Posts Tagged attraction

I’m baaaaaaack!

Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water, your not-so-faithful blogger has shown up again. I went to work for the Census April 23, while I was still in school. Between sub days and enumerating, May was very busy. I was sent to Dodge City in June, then came home to work on the Ultimate Guide to Northwest Kansas for the Northwest Kansas Travel Council. (A link on the right side of that page enables you to request one. An online version should be available, but I don’t have that information yet.)

I worked frantically on that publication until the Census called me back July 8, finishing as much as I could before my work time would be in snatches. Between the Census and Ultimate Guide, I have had almost no time to do anything. Every project I had in mind for this summer has been postponed until who knows when.

Donna and I went to Denver Monday and Tuesday to pick up the Ultimate Guide. I’ve been designing the publication since 2001 and Publication Printers was the most pleasant printer we have worked with. The turnaround was phenomenal, as were the quality and service. Their color work was terrific.

I finished the latest Census operation Thursday, but I could still be called back to work. When I went through training for the first operation, we were told we’d absolutely be finished July 31. I must have done something right because it’s nearly September. I wish I could have told you Census stories, as I have plenty. But I am bound by confidentiality laws. Better to be safe and silent than risk sharing too much information!

Downtown Denver and the Front Range

When we went to Denver, Donna got a great rate for us at the Grand Hyatt in Denver. What a lovely place! My room was on the 22nd floor and we went to the Grand Club, which I believe was on the 29th floor, the highest floor I’ve been on since leaving New York City in January.

tourist on Top of the Rock

I couldn’t help making the comparison between standing on Top of the Rock, 70 stories up.

daytime traffic in Downtown Denver

Traffic is a lot closer from 26 floors up than it is from 70.

Fifth Avenue traffic at rush hour

The stream of vehicles down Fifth Avenue was a constant parade of congestion. No wonder the guide book said “DON’T DRIVE IN MANHATTAN!”

Yes, Denver has its traffic nightmares. I’ve parked on I-70 before. But the guide books don’t tell you not to drive in the Mile High City.

Hubby’s cousin married a man from Long Island, N.Y. When they lived in Denver, his mother visited them. When she saw the Denver skyline, she said, “What a cute little city!”

Cute little city?

Depends what your comparison is. SkyscraperPage.com has three pages — 77 buildings — of Denver skyscrapers. Republic Plaza is the tallest at 56 floors.

According to Skyscraper Page, New York City has 770 buildings — 31 pages — that qualify as skyscrapers. The tallest is the Empire State Building at 102 floors. One World Trade Center is supposed to be 105 floors. SkyscraperPage lists 43 NYC buildings taller than Republic Plaza.

By NYC standards, yes, Denver is a cute little city, but I like it. Denver is comfortable. New York City is overwhelming. Fun, yes, but still overwhelming.

Even so, I’d jump at any chance to return to NYC. I like fresh air, but Times Square is good, too.

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A spot of tea, anyone?

Old South Church interior

This is the interior of Old South Meeting House, built in 1729. It’s most famous for its connection to the Boston Tea Party. Visitors are even handed a tea bag when they visit.

Those opposed to the British tax on tea held a meeting in Old South to discuss what their response should be. Samuel Adams, a prime mover and shaker in the revolutionary movement, stood up and announced, “Gentlemen, this meeting can do nothing more to save the country.” This was supposedly a signal to the Massachusetts Sons of Liberty to destroy the tea.

The Boston Tea Party was on and 342 tea crates bobbed in Boston Harbor. The partiers ensured that all the tea was thoroughly soaked and ruined.

When the British occupied Boston, they wreaked revenge on Old South, turning it into a horse riding arena. They gutted the building and used its furnishings for fuel. When the Redcoats left, the congregation spent eight years raising funds and restoring the interior.

Old South pulpit

The original congregants liked long sermons. In an age without mechanical amplification, the speaker needed all the help he could get. The height of the podium ensured that sound would fall upon the ears of the listeners and the sounding board above him reflected sound downward. Much to my amusement, I thought it looked like some giant threat. “Say something we don’t like and we’ll crush you with this stamp above you!”

This is ironic considering the meeting house’s history subsequent to its preservation as a museum in the 1870s. Old South became a place where anything could be discussed. In 1929, the meeting house’s board voted that any subject, no matter its unpopularity, could be discussed.

I wonder what the original congregants would have thought of that?

To visit Old South from the Boston Common Visitor Center (start of the Freedom Trail, the red line marked on the sidewalk), walk along Tremont Street (with Visitor Center and Boston Common behind you) to the corner of Tremont and School Streets. Turn right, walk down School Street to Washington Street and turn right again, walk down Washington Street. The Old South Meeting House is on the corner of Washington and Milk Streets. The closest subway stops are State Street (Blue/Orange Lines), Government Center (Green Line) and Downtown Crossing (Red Line). It’s open daily all year, except Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve Day, Christmas, and New Year’s Day. Hours are 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. April 1-Oct. 31; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Nov. 1-March 31.
Here’s the Freedom Trail slide show:

Click on the link in the gallery to order.

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Our House is a very, very, very fine House

Massachusetts House of Representatives

This is the Massachusetts State House‘s House Chamber. Note the Massachusetts House of Representative’s voting boards on the left and on the right.

House Democrats

Here are the Democrats. Leadership is on top, then the members follow in alphabetical order.

House Democrats, Independent and Republicans

Democrats continue on the other side. Rep. Jones, the one with the dashes before and after his name, is the lone Independent. The remaining names are Republicans. Massachusetts is definitely a blue state, which makes the election of Sen. Scott Brown a shock. The election happened only a few days before we arrived. I was hoping to score a Scott Brown sign, but the only election evidence I saw was a Martha Coakley headquarters storefront.

Albert Herter painted the five murals high on the wall, Milestones on the Road to Freedom. The leftmost one (not shown), the painting of John Winthrop leading the Pilgrims to their landing on Plymouth Rock, has been water damaged and was removed for preservation and restoration.

The room is paneled with lustrous Honduran mahogany.

House ormolu clock

At the back of the room is an ormolu clock. Ormolu clocks are also known as “Death Clocks” because the process used to make ormolu poisoned the clockmaker.

The Sacred Cod

The Sacred Cod is the State House’s most famous item. The cod fishery was early Massachusetts’ most significant form of income. A representation of a cod has hung in Massachusetts state houses since the early 1700s. One was lost in a 1747 fire and its replacement disappeared during the British occupation of Boston. The current one, a five-foot fish carved from a single block of pine, was donated in 1798. It hung unmolested until 1933, when the staff of Harvard Lampoon stole it by clipping its supporting wires. An anonymous tip led to its whereabouts. It was rehung much higher, out of the way of someone’s clippers.

Holy Mackerel

The Senate has its own fish, the Holy Mackerel, worked into its chandelier. The dome has 360 pieces of carved wood around it, one for each degree of a circle.

Massachusetts Senate Chamber

The Senate’s documents are tied with red ribbon. British legal documents have been tied with red ribbon since the 17th century. Massachusetts Senate only continued the practice. There’s the origin of the phrase “red tape”.

Senate Reading Room

The Senate’s original chamber is now its Reception Room. The carpet is a replica of an earlier carpet. The tour guide went out of her way to ensure we knew the cross pattern in the carpet had “no religious significance.” What a commentary on our culture! The ceiling is a barrel vault decorated with beautiful plasterwork.

The tour ended here and I had no more time to explore. The rest of the Freedom Trail awaited me.

Directions to State House and tour instructions are here. State House Tours are offered Monday through Friday between 10 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Tours last approximately 45 minutes. They are free of charge but reservations are requested. Call 617-727-3676. State house is closed on weekends and holidays.

Here’s the State House slide show:

Click on the link in the gallery to order.

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Under the golden dome

I walked the Freedom Trail on our second day in Boston.

Massachusetts State House from Boston Common

As soon as I exited the T’s station under Boston Common, I was drawn to this golden dome and Charles Bulfinch’s beautiful Federal style architecture. Massachusetts State House’s dome is covered with gold leaf, which was added in 1874. Gold is 23.5 carats, which seems an oddly-precise number. It has remained gold ever since, with one exception. The dome was painted gray during World War II to prevent enemy ships from using its gleam as a target.

Our tour guide commented how relieved the citizens were when their gold dome appeared again.

Distances to Boston are measured from the dome, not the city limits or central post office.

Massachusetts State House from Beacon Street

Tour guide said that the center entrance is only open on very special occasions:

1) When the outgoing governor departs;

2) When Massachusetts regiments return from war, they return their battle standards to the State House;

3) When a sitting President visits the State House while the legislature, called the General Court, is in session.

corner of Massachusetts State House

Ordinary mortals must use side entrances. This one is called the Hooker Entrance.

General Hooker's statue from behind

No, ladies of the evening are not plying their trade outside, although a connection does exist. Gen. Joseph Hooker, whose equestrian statue stands outside this entrance, was the third commander of the often ill-fated Army of the Potomac. Hooker’s headquarters were so wild that they were characterized as a combination “bar room and brothel“. “Hooker” was already slang for a prostitute before the Civil War. But, because of Hooker’s drinking and womanizing, Washington’s red-light district became known as “Hooker’s Division.” This increased the slang term’s popularity.

With his history, perhaps the hind-end view of Hooker from the State House is rather appropriate.

Tours originate in the Doric Hall. This is the only place that is not always handicap accessible. A chair lift is present, but often breaks down.

Doric capital in Doric Hall

The room is named for these Doric capitals.

Gov. John Andrew

The room has several statues in it, including ones of Lincoln, Washington, and Gov. John Albion Andrew, the state executive during the Civil War. Andrew sent the Massachusetts State Militia to defend Washington, D.C., in the early days of the Civil War.

bust Lincoln above Gettysburg Address plaque

Abraham Lincoln, the President whose capitol Andrew had rushed to protect, is represented in this bust above a tablet with the words of the Gettysburg Address.

closeup of George Washington's bust

George Washington is honored twice, once with a full-length statue and once with this bust.

Washington statue by Sir Francis Chantrey

This statue received mixed reviews. Washington’s pose in the clothes he actually would have worn is obscured by a Roman toga draped around him. This was called “absurdly incongruous” by at least one source. I have to agree: The combination looks ridiculous.

Massachusetts was pleased enough with Chantrey’s efforts to add a “Washington Temple”, for the sculpture onto their State House. Room is the current Doric Hall. No wonder it didn’t seem to match the rest of the building.

Next up, the rest of the State House.

Directions to State House and tour instructions are here. State House Tours are offered Monday through Friday between 10 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Tours last approximately 45 minutes. They are free of charge but reservations are requested. Call 617-727-3676. State house is closed on weekends and holidays.

Here’s the State House slide show:

Click on the link in the gallery or go here to order.

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Adventures in production

sound board for Kennedy-Nixon Debates, 1960

Since I spend nearly every Sunday morning in our church’s sound booth, production equipment is of great interest to me. Ours was installed last year, so it’s pretty up to date with lots of sliders and knobs.

This one above is a complete dinosaur, literally a museum piece. It’s part of the Kennedy-Nixon Debates exhibit in the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum, Boston.

The progress since is truly amazing.

My grandfather was the sound technician at his church for many years. When he was working, he allowed no one in the booth, so I never got to see him in action. I remember what the tiny room looked like when I was a child. A huge reel-to-reel tape machine dominated the area. He had stacks of those tapes in little flat white boxes, labeled with each service date.

When the church changed to cassette tapes, the sound booth seemed bare and somehow sad.

(Grandpa also loved film-making. The whir of his 8mm camera is part of the soundtrack of my life. He experimented with stop-motion, especially in the credits. I’ve thought about recreating some of the work I remember, but I’m not sure I have that much patience.)

I worked in a television station’s tape room in the summer of 1992. The job was anything but enjoyable for me. The equipment needed repair and some extreme measures had to be taken at times to make them work. The cart deck was the most problematic.

“Cart” was short for “cartridge”.

The TV station’s production crew put together local commercials and we’d have to dub them from their tape to these cartridges. The cartridges were then placed in order into the cart deck’s conveyor belt, which was shaped like an oval track. If we had to repeat that commercial, we’d have to pull that cartridge and place it into another slot. If/when the cart deck would stick, Tape Operator would have to literally kick the machine to get it started, resulting in some dead air, the most dreaded term in the television lexicon.

We had to download some programs from satellites. One of the receivers was fixed on a specific satellite, the other was programmable. I hated the programmable receiver. It often refused to lock on its intended target, even when we had input the specific coordinates. Each night, we had to download two early-morning programs. One was downloaded from the fixed receiver; the other from the programmable one.

One night, we were unable to download the program for 15 minutes. We only had the one shot, so the early birds had to sit through 15 minutes of the longest commercials the overnight Master Control Operator could run. Otherwise, we’d have had 15 minutes of dead air or 15 minutes of the slide that read “Don’t call Sperry’s TV. Your TV is OK; the network is experiencing difficulties.”

Apparently, none of the station’s higher-ups were watching TV at 4:30 a.m. because we never heard a word of rebuke.

Now I download nearly everything from cyberspace. No more horrible programmable receivers; instead, I just head for WWW Land. No more kicking a cart deck, although Windows Vista and EasyWorship can be finicky. I’ve learned more about codecs in the last year than in 25 previous years of computing.

I LOVE technology!

This is my slide show from JFK Library:

Click on the link in the gallery or go directly to gallery here.

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I.M. Pei’s pavilion

I had a list of the top four places I wanted to visit in Boston:

1) John F. Kennedy Library and Museum

2) Adams National Historic Park

3) Freedom Trail

4) Isabelle Stewart Gardner Museum

The Adams’ houses are closed during the winter, so I crossed that attraction off my list. Seeing only the visitors center left me cold. If the houses had been open, I would have seen Presidential sites for the first six Presidents. But this was not to be.

On our first day in Massachusetts, I headed for JFK’s Library. Since the library has free parking, I drove there, then hopped the transit system, or “T”, to Boston Common, where I picked up my Go Boston card at the welcome center. It was good at every attraction I desired to visit. Instead of standing in line to pay, I showed attraction staff my card and went right in. I hopped back on the T and returned to the library, which is now the furthest east I’ve ever been.

JFK Library and Museum building from its pier

When Jackie Kennedy was choosing a design for her late husband’s library, she chose I.M. Pei, then an unknown, as the architect. The tour starts with a showing of a film about JFK’s life, after which visitors are supposed to go downstairs to the museum exhibits, then end in the memorial pavilion. Somehow, I often don’t do things like other people do.

tour group in the pavilion

I must have exited a different door than the one leading to the exhibits because I ended up in the pavilion. Its only furnishings are some low benches. At 115 feet high, it dwarfs all humans entering. If the pavilion is intended to make visitors feel the weight of history and the brevity of life, it succeeds.

pavilion flag and ceiling

The flag, the room’s only decoration, is 45 feet by 26 feet. The space defines stark.

view of Atlantic Ocean from JFK Library's pavilion

The ocean only a few feet away saves the pavilion from unrelieved severity.

Boston skyline from JFK Library pavilion

JFK’s love of the ocean and of sailing was well known. Among other reasons, he said he loved it because of its changeability. The day I was there, the ocean and sky were nearly the same leaden color. The next day, the ocean was brilliant blue, although the skies continued to be overcast.

I could get addicted to seaside views.

For information on visiting JFK’s Library, go here.

This is my slide show from JFK Library:

Click on the link in the gallery or go directly to gallery here.

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Clifton Hill, Niagara Falls, Canada

Yogi Berra was famous for his redundant statements, including “This is deja vu all over again.”

I could sympathize with Berra when we arrived at Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada. Once we got through Canadian customs, I felt as if I’d gone back to Branson, Mo. The same tourist trap chains that populated Branson populated Clifton Hill, Niagara Falls’ entertainment district.

Dinosaur Rampage

I laughed out loud at the Dinosaur Rampage Theater. The toothy predator’s head was too funny, especially with the cheesy growling noises emanating from the theater.

passer-by poses for a picture

I’ve never been to Las Vegas, but I imagine this was a pale imitation of the Nevada city. I considered it preparation for the greatest light show of all, the one in Times Square. I set up tripod in an out-of-the-way corner and shot some pictures. Dad stood by to ensure no one came up behind me and knocked over my camera. A group came by, saw what I was doing, and one struck up a pose. He didn’t think I’d actually shoot, but I caught him. Too bad I don’t know who he is.

Note all the attractions behind him.

Skywheel and Rock N Bowl

The Skywheel was interesting.

Dad in front of Skywheel entrance

Skywheel spans 175 feet, high enough for a wonderful view of the Falls.

Skywheel gondolas

The gondolas are enclosed and completely climate-controlled, which was a good thing. Temperatures at that time were in the 20s. Gondolas seat up to six. The car’s motion prevented me from shooting pictures of the beautiful view. I cannot understand now why I didn’t video instead. Perhaps the dirty windows put me off? If I ever return, I’ll definitely video the ride. Even so, the ride was definitely worth taking, if only to orient ourselves.

view from Clifton Hill

This is the view from the exit side of the Skywheel. Unfortunately, the Falls are not visible from this angle; the trees obscure them.

Some of the attractions are deja vu, but the main attraction at Niagara Falls, are — naturally — the Falls themselves. After riding the Skywheel, I could hardly wait for the main event.

If you have more time to spend at the Falls than we did, the advice at USATourist.com and BootsnAll.com are worth reading.

Here’s my slide show from Niagara Falls, Canada:

To order, click on the gallery link in the slide show or go here.

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Insulators

We visited the Museum of Independent Telephony while we were in Abilene.

insulators from below

insulators from below

I was immediately drawn to this lighted display case full of insulators. They were used to protect wires from shorting out, especially in the rain. I love their shapes and colors. Of course, I just had to see what they looked like from underneath.

blue insulator

blue insulator

The little bumps on the skirt bottom helped rain drip away from the wires inside.

brown saddle insulator

brown saddle insulator

My friend Esther contacted a friend of hers who collects insulators. He said, “The brown insulator and the ones in the background with the large top groove were possibly used in mines to carry large wires for longer distances back in the mines. This would be for electrical use.”

green glass insulator with bow-shaped top

green glass insulator with bow-shaped top

Here’s another strange shape, this one from Hemingray.

Hemingray green insulator

Hemingray green insulator

This one’s also from Hemingray, in a style known as the “Doorknob”.

purple insulator

purple insulator

Ironically, purple insulators originate in a decolorizing process that removes the aqua or green coloration from glass. Manganese is added to take out the greenish colors. Under radiation, solar or artificial, the manganese turns purple. The more manganese in the glass, the deeper the purple.

orange insulator

orange insulator

I tried to find out what makes glass orange, but failed. I didn’t want to squeeze orange juice or make a bong, but those were among the results that appeared. Whatever.

The next time you look at a telephone pole, remember the hidden beauty of the insulators.

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