THE LAST LEG
Oklahoma City proved to be a fun and sobering stop. The fun
was our visit to The National Cowboy and western Heritage Museum. It far
exceeded my expectations. Their collection of western art included well-known
classic masters such as Russell and Remington as well as many modern artists
who were nothing less than phenomenal. In addition art work there were displays
of Native American headdresses, Rodeo, Cowboys, Cavalry and even an old
recreated western town with sheriff’s office as well as saloon.
The sobering part was the Oklahoma City Memorial and Museum.
Words can not describe the feeling one gets when you see the wreckage that
resulted from that horrific attack on an otherwise beautiful spring day.
On to Arkansas, the only state in this quadrant of the
country I have never previously visited. This was fall color time in the South
East however given our New England background we were disappointed by the lack
of vibrancy to the color change. The first night was spent camping at a small
vineyard. After sampling the wine it was more than apparent that we were not in
California. Next stop was a State Park outside of Hot Springs Arkansas. Hot
Springs National Park showed a lost part of our past. The hot springs
bathhouses were not only for recreational purposes but an important component
of the medical treatment regime of the time. The hot spring water just bubbles
out of the ground.
I have to mention that we found a microbrew, with good beer,
in an old repurposed bathhouse.
Continuing in a southeasterly direction we visited Selma
Alabama and also Tuskegee Alabama. Selma, a small town outside of the Capital
Montgomery, appears to have changed very little over the last half century. The
National Park has several interpretive centers along the path of the famous
Selma To Montgomery Voters Rights March of 1965. In 1961 only 156 of the
county’s 15,000 voting age black people were registered to vote. The displays
were even more poignant given the recent political rhetoric that seemingly
giving credence to racism and the fomenters of hatred. On our brief stop in
Tuskegee, we visited The Tuskegee Airman’s Museum and Tuskegee Institute
founded by Booker T Washington. George Washington Carver a famous professor of
botany, who incidentally did his graduate studies at Iowa State University,
developed countless patents here.
The last stop on our long road trip was Andersonville,
Georgia home of infamous Civil Was Prison. Andersonville was built to house
10,000 prisoners on 14 acres but eventually housed 45,000 prisoners and was
expanded to 22 acres. 11,000 POW’S died of disease and starvation. The National
Park Service has a museum devoted to Prisoners Of War covering the entire time
from the start of recorded history to now. Again a moving and well-done museum
that words can’t do justice to describing the feelings one experiences.
We arrived in Titusville Sunday November 6th and
quickly learned that our HVAC system (heat/air-condition) was not working. Good
news we got someone here Monday morning bad news the problem was not a quick or
inexpensive fix. We have opted to go with a new and upgraded system due to the
age of our existing system. It has been nice to catch up with friends that
arrived before us and those that are filtering in. In the mean time we have
been busy settling in.
The 2 videos are self-explanatory. Due to unreliable internet we were unable to include them previously.
 |
| National Cowboy Museum |
 |
| Great Steakhouse outside of OK City Stockyard. Great local atmosphere |
 |
| Warren Spahn and David |
 |
| OK City Memorial |
 |
| Men's Bath Facility |
 |
| Woman's Music room in bathhouse |
 |
| Brown Chapel Selma Alabama site of meetings leading historic march |
 |
| Edmund Pettus Bridge |
 |
| Paul M Grist Lake SP |
 |
| Paul M Grist SP where we had the entire 1,000 acre park to ourselves | |
 |
| Gym at Fordyce Bath house |
 |
| Fordyce Bath house |
 |
| P 51 Fighter at Tuskegee Notice red tail that's how other airmen knew it was them |
 |
| Hangers at Tuskegee |
 |
| At Andersonville Prison this brook served as sole water source, one end drinking and other end toilets. |
 |
| Front gate inside as seen by prisoners in Andersonville |
 |
| Has it snowed in GA? No it's King Cotton |
 |
| Rows of graves at Andersonville |
 |
| Booker T Washington's Home |
 |
| Campus at Tuskegee Institute |
No comments:
Post a Comment