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Twain tie turns up in ‘Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter’

Posted by – June 4, 2012

A re-imagined Abraham Lincoln takes a break from slaying baddies like Joseph Nash McDowell, the real-life macabre doctor who inspired Mark Twain Cave's spookiness, in this poster from the summer blockbuster "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter." (photo courtesy of Hollywood Reporter)

Here’s a fun one from one of Hannibal’s Mark Twain heirs apparent about an upcoming summer blockbuster’s possible nod to Twain and Hannibal.

Jim Waddell, a prolific Twain portrayer in Hannibal, emailed me over the weekend to tell me he’d been thumbing through a copy of “Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter,” the 2010 novel by literary revisionist Seth Grahame-Smith that imagines our 16th president as a slayer of the undead. A film adaptation is set to be released later this month.

Waddell, who has done some interesting research into Twain’s Hannibal childhood, soon found that a figure who fascinated the young Samuel Clemens — and inspired no small share of Mark Twain Cave’s spooky vibe — figures prominently in the book. From his email (emphasis mine):

Imagine my surprise when I read in chapter eight that Lincoln sends his cohorts to kill the dreaded vampire Dr. Joseph Nash McDowell. This is the same man who stored the corpse of his daughter in the Mark Twain Cave.  Her likeness is visible on the ceiling of the submarine room, traced on the limestone with the carbon produced from the flame of a torch.  B.F.M. Farthing wrote an acount(sic) of how he, young Sam, and several other boys snuck out of school to view the corpse and got lost in the cave.  The chapter in AL:VH that addresses McDowell is exciting and graphic.  It will be interesting to see how its(sic) represented in the movie.

Twain’s “Life on the Mississippi” briefly touched on McDowell’s gruesome medical experimentations. However, I’m willing to bet Twain never imagined McDowell as a vampire. Maybe this re-imagining of McDowell will inspire a new interest in his real-life fascination with the macabre and how it touched one of Hannibal’s best-known landmarks.

Here’s the trailer for “Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.” My colleague Matt Hopf blogged recently about a new Illinois Office of Tourism ad that likewise painted Lincoln as an action hero of sorts.

Speaking of Twain and medicine, a recent Flavorwire post about the notebooks of famous authors included Twain’s thoughts on a comedy about a physician-turned-playwright.

Self-confessed abuser from Hannibal seminary dies

Posted by – May 10, 2012

A former Catholic priest and bishop who admitted to abusing a young man at Hannibal’s old high school seminary has died.

Catholic News Service reported Tuesday, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch Wednesday, that Bishop Anthony J. O’Connell died recently in a Trappist abbey near Charleston, S.C., after a long illness. He would have turned 74 today.

O’Connell resigned as bishop of south Florida’s Diocese of Palm Beach in 2002, the first bishop to do so in the heat of that year’s Catholic clergy abuse crisis. The day before his resignation, he admitted that he had abused a teenage student in the 1970s at the all-male St. Thomas Aquinas Preparatory Seminary in Hannibal. That student, Christopher Dixon, later would receive a settlement from the Diocese of Jefferson City; however, the diocese never admitted to the allegations against O’Connell, which ultimately were documented in Time magazine.

O’Connell was ordained a priest in the Jefferson City diocese in 1963 and named rector at St. Thomas in 1970. He went on to serve as a bishop in Knoxville, Tenn., and in the Palm Beach diocese, where his ministry career ended. He was never formally defrocked.

The hilltop St. Thomas campus is now home to Hannibal Christian Academy.

Missouri Department of Natural Resources sponsoring mercury drop-off site in Hannibal

Posted by – February 28, 2012

Don’t toss that old thermometer or thermostat in the trash. The Missouri Department of Natural Resources is sponsoring mercury drop-off sites throughout the state, including a site in Hannibal.

The DNR is working with fire departments and county health offices to provide drop-off locations where people or agencies can leave mercury-containing instruments like thermometers, thermostats, blood pressure cuffs or switches. It’s part of a statewide DNR roundup to rid homes of mercury.

If you want to drop something off at the site, secure it in two zip-top plastic bags and then place it in a crush-proof container like a coffee can, margarine tub or plastic beverage bottle. Then bring it to the Hannibal Fire Department’s Station 1 at 206 S. 4th.

For our friends further to the northwest, there’s also a drop-off site at the Kirksville Fire Department’s central station, 401 N. Franklin.

If you’ve got a lot of items to drop off at the site, or if you’re at all uncomfortable with transporting mercury instruments, call the DNR’s spill line at (573) 634-2436.

The mercury roundup will run through May 31, at which time DNR staff will collect the dropped-off items and transport them to their Jefferson City headquarters. There, they will recycle what they can and properly dispose of the rest.

The DNR has more information about the mercury round-up and about the health effects of a mercury spill around the house.

Proposed Hannibal bicentennial evokes a little deja vu

Posted by – January 20, 2012

The city of Hannibal is beginning the long process of planning a 2019 bicentennial celebration for the city. Click here for the story.

The long list of ideas Third Ward Councilman Lou Barta proposed for the bicentennial — which the City Council sanctioned this week by passing a resolution to form the Bicentennial Commission — evoked, in my mind, everything I’ve read about Hannibal’s Mark Twain sesquicentennial. (Yes, I was alive then. No, I was not old enough to read.) Or, rather, what it was supposed to be.

A belt buckle sold at the Mark Twain Boyhood Home and Museum in 1985, commemorating Twain's 150th birthday.

For some historical perspective, I suggest reading Ron Powers’ “White Town Drowsing.” Powers, a Hannibal native and Pulitzer Prize winner, has his fans and his detractors in Hannibal, and having read “White Town Drowsing” last year, I admit it can be pretty self-aggrandizing. But it’s also quite the account of the controversial planning process that led up to the 1985 celebration of Mark Twain’s 150th birthday.

The sesquicentennial was supposed to be, in outside promoters’ minds, a seven-month extravaganza drawing untold thousands of visitors from around the world. A steamboat regatta and chart-topping concerts were among the ideas they promoted and sold to local residents. As Powers tells it, it was controversial because, among other reasons, the local residents who were to benefit from the festival didn’t have much skin in the planning. However, when many of the elaborate plans fell through, locals stepped in and planned a more modest celebration.

The city’s bicentennial won’t look much like the proposed Mark Twain sesquicentennial. Steamboat regatta? Try a visit from one or two steamboats. But the concept of the event itself may bring back some memories in Hannibal, I said to Barta as I chatted with him about his plans.

Barta knows memories of the Mark Twain sesquicentennial run deep, not all of them pleasant. For one thing, as recently as last year, the City Council had a member, Jeff Lyng, whose father, former Mayor John Lyng, was the local face of the sesquicentennial process. (Several senior Herald-Whig staff members, too, were around Hannibal in those days as members of the media.)

“I do know there are a lot of people who remember those things and are are still working with us and with the city,” Barta said.

But he believes Hannibal has learned from its mistakes. He’s hoping for many chances to solicit public input, which he says will be a hallmark of this process, if he has his druthers.

Still, on the face of it, the idea of a bicentennial celebration made me wonder if Hannibal is in for some deja vu. Depending on how you look at it — and how things take shape over the next seven years — that could be a good thing or a bad thing.

Winter travel? There’s an app for that, MoDOT says

Posted by – January 10, 2012

Although we’ve had a mild winter to date, the other shoe can drop at any time. The Missouri Department of Transportation is hoping to provide a handy way to navigate winter weather on the state’s roads: It has launched its online Traveler Information Map as a smartphone app.

The free app, available for the iPhone and Android phones (version 2.2 or later), provides a miniaturized version of the interactive road map, offering a state overview of construction-, incident- and weather-related road conditions, as well as zoomed-in information on a given location. Weather information and traffic cameras are also accessible.

As with the Traveler Information App on MoDOT’s full website, all of it is updated continuously during snow and ice events. (I know that’s when I find myself hitting “refresh” constantly.)

MoDOT cautions that the app should be only one part of a safe travel plan, with weather reports and law enforcement alerts factored in, as well. Also, don’t use the app while driving, the agency says; that’s as bad as texting and driving.

VIDEO: Festive flash mob takes Quincy Mall by storm for Salvation Army

Posted by – November 26, 2011

How do you raise awareness for your organization’s Christmas fundraising campaign? Well, you could put up a billboard or take out a newspaper ad.

Or you could gather a bunch of people to sing Christmas carols in the mall.

The Salvation Army took the second route Saturday with a flash mob at the Quincy Mall. Several dozen Quincyans converged on the mall’s Fountain Court during a busy morning of holiday shopping to sing “Angels We Have Heard on High” and collect funds for the social service nonprofit’s Christmas campaign.

Below, watch a video of the flash mob unfolding.

VIDEO: CASA volunteers take their oath

Posted by – November 22, 2011

Monday was a big day for the newest volunteers in Douglass Community Services’ Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) program, as they were sworn in by Judge Rachel Bringer to begin their service to foster children in the 10th Judicial Circuit. Watch them take their oath in this video.

VIDEO: A spooktacular night at Hannibal’s community Halloween party

Posted by – November 1, 2011

The Hannibal Police Department held its 31st annual Halloween party Monday night, a free night of tricks, treats, games, costume contests and haunted houses at Admiral Coontz Armory. The party drew a large crowd of little ghosts and goblins and their families, and everyone seemed to be having a great time. Hats off to the Police Department for putting on another great event.

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VIDEO: High school students learn Civil War-era dance

Posted by – October 28, 2011

Canton’s Christian University was the home base for numerous Union troops in Northeast Missouri in the early months of the Civil War. A century and a half later, the school now known as Culver-Stockton College commemorated its unique place in Civil War history with a two-day symposium, “1861: The College, The Community, The War,” featuring a day-long hands-on demonstration Thursday for area high school students.

A highlight of Thursday’s presentation was a workshop on Civil War-era music and dance, led by area re-enactors and C-SC Dean David Wilson. Below, students from Palmyra High School learn a dance called a reel as musicians play the period tune “Blackberry Blossom.”

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Hannibal artists “Go Big or Go Home”

Posted by – October 27, 2011

Brenda Beck Fisher, of the Hannibal Arts Council, and the super-sized "Little Debbie" by Stephen Schisler.

The Hannibal Arts Council, like many galleries, is limited by space constraints in the size of the art it usually can accept for exhibitions or competitions. Not so with its current exhibition.

The “Go Big or Go Home” exhibition, which begins with an opening reception Friday evening and runs through Nov. 19, reverses the usual size constraints and welcomes large-format art. Executive Director Michael Gaines says each piece in the exhibition was required to be at least 37 inches, preferably more, in its largest dimension.

Visitors to the gallery, which is open weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., will see items like Stephen Schisler’s “Little Debbie,” pictured here.

This is arguably the greatest thing I have seen all week. Stay Puft Marshmallow Man, anyone?