Tara A. Elliott
A poet and educator, Tara A. Elliott’s poems have or will soon appear in Cimarron Review, Wildness, Passengers Journal, and Ninth Letter, among others. She serves as Executive Director of the Eastern Shore Writers Association (ESWA) and Chair of the Bay to Ocean Writers Conference (BTO). A former student of Lucille Clifton, she is a recent winner of a Maryland State Arts Council’s Independent Artist Award for Literature.
Snowball
“ Legend has it that the snowball was invented in Baltimore during the Industrial Revolution. In the mid-1800’s, icehouses shipped ice from New York down to southern cities. Children would beg for ice shavings as the ships stopped in the Baltimore harbor. The mothers of these kids soon created flavorings to sweeten the ice. Due to the quick money that could be made following the Great Depression, snowball stands soon popped up on just about every street corner in Baltimore during the humid summers. By 1977, The Baltimore Sun estimated that there were over 1,000 stands in the city, many serving The Baltimore Snowball—chocolate covered in marshmallow syrup. The summertime treat was often featured at local sub shops where coin-operated arcade (video) games made their start. The poem centers on the tension between adolescent boys and girls at the time—including the interesting fact that the earliest arcade games never allowed gameplay as a female character. It wasn't until 1982 when Midway launched Ms. Pac-Man that a female character appeared on the playable screen. It was far more successful than any of its predecessors.
For more about the snowball, visit: oldlineplate.com/tag/baltimore-snowballs/ ”