We got off to a sweet start today. First we drove to Waterbury, VT, where one of Ben & Jerry's ice cream factories is located. The tour was fun, interesting, and delicious.
Next we went to the state capital, Montpelier. After a quick tour, we went to Morse Farm Maple Sugar Works. Another sweet treat!
Then the real driving began - we traveled on highway 32 through Woodsville and Littleton to the White Mountain National Forest. This is the highest mountain range in New England, with Mt. Washington towering at over 6000 feet. The scenery was beautiful, and the day was picture perfect.
We settled in North Conway for the night, in a bed & breakfast close to the ski resort area.
We did visit a graveyard and found some old friends, see if you remember anyone of them..
I am not sure anyone has registered these on Find-A-Grave. Be the first.
Thursday, October 3
Wednesday, October 2
Wednesday, Oct. 2 - Fort Ticonderoga
We left our hotel early this morning to drive up the west side of Vermont toward Burlington. The scenery was beautiful, so we traveled mostly on highway 7 and the adjacent country roads to get the best view of the foliage.
At the village of Hampton we crossed into New York state and followed the through small villages and on back roads to Fort Ticonderoga.
Our guided tour at Fort Ticonderoga was the highlight of today, well worth the time.
After our visit, we boarded the cable ferry operating on Lake Champlain and returned to VT. We drove north on highway 7 again to Burlington, where we spent the night.
We had an excellent dinner had at The Ice House restaurant. The weather is unseasonably warm for this time of year, so we ate on the outside deck that overlooks the lake and watched the sun set.
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Photo by Nancy |
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Inside the reconstructed fort. |
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View from the front ramparts of the fort. |
Our guided tour at Fort Ticonderoga was the highlight of today, well worth the time.
After our visit, we boarded the cable ferry operating on Lake Champlain and returned to VT. We drove north on highway 7 again to Burlington, where we spent the night.
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The ferry is just like the one crossing the Willamette at the Canby crossing. |
Tuesday, October 1
Tuesday, Oct. 1 -Three States in one day - CT,MA & VT
Today we drove across two states (CT and MA) and into a third (VT). Know that sounds like a long way, but our route was only about 170 miles. It does take all day, though, with many stops and slow traffic.
After a quick stop at another cemetery in East Haddam, CT, we headed north through Hartford to Springfield. We had planned to stop at the Springfield Armory National Historic Site, but it was closed due to the government partial shut-down.
We chose to travel on the side roads, so took highway 7 on the western edge of MA. We enjoyed lunch at the Barrington Brewery in Great Barrington, and visited Stockbridge to see the Norman Rockwell Museum. This museum sits on over 30 acres and has beautiful views of the autumn countryside.
We also drove through Lennox, Pittsfield, and Williamstown. These are revolutionary war sites, as well as being charming New England towns.
After a quick stop at another cemetery in East Haddam, CT, we headed north through Hartford to Springfield. We had planned to stop at the Springfield Armory National Historic Site, but it was closed due to the government partial shut-down.
We chose to travel on the side roads, so took highway 7 on the western edge of MA. We enjoyed lunch at the Barrington Brewery in Great Barrington, and visited Stockbridge to see the Norman Rockwell Museum. This museum sits on over 30 acres and has beautiful views of the autumn countryside.
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Norman Rockwell's studio |
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One of numerous panoramas along the roads we traveled today |
Monday, September 30
Monday, Sept. 30 - Hitting the Books - Autumn Colors
Today was research day. After breakfast we headed to the New London Library, and spent a few hours in their genealogy room. We both found ancestors who lived in this area in the mid- to late-1700s.
This afternoon we drove to the Old Hebron Cemetery to locate a few more ancestors. The drive was beautiful, as the pictures show. We followed a two-lane highway through several small towns filled with well-kept colonial style houses, each with an autumn wreath on the front door. Every small town had a central green, now the location for a pick-up soccer game and weekly farmers' market.
Fall colors are starting to show. Heading north to find more.
This afternoon we drove to the Old Hebron Cemetery to locate a few more ancestors. The drive was beautiful, as the pictures show. We followed a two-lane highway through several small towns filled with well-kept colonial style houses, each with an autumn wreath on the front door. Every small town had a central green, now the location for a pick-up soccer game and weekly farmers' market.
Fall colors are starting to show. Heading north to find more.
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Horse Pond @ 41.46177,-72.248877 |
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Horse Pond @ 41.461241,-72.248788 |
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Horse Pond @ 41.46177,-72.248877 |
Sunday, September 29
Sunday, Sept. 29 - Norwich, Connecticut
Today we went to search for our ancestors in Norwich, Connecticut. Both sides of our families (Lanes & Smiths) came from this area, so it was the perfect place to start. We went first to the Founders Cemetery. This spot was dedicated to the founders of Norwich as their final resting place. The cemetery is marked with a granite memorial, since there are no grave markers.
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Leffingwell House - One of Nancy's ancestors |
Nancy can trace her roots back to Thomas Leffingwell, a lieutenant during the Revolutionary War. He owned an inn in Norwich which is now a museum. We met Richard, the archivist, and he gave us a tour of the building. We were also able to visit the Old Burying Ground, a cemetery where Thomas and his family are buried. We also found another branch of the family, the Huntingtons.
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Christopher Huntington - another branch of her family |
Back in Groton, we went to the Fort Griswold Battlefield State Park. On this site Benedict Arnold and the British forces defeated the American troops. This was the last victory for the British in the Revolutionary War. The monument there is in memory of the soldiers who fought in that battle. More Information below.
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The Monument looks just like Bunker Hill and the Washington Monuments |
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Looking back towards New London on the right and Groton on the left |
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Yes - that is a house perched on the rock, with a pier to tie up a boat. |
More the you wanted to know ~
Arnold, a general in the Continental Army, decided to change sides in 1779, and opened secret negotiations with the British. In July 1780, he was offered, continued to pursue and was awarded command of West Point. Arnold's scheme was to surrender the fort to the British and turn over the arms and ammunition. After he plans were discovered he fled to England and returned in command of a British unit to capture New London and Groton in 1781, He defeated the troops at Ft. Griswold, killed and wounded many troops after the officer surrendered in what was later called the Fort Griswold massacre. His troops were ordered to burn both towns to the ground. Last week they burned his effigy in New London, then brought his leg over to Groton. The leg was wounded while he was fighting for the Colonies. Memories go way back here.
Saturday, September 28
Saturday, Sept 28 Long road to Mystic
Today was a travel day, with some rubber-necking and sightseeing. We drove from Hyannis, Mass, to Mystic, Conn. We decided to drive some back roads, but they were well kept, tree lined, divided four lane alleys that usually kept your eyes forward. The real sights were to drive around the small towns. They brought the flavor of the area.
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3 lanes of traffic lined with trees for mile and miles |
It was a beautiful day for a drive, so we headed for Newport, Rhode Island. We toured the town, full of 70-room "beach cottages" built by millionaires in the late 1800's. After crossing Pell Bridge, we breezed through Rhode Island (it's only 37 miles wide!) and ended our day in Mystic, Connecticut.
The tourist town of Mystic is so vibrant! We ate at Mystic Pizza - yes, that's where the Julia Roberts movie was filmed - and enjoyed a delicious dinner. The weather has been beautiful, with very cool nights. We're looking forward to being able to see the leaves turning color when we head north.
Friday, September 27
Sept 27 Cape Cod
I'll fill in a few blanks tomorrow. The wi-fi is really slow, except in the bar. Talk about a con, but the beer tastes good.
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Plymouth Harbor |
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Mayflower II |
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Pavilion were Plymouth Rock is located. |
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Plymouth Rock - In times past they use to have a hammer and chisel close to the rock. |
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Wet feet in the Atlantic - WOW - one more check on the bucket list |
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Look how tall Nancy is. |
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A great dinner in a very eclectic place |
Thursday, September 26
Sept 26 Museum of Fine Arts - Boston
After breakfast in Quincy Market, we burrowed down to the subway for a trip up the Green line E route to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Nancy and I parted ways and followed of different interests. The collection of paintings featured the renown artists of their day showing many colonist and revolutionary's. The gallery's were large and the museum provided thousands of square feet on three floors to exhibit a wide variety of art. I wandered around looking at: photographic prints, fine art, per-Columbian artifacts, the work of silver smiths, native American pieces and many other exhibits. Nancy went for the jewelry, furniture, European artist and the gift shop. The Museum was joy for the eyes, inspiration for the soul and history for the mind.
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Nancy on the 2nd floor landing. I am standing next to a 30 glass sculpture. |
We topped our last night in Boston at Legal Seafood with two delicious meals and shared a mouth watering chocolate lava cake with a side of ice cream surrounding a macaroon. A walk down to the wharf to look over the harbor and see the city lights of downtown.
Wednesday, September 25
Sept 25 - Around and Across Boston Harbor
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Our 1st stop - The USS Constitution - Oldest commissioned war ship in the world. Never lost a battle or was boarded by enemy troops. Bunker Hill Monument in the background. |
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I don't think our Oregon boater's card will give us the chance to take the helm of this ship. |
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The sides of the ship are 21 - 28" thick with live oak sandwiched between white oak. |
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Gun deck - most of those cross beams are about 5' 10". Sleeping quarters about 5' 8". Average sailor 5' 4". Marines 6' 1". OUCH! |
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Monument at Bunker Hill - 294 steps and all four of us took the stairs to the top. Tired, but we made it. |
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Boston Harbor from the top of the Bunker Hill Monument. USS Constitution in lower right. |
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Our last dinner in Boston with Bruce and Sharon- Great traveling partners. |
Tuesday, September 24
Tuesday, Sept. 24 More adventures around Boston
We chose the Old Town Trolley Tour, a two-day hop-on, hop-off bus tour of Boston historic sites. After another great breakfast at Quincy Market, we boarded the bus to meet Bruce and Sharon at the Cheers stop. They are driving into the city and using the subway. Our first stop was Trinity Church in Copley Square, situated across the square from the Boston Public Library - the first public library in the United States. Our tour of Trinity Church was excellent. John La Farge's murals and stained glass were exquisite!
We skipped several tour stops and arrived at Fenway Park right in front of the Carl Yastrzemski (Yaz) statue. His number 8 was retired by the Red Sox. After our fitted baseball hats were in the bag and big league stadiums in our dreams, we took the one-hour tour of baseball history. It was so interesting to hear about the Park's history and to get a "behind the scenes" look at the nooks and crannies the public does not normally get to see. We started in the lower seats on the right field line, climbed the stadium up behind home plate to the top of the Green Monster, back to the press box and over to the right field foul line. Of course our guide gave out little bits of history and trivia like hard candy at a parade to eager middle-aged kids. Don't pinch me, I am living the dream.
Across the street from Fenway, it was time for some brews and a snack at the Beer Works Brewery (they brew all of the beers they serve). No Bud or Coors served. They had some really good beers and we had one that puckered our taste buds with 82 IBU's (supremely bitter).
We had a long gallop over to Paul Revere's house and the Old North Church. They are just a few blocks apart. Paul had a pew for his family of 8 children with wife 1(she died) and 8 children with wife 2. She probably suggested that he take a long ride that night for a little rest.
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Inside the old North Church - Front |
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Looking towards the back |
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Paul Revere's House - needed a lot of room for all of the children |
The dinner hour was near, so the troop made our way to Hanover Street in the Little Italy area of Boston. We found so many restaurants that it was hard to choose. The standard line in Boston is that they are all good. With appetites at the ready, the girls decided to eat dinner at Ristorante Saraceno, a family-operated restaurant since 1931. Yummmmm and the best Chianti I had ever imbibed. Dinner was delicious - but we found that we had room for dessert. Six shops up the street was Mike's Pastry, which David recommended, for their signature pastry - cannolis (heavenly). What a sweet end to a great day in Boston!
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