On November 7, 1940, the Tacoma Narrows, south of Seattle, Washington, was beset with gale force winds.  According to the Washington Department of Transportation (WSDOT), by early morning the Tacoma Narrows Bridge began

    undulating, “galloping,” with several waves 2 to 5 feet high. At 7:30 a.m. the wind measured 38 miles per hour. Two hours later, engineers clocked the wind at 42 miles per hour near the bridge’s east end.

    Because “Galloping Gertie,” as it was nicknamed, was a suspension bridge, it had the ability to flex, bend, and ripple, all without breaking–for the moment, as least.  Galloping Gertie was the world’s third largest suspension bridge.

    Tubby the Dog is Trapped

    By now, spectators, bridge officials, and newsmen had begun to gather on both ends of the bridge, with a number of them still cautiously driving across the bridge.

    One such newsman, Leonard Coatsworth, of the Tacoma News-Tribune, was actually there not as a newsman.  He was driving toward his summer cottage on the Olympic Peninsula.  In the back seat was his black cocker spaniel, Tubby.

    Coatsworth did not complete his trip across the bridge.  The bouncing bridge threw his car against the curb, and Coatsworth managed to crawl from the window and stumble back toward the East Tower, a good 480 yards away.  Coatsworth later said of his escape from the bridge:

    On hands and knees most of the time, I crawled 500 yards or more to the towers…My breath was coming in gasps; my knees were raw and bleeding, my hands bruised and swollen from gripping the concrete curb…Toward the last, I risked rising to my feet and running a few yards at a time…

    One problem:  Tubby was still trapped in the car.

    Enter Frederick Bert Farquharson!

    F. Bert Farquharson (1895-1970), a professor of engineering at the University of Washington, had been involved with fixing wind-related engineering issues on Gertie prior to this gale.  When he heard about the problems with the bridge, he hopped in his car and drove an hour south from his home in Seattle.

    When he reached the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, Farquharson began filming the bridge from various angles.  After hearing about the predicament with Tubby trapped in the car, Farquharson decided to walk out onto the bridge and save Tubby.

    Two huge problems.  First, by this time, the Tacoma Narrows Bridge was shaking so wildly, one edge of the bridge was often as much as 28 feet higher than the other side.  Second, concrete chunks of the bridge had already begun to fall off.

    Another problem that no one knew at the time:  the bridge was only 6 minutes from collapse.

    Prof. Farquharson Tries To Save Tubby

    Farquharson ventured over 1,000 feet to Coatsworth’s abandoned car.  But when he tried to grab Tubby, the dog bit his finger.  Realizing that this was a lost cause and that his own life was at stake, Farquharson wisely retreated.  WSDOT tells us:

    Farquharson ran from the East Tower toward the Toll Plaza, covering the 1,100 feet of the side span length as fast as his legs could carry him. He followed the centerline, where he knew there was least motion. Twice, the roadway dropped 60 feet, faster than gravity, then bounced upward, finally settling into a 30-foot deep sag.

    But here’s what propels Farquharson to true titanium-balls status.  When he arrives at the end of the bridge, he is still dressed in his tie and trenchcoat, and holding his pipe.

    If you didn’t catch that:  wearing his tie and holding his pipe.

    The Tacoma Narrows Bridge Collapses

    By 11:10am, the Tacoma Narrows Bridge–good ol’ Galloping Gertie–had fully collapsed, into the cold waters of the narrows.

    A video of the collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge.  The section with Farquharson, aplomb intact and pipe in hand, begins at 2:05.  Be sure to mute the sound, so you don’t have to listen to the nasty New Age music that the YouTuber put on this video.

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