December 2011 Volume I Issue IV
Transcription
December 2011 Volume I Issue IV
Thirsty Knights Standard Volume 1 Issue 4 November 2011 NEXT MEETING Sunday, December 4 Plattduetch Park This could be the last issue of this Newsletter! Please we need help. Send articles to me to be included in this newsletter. Send me information that you would see here. This can include anything which may be of interest to other members, such as: Birthdays Birth announcements Anniversaries Graduations New acquisitions Auction News Pictures of your visit to a friends collection Pictures of a visit to an museum You can email me at [email protected] or write me at Richard Walter 550 Park Place Paterson, New Jersey 07504 Page 2 Thirsty Knights Standard The Stein That Was Meant To Be Ours Flash back to the late 1950’s in Brooklyn, New York. My parents bought a bar for our apartment, all the rage back then. Dad thought it would be nice to have a shelf behind the bar with a few beer steins…and so it began! In those early years, you could buy steins from a guy on Coney Island Avenue, his name was Huey, and his business card said he was a “Connoisseur of the Rare”. (Huey sold several steins to Dad back then, a Mettlach cost about $15!) Little was in print about the world of steins, there was no internet, clubs, etc, and so we learned as we went. Little did I know that I was in my father’s footsteps as the love of steins grew in both of our hearts. For my Dad’s birthday in 1960, he got a stein which I thought was really neat. It was a PUG with a keg and devils escaping from the brew inside. It was a two liter common stein, but was secretly my favorite. We had moved out on Long Island in 1963, and my parents stopped into a local tavern for a drink one afternoon. On a shelf, Dad spotted the George Ehret stein, By Joanne Festa a Mettlach (#1997). (Ehret’s Hell Gate Brewery was established in 1866). Being a crafty Brooklynite, my Dad asked the owner of the tavern if he would be interested in trading that brown and beige stein (the Mettlach) for a larger more interesting one. The owner agreed, and the deed was done. Dad felt a sense of accomplishment, in that he “upgraded” a common stein PUG for an etched Mettlach. Both were happy with the trade they made. Years passed. My Dad’s collection grew, and I started my own collection when I went out on my own. Steins were everywhere in our homes, something like the squirrels saving nuts for the long winter. We both loved them, and enjoyed our time looking at the latest Prosit, going to stein meetings, perusing stein auction catalogues. Books were written full of information. We made friends and learned and shared. The Erhet stein stood proudly among my Dad’s conquests. One day, about twenty years later, my parents returned to the tavern for a drink. It had been years since their last visit. That’s right; up on a shelf stood the PUG Dad had traded back in the early 1960s. He asked the new owner of the tavern if he could possibly buy that stein. The owner agreed, and Dad bought the stein back for $75. He was delighted!! I always loved the stein, so I was happy it was back in the family. Sadly, my father, Lambert Schmidt, passed away in 2004. The steins are now part of his legacy to his family and the future stein -enthusiasts to come. But I have to say, of all the steins in our combined collection, my favorite, to this day, is the one that was parted all these years and returned… devils thumbing their noses at the gnomes who are working to put the hops into the brew. Volume 1 Issue 4 Page 3 My First Stein by Jim Fredhold out I casually asked him would he mind if I took a look at it. He handed it to me and said sure. I checked it out and very quickly handed it back to him saying I was not interested. Now comes the funny part. He asked me why. I said, and pointed out, it has a big chip on the base and a line startingat the base and going underneath half way across. I started walking away keeping my eye on what he was doing with the stein. Finally he put It was a beautiful Saturday morning sometime in the summer of 1989. My wife Kathy and I, along with a friend of hers, were out very early in the morning hitting all the yard and garage sales we could find, in search of all sorts of things including steins and Hummels. As I recollect it was about the 3rd or 4th stop at a huge yard that the following happened. The 3 of us always split up so we could cover all the tables as quickly as possible. I was moving along when I spotted this stein across the yard on a table. I hurried quickly over but before I got there, a man picked it up. Slowing down I went to the table and watched him examining it. I asked him how much was on the sticker. He told me $25.00. As he was checking it down the stein and left the table. Very casually I circled back and picked up the stein and headed for the pay table. I told the lady it was damaged and showed her the chip and hairline. She seemed surprised and I asked her if she would lower the price. After looking it over she commented that it probably would not sell with the damage, at that price, and I could have it for $5.00. Thus I had my first early stein of my career and a good price and a story besides. JIM FREDHOLM Page 4 Thirsty Knights Standard The Schuhplattler by Richard Walter I have for many years been involved in a schuhplatter veriene. This has led me to collect steins that depict Schuhplattler dancers. I thought some of you may be interested in the history of this form of dance whitch is unique to Bavaria. The Schuhplattler certainly belongs to the most characteristic of all Bavarian forms of expression. The word "Schuhplattler" has its origins in the fact that the dancer strikes the soles of his shoes ('Schuhe') with his hands held flat ('platt'). The 'inventors' were simple folk: farmers, hunters, woodsmen. It's difficult to determine the exact origin and history of the dance. "Ruodlieb", a knight's poem written by a monk at Tegernsee monastery (not far south of Munich) in the year 1050, describes a village dance featuring "leaps and hand gestures" that could actually denote an early form of the Schuhplattler. When the empress of Russia spent time in 1838 at a spa in nearby Wildbad Kreuth, the locals honored her with the performance of a dance that very closely resembled the Schuhplattler. During the dance, the boy was allowed to move however he liked to the melody of a 'Laendler' folk tune, i.e. he would make figures, leap, stomp and slap while his girl rotated in time with the music and did not join him until the waltz began. His unregimented, free 'plattling' was known as "Bavarian dancing". From about the mid-1800s onward, the Schuhplattler dance moves became increasingly standardized and "group plattln" came into its own. On July 15, 1858, a Schuhplattler dance was performed in Upper Bavaria on the occasion of King Max II's trip through the bavarian mountains. Volume 1 Issue 4 Schuhplattler - Continued In 1861, a "Gemuetlichkeit Club" was formed in Miesbach (also south of Munich, not far from the Austrian border), which changed its name to the "Schuhplattler Society" in 1866. In 1883, Joseph Vogl founded the "Club for Preservation of Folk Costume in the Leizach Valley" in nearby Bayrischzell, and from that time onward, the phenomenon of regulated Schuhplatteln developed in the folk costume clubs. There are about 150 different Schuhplattler dances, and regional differences are evident throughout the areas in which the Schuhplattler is part of the local culture: the Koenigssee in the east to Lake Constance in the west, from the Danube River in the north to the border of Tyrolia in the south. Wherever the dance is performed, it is irrevocably linked with Bavarian tradition and genuine zest for life. Page 5 Page 6 Thirsty Knights Standard Photos from last Thirsty Knights meeting Volume 1 Issue 4 Photos from last Thirsty Knights meeting Page 7 THIRSTY KNIGHTS Help make this newsletter a success! Newsletter Committee Richard H. Walter richwalt@richwalt,com 973-345-7503 Dennis Ramshaw [email protected] 631-588-2061 Copyright 2011 Thirsty Knights Please send updated contact info to Cynthia Ramshaw at [email protected] or call (631-588-2061) so we may email/send you Thirsty Knights correspondence. Send your articles for this newsletter to any committee member. This newsletter will only be a success with your help. Here are some suggestions for articles but I call upon you to come up with some new and fresh ideas. My first stein Why I joined the Thirsty Knights. Why I joined SCI. My favorite stein. Why I collect steins. What types of steins I collect. Stories of SCI and Thirsty Knights history. SUGGESTION BOX We are looking for your suggestions. We want to make The Thirsty Knights a better organization to serve your needs. Please send us your suggestions on how to improve both our enjoyment of our collecting hobby and our social time together. We have already received some suggestions. Please add yours to the list! Convention #4
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