6-7 Nov 09--Yesterday we didn't do a whole lot...stayed at the RV, washed and cut the dogs, and went to the gym. Seeing as there isn't a whole lot to do here we figured we should spread it out. haha
So today we went downtown again. First we toured Orange Hall, then went to the Navy Submarine Museum run by the town, and then Cumberland Island/oyster/War of 1812 Museum.
Orange Hall was built in 1829...all 8000 sq ft of it. It has 2 front parlors for guests, and a downstairs for the servants...and unlike almost all houses of that period, it actually had a kitchen built inside the home, downstairs where the servants lived. That is a "dutch oven" on the left of the picture. Patti, you said you were looking for kitchen pictures...this was the 1st kitchen I came to.
This is a wind up record player....and a Tiffany chandelier from the original owners.
This is a great staircase! And it is the original railing on the left!
Upstairs were the bedrooms....look at what appears to be the 1st trundle bed!
And isn't this wheelchair pretty cool!
I hate to say it but the Navy Museum was weak, at best. It was 3 floors of mostly plaques that were donated by different sailors over time. They had a lot of model submarines on display, and a few things like the door to a sub and steering panel, but the rest was sort of boring.
There were only a few things I found interesting...these are pictures of the top of a sub....where the missiles are stored...and I think they said this sub can carry up to 154 nuclear missles! ouch!
This is a picture of the same sub, but this shows where Navy Seals can be carried in a compartment below and then released without the sub surfacing. I thought that was pretty cool.
This is a door between compartments in a sub...it was as small as it looks in the picture. I have seen some pretty hefty sailors in my time, so that door caught my eye!
This was a Congressional Medal of Honor citation for a guy who was a deep sea diver and saved his buddy who was trapped underwater and couldn't get up to the surface because his lines were snagged. And then a picture of a sub surfacing...doesn't it look like a whale shooting out of the water?!
And the most interesting thing of all was this mechanical chair they had for people who needed it to get up the stairs. If you are my age or older you may remember Inger Stevens in the TV show Farmer's Daughter when we were kids. They had one of these for the grandmother, and I always thought it was so cool!
When we left the Museum we were looking for something to eat and stopped in this restaurant to look at the menu....Gator Tail!!! Didn't order it!
Then we went to the Cumberland Island Museum....this is the museum attached to the island we went to the other day, but it shares its space with a small War of 1812 exhibit. I can't remember if I told you that St Mary's has a few claims to fame. They say they are the 2nd city chartered in the US, after St Augustine. Cumberland Island itself is clearly a big claim to fame. And they also claim that the last skirmish of the War of 1812 happened here, not in New Orleans as the history books would tell you.
So the museum has a few things about Cumberland Island that I didn't see before, and then they have a little oyster section, (I don't really know why), and then they have a section on 1812. I must admit I knew absolutely nothing about that War, so it was a little informative.
Tjis is a picture of the slave quarters on the island before the Civil War. And that is the church JFK Jr got married in...although updated. Then you have examples of toys the little slave children made and played with.
Here is a picture of Lucy Carnegie, who ended up owning 90% of this island.
This talks about how every night was a "formal" dinner at the Island house....evening gowns and tuxedos!
This is lucy and her 9 children....she is so tired she has to lean on the tree!!! And then you have a trunk...notice the built-in hangers and especially the travel iron at the bottom!!!!! And we must remember these came from about 1895-1900.
Then there is the small section on the War of 1812 (Iskipped the oysters). The story goes that the armistice was signed about a week before the Brits attacked Point Peter, the area that was supposed to protect St Mary's from invasion. The Brits kicked butt, and in the process freed a lot of thwe slaves that agreed to fight on their side.
So our day was done...then we saw this house, it ws built in 1834 so I took a picture.
And then just to show you how much they really stretch things here....get a load of this marker. It is about pecan trees!
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While I find this interesting, you really did stretch it out. (lol).
ReplyDeleteSubmarines scare the crap out of me. Like being in a big MRI machine.
Glad you are enjoying yourselves. Now off to Florida for a little rest eh?
I figured you were home doing nothing, looking for something to do, so I would give you some material to read!
ReplyDeletePaula, I found this very interesting, even the pecan part!
ReplyDeleteI loved the travel iron! Did you notice it?
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