Tuesday, 30 November 2021

A Postcard A Day - Tuesday 30 November 2021 - T for Netherlands, stamps and hot chocolate

 

Good morning lovely ladies! 

I've got some great cards and stamps to show you this morning. 

Here is the first one:

I have no idea where the photo on the postcard was taken. It could have been anywhere, it is so typically Dutch, with canals, waterways and draw bridges.

The theme is Holland. Holland, or more precisely the Netherlands. I know that abroad my country is generally known as Holland, but the country is called the Netherlands (Nederland in Dutch) and only the two provinces in the west of the country are called Holland.


 

There is a South Holland, where I was born in Rotterdam. The government meets in South Holland, in The Hague (Den Haag in Dutch). North Holland has the capital Amsterdam. 

As I'm on the subject, let me put something else straight. Some people think Dutch is the same as Deutsch. Dutch is the language spoken in the Netherlands and Deutsch is the language spoken in Germany.  Deutschland=Germany, Deutsch=German.

The stamps are lovely. They show some typical Dutch things such as cows and gable houses. The large stamp on the left is about the province of Overijssel. Coincidentally it is the province that the arrow is pointing to on the above map.

Here is a better image of this stamp:


My next card comes from the USA would you believe! It features the cover of a Ladybird book.  

It teaches children about different countries and this one is about Holland. It was published in 1971 and written by Betty Scott-Daniell. The illustrations are by John Berry.
I have not been able to find anything about the author, but John Berry is a well-known illustrator so here goes:
John Leslie Berry (9 June 1920 – 10 December 2009) was a British illustrator. He came up with the idea for the iconic Esso tiger adverts. At 19 Berry won a scholarship to the Royal Academy Schools but was unable to take it up owing to the outbreak of World War II. 
From 1941 to 1944 Berry served as an official war artist in World War II, attached to the Eighth Army in North Africa and Egypt painting battle scenes. 
Berry started his work for Ladybird in the late 1950s and between 1961 and 1978 he illustrated thirty five Ladybird books. He worked on their Key Words Reading Scheme. These included the "People at Work" series, featuring jobs such as policeman, fireman, postman, potter, nurse, coal miner, farmer and engine driver. The series forms an almost complete record of British industry as it was at the time. He also illustrated all six books in the "Hannibal the hamster" series between 1976 and 1978, and publications such as Come to France, Come to Denmark, Come to Holland and Learning to Ride. 
One day in 1951 the secretary at McCann Erickson advertising agency asked Berry if he could draw a tiger for the Esso oil company account. "Yes, put a tiger in your tank," Berry retorted. For the next 10 years he continued to draw tigers for the campaign, but he made only a flat fee of £25 for the famous slogan, a story he much enjoyed telling. 


Berry was also commissioned to do portraits of Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip, Lady Astor, Diana, Princess of Wales (twice), George Bush Sr., His Highness Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahayan, Ruler of Abu Dhabi and President of the United Arab Emirates and many prominent people including American Indians.

I have no picture of him. Strangely enough I have not even been able to find a self portrait. (Perhaps he never did one).

 This book is probably the reason why so many people outside the Netherlands think we all dress like this. No, we don't. This is the dress of one particular little village called Volendam. (Which is now a tourist attraction).

This:

And this:

Eventually became this:

The stamps are stunning!



 On the left is  the oil-on-canvas mural “Sugarloaf Mountain”


 which was painted for Rockville, Maryland’s old post office, which is now a police station. The artist was Judson Smith.

The second stamp has the image of a tiger and is from the series: Save vanishing species.


On September 20, 2011, the U.S. Postal Service started selling the stamp. It's image features a beautiful Amur tiger cub, and was designed by Nancy Stahl. The price of the stamp marginally exceeds the cost of first class postage.
More formally known as the Save Vanishing Species Stamp, a portion of every Tiger Stamp that is purchased helps to fund conservation projects around the world. To date, 99 projects in 35 countries have been funded to help protect these beloved, yet highly threatened species.



The third one is close to my heart as it is a nurse stamp:;

US Postage Stamp Single 1961 Nursing Issue 4 Cents 


The stamp on the right features Clara Maass.


Clara Louise Maass (June 28, 1876 – August 24, 1901) was an American nurse who died as a result of volunteering for medical experiments to study yellow fever.

In April 1898, during the Spanish–American War, Maass volunteered as a contract nurse for the United States Army (the Army Nurse Corps did not yet exist). She served with the Seventh U.S. Army Corps from October 1, 1898, to February 5, 1899. She was discharged in 1899, but volunteered again to serve with the Eighth U.S. Army Corps in the Philippines from November 1899 to mid-1900.[5]

During her service with the military, she saw few battle injuries. Instead, most of her nursing duties came in providing medical aid to soldiers suffering from infectious diseases like typhoidmalariadengue and yellow fever. She contracted dengue in Manila, and was sent home.

Shortly after finishing her second assignment with the army, Maass returned to Cuba in October 1900 after being summoned by William Gorgas, who was working with the U.S. Army's Yellow Fever Commission. The commission, headed by Major Walter Reed, was established during the post-war occupation of Cuba in order to investigate yellow fever, which was endemic in Cuba. One of the commission's goals was to determine how the disease was spread: by mosquito bites or by contact with contaminated objects.

The commission recruited human subjects because they did not know of any animals that could contract yellow fever. In the first recorded instance of informed consent in human experiments, volunteers were told that participation in the studies might cause their deaths. As an incentive, volunteers were paid US$100 (approximately $3,000 today), with an additional $100 if the volunteer became ill.[5]

In March 1901, Maass volunteered to be bitten by a Culex fasciata mosquito (now called Aedes aegypti) that had been allowed to feed on yellow fever patients. By this time, the researchers were certain that mosquitoes were the route of transmission, but lacked the scientific evidence to prove it because some volunteers who were bitten remained healthy. Maass continued to volunteer for experiments.

On August 14, 1901, Maass allowed herself to be bitten by infected mosquitoes for the second time. Researchers were hoping to show that her earlier case of yellow fever was sufficient to immunize her against the disease. Unfortunately, this was not the case. Maass once again became ill with yellow fever on August 18 and died on August 24. Her death roused public sentiment and put an end to yellow fever experiments on human beings.


It is right that she is honoured and that human subject research is now highly regulated. Human subject research legislation in the United States can be traced to the early 20th century. Human subject research in the United States was mostly unregulated until the 20th century, as it was throughout the world, until the establishment of various governmental and professional regulations and codes of ethics. Notable – and in some cases, notorious – human subject experiments performed in the US include the Tuskegee syphilis experimenthuman radiation experiments, the Milgram obedience experiment and Stanford prison experiments and Project MKULTRA. With growing public awareness of such experimentation, and the evolution of professional ethical standards, such research became regulated by various legislation, most notably, those that introduced and then empowered the institutional review boards.


Today I am joining the T-Party hosted by Bluebeard and Elizabeth. To be able to participate I need an image of a beverage. So let me show you the churros con chocolate we had on Sunday. People often have those for breakfast on a Sunday, and our pastor suggested we have breakfast together at church. He would bring the churros and members of the congregation brought the hot chocolate and coffee.
The churros is dipped in the hot chocolate. Yum!

Here we have a whole bag of them, warm and fresh from the café on the corner.

They soon disappeared.

This is how they are made:

Home-made churros are piped into hot oil. 
But the street vendors (and cafes) have a 'tap' extruder which turns round and the churros get cooked in the shape of a spiral.

When it is cooked, they take a pair of scissors and cut them into bits.


Then all you need to do is dip them in hot chocolate, which here in Spain is slightly thicker than in England.


That was it for today. I had some book reviews lined up, but I think I will leave those for next week.

Have a lovely week,

Take care and keep smiling,

Hugs,

Lisca





14 comments:

Linda Kunsman said...

a fascinating read about your postcards and such. I just love the old photos! I've had churros but not homemade- these look especially delicious. Thanks for sharing and happy T day!

Bleubeard and Elizabeth said...

I really enjoyed reading about the Netherlands and of course, the postage stamps. How sad Maass had to die, but her death made informed consent much harder for researchers to use human subjects, at least. LOVE the nurse stamp, too.

I've also had churros, but always at the fair. They are larger than the ones you showed. They are dipped in cinnamon sugar here, not chocolate sauce. Thanks for sharing your lovely postcards, info on the Netherlands, and your husband with his churros for T this Tuesday, dear Lisca.

Mae Travels said...

Stereotypes of various countries and ethnic groups are often invented by people writing travel literature or children’s books. Your examples really show how this happens. For Dutch people it’s maybe not so harmful, but it’s been really damaging for some groups such as native Americans.

best… mae at maefood.blogspot.com

My name is Erika. said...

I loved reading about the Netherlands versus Holland. I knew it was called the Netherlands but I didn't know where the Holland came in. And I did know about the Dutch versus Deutsch. I once received a package in the mail from Germany and the post office woman was insisting I had a package from the Netherlands. And I love churros, although here they are just sugar coated never dipped in chocolate. Dipping them in chocolate sounds soooo good. I always looks forward to learning new things in your T day post Lisca. I hope you have a wonderful T day and nice end to the month, and start to Deceber too. Hugs-Erika

kathyinozarks said...

Hi Lisca, Wow this was such an informative post and I really enjoyed reading it all. the stamps were beautiful Liked seeing how the churros were made sounds good Happy T hugs Kathy

Iris Flavia said...

I always mix these countries up and drive Ingo nuts with it!
Put in Denmark and I´m like totally lost.

Oh, yes, I haven´t heard of the tiger in the tank in a long time.

You don´t say. I assumed you run around in wooden shoes, just like us drinking tea with Kluntje all the time ;-) Or even worse get mixed up with Bavaria and thought of Dirndl and Lederhosen.

Very cute tiger-stamp! And such tributes to nurses!
Sweetness overload, looks like you had fun - happy T-day and hugs

Valerie-Jael said...

Hi Lisca, another very informative post. In Germany we say 'Niederlande'. Lots of wonderful stamps and postcards. When I visited Spain I loved Churros and hot chocolate! Have a great week, happy T Day, Valerie

nwilliams6 said...

Lisca, always imformative posts. I learned so much on this one! Wow. So many interesting things. Loved all the information. Clara was very brave - hopefully they learned a lot from her death and she saved tons of people (maybe even from experimenation).

The pictures of the churros look fab too - I would love to try them! Love the picture of hubby eating them.

Happy T-day! Hugz

Jackie McGuinness said...

I loved Amsterdam and the Hague when we made a few days stopover there.

Divers and Sundry said...

Best breakfast ever! Happy T Tuesday :)

Empire of the Cat said...

I looked it up and you can buy that Ladybird book 2nd hand on amazon! https://www.amazon.co.uk/Come-Holland-Easy-Reading-Books/dp/0721402976 Love the stamps, that tiger stamp especially and of course the churros! Happy T Day! Elle/EOTC xx

Kate Yetter said...

I have never tried churros but every time I see them I want too, especially if they are dipped in chocolate! Yum! I loved seeing the different ways they are served.
Loved the postcards and the bit of history about Holland. The Tiger one is my favorite.
At my pinning ceremony, I wore a cap like the one in the first stamp. Brings back memories.
Happy Tea Day,
Kate

DVArtist said...

These are some wonderful cards, stamps and the history lesson. I have never had churros either. Glad you enjoy them so much. Have a wonderful day.

pearshapedcrafting said...

Fabulous cards and as usually very informative. The first postcard reminds me of a visit we had to Alkmaar some time ago.Love that you had breakfast together(and what a great breakfast!) A very belated Happy T Day, Chrisx