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<p class="year b1">1939 to 1942: A Prince of the Park</p> | <p class="year b1">1939 to 1942: A Prince of the Park</p> | ||
<p class="item"><u>I, and my nanny</u>, Woz, aka Rose, squeezed into my parents' Gramercy Park | <p class="item"><u>I, and my nanny</u>, Woz, aka Rose, squeezed into my parents' apartment on Gramercy Park, with its terrace, coveted view, and their routines of engaging work and gregarious lifestyle. For my first 3 years, that apartment and the bustle of activities that took place there situated my initial lifeworld—my experience of all the givens where I began to sleep and to eat and to walk and to talk, my initial efforts to cope with all my circumstances of time and place.</p> | ||
<p class="item">Our apartment was scaled and furnished, loosely Art Deco, for socializing among Depression era, upwardly-mobile professionals, circa 30 to 40 in age. It came with a rarity, a key to a private, block-sized space straddling Irving Place where I spent my time outdoors, a prince of the park, wheeled about by nanny in my carriage, sporting absurd finery and cooing to gushy bystanders. I have no actual memories of my life there then, but I like to think I would be having some reservations about it. Big-smile pictures of me dressed to the nines suggest someone learning to excessively please. And perhaps my cultivating a knack for quietly sousing myself on drinks carelessly set on low tables by standing guests intent in their conversations suggested a sophisticated despair in the making. From infancy on, we all adapt to our lifeworlds, working with their good and their bad, whatever those may be. At the age of 3, I was ready for a big change through which I could turn active, a self-directing agent in a very different lifeworld, which, thankfully, my parents brought about.</p> | |||
<p class="year b1">1942 to 1943: A different lifeworld.</p> | <p class="year b1">1942 to 1943: A different lifeworld.</p> | ||
Revision as of 11:15, 4 January 2026
A Timeline of my life and and self-formation
Starting Up, 1939-1965
Birth: August 17, 1939.
Mother: Margot de Bruyn Kops McClintock, worked near Herald Square in the Garment District, a designing a line of junior-miss dresses and suits sold nationally in mid-scale department stores.
Father: Franklin T. McClintock, "Joe" to friends and family, worked as a midlevel executive on financing large industrial projects through the Wall Street investment bank, Harriman, Ripley, & Co.
My birth nearly killed my mother, owing to a catastrophic loss of blood in an emergency Cesarian operation. As an infant, she had contracted polio and spent a year-plus in a sanatorium in Bismarck, ND, which left her with a gimp arm, a short leg, a strong will, and, I discovered, a constricted cervical canal. More. . . .
1939 to 1942: A Prince of the Park
I, and my nanny, Woz, aka Rose, squeezed into my parents' apartment on Gramercy Park, with its terrace, coveted view, and their routines of engaging work and gregarious lifestyle. For my first 3 years, that apartment and the bustle of activities that took place there situated my initial lifeworld—my experience of all the givens where I began to sleep and to eat and to walk and to talk, my initial efforts to cope with all my circumstances of time and place.
Our apartment was scaled and furnished, loosely Art Deco, for socializing among Depression era, upwardly-mobile professionals, circa 30 to 40 in age. It came with a rarity, a key to a private, block-sized space straddling Irving Place where I spent my time outdoors, a prince of the park, wheeled about by nanny in my carriage, sporting absurd finery and cooing to gushy bystanders. I have no actual memories of my life there then, but I like to think I would be having some reservations about it. Big-smile pictures of me dressed to the nines suggest someone learning to excessively please. And perhaps my cultivating a knack for quietly sousing myself on drinks carelessly set on low tables by standing guests intent in their conversations suggested a sophisticated despair in the making. From infancy on, we all adapt to our lifeworlds, working with their good and their bad, whatever those may be. At the age of 3, I was ready for a big change through which I could turn active, a self-directing agent in a very different lifeworld, which, thankfully, my parents brought about.
1942 to 1943: A different lifeworld.
By mid '42 or so, recognizing the austerities of war and the constraints of out-grown living arrangements, my parents radically changed my lifeworld, and theirs as well. All along, the Gramercy Park apartment had not been the whole of my world, for Woz and I would accompany my parents to various places for short weekend visits and longer times in the summers of '40 and '41, but I would experience those forays as transient departures from our urban routines, often pleasing but also confusing. One destination for these visits seemed somewhat recurrent, and at it, instead of relaxing convivially, my parents would seem unusually busy with projects in and about, while Woz, who had barely ever in her life been out of the city, nervously kept me too much aside of the action. Nevertheless, I would eye what was going on around and with some excitement added "the farm" to my sparse vocabulary. I had a little party for my 3rd birthday with my urban friends, whom I didn't really know, and shortly after that I learned that we were moving away from the Gramercy Park apartment to live fulltime at the farm. I don't have actual memories of my emotions that our move to the farm triggered, but I'm sure they were emotions of hearty approval and eager anticipation.
Margot and Joe had bought the farm for a song in a deeply depressed market 2 or 3 years before I was born. Making it into an attractive retreat weekends and summers had become their shared avocation, my father the planner and my mother the manager. My involvement began, of course, as a passive participant in the endeavor. But I am sure that by the time it became home, I was ready to turn active, exploring the farm and making it my turf!
1943 to 1948: The Farm @ Solebury, Pa.
Let's set the new scene to sense how an energetic 3-year-old might, intuiting its possibilities relative to programmed and pampered prospects on Gramercy Park. You can find the small village of Solebury at a confusion of stop-signs where 5 country roads converge, about 2 hours south-west of Manhattan, a couple miles beyond the Delaware River, 7 or 8 upstream from historic Washington's Crossing. At the western edge of the village, the Farm occupies 65 acres of bucolic Bucks County land, up the face of a rolling hill, about half of it fallow or wooded, the other half cultivated in wheat, corn, or soy beans. The main house had been built of field-stone in spurts from the mid 1700's to the mid 1800's. It had a large attic floor beneath a sloping roof. The 2nd floor had 4 bedrooms, 2 small and 2 large with unused fireplaces, and 2 bathrooms. The main floor had a kitchen, a dining room with a large working fireplace, and a large living room with an even bigger fireplace, which also worked.[1]Adjacent, most to important me, a big, working barn stood catty-corner 75 feet or so from the main house.
Like the house, the barn had grown from the mid 1700s on. Its base was about 50 foot square, constructed from field-stone, about 3 stories high, with the back wall dug into the hill rising behind it. The front and back walls were faced with wooden planks, the side wall were stone work going all the way up, supporting the roof and interior structure. The ground to the back wall was built up to make a wide ramp to the 2nd floor, with high sliding doors so that heavy, bulky loads could be easily taken in filled with various animals, diverse tools, and lots of space, materials, and stuff to let imagination soar.
I describe the farm at some length because I made my new home a crucial site of my self development for the next 10 years and more., They
I certainly was not aware whether or not my parents purposively planned it, but our moving fulltime to the farm created for me extraordinary opportunities for self-development.
but they each worked fulltime in their Manhattan offices with staffs to manage, projects to plan, and deadlines to meet.
Civic Humanism, 1960-1985
Digital Humanism, 1980-2005
Finishing up 2000-on
1959/60
Excerpt from my undergraduate journal
pdf
1960/61
Educational Content and the American Reality: An Inquiry into Secondary Education for Americans Living in Europe (Senior thesis)
pdf
June: Graduated from Princeton University, with an A.B. degree and the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs Certificate, the Gale F. Johnston Prize in Public Affairs, and High Honors in the School of Public and International Affairs.
Princeton Undergraduate Transcript, 1957-61.
pdf
1961/62
Summer: Managed the summer program at the American School in Switzerland ("Swiss Holiday")
September: Began study at Columbia University towards an M.A. in History.
Fall: paper (now lost) on Henry Adams for a Colloquium in American Intellectual History with Henry Steele Commager, then visiting professor.
pdf
April: Draft M.A. Essays, "The Development of Concepts of Association in American Educational Thought" submitted and rejected by the faculty advisor. Arranged to switch to History and Education program with Lawrence A. Cremin as advisor.
September: Started work on Ph.D. on History and Education as a student in Columbia's International Fellows Program.
pdf
1962/63
"Notes from a Mad Man," Review of Education and the New America by James McClellan & Solon T. Kimball. Unpublished, submitted 12/17/1962 for the General Seminar (TF6000).
pdf
December:The American Attack on UNESCO:1951-1957 (MA Essay, submitted 12_18_1963)
pdf
1980
Citizens and Subjects: Educational Politics in
Historical Perspective
pdf1
pdf2
1980
My case for promotion to full professor
pdf
html
- ↑ Adjacent, a small square "spring house" stood, also built of field-stone, about one and a half stories high, with no windows, a pre-modern refrigerator powered by spring water flowing in, around a large circular stone in the center, and out to a nearby pond, keeping the butter, cheese and other creamery products safely cool whatever the season.