Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Williamsburg -- Virginia in June -- 2007

I visited Williamsburg many years ago, but only briefly for dinner when I was at a conference in Norfolk, so I wanted to stay there & explore it a bit. We didn't immerse ourselves in too much Revolutionary War history but we did get some by just being there. We stayed there & took day trips everywhere else.

In terms of living history museums, Williamsburg must be the king of them all. Many buildings are original & are located where they were 300 years ago. We got to stay in one of those -- the Peter Hay Kitchen. It was tiny, but had a fireplace (which would be handy in December, but not in June), air conditioning & lots of privacy.

This is the front of it, with atypical hotel room door handle signs.






This is the back garden. We could see it from our bathroom & dressing area windows.


One of the most charming things about Williamsburg for me is that almost everything is done the way it would have been done in the 18th century. The workers are all dressed in appropriate clothing. The restaurants have no electric lighting in the dining rooms, only candles, & serve meals consistent with the times. Streetlights are very dim & there are few of them. In fact, flashlights are provided in the rooms for people to use when they walk around after dark.

The area is walkable but quite large. One modern day convenience was a shuttle bus that ran around the perimeter from early in the morning until fairly late at night. It was much appreciated after a long day of walking.


We didn't bother with the camera at night, but we did spend one solid day seeing Williamsburg & took pictures then as well as at some special events on other days. Something is always going on in keeping with what would have been happening at the time. Tourists can join in on some of the activities, such as marching to protest something, or as Trout did, learning how to dance properly.


This is the building which housed the Capitol of the Virginia Colony starting in 1699 when it moved from Jamestown to Williamsburg. It is here that much later, the founding fathers started the seeds of revolution, the Constitution & the United States.



Washington, Jefferson & many others were Virginians. They sat in this very place to discuss the issues of the day. Trout & I sat in this room one night for a harpsichord concert, all by candlelight, of course.


Protest marches were being enacted one day. These pictures show some of the street action with a mix of Williamsburg employees & tourists.


The guy in the center of the street in costume was a slave who was saying he'd fight for the colonies, just give him a gun.



These new soldiers are being trained on the field.





These ones already appear to have some skills.





Technological Distractions

One of my favorite buildings was the jail. I liked its visual images. Trout got into seeing how the doors were built.




And he insisted I take a picture of the method used by the gates to stay closed.




Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Jamestown & Norfolk -- Viginia in June -- 2007

Jamestown

I love to tease my friends & family with Mayflower (1620) connections that they were latecomers & were really supposed to land in the Virginia Colony north of Jamestown on the Hudson River but got blown off course. If you look at an historical map, you can see that Virginia was huge in those days. But can you imagine what all those prim yankees would have been throughout history & today if they had ended up being southerners?

I also like to tell folks that my ancestors were some of the earliest to come to VA from Great Britain, but that they were met by some of my other ancestors who were waiting in the woods for them. All true, not all proven yet.

In reality we all should know that the 1st successful European colonization of the east coast of what is now the United States was done by the Spanish (Trout's patriarchal DNA) in St. Augustine, FL (1565) & that both Jamestown & Plymouth are merely the 1st successful English settlements. We should also be aware that if England had not been in conflict with Spain at the time, the need to compete with Spain might not have been so great & we all might be speaking Spanish as our 1st language today.

We did go to the actual site of Jamestown & walked around the archeological excavations & the rest of it, but there's not a lot to show you there about what it was like. The capitol of the Virginia Colony was moved from there to Williamsburg in 1699. After that & multiple hurricanes, much of what was there disappeared, or so people thought. The site is right on the James River & they figured there wouldn't be much evidence of it left. Wrong, wrong, wrong! The archeologists are finding lots of evidence buried in the sand.

Jamestowne Settlement


Since the 1st one I visited, I’ve loved living history museums. Jamestowne Settlement is one of those. These are some of the replica ships from Jamestowne Settlement. You can actually tour them.





This is from inside the fort. It's amazing what a small area the people lived in at first.




This is the interior of one of the nicer houses. Of course, I liked the tile.





And this is a storeroom with tobacco hanging in the rafters to dry. Tobacco was the most important crop of the Virginia Colony & it was used just like money. There's even evidence of that in my family history.



Trout spent almost all the time there watching the blacksmith.




Norfolk

There was a tall ships sail-in at Norfolk to help celebrate the quadricentennial. Ships sailed from all over the world. There were fireworks the same day we were at Jamestowne Settlement. Of course, we had to go, & the best way to get there was by ferry over the James River. These are little baby ferries compared to the ones in the northwest, but they accomplished the transporation task.


We found our way to a parking place & walked to the waterfront. We found a good place to watch from & secured the spot, but then had to move for security reasons. We still got to see the fireworks very well. They were being shot off from 3 locations and we could see 2 of them simultaneously.


This was on the ship closest to us before it got dark.





This is the front of the same ship after the fireworks started.


After we got home I discovered that my camera has a fireworks setting. Who knew? Anyway, this was one of my favorite pics from the whole evening.





Saturday, November 10, 2007

El Día de los Muertos -- In Tubac, Nogales AZ & Nogales SRA

Celebrations for El Día de los Muertos get more elaborate the farther south you go. Tohono Chul Park sponsored a day trip to visit cemeteries in Tubac, Nogales AZ & Nogales SRA. It was on Friday, November 2nd. As I mentioned in an earlier post, that's a holiday after you cross the border into Mexico.
Tubac
Tubac is the oldest incorporated town in AZ. At one time it was almost a ghost town. Now it's mostly a tourist town with lots of artists & shops along with its history. It's one of those places where you wonder where people buy groceries or hardware.

The cemetery dates back to the days of the Spanish settlers in the area, but no graves are marked in a way that would indicate their age. In fact, many are not marked at all except by the stacks of rocks over them.

This arch over the entrance is an example of local Spanglish. It originally was in Spanish -- cementerio. Someone decided to translate it into English, but didn't quite translate it the whole way.


This is where we got our first taste of Mexican style graves. Nowadays, it's typical for many cemeteries in most of the US to have "perpetual care." It comes with the purchase of a plot. It didn't use to be that way & it is not often the case in southern AZ or Mexico. So a part of each Día de los Muertos is to clean up the grave & decorate it.

There are often abandoned graves with no one left to care for them. It isn't uncommon for unrelated people to do that. This cemetery had many people working in it cutting grass & cleaning up graves that were not in their own family.

These are some that had not been cleaned up yet when we were there.

These are some graves with rocks & no markers.

These have both rocks & markers.

Another common thing in these cemeteries is that people put their own markers, so there is a great deal of variety among them. Some are very fancy. Some are very plain. Sometimes they start small & become fancier as time goes by.

Many are home made, like this example. The cross is made of horseshoes.

Although this cemetery dates from the 18th century, the earliest marked graves I saw were from the 30's. This is one of them. The concrete stone may or may not be that old.

Something you see from time to time are graves with nichos (niches) usually with the Virgin of Guadalupe, Jesus or a saint.

Many graves have simple crosses of iron. Sometimes the names are readable, sometimes not. Sometimes there are no names.

Although newer, this was one of my favorites from the Tubac Cementery. I love the photo. Many inscriptions are in Spanish. This one means that Miguel is remembered by his wife & children.

Nogales, AZ

Things started to change when we got to Nogales, AZ. There were formal family plots, some large & some small. Many were walled with wrought iron, brick or both. Many were well-tended or being tended while we were there. Many were obviously abandoned.

Unlike Tubac, this was a very large cemetery. I tried to stay in the oldest section. The oldest grave I found there was for someone born in France. He died in 1886 at the age of 51.

One very simple family plot had this hand carved marker.

Some people replaced old iron crosses with tombstones as time & money allowed.

This unique new family plot was in the older section.

Down in a little valley below the main cemetery there were many newer, larger & fancier plots.

Nogales, Sonora
The cemetery in Nogales, SRA is called the Panteón Nacional. It sits in a valley & up 2 hills. One road runs right through it & another one cuts between 2 sections of it. There is also a private cemetery with many mausoleums above one of those sections.

Because November 2nd is a holiday, the place was packed with people, vendors, a carnival, etc. Going to the graves of loved ones on this day is not considered to be a sad thing. It's a time for reflection, of course, but also a time for family to get together & celebrate the lives of those who have died. People clean the graves, paint them, put flowers on them, have parties, eat, etc. I expected all that. I didn't expect the Mariachis that were playing for so many families.
Trout entering the main street between the primary sections of the Panteón.

Carnival to the left.

We passed right between these marigold, cockscomb & sugar cane vendors.

Many vendors were going through the Panteón selling food. This guy has cotton candy.

Mariachis at a family plot.

As we were walking down the road, we saw people mixing paint at their cars in buckets to carry to the graves. White was the color most often used, but these pictures illustrate other colors as well as the large number of people working on the graves. Plots are very crowded with no room between them, so it is impossible to not walk on someone's grave.




There weren't many enclosed tombs in the older sections of the Panteón, but this section did have some small ones.

In the private cemetery we saw some very elaborate ones.

We also saw some odd headstones.

In the public cemetery we saw some very humble graves. Some appeared to be abandoned. Most were not. We saw people repainting crosses & hand lettering the details about their loved ones right there.


Although neater than most, this is a pretty typical inscription for cross grave markers. The QEPD stands for Que en paz descanse -- May you rest in peace. The star for birth & the cross for death are typical shorthand for these crosses.

We saw many graves of children. It's common for people to encase them in wrought iron & fill them with balloons. This man was spray painting this child's grave. We couldn't stay long enough to see what else he was going to do.

Seeing the children's graves was heart-wrenching, but seeing graves for people who lived a very long time was also very touching.

I took this picture because of the name. Our next door neighbors are Parras, although Tony knows of no family members buried in the Panteón. Yolanda does have family there -- Huertas & Villas -- but I didn't know her family names until we got back, so I didn't notice any graves with those names on them.
We joked again about a Parr moving in next door to some Parras. Parr is a Scottish name. The two versions of the name could have gone either direction -- from Spain or Italy up to Scotland, losing the 2nd "a" or vice-versa adding it. I had never heard the Parra name until we moved here.