Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Carrie Pearson - Found!

Until yesterday, I have posited that Carrie Pearson could be a fiction created by Louis Edwin Granger. She existed on secondary family records and in genealogies that relied on him to report them. There was no birth record, no death record, no marriage record - nothing. I was able to piece together a slim picture based on secondary sources -
  • Carrie Pearson may have been born about 1845, lived in New Orleans and married Granger about 1865, presumably when Granger was stationed in New Orleans with the Union Army.1
  • Louis' wife during the war may have had a brother named George, who was a trader in New Orleans2
  • My grandmother, Louis' granddaughter, had told my father this crazy story that Louis had shot his first wife after catching her in bed with another officer.
This was not much to go on, and there aren't many primary civil public records on-line for Southern states during this period.

So last week, I got my first lead. I went to the National Archives in Washington, DC and pulled the record for Louis Edwin Granger's court martial. I found a few interesting things:
  • Granger was represented by a lawyer by the name of Eliphalet Pearson.
  • In his closing statement after being convicted he wrote: “In conclusion the accused would state that domestic afflictions and calamities not proper to be disclosed but with which some of the court are familiar and which had their influence in the settlement of debts with a view to keep these matters from the public gaze - may have led accused to acts of indiscretion, but he believes himself utterly incapable of knowingly defrauding his fellow man or that government under whose auspices he has been acting, and under whose banner it has been his pride and glory to act.”
  • The court martial materials contained a letter detailing and act of adultery from his unnamed while Louis was working with the Freedman's bureau.3
I found it very interesting that the lawyer has the same name as the alleged first wife. I decided to research Eliphalet Pearson. I found that Eliphalet Pearson was a rather famous early educator and minister affiliated with Harvard University. There was also an Eliphalet Pearson who was rather prominent from Indiana. And there was an Eliphalet Pearson who graduated from Dartmouth. This last Eliphalet Pearson became a lawyer moved to New Orleans in 1865.4 According to the 1850 Federal Census and the 1855 Massachusetts Census, there is a young woman living in the house named Caroline Pearson. Who was born about 1845 in New York. And a young man named George Pearson.

At this point I was very excited. I didn't have anything definitive - it was all circumstantial, but also very interesting. I found Eliphalet died in 1870.5 I looked for graves for Eliphalet Pearson in New Orleans. Findagrave directed me to Greenwood Cemetery. At Greenwood cemetery, I found Eliphalet Pearson buried at 11 Mulberry Cedar Aloe. The site was shared by two other people: Selone Pearson - a badly transcribed index for Salome Pearson, Elipahlet's wife, and Carrie Granger. Most likely the Caroline Pearson/ Carrie Pearson who married Louis Edwin Granger.

Notes:
1 Granger, James Nathaniel; Launcelot Granger of Newbury, Mass and Suffield Conn.: A Genealogical History, p 368-369.
2 "The Luck of Louis Granger. War's romance illustrated by grateful Scotchman - bequeathing $50,000 to Union Officer." The Daily Picayune (New Orleans, LA) Monday, May 02, 1887, pg. 4, Issue 98, col E.
3Record Group 153: Records of the Office of the Judge Advocate General (Army), 1792 - 2010, Series : Court Martial Case Files, compiled 12/1800 - 10/1894, War Department. PP-479.
4A memorial of the class of 1827, Dartmouth college, Dartmouth College. Class of 1827, Jonathan Fox Worcester, Centennial anniversary of the College, 1869, p. 51; Bench and Bar of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Volume 1, William Thomas Davis, Boston History Company, 1895, p.450.
5General Catalogue of Dartmouth College and the Associated Institutions(1880) p. 27

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Solving the fund manager dilema

Nassim Taleb pointed out a problem with assessing fund managers in The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable. A certain number of fund manager's are going to do better than the market through dumb luck. Telling whether your fund manager is an exception or not is made more difficult by the fact that under performing managers are fired and new fund managers are added to the pool.

The math for static pool is straight forward: Start out with 1000 fund managers. Assess them at the end of the year. Fire the half that didn't beat the market. After the first year you have 500 survivors. After 2 years 250. After 3 years 125. And so on. If we let S be the number of survivors and P be the size of the initial pool of managers and t be the number of years, the equation would look something like this:
S = P(2)-t

And of course you can easily generalize this to allow for different drop criteria by adding a factor ρ for the ratio being kept:
S = P(ρ)-t

So what do you do when the size of the pool is changing? While I'm not directly solving the fund manager problem, I am solving an analogous one with books. Here is the scenario:
  • A pool of electronic books is made available to library patrons
  • When a library patron accesses a book the library pays a rental fee for a short term loan
  • After a set number of loans the library purchases the book outright and the book remains as part of the library's collection
  • Books are added to the pool as they become available
  • Books are removed from the pool, for example a later edition is published and replaces the existing edition
  • No purchased books are removed from the pool
How much money do you need to set aside to cover the costs of the rental fees and the purchase fees?
Which is really a bunch of related problems:
  • How many books will I purchase? At what cost (% of list price)?
  • How many books will I rent? How many times? At what cost?
  • How many books will be removed from the pool before being purchased?
In each of these cases I can use the same equation except I need to measure the size of the initial pool, P, the number of survivors, S, at time, t, to calculate my rate, ρ. Measuring the number of survivors is easy - count the number of items that meet the selected criteria at time t. For example the number of books rented at least once after 100 days. I've been grappling with how to measure the size of the initial pool. What is the correct size for the initial pool? I think I have an answer:
count the number of items that have been in the pool at least that long and were not removed from the pool before reaching that age. So what do you think? Is that the right way to do this?

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

By the Book

By the Book is a delightful short story by Michael J. Farrell. I'm not going to review it - go read it yourself. It's in a collection called Life in the Universe from Stinging Fly Press.

The story dovetails nicely with the questions I've been asking professionally:
  • What should we be weeding from a collection? 
  • Why do patrons select the books they do? Why do researchers? 
  • When is there enough? When is there too much?
My great grandmother liked reading Sienkiewicz. My father decided to reread some of the things she had read to him as a child. They were gone - weeded from the public library's collection because no one still reads Sienkeiwicz - Polish novels no longer are interesting. And no one's heard of them. And if they have, they can't find them because Polish spellings are so different from the way an English speaker would transliterate them. Should I at least try to find a copy and give it whirl for nostalgia's sake?

Finding and using seem to be tightly connected. Advertising, word of mouth, display, wandering the stacks. I read Red Moon Rising: Sputnik and the Hidden Rivalries that Ignited the Space Age, because I saw it on a prominent display at the public library. I read Britain's war machine : weapons, resources, and experts in the Second World War because I found it in the stacks while looking for something else. Should we take old uncirculated books and display them prominently, rather than send them to storage or off to the discard pile?

Friday, March 21, 2014

Obituary

My great great grand father, Louis Edwin Granger, died a hundred and fifteen years ago this coming April. I found his obituary from the New York times. It is an interesting piece of myth making. Some of  it is verifiably true, some of it is patently false and some of it may simply be wishful thinking. Col. Louis Granger the head line reads. The US army never made Louis E. Granger a Colonel. As far as I can tell, he started using Col. in his professional life in the 1880's. I always figured this use was a marketing scheme like Colonel Sanders. Apparently, his last wife wasn't aware. His official record lists two brevets - one to First Lieutenant for his actions at Antietam, and Captain for his actions at Port Hudson. Lieutenant, Lieutenant Colonel perhaps someone misheard.

Otherwise the Obituary's description of his military career is accurate. The general story arc matches the official record. Boston Guard to Massachusetts Infantry, serving with the Army of the Potomac. A transfer to be an officer with the US colored troops in Louisiana. A stint in North Carolina serving with the Judge Advocate General during Reconstruction. A return to Louisiana to sell off the Army's equipment in Louisiana and east Texas. Discharge, reenlist. While it mentions the end of his service in the army, it does omit he ended his Army career in 1869 under less than voluntary circumstances. The Evening Star reported

Capt. Louis E. Granger, 25th United States Infantry, of Massachusetts, has been dismissed [sic] the service and sentenced to imprisonment at the Dry Tortugas for conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman, and for misappropriation of public money.1

His obituary then summarizes the next thirty years in two sentences:

He retired from this position and army life in 1869, and went in the brokerage business.  In 1889 Col. Granger erected a monument in Hardwick, Mass., to the natives of that town who were killed in the civil war.2

The "brokerage" business landed him in court at least three more times. Once for forgery - possibly related to his discharge in 1869. Once for bad debts while he was living in Utah. And finally in 1898, when he declared bankruptcy. There was also a civil suite in Salt Lake and at least one divorce in Chicago. The monument in Hardwick still stands - it's a bit out of the way but it is still there.

The final paragraph lists his widow in Manhattan, her two daughters and her two stepsons from Utah. It omits his third (?) wife in Boston who had claimed to be his widow from at least 1880 until her death seven year later in 1906. There is also the possibility his first (ex?)wife was still alive as was his eldest daughter. According to our family stories - both had died prior to 1870, but the daughter magically appeared in a couple of articles in Salt Lake Newspapers in 1885. Leaving the issue entirely open. If she was alive in 1885 it is entirely plausible she was still alive when her father died.

The man had successfully created a myth that made a checkered past a bit more palatable. He highlighted the good things, omitted the bad, and exaggerated when it suited his sense of self. Perhaps this is something we would all like to do.

1The Evening Star, Volume 34, Number 5181, Washington DC, October 18, 1869, pg 1, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov, accessed February 24, 2014

2New York Times (1857-1922); May 1, 1899; ProQuest Historical Newspapers: The New York Times (1851-2009) pg. 7

Friday, January 24, 2014

Aunt Gladys

My grandmother was named for her father's younger sister, Aunt Gladys. In 1972, my grandparents visited my family and a plan was hatched to visit Aunt Gladys. We piled into my grandfather's Lincoln and were off to visit Aunt Gladys in Florida. I remember visiting a very old woman who was too sick to get out of bed. The mosquitoes in the everglades, the rides at Disney World, and the Spanish fort at Saint Augustine.

Recently, I decided to see what I could find out about Aunt Gladys. First, I found out she was married to a cover artist for magazines  - she was his model for some covers. Paintings of her are kept in art galleries. And she was a pin up girl during the teens and twenties. I discovered she was an actress - she appeared in plays on Broadway, and Silent films. Her mother was also on Broadway. Who knew?

She has connected me socially to the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. For example, I am separated from the Civil War by two degrees because I met her - her father was a Civil War veteran. There are only two degrees to Rudyard Kipling - she appeared in a play he wrote. What else will I find looking at old newspapers from New York?

Cheers!

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

The Data Driven Librarian

I am a spreadsheet junkie. I like data. I also subscribe to the paradigm that data isn't information until it has context. Information isn't knowledge until it can be used for something. In that light all the data cleaning, analysis, and charting is really an attempt to make information out of data. Once the data is information, it can be used to make decisions and take actions.

Using data in this way sits well with my constituents - mostly Engineers and Scientists. I want to know what people are using, what is costs. I want to know what people want. I want to know what is being taught and what is being research and what is interesting. Ultimately, I'm trying to make the best decisions I can.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Payola, Anyone?

I have been attending a lot about "Open Access" lately. Between attending Open Science: Driving Forces and Practical Realities and Eileen Joy's Freedom, Responsibility, E-Publishing, and Building New Cultural-Intellectual Publics, my brain in still processing Green Open Access, Gold Open Access, Open Science, Open Data, Self Archiving, et al.

Open Science forum two things stood out to me. Dr. John King, from the University of Michigan, made the observation that tenure would end. He didn't know when. He didn't favor it. He was seeing signs that it was ending, a increasing percentage of professors and teachers were holding non tenure track positions. In the afternoon session, The Future of Open Science, one of the state roadblocks is no one wants to pay for Open Science. Everyone likes the idea of freely available peer reviewed papers, but no one is willing to pay for it. Each organization looks to someone else to provide the infrastructure. Publishers don't want to reduce profits for Open Science. Schools see Open Science as an added cost. Agencies don't think they can sell the costs to the public.

The marginal cost of information is extremely low.1 Many would insist information should be free. It is not. It is like a free lunch. Even if you're not paying for it someone is. Usually they expect something in return. People who create and disseminate information need to have access to broadcast information. That costs something. They like to eat. That costs something. There needs to be freedom to broadcast information and appropriate limits to vet information that could be harmful to others. Enforcement and protection cost money. Sometimes these costs are born by a publisher. Sometimes they are born by the author, sometimes they are born by someone else, usually a government, or an advertiser.

I see a potentially bad scenario: a young researcher is trying to get tenure. The requirements are publication and citation. A paper is accepted at a high impact open access journal. The researcher can choose to pay to have the article open and more likely to be cited, or behind a pay wall. The University does not pay publishing fees for non-tenure researchers. We have a classic catch-22 - if you're tenured you are printed in open journals and cited. In order to be tenured you need to be cited. In order to be cited you need to be in an open access journal. In order to be open in an open access journal you need to pay, but the University doesn't pay publication costs for non-tenured researchers. The problem has an eerie resemblance to payola schemes.

There are a host of things to keep this from happening, not the least of which is funding agencies may allow portions of a grant to go to publication costs. Right now, most publishers wave the price for open access if the researcher can't pay. It will be interesting to see where this all goes.

1 I would like to see someone actually sit down and figure out the cost of a page of internet information. Not how much does it cost me the user, but how much did it cost. You know, it takes three hours to type and edit one page of 500 words on a computer, assuming a wage of $X per hour, prorated cost of computer equipement/cell phone/tablet, cost of internet connection, server costs to host for a year, etc. what does information actually cost?