mansion

Archive for the ‘antebellum mansions’ Category

Atlanta Has Puppets, History and Chocolate Pecan Pie

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

Atlanta Has Puppets, History and Chocolate Pecan Pie

During the Civil War, Atlanta did indeed burn, but in the years since she has rebuilt, restored and in fact reinvented herself. Down but not out, she rose like the phoenix from the ashes of a bitter conflict to become queen of the American south. Multi-columned antebellum mansions rub shoulders with high rise office buildings and the musings of business are conducted at a slower pace with the amusing purrs of the local accent. Atlanta, Georgia is the home of southern hospitality.

Traveling to Atlanta, Georgia by air brings you into one of the busiest airfield hubs in the nation. An Automated People Mover (APM) System has been in service since 1980, carrying over 200,000 passengers regular between the main terminal and the six airside concourses. The individual friendly system displays passenger information in eight languages; English, French, German, Spanish, Japanese, Chinese, Arabic and Korean.

The Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport recently opened a fifth runway to keep up with the demand and will soon open a new 12 gate international terminal. Part of the upgrade includes a new energy efficient automobile rental facility. In addition to rental cars, transportation options to downtown Atlanta include taxis, limos, shuttles and an extension of the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MARTA) which can have you in the city core in twenty minutes. Traveling beyond Atlanta? Greyhound Bus Lines has a pick-up point right at the airfield and Amtrak provides a shuttle to its downtown station.

Visitors to Atlanta might select from spending the night in the historic surroundings of a colonnaded mansion turned B&B, an old fashioned and perhaps themed boutique hotel or the most luxurious of resorts. Many accommodation choices are acquirable within the downtown core and within travel distance of some of the ideal restaurants and shopping opportunities in the world.

One area in particular, known as Buckhead, is an upscale section of town that sometimes is referred to as the Beverly Hills of the East. Sporting a retail district similar to Rodeo Drive it is home to not only fashion from top designers, but to noted eateries such as Au Pied de Cochon (Intercontinental Hotel), Cassis at the Grand Hyatt and Seasons 52.

Baseball fans can follow the Braves as they chase the World Series Pennant and football lovers can watch the Atlanta Falcons vie for a Super Bowl Championship. Hockey anyone? See some cover action at an Atlanta Thrashers game. Golfers can tee off at a number of challenging courses in the area, some designed by such legends as Jack Nicklaus and Jim Fazio.

While in Atlanta, you’ll have the chance to catch a performance of the country’s oldest ballet company, the Atlanta Ballet, or the Grammy Award winning Atlanta Symphony Orchestra. Museum lovers will find not only collections dedicated to local and Civil War history, but a one-of-a-kind Center for Puppetry Arts, which is the world’s largest museum dedicated to the art of puppetry. After a busy day of exploring find yourself some buttermilk fried chicken and some chocolate pecan pie and rest as you contemplate the many facets of Atlanta, Georgia.

For more information on Atlanta, Georgia, visit http://georgia.tv

Exploring the Southern Belle: Savannah, Georgia. Discover its cobblestone streets, beautiful antebellum mansions, tranquil squares framed by Live Oak trees, Mercer House, Forsyth Fountain and much more… Note: I had to replace my original choice of music by some YouTube AudioSwap music…
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Find More Antebellum Mansions Articles

Beautiful Places in Alabama

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Beautiful Places in Alabama

Alabama is one of the beautiful says in U.S. You will find many attractions here that will make your visit very worthwhile.

Alabama has wonderful attractions and sites for an enjoyable pass from its mountains at the north to each beach to its Gulf Coast. The country also has golf, beaches, rich natural wildlife, hunting and fishing, and a history to experience here.

Tourists will like to go shopping. People can travel in Alabama for such purposes. The country has spacious outlet centers, International class malls, and antique’s stores. They have fashionable brands and market types where they could bargain more. The options presented to them will more than satisfy their shopping spree.

Gulf Coast in Alabama is known for its 32 miles of beaches, playgrounds and theme parks. Some of the beautiful sceneries here are Pirate’s Island, Waterville USA and Dauphin Island. People will also see the Historic Blakeley Say Park at Spanish Fort which is the area of the last main fight of the Civil War.

Alabama hotels are widely varied. There are inexpensive and more inexpensive accommodations that will suit many tourists’ budget. The services in these establishments are likewise excellent and very commendable. There are also the more posh and classy accommodations in their five-star hotels.

Birmingham traverses the wealthy wooded Appalachian Mountains’ foothills. It entertains people and its appealing Southern part attracts the vacationers. It is also surrounded with stories from the events of African American people.

Moreover, there are two prime Birmingham attractions. These are the Alabama Adventure which is the first enjoyable park; and the McWane Center where science is presented as both interesting and challenging.

Montgomery is the civil rights movement’s center. The guests are coming there together to see Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church, the capital of the state, the First Confederacy White Home and the Rosa Parks Library and Museum. However, the Shakespeare Festival in Montgomery of Alabama is the fifth biggest Shakespeare festival in the universe.

Auburn or Opelika is a achievement down to Auburn Avenue. The Sweet Auburn is just a achievement along a lively museum of the well-known attainments of Black Atlanta. It offers scenic views that will make the stroll more lovely and pleasant.

The Museum of East Alabama is the ideal place to start in Auburn. People will witness here lots of artifacts representing life in East Alabama and the Southeast from the middle of 1800s to the present. However, the Opelika Historic Railroad District involves the Lee County Courthouse. This is a powerful courthouse formed in 1896.

Other beautiful places to see in Alabama are the Sports Hall of Fame in Alabama, the Jazz Hall of Fame in Alabama, the only antebellum mansion of the say which is the pretty arts museum today, the Arlington Antebellum Home and Gardens, the Center of Dixie Railroad Museum which is the refuge for railroad buffs,, the Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum, and the McWane Center which is the art science center of the country with IMAX Dome Theater.

Moreover, there are other beautiful sceneries here. They are the Riverchase Galleria with many stores and restaurants under the biggest skylight of the world, the Treetop Nature Trail at Oak Mountain Say Park, Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail of Alabama, and eighty years of aviation history at the Southern Museum of Flight.

The history of Mercedes is presented at the Mercedes Benz U.S. International Visitors Center at Vance. There are also works tours which start from the hub.

For more information on Historical Activities in Alabama and Alabama Celebrations.Please visit our website.

STANTON HALL, THE MOST SPECTACULAR OF ANTEBELLUM MANSIONS IN NATCHEZ, MS., IS ON TOUR DURING THE SPRING AND FALL PILGRIMAGES. COMPLETED IN 1857, THIS MANSION IS FULL OF ORIGINAL ANTIQUE FURNISHINGS. NATCHEZ HAD A MULTITUDE OF WEALTHY PLANTATION OWNERS WHOSE SOURCE OF INCOME CAME FROM HUGE COTTON FIELDS. MANY PLANTATION OWNERS BUILT SUMMER DWELLINGS IN NATCHEZ WHICH WERE A SHOWCASE OF THEIR WEALTH. ALMOST ALL OF THEIR FURNISHINGS WERE IMPORTED ALONG WITH IMPORTED CHINA, CHANDALIERS, CARPETING, AND DRAPERIES. ON THE GROUNDS OF THIS MANSION IS THE CARRIAGE HOUSE RESTAURANT SERVING EXCELLENT SOUTHERN MENU. THEY ALSO SERVE MINT JULEPS THAT WILL KNOCK YOUR SOCKS OFF!

What is Worlds Better Than a Hotel Room?

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

What is Worlds Superior Than a Hotel Room?

Yep,they say that the hurricanes scared some folks away from Florida. Well, I just came up with a really good reason for you to revisit the state. Florida contains some of the finest Bed and Breakfast inns in the nation, and below I present some of the ones that stood out to me.

1. The Addison is a serene 14-room inn representing a one-of-a-kind blend of old-style elegance with modern amenities. Traditionally, the values might seem to clash but the builders and owners have merged them together in a beautiful blend. This Inn was selected as one of the ten Ideal Overall Inns of 2009-2010 by BedandBreakfast.com. It also consistently maintains a number one ranking on TripAdvisor.com. Located on Amelia Island in the historic district of Fernandina Beach, the rooms feature porches for relaxation and an enchanting fountain courtyard. The area is a nature-lover’s paradise with pristine beaches, four major Say Parks and a National Park. One can bike, hike, play golf, horseback ride, shell, bird watch, or go backwater or deep sea fishing. Signature breakfast dishes include fresh fruit smoothies, breakfast in a boat (baked potato shell stuffed with scrambled eggs, cheese, and crumbled bacon), banana pancakes with pecan toffee syrup, spicy breakfast quesadillas, praline French toast, and perfect Peruvian coffee.

2. If you can look past the wild and funky website, the Cedar Key B & B is an inn well worth visiting! Located in the second oldest city in Florida, the historic inn was built in 1880. Originally, the town was known for its cedar, out of which Eagle and Eberhardt pencils were produced; this day its claims to fame are clam farming and tourism. Besides boasting some of the cleanest and most comfortable lodgings imaginable, this inn’s draw is also the astonishing array of activities in the area: boating, kayaking, air boats, fishing, bird watching, playing with dolphins, biking, hiking, scuba diving, plus a famous Arts festival and the October Seafood Festival. Or if you like football, attend a Florida Gators game in nearby Gainesville. A few nice added features of the inn is the pet friendly status, last minute specials, delicious breakfast, and an endless array of amenities such as teas, cookies, biscotti, hot chocolates, coffees, and a bottomless blow of the freshest homemade cookies you’ve ever put in your mouth.

3. Casa Grandview is located in the vibrant, upscale city of West Palm Beach. This Bed & Breakfast combines some of the most desirable features of the secluded and quaint B & Bs with the services of a luxury resort. The Casa offers romantic cottages, quaint bungalows, art deco cabana suites, stylish tropical coastal villas, and classic city shelter retreats. What a mythologic array of choices, many with kitchens, elaborate baths, and spacious living areas. The owners stock apiece suite with only the ideal gourmet foods for your breakfast, and, if desired, for additional meals. Everything you need is acquirable including complimentary Wi-Fi, HD TVs, premium satellite service, music and motion picture channels, iPod docking stations, and CD players. You can even check emails and surf the web while catching some rays poolside or dozing in a hammock. You will be waited on with 5-star service or left alone for some glorious privacy. Whatever you want is what you get at Casa Grandview.

4. Elizabeth Pointe Lodge is a island ‘shingle style’ inn that overlooks the rich blue Atlantic. What can I say? USA This day deemed this oceanfront inn as one of the 10 greatest places to sit on the porch. Travel and Leisure entrepot recognized it as one of the fifty great beach resorts in our nation. The book, 1000 Places to See Before You Die, tagged this as a place where the emphasis is on pure relaxation. The Road Ideal Traveled distinguished the inn as one of the 12 Ideal Waterfront Inns in America. The honors go on and on. Besides offering full concierge service and 24 hour room service, there are also gourmet treats offered all day, a lavish wine and hors d’oeuvres reception apiece evening, and an oceanfront breakfast with scads of sumptuous offerings in the sunroom. In apiece way, Elizabeth Pointe is determined to go above and beyond your needs and expectations.

5. Florida Trend Magazine says that the Herlong Mansion of Micanopy, Florida is “easily Florida’s most elegant Bed & Breakfast.” In case you don’t know, this quiet tiny town is south of Gainesville, near Cross Creek, the village the author of The Yearling prefabricated famous. The ten fireplaces and high ceilings of the inn are perfectly accented with mission oak woodwork and mahogany inlaid floors. Pictures can never do justice to the warm beauty of this place. Wide verandas between enormous pillars on the first and second floors contain cushioned swings that overlook an impeccably manicured lawn with ancient towering oaks. The breakfast isn’t wildly fancy but offers delicious traditional fare such as homemade biscuits and perfect omelettes, rich coffee, and apple bread. And, if you like, you can have a candlelit four-course dinner catered with roses, champagne, the works. Treat yourself to casual elegance for just one night, or more…

6. The Seven Sisters Inn is located in Ocala, Florida, region of rolling green hills and thoroughbred horse ranches. Built in 1888, the Queen Anne Victorian home was judged a “Best Restoration Project” and is listed prominently in the National Register of Historic Places. One startling uniqueness of this inn is the rooms, which feature décor from the four corners of the globe. One enters through elaborately carved Indonesian doors, then there is a Bengal Safari room, a Cape Cod Lighthouse room, an Egyptian Treasure room, an Oriental Zen-like room, and a room from Old Paris featuring imported French fabrics and décor. Visitors feel as if they are traveling the world as they lounge in front of their fireplaces or rest with spa showers, Jacuzzi, Victorian soaking tubs, and heated towel bars. And when you wake the next morning, get ready for an honor winning breakfast on white china and crystal, including three-cheese French toast with Ginger Peaches, Eggs Pesto, Chicken Puffed Pastry, Raspberry-Oatmeal pancakes, or Tomato-Zucchini Quiche. The “Seven Sisters” will make you happy.

7. The Williams is a beautifully restored antebellum mansion located in the historic seaside village of Fernandina Beach. There are three separate buildings, apiece offering rooms for guests: the Williams House, the Hearthstone House, and the Carriage House. You will be captivated by intricate moldings, big pocket doors, true wood floors, and hand-carved mantles created from heart pine, cherry, or mahogany. Sweeping verandas, original tiled fireplaces and crystal chandeliers make visitors feel as if they’ve slipped into a time warp. If you appreciate the days when great pride and craft were marks of the homes of the wealthy, you will love the William’s House. But it isn’t just a home to wander. The owners cater to your whims, including your desire to wake to a breakfast you’ll remember. Your first course will feature fresh fruit and muffins, scones, or pound cake. Your second course might include strawberry croissant French toast or blueberry strata. Enjoy this with fresh orange juice or rich Colombian coffee. No one will leave the William’s Home either hungry or unhappy.

8. Can you keep a secret? There is a Bed & Breakfast inn in Key West called Atlantis House. This is one of those places you will not want to tell your friends about, lest the next time you want to book a night there, it will be booked two or three months ahead. It has only two exclusive rooms: that’s right, the Master suite and the Garden suite. The owners, Steve and Kayla Kessler designed, built, and maintain the property themselves. The inn is nestled in a lush tropical garden bordering the roiling Atlantic. Not long ago, this inn was awarded “The Ideal of the South” honor from BedandBreakfast.com, and it was deserved. I just don’t know how they found the thing. If you want, you can kick back on your own sun deck or spend some romantic moments in the breezy, vine-covered gazebo. Or if you’re a tiny more adventurous, Steve happens to be a licensed Captain and with his boat, The Contender, he’ll be happy to take you fishing. Then Steve and Kayla will prepare you the perfect dinner with “the catch of the day,” or maybe a lobster Steve caught for your dining pleasure. Steve can also offer private, guided snorkeling tours of the most beautiful coral reef in the Continental United States. Then, after a hard day of sunning or fishing, Kayla, a massage therapist, can massage all your troubles away. Now remember, this is our tiny secret, cross your heart.

9. Palmer Home is an inn nestled in a tiny town called Lithia, Florida. This is another B & B that was listed by BedandBreakfast.com as one of the “Best in the South” for 2009-2010. It’s a very tranquil place with grandfather oaks, butterfly gardens, hammocks, and bicycle trails. But, hang onto your hats, because nearby are nearly all the tourist attractions Florida offers, including Orlando’s. In fact, Lithia is the perfect location from which you can go for day trips either to Busch Gardens or the Tampa Bay Bucs on the Gulf coast or Disney World and Universal Studios on the Atlantic coast. You’ll get home in time for some cookies and milk before bedtime and you’ll awaken the next morning to fresh coffee, quiche, a breakfast casserole, and their signature dish, almond-crusted French toast.

10. On charming Anna Maria Island, near Sarasota, Florida, you will find the Harrington House. It is actually comprised of the Main Inn, the Carriage House, the Huth House, and the Dodt House. You thus have the option of staying in a bungalow, a beach house, a villa or a condo. You can lounge on your balcony opening out onto the Gulf of Mexico, you can kayak with the dolphins, tour the island by bicycle, or swim in the Gulf or the heated pool. Nearby Sarasota and Bradenton offer the Ringling Museum of Art, Selby Botanical Gardens, the Bishop Planetarium, shopping at St. Armand’s Circle, or fine dining at Longboat Key. But, whatever you do, don’t miss the Harrington chef’s most favourite breakfast dishes: Buttermilk Pancake Sundae or Jo’s Bacon and Crab Roll.

Yes, in a say chock full of Bed & Breakfast inns, these are a few of the ones I wanted to introduce you to. Maybe there are others to equal some of these. However, I don’t think you’ll be disappointed with any of those described above. It’s time you discover the world of difference between a typical hotel and a Bed & Breakfast inn.

Debra Fortosis is a professional travel agent. You can book travel on her individual friendly website. She can even help you easily launch your own turnkey e-travel business.
Register for a free monthly pass giveaway!
Book Travel: http://www.mndgetaways.com
Contact Debra: mndgetaways@comcast.net

Find More Antebellum Mansions Articles

Plantation Alley, Louisiana: Antebellum South Comes Alive

Sunday, August 9th, 2009

Plantation Alley, Louisiana: Antebellum South Comes Alive

Plantation alley is located on the Mississippi River North of New Orleans.  On both sides of the river were massive sugar cane farms (plantations down here), where the owners built beautiful mansions for themselves, while their slaves, who worked the fields, lived in shanty poverty. Many of the estates have been destroyed either by fire or the floods of “Old Man River”. Most of the existing ones have been restored and offer guided tours.

The first plantation of the West Bank was Laura. This is a Creole plantation built in 1805. The guided tours are based on the Memories of Laura Locoul, who had lived there and in the French Quarter. The tales of Br’er Rabbit were stories told in the slave quarters on this plantation and later written down for posterity.

Next is the most photographed plantation of the all, Oak Alley. Twenty-eight majestic oak trees line the entrance way to the mansion. River road passes by it and a levee has been built to control the river from flooding. The view from the river in the 1800s must have been magnificent. It is even spectacular today.  I have been told that Hurricane Katrina destroyed some of these stately oaks.

On the East Bank of the river are the restored San Francisco, Ormond, and Destrehan plantations. The war of 1812 nearly began in New Orleans, rather than ending there. The facts are that in 1805 Haiti abolished slavery. Some of the French settlers took their slaves from Haiti and moved to the East Bank of the Mississippi, where they farmed sugar cane and kept their previous way of living. The slaves had felt the stirrings of freedom while on Haiti. Some of them felt that if they could band together, they might be a force with which to be reckoned. In 1811 a group of slaves escaped from their masters up the river and began traveling South to New Orleans, which they hoped they could capture and negotiate their freedom with the British, who wanted the Colonies back. Along the way the group grew in numbers with slaves from other plantations and from other escaped slaves who heard of their mission. A sizeable store of guns and ammunition was to be inactivity for them along the way. For some reason, they were betrayed and the store was not there. They were captured, place on trial at Destrehan Plantation (now a B & B) and convicted. What would have been the outcome of the war if they had succeeded?

John Pelley is a Geriatric Gypsy.  He is retired from the rat race of working.  He is a  full-time RVer, who ran away from home.  He began our travels on the East Coast and, like the migrating birds, seek the warmth of the seasons  He has discovered volunteering with the National Park System.  He has a CD he has recorded of Native American flute music., A Day with Kokopelli. For pictures, links, and more information visit http://www.jmpelley.org.

Natchez, Mississippi: Stately Mansions and Indian Mounds

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Natchez, Mississippi: Stately Mansions and Indian Mounds

Natchez, Mississippi is the southern terminus of the Natchez Trace Parkway. Natchez is an antebellum city unravaged by the fortunes of war. Many cotton barons, lawyers, physicians and other professionals played the game of one-upmanship. Mansions with obloquy like Monmouth, Magnolia Hall, Fair Oaks, Auburn, Oakland, The Elms, Hawthorn, Rosalie, Linden, Stanton Hall give testimony to their lifestyle. Most of the homes are located in the downtown area. So it is an simple achievement between mansions. Two of them require some driving: Longwood and Melrose. The most uncommon one is Longwood, a five story octagonal home the largest one in the US). Haller Nutt had great plans for this dream home for his wife Julia. The Civil War ended construction of the mansion. Only the basement was completed. Mr. Nutt died from pneumonia in 1864. The descendents lived in the basement until 1968. The mansion’s interior will remain unfinished as a monument to the tragedy of war. Many of the mansions this day are B & Bs and the town of Natchez has two festivals of homes: spring and fall. Twenty-eight of these beautiful show pieces are open for visitation that time. The National Park Service controls two mansions in Natchez: the one hundred plus acre cotton plantation of Melrose just outside of town, and the William Johnson House, a free slave, who prefabricated his fortune as a barber in the antebellum south. Just outside of town are the Natchez Mounds of Grand Village. These are the remnants of a sophisticated society, who lost a war with the French. They had attacked Natchitoches, Louisiana. The is the only attack by Native on this city. The Spanish garrison at Los Adais, eleven miles to the West came and helped the French defeat the Natchez. The Visitor Center has many exhibits describing the Natchez tribe and their lifestyle. The visitor might achievement around and view the different mounds and the buildings reconstructed on them.

John Pelley is a Geriatric Gypsy. He is retired from the rat race of working. He is a full-time RVer, who ran away from home. He began our travels on the East Coast and, like the migrating birds, seek the warmth of the seasons He has discovered volunteering with the National Park System. He has a CD he has recorded of Native American flute music., A Day with Kokopelli. For pictures, links, and more information visit http://www.jmpelley.org.

Related Antebellum Mansions Articles

The Antebellum Trail Shows the Glory of Georgia

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

The Antebellum Trail Shows the Glory of Georgia

The Antebellum Trail begins in Athens, Georgia and generally follows Rte 441 South to Macon. In all of the towns along this historic highway are homes built before 1860. Most are in the Federal or Greek Revival style. Some are B & Bs today. Many are still private residences, well restored to their former opulence.

Just a few miles South of Athens is historic Watkinsville. The Eagle Tavern, erected in 1801, houses a small museum and welcome center. The two-story structure was an inn, where the guests slept on the upper floor. Down Rte 15 about six miles is Elder Mill Covered Bridge, built in the 1860s. It is one of the few covered bridges in Georgia, which grants traffic to cross. In order to stop speeders or oversized cars from crossing or ruining the bridge, there are metal entrance arches (ten feet tall by ten feet wide) thirty feet from either side of the bridge.

Continued our trip down the Antebellum Trail. We detoured East a few miles to Sparta. Approaching from the North on Rte 15, we descended a hill into the town. Directly ahead was the County Court House. Built in the 1881-1883, the courthouse still functions as the governmental offices of Hancock County (named after John of the Declaration of Independence fame). Notable is the two-story courtroom on the second floor. Sparta is not on the tourist trail, but the courthouse is worth making the detour.

Our next stop is Milledgeville, the Georgia say capital from 1807 to 1868. The articles of secession in 1861 took place in the chambers of the Capital building, presently housing the offices for the Georgia Military College a preparatory and junior college. In a display case are the articles of secession from 1861. On the walls are four massive portraits: Washington, Jefferson, Oglethorpe, and Lafayette.

The visitor’s welcome center is in the old post office, directly crossways the street from the Georgia College and Say University quadrangle. The College has a room dedicated to manuscripts and memorabilia of the author, Flannery O’Connor.

Also in the city is the Governor’s Mansion, where General William Sherman stayed during his “March to the Sea”. This build is currently undergoing reconstruction, but is still open for tours. Throughout the city are many antebellum and Victorian homes.

North of Milledgeville twenty miles lies Eatonton, the home of Joel Chandler Harris, author of Uncle Remus and Alice Walker, author of “The Color Purple”. In town is the Uncle Remus Museum housed in a log cabin prefabricated from two slaves’ quarters. According to the curator of the museum Harris heard the stories as a young boy on the plantation. As an adult he lived in New Orleans and other cities before settling in Atlanta, where he penned the Uncle Remus Tales. It is doable that besides the stories he heard as a child, he also was familiar the book “Compair Lapin”, the stories of Br’er Rabbit, which were also told at the Laura Plantation.

Putnam County was once a major cotton producer. After the boll weevil epidemic, most of the farmers changed to farm farming. As you drive through the country, you see herds of farm cows in the pastures.

North of town, about nine miles is the Rock Eagle Effigy, approximately 5,000 years old. It is one of two stone effigies in Putnam County. The raptor measures 102 feet from wingtip to wingtip and rises ten feet in height. It is constructed entirely of crystal rocks from pebble size to larger than one man can carry. Archeologists believe this to be a religious ceremonial site. A three-story attending tower stands at the head of the raptor for viewing the mound from above..

John Pelley is a Geriatric Gypsy.  He is retired from the rat race of working.  He is a  full-time RVer, who ran away from home.  He began our travels on the East Coast and, like the migrating birds, seek the warmth of the seasons  He has discovered volunteering with the National Park System.  He has a CD he has recorded of Native American flute music., A Day with Kokopelli. For pictures, links, and more information visit http://www.jmpelley.org.

“The Republic of Virtue” go here for a playlist of all these uploads: www.youtube.com Say structure after the War of 1812…The capitol building and dome, by Charles Bullfinch. John Trumbull’s paintings in the capitol. Thomas Cole’s “The Course of Empire” Southern Architecture and Antebellum mansions…on these Hughes quotes Yeats: Some violent bitter man, some powerful man Called architect and artist in, that they, Bitter and violent men, might rear in stone The sweetness that all longed for night and day, The gentleness none there had ever known; originally aired on US TV in 1997
Video Rating: 5 / 5