LizzieMaine
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New England town meetings are very much like the scene in the painting. Suits are not commonly worn, except perhaps by the moderator, and not always then. They traditionally take place in the dead of winter -- although the transplants tend to be too spleeny for that, and have voted in recent years to move them in many towns to June -- and people usually dress in work clothes: in Rockwell's day a leather work jacket would have been very common, if not a red-and-black checkered wool hunting coat. Nowadays it's not uncommon to see town meeting attendeees show up in Grundens.
The town meeting isn't just a meeting -- in towns where this form of government is used, the townspeople themselves are the actual legislative body of the community, and the purpose of the meeting is to approve the municipal budget for the year, line item by line item. The selectmen or town manager who prepared the budget are the executive branch of government, but have no authority to execute the budget until the voters have approved or altered it. Ordinances and other matters of town policy are also debated and decided at these meetings. That fellow in the leather jacket is probably demanding to know why the board cut spending on snow removal again this year when everybody knows the roads outside downtown are completely impassable after a storm and what are we paying taxes for if not to get the damn streets cleared?
Rockwell did, deliberately, make the man in the leather jacket look like Lincoln. Or at least like what Americans in 1943 imagined Lincoln to look like, which is to say, Raymond Massey.
The town meeting isn't just a meeting -- in towns where this form of government is used, the townspeople themselves are the actual legislative body of the community, and the purpose of the meeting is to approve the municipal budget for the year, line item by line item. The selectmen or town manager who prepared the budget are the executive branch of government, but have no authority to execute the budget until the voters have approved or altered it. Ordinances and other matters of town policy are also debated and decided at these meetings. That fellow in the leather jacket is probably demanding to know why the board cut spending on snow removal again this year when everybody knows the roads outside downtown are completely impassable after a storm and what are we paying taxes for if not to get the damn streets cleared?
Rockwell did, deliberately, make the man in the leather jacket look like Lincoln. Or at least like what Americans in 1943 imagined Lincoln to look like, which is to say, Raymond Massey.