Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Friday, April 17, 2015

Washington D.C. - Smithsonian Day

The weather forecast was for rain and the weatherman was right....it rained all day. Seemed like the perfect day to spend inside the Smithsonian museums so we threw on the raincoats and headed over there.

First, we took the tour of the Air and Space Museum... we had a great guide that was a retired teacher. We started with space travel from the German V2 to the Space Station.  I found the development of rockets following WW2 and the race between Soviets and Americans to develop ever bigger payload rockets very interesting. Then the guide took us over to air travel where we saw so many famous planes like the Wright Flyer, Spirit of St Louis flown by Charles Lindbergh, Bell X-1 that Chuck Yeager flew to break the sound barrier, the X-15 rocket plane that still to this day holds the speed record for a plane - Mach 6.2, Rutan Voyager(around the world without refueling) and many more.

After a morning in the Air and Space Museum, we spent the afternoon in the Natural History Museum... There was so much to see and I would like to have read every sign but it is just so much.. Warning! If you don't believe in Human Evolution, you had better skip the whole section on that subject because they aren't describing it as "theory". 






                                                Russia vs United States





Actual size of Pacific Jellyfish(Don't worry it is not found in Gulf of Mexico)

 


 

 

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Washington, D.C. - #2

Woke up to another beautiful day in the nation's capital.  Following the advice of the hotel concierge we left the hotel early to get in line for tickets at the Holocaust Museum. The tickets are free but they start passing them out at 10:00 each day and it is best to be in line by 9:00 if you want to get the entry time of your choosing.  Sally held our place in that line while I hiked over to the Washington Monument to get timed tickets (again free) for entrance later in the day. We  ended up with 12:30 tickets for Holocaust Museum and 4:00 for Washington Monument. While waiting for 12:30 to come around, we took a tour of the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing(prints U.S. currency) and had an early lunch at the Agriculture Building Cafeteria(which turned out to be a great find...lots of choices, good food and good prices).




Three hours in Holocaust Museum was not enough time to see it all.


So many shoes...a stark reminder of all those lives lost

From top of Washington Monument - Cherry trees, paddleboats and Jefferson Memorial

From top of Washington Monument - White House

From top of Washington Monument - World War Two and Lincoln Memorials

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Washington, D.C.

First couple of days were packed full of interesting sites(lots of walking).  Our tax dollars at work as it seems most everything in Washington is free to the public. Visiting the monuments and reading again the famous speeches of Lincoln, Jefferson, Washington, Roosevelt, Kennedy, Reagan, King and others on the hallowed walls of the monuments reminded me that no political party has a monopoly on truth and that we have in the past been able to put the differences aside for the common good.  My hope has been renewed that we will again be able come together and find the middle ground and act as one people to solve the problems that exist today.



Cherry Blossom Festival parade

 
Army Old Guard Fife and Drum Corps


Sweetheart in Blooms

Our 44th anniversary shot
 
World War 2 Monument

Bob Dole and WW2 vets

 Cherry Blossoms

The blooming cherry trees were awesomely beautiful

More blooms
 
 Jefferson Memorial
 
Thomas Jefferson
 
Franklin Roosevelt Memorial

FDR Memorial - Great Depression era
 
 
 Lincoln Memorial
 
We took an excellent guided tour of Lincoln Memorial led by Park Ranger
 
Vietnam statue 

 Vietnam Memorial
 

Vietnam Women's Memorial 
 
 
Here we are again....
 
 
Washington Monument
 
Arlington cemetery

 Tomb of the Unknown Solider
 


Saturday, October 11, 2014

Roadtrip - Texas History

Sally and I have always enjoyed taking spur of the moment road trips and friday morning we woke up in just that frame of mind.  The plan is always not to have a plan just a general direction and this time we headed out of Seguin to the east toward Gonzales on 466 (also called the Capote road). This is an area rich in Texas history and it wasn't long before we had our first history lesson...It was a marker indicating the site of Wilson pottery. In 1856, the Wilson family along with several slaves moved to this site.  The Wilson family sold the business in 1869.   When Wilson moved on, three of these former slaves started their own pottery production.  Pottery produced by Wilson Pottery and particularly the pieces produced by the former slaves (1869-1884)is very sought after by collectors. Sally and I will be on the lookout for such a find.

Back on the road and we were soon at another roadside marker.  This one located at a gate for the El Capote Ranch. I am guessing that this is how the Capote Road got it's name. El Capote Ranch was founded by Jose de la Baume in 1806. He was given  27000 acres with miles of Guadalupe river bottom land by Spain for his services to the Spanish army.  In later years this ranch produced many fine horses,,,,one of those horses named "Seguin", was the horse that Theodore Roosevelt rode up San Juan Hill during the Spanish/American War.





Back on road and around a couple of bends and there is a big gathering of buzzards (on the ground by the road and out in the field.. As we zoomed by at 60 mph, I realized they weren't buzzards...they were hawks.  Maybe fifty or sixty hawks sitting on the ground and some in the sky above us.  Never seen anything like it. In an area the size of 2-3 acres, there were all these hawks and they appeared to be the same species.  Further research and I found they were Broad-wing hawks and that they migrate at this time of year in large groups referred to as kettles. 




                                        This one stayed around for a photo

The Capote road continued on past the community of Monthalia and intersected hwy 97 at the community of Cost. A second-hand store was only thing open in Cost. The old man that was sitting out front of the store, was a talker and filled me in on the history of all the old dilapidated  buildings that once made up the businesses of the once thriving town of Cost. Also, at Cost is a monument to the "shot that started the Texas Revolution".  Before this day, I had thought that the shot was fired near the Guadalupe river bridge on hwy 183 at Gonzales(birthplace of Texas Revolution and home of "Come and Take it" slogan). There is a marker at that bridge that indicates that the shot was fired near there and I always thought that that they meant it happened in close proximity to the bridge. The actual location is on the Guadalupe river about a mile or so from Cost. To get there, we drove from the roadside monument in Cost to the river where a smaller monument commemorates the actual spot. It was exciting to be standing on the same ground where the revolution started.


                             "First Shot of Texas Revolution" Monument at Cost

                                     Actual site of "First Shot of Revolution"


From there, we drove into Gonzales and marveled how many new businesses have opened due to the Eagle Ford Shale oil drilling.  On the way back to Seguin, we drove through Palmetto State park and went by the abandoned Warm Springs Hospital. The Park Ranger said that the warm springs still flow so I want to find out how to get permission to visit the springs... that's another trip.


Palmetto State Park - for nostalgia - the circle at the campground where our kids use to ride their bikes around and around and around...



Sunday, July 20, 2014

Bed and Breakfast

Friends, Sherman and Joy Schlichting, had an open house for their newest bed and breakfast that they named Opa's House.  With just a few necessary modern touches, the old house has been restored to it's glory of 1861. If these old walls could talk, I'm sure they would be saying "Thank you".



Sherman and Joy


Newest restoration - Opa's House

Entrance

Below is the blog for the original posting for this home:

http://alongthegeronimocreek.blogspot.com/2012/04/negleted-historial-home-gets-new-life.html

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Timmermann springfed swimming pool on Geronimo creek

My interest in the history of the Geronimo creek recently led me to what remains of the Timmermann Swimming Pool. Built out of concrete around 1917. The water was piped from a nearby spring.  The pool was for men only except for one day a week when it was open for women only. It seems that children were not allowed in the pool. It seems that the pool was open off and on for 12 years.  Closed by William Timmermann in 1929. The reason is a little vague. Some say that it was due to a typoid epidemic(this was before the standard use of chlorine for sanitation and people worried that disease could be spread by swimming in the same pool).  Another reason that is worth mentioning is that Mr Timmermann closed the pool because he didn't like some of the activities that evolved around the  use of the pool. I wasn't able to discover exactly what activities ..


                                            This is what the Timmermann pool looked like in 1919.


This is what the Timmermann pool look like today



Spring that fed the pool
 
 

Piping that connected the pool to the spring