Bella: 450 miles
State count: 12 states, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine. Massachusetts is the latest
Monday, September 14
It was here the jubilant crowds surrounded the balcony to hear the reading of the Declaration of Independece on July 18, 1776, and in front of which the Boston Massacre had occurred six years earlier.
Boston Harbor remains very busy, more with pleasure and tourism these days, as well as being a Coast Guard station for search and rescue vessels.
It was also really windy on the harbor cruise:
We learned a documented interesting twist to the Paul Revere story. You may remember that actually two riders were sent out to warn the colonist patriots after the lanterns were hung in the belfry of the Old North Church. Paul Revere had the shorter ride, being rowed across to Charlestown, where he was given a horse to ride out to Lexington and Concord. William Dawes had the longer route and rode via Boston Neck. He reached Lexington after Paul Revere and they rode on together to Concord. As they rode, they encountered fellow patriot Dr. Samuel Prescott who was returning home from a DATE .... visiting a girlfriend or "courting" the reports say. He hooked up with them, and they were all intercepted by a British patrol before they reached Concord. Paul Revere was captured (and released later the same day as the British realized they had bigger fish to fry), Dawes lost his horse, and it was Dr. Prescott who actually got through to Concord to warn the Minute Men there. SO, being out and about, wooing and courting ..... it can be a very patriotic thing to do!
On Friday, September 18, we headed southeast for our Cape Cod week-end. We decided we weren't going to try to see everything, or much of anything for that matter. We just wanted a little down time. We had some lovely and unusually warm weather, so Liz had fun playing with her parents in the pool.
On Saturday, we headed to South Cape Beach, near Falmouth. It was breezy but a beautiful sunny afternoon. While we didn't swim, Gary and Liz played in a sand and I took a tremendous beach walk.
The 45 minute ferry ride was beautiful ... about 10 o'clock on a bright Sunday morning. Everybody was in a good Sunday mood, and enjoying themselves. We had reserved a car at Oak Bluffs, and explored the rest of the day.
Then Liz took a ride on The Flying Horses carousel, the first merry-go-round in the country, and did have some luck grabbing the brass ring!
Above left are the cliffs at Gay Head, and on the right is one of the Gingerbread Camp Meeting houses that were an interesting part of Martha's Vineyard history early in the 20th century.
Finally, we moved on to Plymouth today, Monday, September 21, and saw, of course, THE ROCK, the Mayflower, and a very interesting restoration called Plimouth Plantation. There are neighboring displays: one of a native Wampanpaog extended family who had been asked by the chief, Massasoit, to be a liaison with the newly arrived Europeans; ....and then the 1620 European settlement which was understandably crude, but with folks in costume telling us how life had been that first year. After nearly 100 arriving in December, 1620 (their sailing had been delayed as the original vessel was not determined to be sea-worthy), only one-half survived that first year. We were told they DID have enough food, but had no shelter, and died, really, of exposure. They had been weakened substantially after lying around on the Mayflower for about 67 days during the crossing, and the weather prevented them from establishing shelter, so they spent the winter on the ship. It was a really interesting afternoon.
The Wampanoag encampment had native people descendents staffing it, and we saw young women weaving and another giving herself what she said would be a permanent tattoo: she was using obsidian/charcoal with a sharp edge embedding it into her forearm (see photo).
Then, a "colonial" instructed Liz on how to whistle with grass between her fingers.
This evening, Gary and Liz went on a 90 minute walking "Ghost Tour" of Plymouth. They met at Plymouth Rock at 7:30, and with four others followed a guide around town while she told spooky stories and legends and took them by the graveyard. Liz loved it!
It was a busy week, but really perfect for the first week of school. We did do some reading, and spelling, and writing, and math, but just living and seeing things first hand taught us all a lot more. One of our problems may be where to put interesting books we pick up at these very memorable sites. It felt like this week was alot of what this trip is about!
Until next time ....
Julie, Gary and Liz
3 comments:
I am enjoying your blog and your interesting accounts of your trip. Lucky Liz getting all that history and spending time with her loving parents! My daughter Deb is living with me temporarily so she has the Google account. Jan Olson (patient)
Hello Leagues! It is so much fun to read about your adventures, and I am getting excited as you work your way down the Eastern shore. I would love to see you when you get to DC. Also, if I can help set up things like White House or Capital tours let me know. I would need to know in the relatively near future, as they need some time to process the information. Enjoy the road!
Hello, Leagues -- On a whim today, I decided to check the internet for my old college friend, Maxine League, in hopes I might send her a quick "thinking of you and remembering what a good friend you were to me many years ago." I found her name on your blog. Maxine and I were students together at North Central College in Naperville, Illinois in the early 1960s. I was a young married woman at the time and she was about 20 years older and living with Warren and her boys on Main Street in Downers Grove, where my husband was a mailman. Please pass along my good wishes to her. I have thought of her often through the years and of how she taught me how to read a dress pattern and then cut out and make the dress in your "summer house" in the back yard in DG. Please share this with her and let her know I have led a very happy and fulfilling life in business, but mostly working to support my great love of historical research related to family history, as well as teaching the subject in the area where I live and organizing a not-for-profit genealogical society in Naperville and now editing the Illinois State Genealogical Society Quarterly magazine. Tell her I had the opportunity to visit briefly with our dear old professor, Dr. Richard Eastman,not long before his recent passing and he still had that same spark that delighted us all. I think of her with great affection and am glad we had the opporunity to spend time together during those years. Please give her a hug from me. Oriene
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