Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Monday, October 21, 2013

Our Trip to Salem

Yesterday, my wife and two of our kids went to Salem for the day.
Despite having lived in Massachusetts for my entire life,
I have only ever been to the town once before,
and that wasn't to tour much but some places along the waterfront.

This trip, we did an hour long trolley tour through the town,
with a very knowledgeable tour guide.
Afterwards, we walked around, sight-seeing
and visiting some very interesting places.
I wish I had taken more pictures,
but here are the shots we did get.
Hope you enjoy!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


The Salem Harbor. Beautiful views.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Was a great day, not hot but not freezing yet, either.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


A small lighthouse, freshly repainted according to our guide.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


This is the old Custom House,
where Nathaniel Hawthorne worked for a time,
when he wrote The House of Seven Gables.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


A very old cobblestone street near the Custom House,
along the waterfront.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Next to a Floral shop, the owner decorates and
creates a Haunted Garden.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


The Haunted Garden again.
Quite the sight!
Very macabre and wonderfully done.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Supposedly, this is the oldest candy company in America.
Our guide said the woman who originally started this
did so with a bag of sugar donated by the townspeople.
Was very small inside and super-crowded,
so we didn't stay or purchase anything.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


The House of Seven Gables,
but taken from the back yard.
We didn't take the tour into the house or grounds.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Salem Witch Museum.
We went here and saw the presentation
as well as the walk-through with a guide,
who spoke about witches and the 
history and portrayals of them through history.
Very interesting exhibit!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


This was taken at the Salem Wax Museum.
My daughter, posing with the statue of Nathaniel Hawthorne.
He looked a lot like Mark Twain,
but my son said he looked like Kelsey Grammer!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


This is the oldest cemetery in Salem,
there is also a memorial for those persecuted as witches.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


So many extremely old tombstones.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Amazed to see how many of them have lasted for centuries.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


The cemetery is not visible at all
from the busy streets beyond the wall.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


The old trees add quite the atmosphere to the Burying Ground.
Here, you can see a place where Hawthorne's wife's family once lived.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Our guide said Hawthorne dubbed this place Grimshaw house.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


She also said the name is now quite apt.
I assume that is because the house is in major disrepair.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Looks like a truly haunted house, that's for sure.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


My daughter snapped these pics because she wanted to get a shot
of the light that was ON inside.

Quite bizarre!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Lastly, a pic I like!
This coffee house is quite old.
From peering in the window,
it appears to still be a functioning restaurant.
Sadly, it was closed.
Next time!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Like I said, I wish I had taken more photos.
Decorations where everywhere along the streets and buildings,
and even the non-decorated buildings are beautiful.

We ate lunch at the same restaurant we did the previous short trip,
a placed called the Witches Brew Cafe.
Great food and service and wonderful ambiance!

We took a tour of the Pirate Museum, which was fun.
The guide knew his stuff and the displays were very well done.

After that, my daughter and I did two of the "haunted houses,"
Frankenstein's Laboratory and a Witches' Walk-through.
They were fun, albeit short, with some jump scares.

We also saw many people dressed in either
Salem witch related garb or in Halloween costumes.
We even saw three women dressed as the witches from Hocus Pocus!

Wonderful trip and I hope to repeat it next year!

Monday, October 3, 2011

Halloween Haunt



I like listening to podcasts, especially when I am doing chores, walking the dogs or exercising.

One that I have recently discovered and have been enjoying is Halloween Haunt.

On their iTunes page they have over 50 different Halloween or horror-related podcasts. They are short, averaging under five minutes each, so they are good for when you don't have a lot of time, or as short bits between longer podcasts you may listen to.

The topics range from history and traditions of Halloween to movies and poems, with works by Lovecraft and Poe covered. And each podcast has appropriate sound effects and background music, well edited together.

So, if you're looking for Halloween-themed entertainment, head on over to their site or look them up on iTunes. They are also on Facebook and Twitter!

And Happy Haunting!

Friday, September 2, 2011

Dark Matters: Twisted But True


Recorded and watched the premiere of the new Science Channel show 
Dark Matters: Twisted But True. And I liked it!

The show takes a few topics from history and relates them through a combination of narration (by actor John Noble), interviews with specialists in related fields and reenactments of the events.

The premiere episode began with the story of the Philadelphia Experiment, followed by the saga of a Russian scientist who was trying to create a human/ape hybrid and ending with the story of the battle between Edison and Westinghouse over selling electricity to the masses.

To me, it is like a combination of the creepy 1970s show In Search Of... and the campy late 1990s show Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction. And a good combination, at that.
I enjoyed it and have set the DVR to record it again.

Here is a video from the show's site:

   

  Dark Matters: Twisted But True airs on Science Channel Wednesdays at 10:00 PM.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Theme Thursday - History

The History of the Universe in 200 Words or Less

Quantum fluctuation. Inflation. Expansion. Strong nuclear interaction. Particle-antiparticle annihilation. Deuterium and helium production. Density perturbations. Recombination. Blackbody radiation. Local contraction. Cluster formation. Reionization? Violent relaxation. Virialization. Biased galaxy formation? Turbulent fragmentation. Contraction. Ionization. Compression. Opaque hydrogen. Massive star formation. Deuterium ignition. Hydrogen fusion. Hydrogen depletion. Core contraction. Envelope expansion. Helium fusion. Carbon, oxygen, and silicon fusion. Iron production. Implosion. Supernova explosion. Metals injection. Star formation. Supernova explosions. Star formation. Condensation. Planetesimal accretion. Planetary differentiation. Crust solidification. Volatile gas expulsion. Water condensation. Water dissociation. Ozone production. Ultraviolet absorption. Photosynthetic unicellular organisms. Oxidation. Mutation. Natural selection and evolution. Respiration. Cell differentiation. Sexual reproduction. Fossilization. Land exploration. Dinosaur extinction. Mammal expansion. Glaciation. Homo sapiens manifestation. Animal domestication. Food surplus production. Civilization! Innovation. Exploration. Religion. Warring nations. Empire creation and destruction. Exploration. Colonization. Taxation without representation. Revolution. Constitution. Election. Expansion. Industrialization. Rebellion. Emancipation Proclamation. Invention. Mass production. Urbanization. Immigration. World conflagration. League of Nations. Suffrage extension. Depression. World conflagration. Fission explosions. United Nations. Space exploration. Assassinations. Lunar excursions. Resignation. Computerization. World Trade Organization. Terrorism. Internet expansion. Reunification. Dissolution. World-Wide Web creation. Composition. Extrapolation?

Copyright 1996-1997 by Eric Schulman.

Original post here.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sorry for the 'cut and paste' post. Had nothing original for the theme and having a cough/cold didn't help with thinking creatively.

I am sure there are much better takes on the theme at the site:

Theme Thursday ---> History

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~