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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Sat Oct 13, 2012, 03:19 PM Oct 2012

GOP insisted Whittaker Chambers' pumpkin patch become a historical site. It averages two guests yr.

A visit to the right’s least popular museum

The GOP insisted Whittaker Chambers' pumpkin patch become a historical site. It averages two guests a year

The most popular National Park Service site is the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia, which has around 17 million visitors per year; the least popular seems to be the Whittaker Chambers pumpkin patch National Historic Landmark near Baltimore, which has around two visitors per year. I was one of them. One windy fall day, I set out from Baltimore with friends to search for the pumpkin patch. The Reagan administration designated it a National Historic Landmark (officially called “Whittaker Chambers Farm”) in 1988 over the unanimous objection of the National Park Service Advisory Board. The site, outside Westminster, Md., commemorates the spot where, in 1947, Whittaker Chambers reached into a hollowed-out pumpkin and pulled out some 35mm film. He said it showed that Alger Hiss, a pillar of the New Deal, had been a Soviet spy.

The “pumpkin papers” helped convict Hiss of perjury in 1950, which transformed public opinion, convincing Americans for the first time that communism posed a real danger to the country. The obscure congressman named Nixon who pushed the Hiss case won a Senate seat the year Hiss was convicted and got the vice-presidential nomination in 1952; a month after Hiss’s conviction, Sen. Joseph McCarthy gave the speech in Wheeling, W.Va., that launched his career and gave the new, virulent anticommunism its name. For the next 45 years, the Cold War served as the iron cage of American politics.

Conservatives had hoped this site would provide a place where the public could be told that the Communist Party did not just defend a totalitarian regime but also recruited its members to spy on that regime’s behalf. Thus the hunt for communist spies was not “McCarthyism”; it was a noble cause.

But, like the other Cold War commemorative efforts, the pumpkin patch National Historic Landmark is remarkable primarily as a failure. In Westminster, outside the Carroll County courthouse, we stopped to ask a cop in a squad car if he could tell us where the Whittaker Chambers pumpkin patch National Historic Landmark was. “Never heard of it,” he said definitively — even though it turned out we were less than two miles away. If we were looking for a pumpkin patch, his advice was “go to the Farm Museum.”

http://www.salon.com/2012/10/13/wiener_excerpt/

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GOP insisted Whittaker Chambers' pumpkin patch become a historical site. It averages two guests yr. (Original Post) DonViejo Oct 2012 OP
What an interesting piece of history of which I knew nothing! k/r angstlessk Oct 2012 #1
see Salon's further article aboudaqn Nov 2013 #2
Interesting that you would go back to a post made over a year ago DonViejo Nov 2013 #3
welcome to DU gopiscrap Nov 2013 #4

DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
3. Interesting that you would go back to a post made over a year ago
Sat Nov 23, 2013, 09:36 AM
Nov 2013

to make your first comment on. Welcome to DU. In actuality, your referenced follow up article doesn't really do any follow up; Chambers' grandson makes some allegations and Weiner counters them. Sleepy time at Salon.

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