Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Where in the World is Coltons Point and St. Clements Island?

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Cross and Light House - St. Clement's Island
First let me acknowledge my beloved publishing partners here at the Coltons Point Times.
Beamish - Neapolitan Mastiff




CuChulainn Deo Irie (Coolin) - Irish Wolf Hound



Mr. Henry - Fila Brasileiro, Brazilian Mastiff (Bloodhound) 



As for Coltons Point and St. Clements Island, it is a question I get occasionally and since there are so many new readers I want to address it. We are the only newspaper in the oldest continuously lived in chartered settlement in the colonial United States. Yes, older than Jamestown, older than Plymouth and older than St. Mary's City, places most people think of as the oldest. If you are not familiar with US history, the three places I mentioned all ceased to exist by the 1690's. That means we existed 142 years before our Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence and went to war with England.



St. Clements Island just offshore from Coltons Point was the landing site for 321 colonists on two tiny ships, the Ark and the Dove, in 1634 and the area has been lived in ever since. It is also the first place in the world with religious freedom as the first English charter guaranteed religious toleration. We are also the site of the first landing of Roman Catholics, first Mass performed in the colonies, first Jesuit priests and the first colony to live peacefully with the Native Americans. If that isn't enough we are the site where the first relic from the True Cross of Jesus came to America and miracles were performed with it.



While the original St. Clement's Manor land grant was huge, stretching all the way to Washington, DC, Philadelphia, and New York City, none of which existed at the time, the immediate area around Coltons Point is known as the 7th District.



For those of you not familiar with the 7th District in Southern Maryland I thought I would offer a little primer in the highly unlikely event you ever fall off the edge of the world and find yourself here. First of all it is one of the oldest landing points for the colonization of the original thirteen colonies way back in the early 1600's. St. Clements Island, the actual place where the English pilgrims landed, is just off Coltons Point where the pilgrims first saw the Indians and set foot in Maryland. These are the last two places on the map in the 7th District at the Potomac River.


Now I am not a pilgrim nor related to pilgrims but an awful lot of people here are and it seems that the older the family the more likely they inter-married with other families that have been around about 383 years, since 1634. That means when you meet a Dorsey, Bailey, Combs, McKay, and all the other names you see on signs down here you might just be meeting the relatives of all the prominent and aristocratic families.


The 7th District folks came here for religious and other freedom and for the last 383 years have been fighting anyone who tried to tame them. Long before the existence of New York City, Baltimore, Philadelphia and Washington, DC these folks had established rights to the 7th District. The early settlers were a combination of water men, farmers and tobacco farmers and starting in 1639 other people started trying to take this place away from them.

Nessie in Scotland

Bessie in Maryland
The local Native Americans never tried, I suspect they knew better, and this was about the only place in America where the settlers and Native Americans lived in harmony which tells you a lot about the people who settled as they respected the rights of the Natives. Since it was the only place in the New World that promised religious freedom a lot of other people wanted to stop them. The Puritans and a few other groups seemed to think they had the only connection to God.


So the locals fought off the other white men for about a hundred years before they joined the fight against the Brits as the concept of freedom just kept spreading. In a couple of wars the British actually attacked this area which goes to show military intelligence hasn't much changed after all these years. The 7th District eventually became the last frontier in Maryland which it remains to this day.


Along the way the Civil War was fought and being we were well south of the Mason Dixon line but still in Union controlled territory, the 7th District became one of the primary smuggling points for getting supplies and arms to the Confederates since the Union had blockaded all the southern ports. One Union officer said at night the Potomac River was filled with black painted boats sailing supplies across the river to the Confederates in Virginia.


Upcoming scandals we will be reporting on include the English and French support for the Confederate army that was channeled through this area and the fact the English backed John Wilkes Booth and was to pick him up here after the killing of President Lincoln. Of course there is also the disappearance of Booth for almost a week during the manhunt in the area of the 7th District.


Eventually the rest of Maryland got civilized and soon the election of governor in the state always seemed to be tied between the Baltimore Democrats and the Washington DC area Republicans and it was the band of outcasts down in the 7th District that decided many an election throughout the 20th century. I suspect this was the way the folks of the 7th District got even with the politicians. Many a person can recall seeing a candidate for governor from up north sneak into the District, spend a weekend sharing some moonshine with the old boys, and going home to win the election. In the 7th District the vote could be controlled as about everyone was a Catholic Democrat and they knew statewide elections were dependent on them for success.


We had our share of celebrities as well but they always seemed to live just across the water from the 7th District. From Coltons Point you could see where George Washington was born and where Robert E. Lee was born on the Virginia shore.


There is no local government nor local police in the entire 7th District as the people could never see the need for the bureaucrats. Most justice was handed out locally including disposal without the expense of trial or jail for anyone terrorizing the people. No crime wave lasted long.


Of course to this day there are no governments, street lights, stop lights, sidewalks, sewers, water pipes, gas lines or anything else found in most civilizations. The fire and emergency personnel are volunteers. About half of the roads planned for Coltons Point have never been built and you better check the goods in the local store for expiration dates before you buy anything.


People here still eat fish, oysters, crab and clams harvested from the river although the politicians up north have done about everything possible to destroy the environment. More than nine Bald Eagles share year round residence in the Point along with many a strange specimen that can be seen wandering out of the swamps and wetlands on dark and foggy nights.


There is a distinct social structure that has evolved over the centuries involving the Ancients, Water men, Yuppies, Yippies, Yappies, Come Downers and Come Backers.  Since there are no Native Americans left our version of the ancients are the hillbillies, moon shiners, deinstitutionalized head cases, religious zealots, and of course Confederates who run around singing "Don't give a damn what the Yankees say the South's gonna rise again."


The Water men are the raucous survivors of the original colonists, the fisher men, crab men, oyster men, clam men, eel men, (yes I said eels as in scary slithering things on the river bottom) and the people who supported them like the marinas, crab shacks, oyster and clam processing joints etc. There aren't many left and that is one of the enduring tragedies of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed.


The Yuppies are the new rich who move here to get away from what they spent their lives working to get. Yippies are the younger generation now beyond youth but still trying to find their way through life with a soft spot for environmental issues, nature, birds and privacy. Yappies are Yuppies and Yippies with a big mouth who show up expecting to find all the laws of more civilized places like dog catchers, police and all the other conveniences of modern society.


The Come Downers are the city folk who discovered the quaint place along the river and made their way here to escape where they are from or to exploit the area for material gain which never seems to happen. Finally the Come Backers are the kids of the Ancient families who escaped long ago only to discover the rest of the world will never replace what they had here in the first place and eventually they find their way back home.


Down here the Postmaster knows everyone on a first name basis. The local bar doesn't want any more customers as that might put them in a higher tax bracket. There is no fast food, no place to eat period without driving about 10-20 miles, and little need to put on airs. It don't matter whether you are rich or poor, you all eat crabs, oysters and clams the same.



Now that is a little of what you find down here in the 7th District of Southern Maryland, ferocious defenders of individual freedom a lot of character from a lot of characters, a place steeped deep in history, a keen sense of fair play, a desire to help your neighbors no matter what their social status might be, a bit cynical when it comes to the promises of the government or elected officials, but people who will never turn their backs on people in need, unless, of course they deserve it.


Coltons Point is a quiet village of about 250 people on the Potomac River where it is seven miles wide, just before it reaches the Chesapeake. Bay. Though we are only 60 miles from Washington, DC there are no governments, no police, no traffic lights, no street lights, no sidewalks, no water, no sewer, no gas lines, no churches, no city hall, no fire department, no sirens, no bureaucrats of any kind and not much of anything in the way of commercial development. We value freedom and independence above all else. This year we celebrate our 384th anniversary.


None of that has anything to do with the Coltons Point Times (CPT) except I happen to live here. Before I found myself in Coltons Point I lived in Iowa, Arizona, Nebraska, California, Washington DC, Virginia, New Jersey and Kentucky. In addition I had worked several years in New York City and Nashville.



Perhaps that is why the CPT seems to cover a lot of national and international issues. It may also explain why an online newspaper in one of the smallest villages in the USA has up to 144,000 readers every month. The last time I checked we had readers from 96 different nations, all 50 states, and Washington, DC.


Our mission is to tell the truth, be an independent voice, share interesting material with our readers and help keep you informed with the inside information on government, politics, science, health, housing, music and a whole bunch of other stuff. When the world stage gets boring we offer a little history and local color that may be of interest. We want to keep the news makers from politicians to news media, Wall Street to the Middle East honest and that has been a lot of work lately.


You may have noticed we are about the last newspaper on the internet to NOT allow those frustrating ads, banners, pop ups, video ads and all the other things created to track and annoy you. We do not require you to register because you have enough people already spying on you. I encourage you to check through our online archives as many stories are updated over time such as the House of Rothschild, Wall Street, and policy issues like the collapse of our health care system, terrorism, culture, and many others.



Reader comments are encouraged and responses will be given if needed. You can even ask me to email you privately in your comment and I will not post your email for the world to see. I have responded in numerous languages although the translations might be a little rough.



Since we do not accept advertising or do our own advertising people find us through searches for issues and images as we often have pretty entertaining photos and cartoons with our stories. You can set up an RSS news feed to your home page to get the latest headlines on articles I post.


Word of mouth is our strongest means of exposure and we would greatly appreciate it if you would tell your friends, family and associates about us and give them the site. Most search engines like Google can easily locate us by searching for the Coltons Point Times or you can click on: http://coltonspointtimes.blogspot.com/ to directly connect.


We appreciate having you in our family and hope you check in for the latest news often. Thank you.

Jim Putnam, Publisher

Thursday, September 14, 2017

What you do not learn about me in a resume - My Personal Background and Experience - Jim Putnam

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This is posted since traditional sites do not allow sufficient room to explain whom I am and what I have achieved.  Here is my real story.



20276 Park Place, PO Box 21 - Coltons PointMD 20626
Phone 301-769-2027 - email: ivyonoak@yahoo.com

Ivy Hollow Productions

"An unusual collection of like-minded souls with considerable interest in the most ordinary and peculiar of things."


Jim Putnam, Proprietor




Did you ever wonder what it would be like to be friends with Yogi Berra?
How about having lunch with La Casa Nostra Godfather Joseph Bonanno?



Or sit on a remote New Jersey deck and chat with Brooke Shields?
Perhaps tour a museum with Wernher Von Braun, architect of our space program?
Or maybe enjoy dinner backstage with singer Celine Dion?
What about helping Bobby Kennedy's son Joseph II with his foundation?



Spend a day with the original Rasta Man Bob Marley?
Chat in a locker room with Smokin' Joe Frazier, world heavyweight boxing champion?
Be a sponsor of Richard Petty, top NASCAR driver in history?
Discover Hitler's secret SS film archives in the frontier outside Moscow?


What do these things all have in common?  Jim Putnam did them.

The Early Years

Some people just do not belong here.  Take Jim Putnam, an Iowa Hayseed for example.  He established a philosophy on life early, very early, and people often found it unsettling.

His self-described mission was "to disturb all settled ideas."  His approach to life was; "no definitions, no regulations, no laws and no prejudice."  True to his love for Lewis Carroll and his magnificent Alice in Wonderland, in Putnam's world "nothing was as it seemed."



Putnam lived to experience life, every aspect of life from the life force in all objects to the thrill of victory and annoyance of defeat.  Every day offered new capers and every experience a new chapter in his "Commonplace" book on life.  In his mind being open to anything and everything was a gateway to more adventures and he instinctively knew the more he learned the less he realized he knew.

Yet what chance did he ever have to be normal? A female physician (a rare occurrence) delivered him one year after two Atomic bombs ended World War II and then at six months old a firefighter saved him from a burning apartment.  At one and one-half years, he suffered a concussion and broke his face flying down a concrete stairway in a stroller.  At three, he was on IVs in a hospital with the mumps.


Four found him immersed in ice to break a 106° temperature.  By five, he was up to his chest sinking in quicksand in Texas.  There was a shootout at six when he and his brother Bob threw a box of bullets into an incinerator catching them in crossfire, followed by drowning at age seven, in a pond at summer camp, when everyone ignored his calls for help and he sank under three times.

By eight lightning hit him in a lake.  At nine, in his basement when pretending to be a priest and holding Mass and Communion it was electrocution.  A blizzard trapped him overnight in a cave with below zero temperatures at ten.  Next, when eleven, he fell through the ice on a lake in frigid weather and his clothes froze while trying to get home in the woods.

A speedboat collision in a ferocious Lake Michigan gale at age twelve split a second boat in two.  Then at thirteen he had a brain concussion in a football game, without equipment of course, had total amnesia and went into a deep coma for days.  All of this and he had not even started high school yet.


The mystical and magical Hopi Indians describe Jim Putnam as a "One Heart" who "walks between worlds."  In his world, Putnam always said some people pray for miracles, he relied on them.  When taking aptitude tests, Putnam used to drive the nuns crazy insisting he wanted to learn and experience everything, not be pigeonholed into a career path.  While in religion class his persistent questioning of dogma and theology kept him in constant trouble.

Born and raised in Iowa CityIowa then moving to Ottumwa when he was eight, one might say he was a multi-tasking over-achiever from his earliest years.  In Kindergarten, he was already winning book-reading contests at the Iowa City Library.  He chose Greek Philosophers like Plato, Socrates, and Aristotle over the Hardy Boys mysteries, Popular Science and Popular Mechanics over teen magazines.


Oddly, by First grade he was leaving weekly instruction notes to his mother informing her of school and Church activities of the kids and reminding her about her duties that week for PTA, lunches, church receptions, and lunch needs for the gang.  He prepared his own meals by Third grade, and did his own laundry and ironed his own clothes by Fifth grade.  Before finishing Fifth grade, he read every textbook to be read through the Eighth grade.

Just before Third grade, his family moved from the youthful and vibrant Iowa City college town to Ottumwa, a struggling manufacturing town still trying to recover from coal mining origins.  His first memory of the town was waking up in a funeral home where his dad stayed while looking for a house.


Putnam's first memory of his new school, St. Mary's, was when the class had to have eye exams and he could not see a single line on the eye chart.  The nurse became furious with him saying he was lying and reduced the new kid in school to tears in front of his new classmates.

The sad truth was he was almost blind and no one had noticed, and the nurse refused to believe it was possible, so Jim Putnam showed up in his new town and new school wearing coke bottle glasses the lens were so thick.  From a cute little kid in a college town he became a freak in a foreign wilderness, while the funeral home and eyeglass disasters were an indication there was something foreboding about this place.

Putnam kids

In fact, so upside down was life in his new home that once his mother, in response to criticism of her son by his teacher, wrote she "also found Jim strange and he often seemed to live in another world."  Indeed, he did and his other world full of non-stop activity and endless adventures kept him sane until he could make his great escape after high school.



An exceptional Knight of the Alter (Alter Boy) he memorized every Mass in Latin.  In sports he was a YMCA swim team member and basketball all star, also on the Country Club swim team, won state championships in Little League and Babe Ruth baseball and was named Most Valuable player in one state championship.  His high school golf team played in four straight state championships.



When the Catholic high school for girls burned down just before Jim started high school, and the girls and boys shared school, his class was first to finish four years co-ed.  Ironically, every elementary and secondary school he attended in Iowa City and Ottumwa has been closed and torn down. 


During high school, he earned fourteen varsity letters in five sports excelling in baseball and golf, helped shatter records in basketball including a sweet sixteen berth in the state basketball tourney though being from the smallest school in the tourney, and finished ranked number one in the state in their class.  In fact, during his four years in high school, the varsity record was 84-11 and his team never lost a home game, thirty-four straight games.


By the time he graduated, he participated on numerous debate and speech clubs, was elected to several school offices, and played in the high school band.  A writer for the Unitas school newspaper and co-editor of the yearbook, Putnam also had several articles published in the Des Moines Register newspaper and won the Outstanding Journalism award.

Putnam brothers with Coach Kramer

The Siren Call of Music and Muses



In high school, Putnam had a promising rock and roll band but gave it up to play basketball and baseball for the University of Arizona Wildcats.  Interwoven throughout his life is music, perhaps because he is a third generation musician from Iowa City.

His grandfather, Wayne S. Putnam, had founded The Wayne Putnam Swing Orchestra, a featured band on the Moose Club circuit back in the 1930’s and ‘40’s.  His father, Wayne E. and Uncle Chuck both played in the orchestra and his grandmother taught piano in Iowa City.


Music was not limited to his father’s side of the family as his other Grandfather, Patrick Campbell, also of Iowa City, used to drag his young grandson with him in summers to his motel on the outskirts of Springfield, Missouri, the home of country music in the 1940’s and early ‘50’s.

One of many Campbell clan castles in Scotland

There young Jim spent many long nights listening to the country stars jamming in the motel coffee shop after gigs on the Smilin’ Jack Tyree Radio Show, or Korn’s A-Krackin barn dance, which later became the Ozark Jubilee in Springfield.  Who showed up at the coffee shop in the wee hours of the night?  It might be Porter Wagoner, Speedy Haworth, Chet Atkins, Eddy Arnold, and the list goes on.

It was the beginning of a lifelong interest in country music and the relationship between Celtic and country music tying together his ancestral roots from Scotland and Ireland.  Often as a kid, he would watch the University of Iowa Scottish Highlander bagpipe band at practices.


Even when he went to Arizona to play basketball and baseball he often attended local performances of his freshman classmate, an aspiring young singer named Linda Ronstadt.  At the same time members of his Beta Theta Pi fraternity were featured performers on the nationally broadcast Hootenanny Show and the NBC Today Show.  Among the many entertainers who performed at their fraternity house was the national hit group the Kingsmen of Louie, Louie fame.


He loved concerts in the dawning of the rock and roll age and got to meet a host of stars like Elvis, Sony and Cher, the Mamas and Papas, Moody Blues, and later got to work with many more like the Turtles, Blood Sweat and Tears, Frankie Avalon, and Frankie Valle and the Four Seasons on benefit projects.


Jim's first car in high school 1946 English Austin

Right after he graduated from high school, he traveled to New Haven, CT to meet with coaches at Yale University to decide if he would attend that fall.  After spending two years completing the interview process to get into Yale, he opted for Arizona.  Ironically, had he gone to Yale his classmates would have been Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton and George Bush, Jr., all Yale graduates from the same class as Jim. 


During the same trip, he spent a couple of weeks in NYC and DC.  While in NYC, he met Tiny Tim in The Page Three club in Greenwich Village, unbeknownst to Jim the most notorious lesbian bar in NYC.  He also was at the Blue Note and The Gaslight Cafe, hangout of Bob Dylan.


He made the best of NYC on his trip going to several Yankees games in the Bronx where he was in the dugout meeting players like Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris, Yogi Berra, and Whitey Ford.  There were also Mets games in their new Shea Stadium, the World's Fair in Queens, Coney Island in Brooklyn, and he attended nearly a dozen Broadway plays in Manhattan


At one point, he went to the world famous Brill Building located at 1619 Broadway just north of Time's Square and uptown from NYC's famous Tin Pan Alley neighborhood.  He met loosely affiliated groups of songwriter-producer teams working there including Carole King, Burt Bacharach, Neil Sedaka, Neil Diamond and Boyce and Hart, writers who dominated the rock and roll charts whose songs were recorded by Bobby Darin, Aretha Franklin, The Supremes, Ray Charles, Dusty Springfield, Paul Simon, and Elvis Presley, also in the Brill studios.

Later in his career Putnam returned to the Brill Building to use the Broadway Video studios of Loren Michael, creator of Saturday Night Live, to produce an award winning television special.  He and Chuck Hammer, legendary lead guitarist with Lou Reed and David Bowie, often were partners in projects. Eventually Putnam would help found a company housed at 52nd and 5th Avenue, overlooking St. Patrick's Cathedral and NBC Rockefeller Center, just blocks from the Brill Building.


June 1964 Putnam visited the construction site of the Twin Towers, soon to be the tallest buildings in the world, at a new complex called the World Trade Center.  It would open in 1970.  In the 1980's when Putnam worked for the Governor of New Jersey, on occasion he attended board meetings for the Governor at the Port Authority in the Twin Towers, the government agency that owned the World Trade Center complex.

February 26, 1993, while working in Manhattan he was on his way to a meeting in the North Tower of the World Trade Center the day a terrorist bomb exploded killing six and injuring over 1,000.  September 11, 2001 Putnam, still working in Manhattan, was having coffee on the front porch of his home in Jersey across the Bay from lower Manhattan, when he saw the second airplane crash into the Twin Towers and the subsequent collapse of the buildings in the worst terrorist attack in our history.  In time, Putnam would live and work in New Jersey and Manhattan longer than he lived in Iowa in his youth.


Back to music, there was another occasion when he spent an entire day with Bob Marley on a plane trying to get through snow storms into MinneapolisMinnesota, and finally giving Marley his winter coat because the soft-spoken Jamaican did not own one.


Putnam integrated music into almost everything he did from concerts in political campaigns, to rock groups in public affairs programs, to Nashville recording sessions.  He often used friends from Mannheim Steamroller in Omaha to perform at political events and play at studio sessions.

Once Putnam was managing a very close Congressional campaign and needed minority votes to win.  He contacted the legendary BB King's manager to get BB to give a boost to the campaign efforts.  By arrangement, Jim and the candidate greeted BB at his plane at the airport and escorted him to the waiting press inside the terminal.

When he pulled off his jacket, BB wore the candidate's tee shirt and he mentioned his "old friend" to the waiting press.  The stunned media, suspecting the candidate knew nothing about BB King, asked him his favorite King record, and the candidate replied, "Gotta Pay the Cost to be Boss."


In return, BB requested a box of the best Omaha steaks for him and his band after the concert and a small grill to cook them.  Shortly after Putnam departed the room of BB and company fire alarms woke the hotel guests when a wind change blew the smoke from the grill on a balcony just outside the room, back into the hotel.


The Political Years



After attending the University of Arizona on a sports scholarship and majoring in journalism, he attended Parsons College, now Maharishi University of  Management University founded by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, a Vedic sage who was mentor to the Beatles at the height of their career.  Jim also went to the University of Nebraska at Omaha, and by age 22 he began his career in politics working for the first of three mayors of OmahaNebraska, a Republican, followed by a Democrat, then another Republican who became a Democrat.

During the next four years, Putnam would undertake a series of pilot projects that would change the way local and federal governments functioned well into the future.  He was the second employee hired to create the first Regional Council of Governments in the Midwest to identify and implement government consolidations, mergers, shared services, and coordinated planning in order to improve service and lower costs.  The success was immediate as Albuquerque, Indianapolis, Minneapolis-St. Paul, and Toronto launched additional pilot programs.  Jim was on several task forces for the National League of Cities and US Conference of Mayors.


The US Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics honored Putnam for being first statistician in the nation to create a methodology to identify pockets of high unemployment and poverty areas within metropolitan areas, data that became the foundation for economic and workforce training programs throughout the country.


Working with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in the Executive Office of the President, he created the nation's first Comprehensive Manpower Program consolidating 18 jobs, employment and training programs in five federal departments into a single entity lowering administrative costs up to 80% and reallocating nearly 50% into improved services.  As a result, the federal government implemented it nationwide saving tens of millions of dollars a year.


Then he helped consolidate both financial and management-reporting systems so local government could use one report for all federal agencies.  The Omaha Riverfront Development Program he helped create with the Mayor was a national pilot development program.  At one point, a temporary assignment to assist the director of the federal Office of Economic Opportunity allowed Putnam to save federal funding for the popular Headstart and Legal Services programs for low income.


Putnam published award-winning studies such as a massive work titled The Invisible Americans identifying poverty in America, did analysis to identify America's unemployed, and was part of the Census Bureau Address Coding Task Force to see that all government data was available on a block by block basis.

He served on task forces to evaluate the Federal Bureau of Prisons, reform the welfare system, create federal block grants to cities and states, design and implement the historic General Revenue Sharing program for states and cities, and helped draft new education, energy, environmental, housing, and Justice Department law enforcement assistance programs to assist local governments.


After four years, he was in our nation's capital as a domestic affairs specialist for the Executive Office of President Richard Nixon, reporting to Roy Ash, OMB Director and founder of Litton Industries, and Frank Zarb, Associate Director of OMB and later Chairman of the NASDAQ stock exchange.

Putnam was one of 32 specialists of the little known White House New Federalism Task Force that restructured the entire federal domestic government from agencies to programs to policy.  The New York Times called the mysterious Presidential task force the most powerful federal domestic initiative by a president since the New Deal under President Franklin Roosevelt.


Silently it went about the work of decentralizing the federal government and transferring powers to our nation's governors during the darkest hours of the American presidency, the year between the Watergate and Impeachment hearings.

Over the next decade, he became a reporter for the Omaha World Herald, spent four terms working for the US Congress, managed two successful congressional campaigns, and helped elect the first Jewish US Senator from Nebraska.


Presidential campaign experience included work for John and later Bobby Kennedy, and Presidents Ford, Reagan and Bush, Sr., followed by work with Ross Perot on presidential and NAFTA efforts. His political experience included all aspects of the legislative and executive branches of local, state, and federal governments and involved working for Democrats, Republicans, and Independents.

Nationally, he served as Deputy Arrangements Chairman for the 1972 Republican National Convention and the largest presidential election victory in history resulted (Nixon won 49 of 50 states).  Putnam served as campaign manager for US House and Senate races and culminated his political career by hosting separate events with all four living GOP presidents (Nixon, Ford, Reagan, and Bush 1) the same year.



While in politics Putnam also worked with Governor Charles Thone of Nebraska and spent eight years with Governor Thomas Kean in New Jersey (recently Chairman of the 9/11 Terrorism Commission), serving the latter as a chief of staff, media and communications director and assistant state treasurer of New Jersey.

In 1981 Kean, a moderate Republican won the governor's race by the closest margin in New Jersey history, just 1,797 votes of 2.4 million cast.  By 1985 Kean won by the largest victory margin in history, getting 69.5% of the vote in a Democrat state and winning by 794,229 votes.  Putnam was active in the 1985 campaign, the most successful "voter inclusion program" ever undertaken by a GOP candidate in the nation.  Kean's record margin included over 60% of the Black, Labor Union, and Roman Catholic votes.


Jim worked with former Kean chief of staff and campaign manager Greg Stevens and cabinet member Leonard Coleman, who became President of the National League in Major League Baseball, on the 1985 campaign.  He helped coordinate with Coretta Scott King, widow of Martin Luther King, Jr., who endorsed Kean, and Bishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa.  In January 1986, a song Putnam wrote at the request of Coretta Scott King called I Had A Dream was performed at the first national holiday celebrations honoring Martin Luther King, Jr. in Atlanta and San Francisco.

Working for Governor Kean he successfully led the state effort to sue oil companies and won over $600 million for the state.  He was a member of the State Planning Commission, the Farmland Preservation Commission, the State Energy Planning Commission, and State Recycling program, all nationally recognized initiatives of excellence in government.  As chief of staff he also oversaw the New Jersey Motion Picture and Television Commission headed by actress Celeste Holm as well as state involvement in PBS stations in New Jersey and NYC.


The Kean years also found Jim becoming acquaintances with New York Giants legendary coach Bill Parcells and assistant coach Bill Belichick (now coach of the New England Patriots) through the New Jersey Sports Authority, owner of Giants Stadium, when Putnam represented the Governor or Commissioner Coleman at meetings.  The Giants won two Super Bowls during those years.  Jim also became friends with New York Yankees All Stars Yogi Berra and Phil Rizzuto during various political activities.

Passions and Pursuits - More Music, Writing, and Entertainment

While working for the Governor he created and produced a television special for the Arts and Entertainment TV Network on energy conservation which won the Cable TV ACE award, the Award for Cable Excellence, the national cable network Emmy, as best public service program in America.  The program featured actress and singer Patti Lupone, Tony-winning star of the Broadway play Evita, and the band he created called State Property, the first government funded show ever broadcast on the Arts and Entertainment network and first to win the coveted ACE (Emmy) award.


During this time, he was a creator, partner, and collaborator with multiple Emmy winner Andrew Carl Wilk, now Executive Producer for television at the Lincoln Center for the the Performing Arts in NYC.  The credits include The Energy Show for Arts and Entertainment Network, Flashpoint - a PBS weekly public affairs program, and the Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra of NYC whose annual Salute to Broadway at the Paper Mill Playhouse, the largest regional theatre in the nation, featured Tony winning actors performing the best songs on Broadway.


Putnam wrote several scripts for Jim Henson's Muppet Babies TV program directed by Wilk and worked with Andrew (conductor and director) in community and regional playhouse productions of Annie, Jesus Christ Superstar, Company and Pirates of PenzanceA number of rising stars on Broadway acted in these popular plays.

From politics, he moved to Madison Avenue where he reunited with former Reagan and Bush presidential campaign experts including Roger Ailes, media consultant and recent President of Fox News.  There were also pollsters Richard Wirthlin and Neil Newhouse, and media creative master Phil Dusenberry, Chairman of BBDO America advertising agency and creator of the Michael Jackson, Ray Charles, and Cindy Crawford Pepsi ad campaigns among many others.  Phil's Crawford ad is one of the top ten Super Bowl ads of all time.

The first person hired at Media, Inc. in NYC, Jim helped grow it to $300 million in billings in three years.  He worked with a number of rock stars on benefits like the annual Starlight Foundation gala, stars including Howard Kaylan, lead singer for the Turtles and Mothers of Invention, and David Clayton Thomas and the Gellis brothers of Blood Sweat and Tears.  He once had dinner backstage with Celine Dion and Michael Boulton after a New Jersey amphitheater performance.


While working in New York in 1994 he formed his own media company, Ivy Hollow Productions, where he produced the first digital recording of the New Testament of the Bible by renowned Shakespearean dramatic actor Max McLean.  Working with Bob Monroe and his Monroe Foundation Jim used "hemispherical synchronization" to increase reader retention when listening to the recording.

After publishing two books of poetry, he then wrote and published The Joshua Chronicles, an inspirational and mystical work of fiction.  At the same time, he began writing the words and music for a song catalog that now totals over 500 songs, and he formed two bands to record the music, Nashville Bound and the John Galt Band.  Over 15,000 Internet friends and fans have helped the bands achieve over a million Internet plays.


National Geographic Television, Ancient Cultures and Sacred Sites

His lifelong fascination with ancient cultures led him to sacred sites around the world, including many in IrelandEnglandScotlandWalesMexicoRussia, and Canada It was a stimulus to become involved with Andrew Wilk again at the National Geographic Society television division as a creative consultant and in providing soundtracks and themes for a number of Nat Geo TV shows with the Pinnacle Group in Utah.  While at National Geographic Television, a series he helped create and post produce with Chuck Hammer, Really Wild Animals (CBS TV Network and Disney Network), earned one Emmy and five Emmy nominations.


Ivy Hollow undertook major national media campaigns for book publishers and record companies in Nashville and WashingtonD.C.  Putnam also created and produced a nationally syndicated weekly radio program in NashvilleFamily Values, introducing new Christian singers and authors and launching numerous singers to the top of the national charts including Point of Grace, Anointed, Jackie Velasquez, Rich Mullins and many others.

Dancing the Tightrope and Take Me Now God! are two books he wrote inspired by the experiences of his life and the many influences growing up. The first book traces the early childhood through teen years and the many adventures all kids shared while coming of age in the days before cell phones, texting, video games and personal computers. The latter is the end of the pursuit of the meaning of life, a rather hilarious journey through the baby boomer maze of metaphysical and spiritual paths to the truth.


His next literary work led him on trips throughout Great Britain and Ireland which preceded travel to Russia in search of secret Soviet film archives of Josef Stalin. In the frontier outside Moscow on a military base near Stalin's home, he discovered the extensive KGB cold war film archives of Stalin and the Nazi SS film archives of Adolf Hitler, which had vanished 50 years earlier in the fall of Berlin.  Over 32 million feet of film footage was kept in the top secret archives. Putnam was the first American the forty-nine archive staff had ever met and only the second to visit the archive in the 60+ years since it opened.

After seven years of research including access to previously "classified" files in America, England, France, and Russia, he wrote his subsequent book, Saviors of the 20th Century - Hitler and Stalin - the War of Annihilation between the Nazis and Communists.  It is a non-fiction narrative history tracing the roots and growth of Communism, Nazism, Hitler, and Stalin.


While in Russia, he was able to acquire and bring back to the western world a stunning video documentary that exposed horrid living conditions and death rates in Russian orphanages.  It led to major changes in the health and safety of abandoned children in Russia.

He also worked with international groups to help adopt Russian and Chinese children.  As a result, he made several appearances as a guest and host of Russia Today, a syndicated public education television program out of Washington, DC.  In addition, Nazi footage acquired by Putnam through the Russian archives has appeared in Turner Broadcasting Productions.

Beamish - Neapolitan Mastiff
In 2000 he joined The Interpublic Group of Companies (IPG) in NYC, one of the world's largest media companies, after they bought Media, Inc., the media company which Putnam helped create in NYC in the mid-1990's.

Energy and Environment

Always intrigued by science, physics and inventions, he studied math and physics and received a license from the Atomic Energy Commission to handle radioactive materials fifteen years before being involved in the clean up of the Three Mile Island nuclear accident while working for the New Jersey governor.

He received awards from President Johnson for work with Keep America Beautiful and the National Association of Business, and was involved in several environmental pilot projects including industrial cogeneration, massive solid waste disposal incinerators, fusion energy (PrincetonNJ), and he oversaw implementation of the nation's first statewide mandatory recycling program in New Jersey.



A member of the task force to create the Federal Energy Agency in response to Arab oil embargoes, he advocated alternative energy before it was popular, even patented and manufactured a solar energy system in the mid 1970's.  The latter involved a consortium he recruited of blue chip corporations including PPG Industries, Phillips Petroleum, Goodyear Tire and Rubber and Dow Chemical.

CuChulainn Deo Irie - Irish Wolfhound

His fascination with science and nature prepared him for a most unusual exposure to natural disasters and the forces of nature.  For example, Jim had his homes hit by tornadoes in three different states, experienced hurricanes in TexasFlorida, and Maryland, floods in CaliforniaMissouri, and Iowa, and blizzards in Iowa and Nebraska.

As if that was not enough, he also experienced earthquakes in California and Maryland (he was less than 50 miles from the epicenter of a 6.2 quake that hit the east coast, the strongest one in over a century), and was caught in the Mad Cow disease outbreak in England.

Science and Intelligence Agencies



A close friend and confidant of Margaret (Maggie) Sanders, daughter of Colonel Harlan Sanders of Kentucky Fried Chicken fame, it was through Maggie and her affiliation with the National Academy of Sciences he interviewed numerous Nobel prize-winning scientists as well as metaphysical personalities Maggie knew from her lifelong search for the Lost Continent of Atlantis.  Also through her Putnam was a participant in the MIT Media Lab - Society of the Mind with Professor Marvin Minsky, founder of artificial intelligence in Boston.


More recently, Putnam worked with Victor Sheymov, a key KGB cold war defector to the US and with James Woolsey, former CIA Director under President Clinton, to establish an international computer security company, Invicta Networks, and to help publish books on intelligence agency activities.

He also works with CBA Pharma, Inc., a Kentucky pharmaceutical company, with a promising potential treatment to cure cancer and drug resistant diseases.  CBA is the first firm to enter FDA Phase 3 human trials with a natural compound that results in the destruction of multi-drug resistant cells including cancer.

Of course, the implications go way beyond cancer since most drug resistance happens in areas of drug over-prescription and saturation over the years, such as treatment with antibodies, medications for depression, high blood pressure, etc.  Even diseases once thought wiped out are making comebacks because of their ability to mutate and most dangerous of all are the hospital-based drug resistant staff infections with their deadly consequences.

The Hopi Indians



Ever since his first visit to meet the Hopi Indians near the Grand Canyon in 1964 Jim has worked with indigenous spiritual leaders including the past three Hopi traditional spiritual leaders along with Navajo, Algonquin, Ute, Sioux, Australian Aborigine and many others to help preserve their cultures and their sacred ways.  His invitation to film the fulfillment of numerous sacred prophecies with the Hopi, Algonquin, Ute, and Dali Lama is a highlight of his fifty years working with Native Americans and Indigenous groups around the world.


On one of his many trips to Arizona, the National Park Service archeological office had invited him to bring a film crew and shoot footage of a little known, ancient Indian site with a twelve mile stretch of undisturbed ancient wall paintings just above the Grand Canyon, called Snake Gulch Canyon that could only be reached by horseback.



While driving to the site the evening before a coyote jumped in front of Putnam's van bringing it to a screeching halt, and then disappeared.  The next morning as they made their way to the sacred site on horseback Putnam's horse was startled by a snake, tossing him fifteen feet down a gulley where he cracked three ribs.  With no access to medical treatment, he finished over ten more hours on horses completing the shoot.  The Hopi told him the "trickster" coyote came to force Jim to take a long overdue rest.

Animal Rescues

Throughout his life he helped heal injured animals and birds his neighbors brought him.  His most memorable rescue took place recently in Southern Maryland one frigid winter day when he went into the bitter cold water up to his neck to save a drowning and sick Bald Eagle along the shore of the Potomac River.  He saved the Eagle, it went to rehabilitation, and later Putnam was able to release it back into nature.  As a volunteer of the Bald Eagle rescue center in Delaware he released another Eagle in Maryland as well.
  

From national politics to cyber security to potential pioneering medical breakthroughs, he still most enjoys music, writing, and trying to help people, animals, places, and things.  Among many current pursuits he is a songwriter through Steven Sharp, Sharp Objects Music Company of Nashville, and his bands, Nashville Bound and the John Galt Band are popular internet groups at Soundclick, MySpace, Indie Records, and many other internet sites.


Media and Entertainment - News Reporting, Books, Music, Television and Publishing

Publishing

He designed a national marketing campaign and produced an album of Christian artists to introduce The Promise, a new CEV Bible translation making it the first Bible to be #1 on national bestseller lists in modern times.

Putnam is publisher of the popular Internet based Coltons Point Times newspaper with over 1,700 articles and columns online featuring multiple investigative stories, and 144,000 monthly readers.  Popular articles include;

Conversations with Melchizedek
Lyme Disease - America's Next Pandemic
Our Broken Health Care System
Federal Campaign Reform
Politics and Political Parties
Histories Mysteries about Southern Maryland
GMO's - Truth and Myth
Cyber Security - Are we really safe?
The Rothschild Dynasty - a Trillionaires Delight

and, serialized excerpts from several Putnam books

You can view his newspaper at: http://coltonspointtimes.blogspot.com/

Mr. Henry - Bloodhound
Books Authored

Words I Chose Not To Speak (poetry)
Second Thoughts (poetry)
Dancing the Tightrope (book and television series)
The Joshua Chronicles (spiritual and supernatural fiction)
Take Me Now God!  (hilarious comedy and parody of Baby Boomers)


Arizona Daily Star Tucson

Saviors of the 20th Century - Hitler and Stalin - The War of Annihilation between the Nazis and Communists (non-fiction historical)
Left Handed, Four Eyed, Small Town, and Catholic, and they call me Lucky? (autobiographical)


Television Shows

Jim Henson's Muppet Babies, wrote several scripts for the TV series
Flashpoint, created and produced a PBS weekly public service television program
The Energy Show, Arts and Entertainment national broadcast - winner of ACE - Award for Cable Excellence (cable TV Emmy) Executive in charge of production
Really Wild Animals, National Geographic TV series on CBS and Disney, 26 episodes, winner of one Emmy and nominated for 5 Emmys - Creative consultant for script, music and post production
Dancing the Tightrope TV Series in development - producer, writer and composer
Several Marilyn Monroe books and scripts under development.


Music

Bible Soundtrack - Max McLean and the Bible
Ivy Hollow Theme - co-wrote with Academy award songwriter Dennis Matkosky
Nashville Bound band - wrote 23 songs recorded by Nashville Bound in Nashville.
John Galt Band - wrote 150 songs for Dancing the Tightrope TV series soundtrack The Story of a Life
State Property band - executive in charge of production for Arts and Entertainment TV special and six music videos
Ivy Hollow music - wrote I Had a Dream performed at first Martin Luther King, Jr. national holiday celebrations in AtlantaGA and San FranciscoCA
Currently additional 250+ songs in song catalog

Radio

Created and produced nationally syndicated weekly radio show from Nashville called Family Values introducing Christian singers and authors

Organizations

University of Arizona Alumni
Beta Theta Pi National fraternity
Omaha Press Club
White House New Federalism Task Force
MIT Society of the Mind
AEC (Atomic Energy Commission) Radioactive Users license


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