Thursday’s Memories DAY Blog: The most beautiful things are not associated with money; they are memories and moments. If you don’t celebrate those, they can pass you by. Alek Wek

Jefferson Memorial     https://www.nps.gov/thje/index.htm

The serene classical Thomas Jefferson Memorial National Memorial honors the third president’s ideals of beauty, science, learning, culture, and liberty.  Jefferson truly was a Renaissance man.  He was fluent in six languages:  Latin, Greek, French, Spanish, Italian, and Anglo-Saxon.  He spent much time studying the natural sciences, ethnology, archaeology, agriculture, and meteorology.  Jefferson was also a gifted architect, America’s first, according to some scholars.  As American minister to France, he developed a love for the beauties of Classical architecture, as evidenced by two of his famous creations, Monticello and the University of Virginia. He almost single-handedly introduced the Neoclassical style to this country.  It is entirely appropriate that the memorial built in his honor should be based on the Pantheon in Rome, which he loved.  

Jefferson made his chief contributions to the history of the United States in the realm of political theory.  Jefferson was a life-long advocate for government as the servant of the people, for religious freedom and the separation of Church and State, and for education for all.   Jefferson’s faith in the educated common man and his ability to use his liberties wisely has been a constant in American political life.  His statement in an 1800 letter to his friend Benjamin Rush, engraved on the frieze encircling the interior of the memorial, captures the essence of his political philosophy:

https://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/presidents/thomas_jefferson_memorial.html

The morning started out extremely early with us fighting our way thru Washington traffic—what a mess–The roads appear to have a mind of their own, wandering occassionally near where one really wants to go.
We ended up at the Jefferson Memorial–though how neither one of us is sure.  “V” was quite up tight and I was in tears over the whole disaster.  But luck was with us and after visiting the memorial, we stumbled on the parking area and the tour bus.
These buses are great, they travel around the mall making several different stops.  You can get off, view the area and get back on another bus.  The only flaw is the long lines of tourists who stand in the dehydrating sun for the tour bus that is lost somewhere in the disaster area referred to in Washington as traffic.
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 US Capital Building   https://www.visitthecapitol.gov/
The Capitol that we see today has been through many different construction phases; throughout its history, it has burned down and been rebuilt and has gone through several extensions and restorations. The Capitol Campus consists of six Congressional office buildings and three Library of Congress structures in total.
Our first stop….was the Capital–the building with its hero statues, and in-laid floors is indeed impressive, the paints on the rotunda and other parts of the building are for the most part quite good or at least inspiring.  We saw saw three Congressmen, but no one else of interest.
The tour of the building was meager at best:  Herded into a rotunda boarded up, with statues wrapped like giant sandwiches, given tickets–I don’t know why__and moved around with a small amount of area covered, and a smaller amount of information.

 

 

 

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Supreme Court Building     https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/courtbuilding.aspx

 

 

First occupied on October 7, 1935, the Supreme Court building is a fitting home for the nation’s third branch of government. Chief Justice William Howard Taft was behind the effort to provide the Court with its own building, moving out of the U.S. Capitol where it had been meeting since 1801. The Court did not move far, however. Its new location was just across the street and was selected to remain near Union Station and thus convenient for out-of-town lawyers.   https://www.aoc.gov/capitol-buildings/supreme-court-building

 

The next stop—the Supreme Court Bldg.  we caught a small snack—the first time we had eaten all day and proceeded to the tour.  Though involving more information, this involved less space.  Seated in the court room of the nation’s highest court, we were informed of the courts doings and sent on our way.

 

 

 

 

 

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Smithsonian Natural History Museum https://naturalhistory2.si.edu/mineralsciences/hope/

 

Our mission is to promote understanding of the natural world and our place in it. The museum’s collections tell the history of the planet and are a record of human interaction with the environment and one another.   https://naturalhistory.si.edu/about

 

 

Next stop the Smithsonian again–primitive people, civilizations of the Americas, as well as a gem collection that was wild–even the largest blue diamond in the world, the cursed Hope Diamond.  We finished off this museum in too much of a rush to do it much justic

 

 

 

 

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Arlington National Cemetery    https://www.arlingtoncemetery.mil/#/

 

 

The first soldier laid to rest there was Pvt. William Christman, 21, of the 67th Pennsylvania Infantry, who was buried in a plot on Arlington’s northeast corner on May 13, 1864. A farmer newly recruited into the Army, Christman never knew a day of combat. Like others who would join him at Arlington, he was felled by disease; he died of peritonitis in Washington’s Lincoln General Hospital on May 11. His body was committed to the earth with no flags flying, no bugles playing and no family or chaplain to see him off. A simple pine headboard, painted white with black lettering, identified his grave, like the markers for Pvt. William H. McKinney and other soldiers too poor to be embalmed and sent home for burial. The indigent dead soon filled the Lower Cemetery—a name that described both its physical and social status—across the lane from a graveyard for slaves and freedmen.
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/how-arlington-national-cemetery-came-to-be-145147007/#KIpcTHHyZ0MF7Gz3.99

 

Then back on the tour bus to Arlington National Cemetery–this monsterous  cemetery sprawls (if one can sprawl in orderly rows–not even allowing the poor military man to get out of formation even in this final resting).  Here after standing on the hard pavement under a harder sun we finally got onto a tour bus.

*First we saw the Eternal Flame of the John Kennedy’s monument which is flanked by his infant son and daugher’s graves.

 

*Near by is a stone water fall with a simple white cross and a plaque proclaiming that here lies Robert Kennedy.  I remember very well when he died and the sadness–the train to Washington with the people watching from the side of the tracks–the black, whites, Hispanics–Such a useless waste–American injustice as wrought by the gun.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Curtis Lee Mansion (now the Arlington House, Robert E. Lee Memorial)

 

 

The residence of Robert E. Lee and his family before the Civil War, Arlington House connects to many important figures, issues and events in American history. Built by enslaved laborers of George Washington Parke Custis between 1802 and 1818, the house and grounds have served many purposes over the last 200 years: a memorial honoring George Washington, a family home for the Lees and Custises, a plantation estate and home to 63 enslaved people, a a military headquarters for Union troops, a community for emancipated slaves and a national cemetery. With 650,000 annual visitors, Arlington House is the most visited historic house museum in the national park system. Since 1933, the NPS has managed Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial. The 16.28-acre memorial now lies within Arlington National Cemetery, which was built entirely within the historic 1,100-acre Arlington estate.

 

We decided to take the curving drive to the Curtis-Lee Mansion, instead of hustling the lines with the tour bus.  The walk was all up hill, but a breeze was blowing and for the most part it is tree lined.

 

 

The mansion set at the top of a hill overlooking the Potomac–the view give you most of Washington at once and directly below the mansion are John and Robert’s graves.  The house itself is not as well kept-up as Mt. Vernon, but is quite impressive with its massive pillars and spacious area.

 

It seems the final punishment of defeat to Lee that they began a burial ground on his plantation so that even if he had hope of regaining it, who would want to live in a huge cemetery.

 

We ended our days activities there–we were both suffering from sore feet, heat and a general lack of adequate nourishment.

 

And we ended the day in a pleasant Italian Restaurant in the outskirts of Alexandra.

 

 

 

Come back next Thurs for day 8/15/1974

 

 

We will not rest until we see the suspects behind bars. Walid Jumblatt PART THREE ON THE QUEEN’S CONSORT’S MURDER

After the Death of Queen Mary’s husband Darnley,  Elizabeth I told  Mary:  “Your case is not so clear that much remains to be explained.”

 

If you haven’t read the previous 2 blogs on this–please do so as a mystery isn’t right w/out all of it’s parts.

Click This is part two and there should be a link there to one.

“…when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?” Sherlock Holmes

"The Mermaid Placard" The mermaid represents Mary. In this age, mermaids were symbols of danger. The hare represents the Earl of Bothwell. It was his family crest. The Poster is suggesting that Mary and Bothwell were involved in Darnley's murder.
bbc.co.uk
This infamous placard appeared after the murder and is said by some to name Mary as the mermaid as a reference to being a prostitute and/or a woman of loose morals,  while others say t Mermaids were felt to be dangerous which would seem to indicate suspicion in her involvement in the dead—-but all agree the hare crest is Bothwell’s family crest.
This came out after her husband’s murder and would seem to indicate an accusation of guilt of the two parties the Queen Mary and Lord Bothwell
Lochleven Castle
Lochleven Castle
HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT SCOTLAND

Following her defeat at the Battle of Carberry Hill by noblemen outraged by her marriage to Bothwell, who was implicated in Darnley’s death, Mary was imprisoned in Lochleven Castle in Perthshire for nearly a year. Her suffering was heightened by the miscarriage of Bothwell’s twins and forced abdication in favour of her son. Yet Mary found admirers, too: the youngest Douglas son, George, was said to be besotted by her, and eventually facilitated her escape from her island prison. She was, sadly, not to remain free for long.                Follow in the footsteps of Mary, Queen of Scots

by 31/01/19

https://www.townandcountrymag.com/uk/culture/g26060769/mary-queen-scots-castles/

 

 

 

 

Suspect I:  Her Royal Majesty, Queen of Scotland
Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots and formerly France.
While I have never heard any direct charge that Mary actually did the deed—there have however been many accounts that name her as an instigator or,  a party in planning, if not carrying out, the murder of her husband.
It is noted that Mary had been very public just prior to the murder in reconciling with her husband and in fact they were to resume living together as man and wife the day after his murder occurred, and she had left Kirk o’ Fields only a few hours prior to the explosion   Weir notes further in Her Mary Queen of Scots and the Murder of Darnley that there is evidence that she was “capable of sanctioning the murder of someone who had become inconvenient….in 1586, there is evidence that she “authorised the assassination of Queen Elizabeth by Anthony Babington and his associates as a preliminary to seizing the throne of England.”    Obviously that never occurred.
On the other hand there does not appear to be any proof that she had any real plans to kill her husband and given that she had hope of settling the succession issues with Elizabeth soon, it would not appear to have been a good time to kill Elizabeth’s cousin (Darnley)
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Fotheringhay Castle
This castle and town in England might be of interest to you on your next wanderings about the British lands check it out.
 Mary was rushed to Fotheringhay, and there in the Great hall of this relatively small castle, she was put on trial in front of 36 noblemen – and convicted. Still it took months to persuade Elizabeth to sign a warrant for her execution, but finally she gave way. Before she could change her mind, the order was rushed to Fotheringhay and arrived on the morning of 7th February where an astonished Mary was told to prepare herself – for she would die the following morning.
(It is of note that one of the suspects of my Next Planned Historical Murder born in this same castle where Mary died.)
Which brings us to the 2nd suspect:  Bothwell,
Bothwell

Bothwell, eventually would become the third husband of Mary Stuart – the young Scots queen who lost her throne and later her head –many of his enemies were quick to blame him and Mary as the originator of the plan to kill Mary’s husband and Mary certainly had reason for resentment and desire to rid herself of her husband.  For one he had  instigated the vicious murder of one of her staff (her secretary RIzzio) in her presence.  He was also known for being quarrelsome and demanding and reportedly spent his time, womanizing, drinking and  in all manner of loose behavior.

 

As to his final illness there are two schools of thought on what the condition Darnely suffered from was that required his residing at t Kirk o’ Fields — Some said he had small pox, but there appears to be an abundance of evidence, best on the talk of the day and medical knowledge of today— that the pox he had came from his fornication and loose behavior

 

There had also long been rumors that he wished to take Mary’s child James from her which adds even heavier reasons for her joining the plot–if she did.

 

 

While Darnley’s behavior was described as loose, Lord Bothwell was portrayed by his enemies as a control freak who killed Lord Darnley, Mary’s previous husband, and dominated the young queen, kidnapping her and forcing her into marriage.

 

 

It is obvious what Bothwell’s motives were and his gains as Mary’s husband, I would think, needs no further explanation here.  Carter & Mears stated in their A History of Britain (Book III The Tudors 1485-1603)  written in 1937–“There is little doubt that the murderer was the Earl of Bothwell.  But did he act with Mary’s knowledge and consent? ”  While Antonia Fraser’s book Mary Queen of Scots  (1971)  explains:  “And Bothwell was certainly such a man inspired either by family tradition of advancement through queens, or plain personal ambitions, unmarked by any trace of sentiment or sensitivity.”

 

But wait there’ s a much newer group to hear from:  This 2010 “book claims that history has much maligned James Hepburn, the 4th Earl of Bothwell (1534-1578). It argues that he was in fact another Braveheart who deserves a place alongside Celtic heroes such as Robert the Bruce and William Wallace. And, spurred on by the prospect of a full and glorious rehabilitation for the 16th-century Scot who died a horrible death in exile in Denmark, one of his descendants is campaigning to repatriate his body.”  Hermary-Vieille’s bookLord James, which was a best seller in France, was released in Dec. 2010 and puts forth this view of Bothwell—I haven’t heard any updates on bring the Lord’s remains back to Scotland though..  https://www.theguardian.com/books/2010/dec/26/mary-queen-scots-earl-bothwell

 

 

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 CRAIGMILLAR CASTLE

Craigmillar Castle was built from the fourteenth century and is now a pretty and well-preserved medieval ruin. The most famed aspect of Craigmillar Castle was that it played host to Mary Queen of Scots when she was recovering from an illness. It is also the namesake of a pact between several noblemen to murder her husband, Lord Darnley.

Today, several aspects of the fourteenth century structure of Craigmillar Castle remain, including an impressive tower. There is also a maze of medieval tunnels.   https://www.triphistoric.com/explore/articles/mary-queen-of-scots-historic-sites

 

https://www.historicenvironment.scot/visit-a-place/places/craigmillar-castle

 

 

 

 

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But did she conspire to murder him?  Mary’s cousin Elizabeth I, queen of England, apparently wondered as much. After the murders, she wrote a sympathetic letter to Mary (the cousins never met in person). But it also contained a word of warning. “I will not at all dissemble what most people are talking about,” she wrote, “which is that you will look through your fingers at the revenging of this deed.” By failing to avenge her husband’s death, Elizabeth suggested, Mary was keeping the rumor mill alive and implicating herself in the deed.

The Salacious Letters That Helped Bring Down Mary, Queen of Scots    

https://www.history.com/news/mary-queen-of-scots-casket-letters-scandal

 

Next Week hopefully Monday—I was goofing off on the holiday—I’ll be back with an account of the Casket Letter as well as Boswell’s trial  and then we’ll move on to some additional suspects including those in the Craigmillar Conspiracy.

 

 

 

 

“I think being in love with life is a key to eternal youth.” —Doug Hutchison

The saddest summary of a life contains three descriptions: could have, might have, and should have. ~ Louis E. Boone

This (above) is the original entry on this on continuing memory—-if you want to read it all just go back and then  go every other blog entry  and you can catch up to today’s

This is my Thurs. Memories BLOG DAY

We (my ex “V” and I) have driven–mostly on back roads and the like from Florida to Washington DC.  We left the day after Nixon resigned,  wandered about and even had our FIRST experience of using a self serve gas pump….I include info about the place/cities/towns/whatever so that if you might like to check something out.  I wrote this while it was happening and have done as little as possible to spruce it up so I hope it’s not too bad for you…..and remember that my goal on this blog is to get you to come away from the TV, computer whatever—stop starring at your FRIGGIN phone and GET A REAL LIFE —travel, join a real group (computer ones don’t count) just walk about your neighborhood even town and see what not computer generated reality really is.

 

 

 

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8/13/1974:

 

Mount Vernon: 

3200 Mount Vernon Hwy,

Mt Vernon, VA 22122

Area500 acres

Open ⋅ 9AM – 5PM

Founded1758

 

https://www.mountvernon.org/

 

The beautiful riverside estate of George Washington includes the iconic Mansion, outbuildings, tomb and working blacksmith shop and farm. The Orientation Center, and Museum and Education Center feature interactive exhibits and immersive experiences as well as over 700 artifacts. Meet characters from Washington’s world and heritage breed animals around the estate. Open every day! Whiskey Distillery & Gristmill open April through October.

 

 

A much better day than yesterday–my extremely sore feet have recovered and I have found my comfortable shoes—not as comfortable as my sandals–that’s $12 shot (I think they were left in error at one of our stops) First we drove to Mt. Vernon.  The parkway there, except for the paving and the few other cars and bikes could have been out of colonial times—long vistas of trees with the Potomac flowing serenely past, all very classic.

 

I was especially delighted with Mt. Vernon since it is all so natural looking.  The restoration work is beautiful and the grounds have been kept from being commercial–the only restaurants are several miles away and are old converted mansion which appear to retain much of their former dignity before they fell from grace to servitude.

 

The grounds ,  wild yet tailored and there is no trash or litter.  I was disappointed with my tour of the house, since the lines were so long, you were pushed thru at rush hour computer speed which does not give one much chance to see the finer points.  As for most of the other buildings there was a great deal of time to browse and see everything.

 

The mansion, itself is a lovely, yet even comfortable looking place with a view of the Potomac that won’t stop.  The Washington’s bed room is quite nice, except that it faces landward.  There is one “servant quarters”, but I tend to believe it was more likely slave quarters.

 

 

See the source image

 

 

 

 

 

See the source image

 

Washington DC Mall

https://washington.org/visit-dc/tours-of-washington-dc-monuments-memorials

 

 

Located just south of downtown and the White House in Washington, D.C., the National Mall is one of the United State’s most prestigious and well-known National Parks. Over 24 million visitors from around the world come to this 146-acre park in the middle of the nation’s capital.  The National Mall is home to numerous monuments, memorials, sculptures, statues, and attractions honoring the legacy and history of the United States including the Belmont-Paul Women’s Equality National Monument, the Constitution Gardens, Ford’s Theatre, the Korean War Veterans Memorial, the Lincoln Memorial, the Washington Monument, and the Thomas Jefferson Memorial.

https://www.tripsavvy.com/info-about-the-mall-in-dc-1040420

 

In the afternoon we were going to Arlington to see the cemetery but ran into some kind people who gave us their Mall tour tickets–so we went on that—

  1.  saw Watergate—The beginning of the end for Richard Nixon ( on June 17, 1972 when five men were caught breaking into the Democratic National Committee’s HQ on the sixth floor of the Watergate office. Arrested in room 214 of the hotel where intruders E Howard Hunt and G Gordon Liddy had set up base, it was the start of President Nixon’s downfall and what remains (at the time of writing!) America’s biggest political scandal.  Forbes  https://www.forbes.com/sites/duncanmadden/2018/05/31/is-the-watergate-hotel-still-as-scandalous-as-ever/#5e72655971aa ).  
  2. Stopped at the Lincoln Memorial.  The great emancipator rising above us unimportant mortals, mortal because our ideals, our causes are important to only us or maybe a few they touch.   https://www.nps.gov/linc/index.htm
  3. We toured around on the buses, stopped at a third Smithsonian Museum  https://airandspace.si.edu/ crammed full of areoplanes and space capsules with all kinds of related films and simulations

For supper we went to an intimate French affair:  Chez Odette (according to an article in the Washington Post this restaurant was closing in July 1985 https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/1985/07/16/georgetown-change-seen/1d66f825-deac-4cb8-a1af-25247412aaf3/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.ef7a9cd9e693) and stuffed ourselves on great food–especially the French Onion which we agreed was the best we’ve ever tasted.

 

See the source image

 

See the source image

 

We came home early and “V” is sleeping now while I catch the Journal up.  I’ll soon join him.  We have another busy day planned for tomorrow.

 

Oh we did drive the entire length of the Washington Memorial Highway and was a pleasant drive, so close to the big city, yet with views of the Potomac framed by a profusion of trees stirred by delightful breezes.  Such a release from the city’s hustle.

 

 

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“…when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth?” Sherlock Holmes

Go back to last Monday  5/13 for part one of this look at the Murder of Darnley Consort,  King of Scotland—Husband of Mary Stewart and who was now  a widow.

 

Mary, Queen of Scots, with her second husband, Lord Darnley

 

The Facts:

The following facts are from Allison Weir’s Book

Monday 2/10/1567

Shortly before 2 am.

Barbara Merton of Blackfriars Wynd was awaken by the sound of running feet and witnessed 13 armed men exiting from the gate of the abandoned Blackfriars monastery and moving up to the High Street.

 

“Some Women” lodging near the orchard of Kirk o’Field heard a man’s voice crying “Pity me, Kinsmen, for the love of Him who had pity on all the world.”

 

at 2 am that same night there was heard a massive crash which
“shook the whole town.”   According to Buchanan.  And it was discovered that the explosion was at the King’s lodgings Kirk o’Field had been destroyed by the blast.  The Lords of the Council would later say “so that not one stone rests on another.

 

 

 

 

FIND OUT MORE about Queen Mary Stuart

just click on the underlined locations to view places that can tell you more about Mary…..or go to:  https://www.visitscotland.com/about/famous-scots/mary-queen-scots/

 

 

 

 

 

After the explosion that Mrs Merton as well as Mary Stirling (nee Crocket) saw 11 men emerge from that same Blackfriar’s Gate and run away–two of which had on light colored clothing.  They reportedly split up and went (4) toward High Street and (5) toward Cowgate Port in the city wall.

 

The Night Watch who arrived shortly after the explosion and reported that they saw Captain William Blackadder at the scene and arrested him.  He protested he had been drinking at a friend’s house nearby.

 

 

People started arriving and saw the soot and debris covered Thomas Nelson on top of Flodden wall.  He reported he had been thrown free of the blast with only superficial wounds and injuries.  Buchanan noted that a candle in the window of the Duke’s House had been snuffed out.

 

 

 

 

 

Crichton (James Hepburn’s.Lord Bothwell—castle) was the seat of the Crichton of that Ilk until 1483. James IV gave Sir Patrick Hepburn the barony, along with the earldom of Bothwell. Mary, Queen of Scots attended a wedding here in 1562.

The Earldom passed to the Stewarts, as did the castle, until around 1650. In 1926 Henry Burns Callander placed the castle into care.

You can still see it today:  http://www.everycastle.com/Crichton-Castle.html

 

 

 

Bothwell was the Sheriff at the time of the incident and after being awaken by his servant George Hallet who informed him of the incident and the probable death of the King…He immediately ordered his men to the scene and then went back to bed with his wife.

 

 

Mary who was spending the night at Holyrood was awaken by the blast and sent messengers out to find out what had caused the noise.

 

 

it was later determined of the six servants at the destroyed house three died. Speculation is that those on the ground floor MC Craig and Glen died while those on the top floor including the aforementioned Nelson, Taylor’s boy and Symond survived.

 

 

Mary Queen of Scots

 

 

 

The early years of Lord Darnley

Darnley’s early years were spent at Temple Newsam.   Temple Newsam is one of the finest historic houses in the region (Leeds), with a rich history of links to royalty through plots and intrigue. Explore over 40 rooms of treasures, with Chippendale furniture, silver, ceramics, fine art, and wallpaper. Uncover the stories of the people who lived here, including the notorious Lord Darnley and how generations of one family developed the house over 300 years.   Find out where you can visit and what you can see there:  https://www.yorkshire.com/view/attractions/leeds/temple-newsam-126172

 

 

CREDIT: UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH 

  • 5 a.m
  • (3 hrs later)
  • Two bodies were found in the south garden and orchard, beyond Flodden Walls, about 60-80 steps from the destroyed house,  that were identified as King Darnley and his valet Taylor.  Both were clad in nights shirts and neither had a mark on them.  Darnley lay on his back below a pear tree, his night shirt was pulled up to around his waist and one of his hands covered his genitals.  Taylor laid about a yard away curled up, also with his nightshirt up about his waist with with his head face down and resting on his crossed arms.  He wore one slipper.  There were other accounts of a young page being found there as well, but this has not be supported by any Public Records. Lying about the bodes was a chair, a length of rope, a dagger, Darnley’s furred nightgown and something that “could have been a quilt or cloak.”  As with the bodies they showed not sign of being in the explosion.  A backless velvet shoe or “mule was also found.  Mary was informed shortly there after.

 

 

Soon after the bodies were found a Francisco de Busso (Mary’s Man) went to the house of John Pitcairn, a surgeon in Blackfriars Wynd and brought him to the death scene and there Pitcairn remained with the corpses for “about 6 hrs”.

 

 

At Huntly’s suggestion Mary appointed  15 members of the Privy Council to meet in an emergency session at Holyrood to discuss how to deal with the crisis as well as apprehending the murders.  Bothwell at the queens order took a company of soldiers to the site of the murders to search “for the traitors and apprehend them.”   Meanwhile Cecil’s (see picture and info below) man was there already making sketches that survive to this day.

 

 

 

William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley from NPG (2).jpg

 

 

 

William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, Burghley also spelled Burleigh, also called (1551–71) Sir William Cecil, (born Sept. 13, 1520, Bourne, Lincolnshire, Eng.—died Aug. 5, 1598, London), principal adviser to England’s Queen Elizabeth I through most of her reign. Cecil was a master of Renaissance statecraft, whose talents as a diplomat, politician, and administrator won him high office and a peerage.

https://www.britannica.com/biography/William-Cecil-1st-Baron-Burghley

 

 

 

  •  Nine Inch Glass Vase
    $75.00
    https://www.etsy.com/listing/689440624/nine-inch-glass-vase?ref=shop_home_active_23

 

 

Figure 2. Example of a Roman scallpellus and similar instruments

 

Post Mortem Examination

By a chirurgeons (From the French meant surgeon) and apothecary done later the same morning in the presence of the Lords of the Privy Council.

 

Findings:  Darnley had a broken rib as well as grave internal injuries which led them to conclude that the king was blown into the orchard by the explosion.

 

 

 

 

James Stewart, 1st earl of Moray.

James Stewart, 1st earl of Moray (above picture)
The illegitimate son of King James V and Lady Mary Douglas and Mary’s half brother.

 

 

ELIZABETH AND MARY: COUSINS, RIVALS, QUEENS BY JANE DUNN

Although Mary became notorious for her romantic attachments, her best-known relationship is the one she shared with her cousin, Queen Elizabeth I of England, her cousin, rival for the British throne, and eventually, her killer.

Jane Dunn paints portraits of a pair of protagonists whose formidable strengths were placed in relentless opposition.

https://bookriot.com/2017/10/17/books-about-mary-queen-of-scots/

 

 

Come back next week (hopefully Monday—but Tuesday by latest) and we’ll sort thru the suspects and see if we can get some feed-back from you OUT THERE on whom you think did it.

 

On Thurs this week we’ll continue with memories of my 1974 trip to Washington, DC

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Part III of my Adventure: “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow mindedness., and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts.” ~ Mark Twain

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                 (still in Va.)  We are heading back to the Interstate, my short cut turned out to involve a ferry, now we’re behind time and have to take a long route–if we’re late we’ll loose our room…..hum……

 

Cabin Point:  https://www.facebook.com/pages/Cabin-Point-Virginia/126288847533447

This cemetery is on land donated to the church in 1711 by the will of Benjamin Harrison. Members of the Harrison family originally were buried here, but they were removed later to the Harrison Cemetery at Brandon. ..  http://sites.rootsweb.com/~vaschsm/CPcem.html

 

Strange brick fences.

 

 

 

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Hopewell  https://hopewellva.gov/attractions/

 

There is a chemical plant in Hopewell Virginia which has been operating for 57 years. It’s among the largest and most efficient plant in the world for making caprolactam, a precursor to Nylon 6. The plant is a cash cow for Honeywell, generating hundreds of millions of dollars of revenue each year. H/AREA member, Reed Belden, who was there at the beginning and played a key role in its success, wrote the following history for our Newsletter.

http://www.hon-area.org/hopewell.html

 

Chemical Capital of the SOuth–what a smell

Has an adult theater even and River sports

 

 

 

 

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Richmond  https://www.thecrazytourist.com/15-best-things-richmond-va/

 

Located along the fall line of the James River, Richmond is the capital of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Although Richmond was incorporated as a town “to be styled the City of Richmond” in 1742, it was not until 1782 that it was incorporated as a city. Plentiful in Revolutionary War history, Richmond served also as the capital of the Confederate States of America during the Civil War.

https://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h3916.html

 

The traffic becomes worse every mile, we’ve gone thru RIchmond and are less than 30 miles from Washington and everyone keeps trying to push us off the highway.

 

It has been a long time since I was last in D.C.  Then I was a “crusader” in a “cause”   We must all have causes to justify our extremes,  Then I was fighting the helplessness of a situation.

 

 

 

 

 

8/13/1974

 

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Washington DC

 

Founded on July 16, 1790, Washington, DC is unique among American cities because it was established by the Constitution of the United States to serve as the nation’s capital. You can read the actual line at the National Archives. From its beginning, it has been embroiled in political maneuvering, sectional conflicts and issues of race, national identity, compromise and, of course, power.   https://washington.org/dc-information/washington-dc-history

The day for the most part was good.

 

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Smithsonian  https://www.si.edu/museums

 

  • For a man who never set foot in Washington, DC, French-born, British-raised James Smithson has had a huge impact on the city. The British scientist (1765-1829), an illegitimate son of a Duke, left his considerable fortune to a nephew with the stipulation that, were the nephew to die without heirs, the money go “to the United States of America, to found at Washington, under the name of the Smithsonian Institution, an establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge.” The nephew died, and a museum complex was born.
  • https://washington.org/dc-guide-to/smithsonian-institution-building-castle

 

Though I think the Smithsonian was a bit too much to conquer for our first day.  We saw all of The Museum of Technology and History and part of the Museum of National History

 

We parked at a fringe area and caught a bus downtown but it was quite a walk to the Smithsonian.

At the museum we saw quite by accident was fantastic—a beautiful red sports car, carousel animals, President’s ladies from the past.  A  great milling herd of people surrounding exhibits, pushing in and around like lave at Herculean burying everything in its path.

 

The second museum was of natural history and had giant fiber glass whales, elephant and tigers, even dinosaurs.  And then there was African music.  It was later than and the crowds had become –a few couples, barely a group–a few couples and family groups braving the later hours.

 

We left at seven and found that we had no idea of where we could get a bus we missed our bus and got on the Silver Springs one instead and then we went to far and had to get a different bus back to it…by this time my minor headache had become major and my stomach was in bad shape and when we finally stopped at a sea food restaurant (V snapping back much better than me) I hardly had anything to speak of–and for me that’s amazing

 

All in all it was a very unusual day.  But we shall drive in tomorrow.

 

 

 

  • I’ll be back next Thurs with more of my 1974 adventures…see you then

 

 

The suspicion that Mary had something to do with Darnley’s death led to her losing the Scottish throne. She was forced to abdicate in favor of her infant son in July of 1567.

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This week I’m started a series of Mysteries—Murder most foul of course as that’s the ultimate in mysteries.

 

I just finished a book about a man that goes thru time to solve historical ones—as you see above.  And so today that’s one mystery that you might be interested in looking into to find WHO KILLED THE KING?  In this case the country was Scotland and the king’s title in name only-which simply means that his wife had inherited the crown and allowed him to be called king but that in truth he was subservient to her.   So all that he had and all those who bowed down to him was by the grace of the queen.

 

 

 

 

Couple: Darnley, who had royal lineage himself, is pictured above with Mary, whom he married in 1565

Couple: Darnley, who had royal lineage himself, is pictured above with Mary, whom he married in 1565

 

You can check out a panel’s findings in 2015’s that cleared Mary of involvement— but you may well–as I was—not be very convinced by the findings and/or the reasons for same:  (the picture above is from the article)

Full article here:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3249401/Mary-Queen-Scots-CLEARED-murdering-husband-panel-experts-examined-evidence-just-428-years-died.html

 

 

 

 

See the source image

 

Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, Stewart also spelled Stuart, also called (1565–67) Earl of Ross, Duke of Albany, (born Dec. 7, 1545, Temple Newsom, Yorkshire, Eng.—died Feb. 9/10, 1567, Edinburgh), cousin and second husband of Mary, Queen of Scots, father of King James I of Great Britain and Ireland (James VI of Scotland), and direct ancestor of all subsequent British sovereigns………..Darnley was the son of Matthew Stewart, 4th earl of Lennox, whose pretension to the throne of Scotland was contested by James Hamilton, 2nd earl of Arran. Darnley’s mother, formerly Margaret Douglas, had a claim to the English crown as granddaughter of Henry VII

Encyclopaedia Britannica

 

 

 

The “King” was Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley an Englishman with good (With a capital G) bloodlines (as far as crowns go) both in England and in Scotland.  Some have speculated that Elizabeth I went out of her way to be sure that Mary, the Scottish Queen and a possible claimant to her throne,  be put in the path of the troublesome, but sexually appealing young man.  I among others find this a bit hard to believe given the  confusion of Elizabeth’s birthright of the Tudor’s very confusing marriage and divorce and/or executions which marked Elizabeth’s father’s reign and forever put some in doubt of who should set the throne especially due to the constant change from legal to bastard and back again in regard to Elizabeth and her sister Mary who ruled before her.  It is also noted that Elizabeth and her council while allowing Darnley go to Scotland in turn forbid him to marry the Scottish Queen (and how did that go for you Elizabeth?).   Or maybe she changed her mind who knows.

 

 

 

Darnley was Mary’s Second Spouse.  She married her first husband in April of 1558 and he became  Francis II, king of France in 1559—and died in 1560 of what appears to have been an ear infection that caused an abscess  of his brain and finally death.   France however was Mary’s second throne–be it ever so shortly as she was already Queen of Scotland when she married Francis.

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The Kirk o’Field site

The lands at Kirk o’ Field went on to be granted to the city specifically for the foundation of a new university, including the Hamilton lodging. The University of Edinburgh was founded by King James VI in 1582, and the Kirk o’ Field site has long been considered to be at the current location of the Old College. Recent archaeological investigations following the Cowgate fire of 2002 have raised some questions about the exact location of the house

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11279751

 

 

 

 

See the source image

 

 

Mary, Queen of Scots (December 8, 1542 to February 8, 1587), also known as Mary Stuart or Queen Mary I, was the queen of Scotland from December 1542 until July 1567. The death of Mary’s father, which occurred just days after her birth, put her on the throne as an infant.

She briefly became queen consort in France before returning to Scotland

https://www.biography.com/royalty/mary-queen-of-scots

 

 

Mary had almost always been queen and she ruled an unstable country which occupied a a small land base with its bitter enemy England whose throne she also had blood lines to.  She was crowned at nine months, originally in the charge  of the Earl of Arran and then of her mother, Mary of Guise, who was from one of the most powerful families in France.  Mary was protected in holy places, on an island in the Highlands while her mother ruled the country for her.  Eventually she was engaged (both were children) to the future king of France and was sent to be raised in a more stable country France, with the Royal children including her fiance.    So most of her life was far from the strife of the land where she was the crown queen of.

 

 

She was totally unprepared when her husband, always sickly died and she returned to her dynasty of Scotland to reign.  And to make it all worse in a day where woman was normally ruled by the male, the widowed teenager was also a Catholic returning to a land rent by religious conflict—where she was forced to take mass in private.  Not exactly a win win situation

 

 

 

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NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE
starring Saoirse Ronan and Margot Robbie
“As enthralling as a detective story.” — New York Times Book Review

 

Centuries after her death, Mary continues to be an object of cultural fascination. The 1971 film Mary, Queen of Scots starred Vanessa Redgrave as Mary and Glenda Jackson as Queen Elizabeth I, with Timothy Dalton as Henry Stewart, Earl of Darnley.

 

In 2013, a Swiss-French movie was made on Mary’s life. And the 2018 movie, Mary Queen of Scots, starred Saoirse Ronan as Mary and Margot Robbie as Queen Elizabeth I. Mary’s life also inspired the 2013 to 2017 television show Reign on The CW.

 

 

 

Hardcover Mary, Queen of Scots and the Murder of Lord Darnley Book

 

Darnley met Mary twice before becoming her suitor. He was sent clandestinely to France by his parents in 1559 after the death of Mary’s father-in-law, Henry II. He spent some time at Chambord where the French court was at that moment, under the protective wing of his paternal uncle John Stuart d’Aubigny, who had remained in France. Darnley was not yet thirteen and carried with him a letter from his father, in which he pleaded to have his forfeited Scottish estates restored. This was nothing but a formal audience with Mary, but a subtle way of introducing young Darnley on the scene. In 1560, when Francis II died in his turn leaving Mary a widow, Darnley was once more sent over to offer his parents’ condolences.

 

 

But as it’s often said the third time is a charm:  Then came Darnley to Scotland, and Mary reportedly was smitten….was she really—or not?  Who knows, he was considered handsome and I am sure that he presented some one to her that would be a support and comfort and so .   He had hoped to eventually be given the crown as a full king but that didn’t come about and he wasted his time drinking and contributing nothing to the management of the throne or carry out his consort duties.

 

 

The bad behavior became worse when the nobles that had previously resented him decided to gain his help by aligning with him instead of shunning him…..once they had “welcomed” him into their circle they began whispering rumors that the queen was more than friendly with her Italian secretary Rizzo and this would all end in the death of Rizzo—it is reported that Darnley insisted that he be murdered in Mary’s presence and legend has it that he hid behind Mary for protection and one of the party (though it is insisted that the queens husband had not the strength to preform the deed himself) is reported to have leaned over Mary’s very pregnant body to murder the man.

 

 

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The National Archives have great site about the death including maps and this drawings of the scenes and includes all the items found with the body.

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/resources/kirk-o-field/

 

 

 

See the source image

 

By February 1567 Darnley who  was now the father of Mary’s son James VI of Scotland (and who would eventually become James I of England due to the Tudor’s inability to produce a long living heir).  He had continued his wicked ways, drinking, whoring and all manner of evil totally alienated Mary by the time that he developed a severe case of the pox–Syphilis and was placed in the Kirk of the Fields site—not a usual place for royalty to abide but it was here that he lived and some say that Mary came often to see and nurse her sick husband.

 

 

Then on Feb. 10 the house was blown up with several losses of life in the ruins….Darnley and a servant were also dead, but they were found in a near by orchard with no marks evident of  how they were killed—both dressed in their night shirts which were pulled up to their waists and around the bodies laid objects including a chair, a net, a dagger and some pieces of clothing.  it was obvious the explosion did not kill them but who or what did?

 

The suspect list was impressive and included Mary’s stanchest ally James Hepburn,  Lord Bothwell.  Interestingly enough he was tried in April and found not guilty, he went on to marry the Queen a month later.  This convinced many that the queen was guilty– and many more were convince of this by the nobility many of which were against the queen including her own half brother who gained much when she was forced to fight for her place and eventually lost–Oh and by the way, her final battle which by the way happened on today’s date

 

 

On 5/13/1568:

At the Battle of Langside, the forces of Mary Queen of Scots are defeated by a confederacy of Scottish Protestants under James Stewart (and her illegitimate half brother), the regent of her son  King James VI of Scotland. During the battle, which was fought out in the southern suburbs of Glasgow, a cavalry charge routed Mary’s 6,000 Catholic troops, and they fled the field. Three days later, Mary escaped to Cumberland, England, where she sought protection from Queen Elizabeth I.

https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/mary-queen-of-scots-defeated?cmpid=email-hist-tdih-2019-0513-05132019&om_rid=215826f0296d5a613dbe23a2c91db60ff30e199744e52a41fa14a8f207616902&om_mid=627024702&kx_EmailCampaignID=29844&kx_EmailCampaignName=email-hist-tdih-2019-0513-05132019&kx_EmailRecipientID=215826f0296d5a613dbe23a2c91db60ff30e199744e52a41fa14a8f207616902&fbclid=IwAR2bCFY5cPCIGzY8Ijk8L5eNJRRNNhhKPSAkPs34hfqaCJiOtcmDcSo_CZg

 

 

Lord Bothwell and Mary Queen of Scots A Study of the Life, Character and Times of James Hepburn, ...

 

Place to see in Edinburgh related to Mary and Darnley include

Holyrood Palace:

   You can still see Mary’ chambers in the Palace of Holyrood. And if you look closely, you can spot the marks on the floor which are said to be Rizzio’s blood. 

(Note:  I have heard various stories, I know that the wooden floor has been replace many times…….but I have seen the stains and my guide told us that legend has it that the stains appear in every floor, but that 20th century testing show that it is sap—but they can’t explain why it re-appears in the same area every time)

 

 

Edinburgh Castle:

Where Mary gave birth to her son by Darnley:  James

 

Craigmillar Castle

Where some believe the Lairds sign a pact to rid themselves of Darnley

 

www.rabbies.com/en/blog/guide-places-connected-mary-queen-scots

 

If you go to the above Web site you’ll see Rabbie’s Blog (they are my favorite touring campy in England and/or Scotland) you can see pictures of these castles as well  4 others that might be a great place to see and or visit it you live in the UK or plan a trip there—or will give you a reason to plan one.

 

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Check out the Tudor Society for their thoughts on the matter:

10 February 1567 – The Murder of Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley

 

You can see Mary’s tomb—James I who paid little attention to his mother during his life decided to be interested in her after her death and when he became king he had her body moved to one of the most beautiful tombs in Westminster Abbey  check it out there or get a preview at::   https://www.westminster-abbey.org/abbey-commemorations/royals/mary-queen-of-scots

 

You can check out British Magazine for their take on the whole affair:  https://www.britain-magazine.com/carousel/who-killed-lord-darnley/

 

 

OK we’ll discuss the cast of characters or should that be suspects on my entry Friday—-5/17   If anybody out there comes up with some ideas please let me know under comments.

 

 

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Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley

A kneeling figure of Lord Darnley can be seen on the monument of his mother Margaret Douglas, Countess of Lennox in the south aisle of Henry VII’s chapel at Westminster Abbey. Her other sons and daughters are also shown as weepers around the tomb chest. This shows him in armour with a crown placed just above his head. Henry Stewart, Duke of Albany, known as Lord Darnley, was the second husband of Mary, Queen of Scots (whose tomb is in the same aisle as Margaret’s). They married at Holyrood in Scotland on 29th July 1565 and Henry was declared King the following day. He was mysteriously found dead in February 1567 (possibly suffocated) and was buried in the vault at the abbey of Holyrood.

https://www.westminster-abbey.org/abbey-commemorations/commemorations/henry-stewart-lord-darnley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Please understand, I have been waiting to leave ever since I figured out that there were roads willing to take me anywhere I wanted to go.” — Unknown

The main picture is from one of my sojourns in Ireland, but today’s writings are from a journal of a 1974 trip to Washington DC trip and is continue earlier in two previous  entries—you back two and then two more and you’ll be at the beginning….then skip forward two and so on……

 

We’re in a car before the interstates were working well or put completely together and heading north from Florida—Tricky Dicky has just resigned (the day before we started the trip) and Gerald Ford is now at the controls.  So away we go:

 

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Maysville  

https://northcarolina.hometownlocator.com/nearby/places-of-interest,n,maysville,lat,34.9039840698,lon,-77.2305526733.cfm

 

(Maysville was one of the first towns in North Carolina to elect a woman as mayor. In 1925, Mrs. Annie Koonce Jenkins was elected and served six years as the Mayor of Maysville.  Today her legacy is still seen by everyone because she was responsible for the planting of the large oaks, many of which still line our city streets today.)

 

A “Mayberry” type town, shipping logs out.  A mini-raceway.

 

Seeing some some of the flooding we’ve heard about—not bad so far….

 

 

 

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Pallocksville

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attractions-g49451-Activities-Pollocksville_North_Carolina.html

 

 

(Pollocksville is only fifteen miles from New Bern by way of Highway  #17 and like Maysville, Trenton and Comfort, it is popular with sportsmen because of the deer and bear hunting nearby.  Pollocksville is well known for fishing all over the country.)

 

 

Beautifully kept up homes and churches surrounded by stores that aren’t.

 

 

 

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New Bern

Things To Do

(Pepsi Cola, first known as Brad’s Drink, was created in 1898 at Bradham’s Pharmacy at Middle and Pollock Streets by the young Caleb Bradham.New Bern was one of the earliest cities in the nation-after Boston and Philadelphia-to recognize and celebrate Independence Day.)

 

 

First printing press in N.C.,  Governor’s mansion, Judicial president.  A lovely town, with several nice older houses.

 

 

 

 Twelve Inch Large Brown Beads on Beaded Choker Vintage
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Vanceboar
(In 1876 Zebulon B. Vance came through Swift Creek and made a campaign speech for Governor.  This visit won him many friends and votes.  In 1877, the citizens of Swift Creek renamed their village Vanceboro in honor of Governor Vance.)

 

Small towns are depressing on all days, but especially on Sundays when they are empty, everyone retreated behind lowered blinds or to church pews.

 

 

Craven Social Club (Craven is the county’s name)

 

 

 

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Chocowintry

https://livability.com/nc/chocowinity/things-to-do

 

    • (Highway 17, with four lanes runs through the small town and joins highways 33 and 264. WITN-TV and Singer Furniture Factory are the major industries. Under the leadership of Mayor W. T. Barnes, who has served except for two years since the town was incorporated in 1959)

Well we finally found lunch.

Another river town, but this one with a 1910 Model T on Display.

 

 

 

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Williamston

http://www.townofwilliamston.com/visitors/things_to_do/index.php

 

(Moving into the 19th Century, the bridging of the river in 1922, Williamston became the hub of a system of major highways and roads upon which the business and commercial life of the county now largely depends.)

 

 

We changed from 17 after many miles of enjoyable travel, but anyway….

 

 

 

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Windsor

Things to do in Windsor

(Soon by the early 1900’s the railroads became a connecting link between the steamship lines and points north. products including lumber from various mills were brought by rail to Windsor making it somewhat of a port of entry for the area. Over the next few years more railroads were built causing the steamship lines to become a thing of the past. the railroads were responsible for the development of the lumber industries and expedited the handling of farm produce that was grown in the area.)

 

 

There is beauty in the sunlight in the sky.

 

More farms now, tobacco, peanuts and corn on a small scale.

 

 

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Powelsville

https://northcarolina.hometownlocator.com/nearby/places-of-interest,n,powellsville,lat,36.2257118225,lon,-76.933013916.cfm

 

(The formal boundaries for the Town of Powellsville encompass a land area of 0.36 sq. miles and a water area of 0 sq. miles. Bertie County is in the Eastern time zone (GMT -5). The elevation is 66 feet.)

 

Used our first  SELF SERVE GAS STATION  (In 1973, a station in Abilene, Texas, invented pay-at-the-pump.)  What a riot–no directions but where to put the money in at.

 

 

 

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Ahoskie

https://northcarolina.hometownlocator.com/nearby/places-of-interest,n,ahoskie,lat,36.2868232727,lon,-76.9846801758.cfm

 

 

(A coastal county annexed from ChowanBertie, and Northampton, Hertford County was established in 1759. Como, Ahoskie, Murfreesboro, Harrellsville, and the county seat of Winton are towns and communities within Hertford. The county was established by a General Assembly act, and the county received its name in honor of the marquis of Hertford, England, Francis Seymour Conway.)

 

 

Big tires and restaurants, tobacco warehouses and water towers.

 

 

 

 

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Winton

http://winton.north-carolina.afabuloustrip.com/loc/353-244

 

(Winton, the seat of Hertford County, was burned by Federal troops on 20 Feb. 1862. It was the first North Carolina town burned by Union forces during the Civil War and the only one burned completely. )

 

 

Marina next right.

 

 

 

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We have entered Virginia!

 

 

 

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Somerton

https://www.facebook.com/places/Things-to-do-in-Somerton-Virginia/110270702336500/

 

(The Quaker meeting at Somerton (near Suffolk) claims to be the “the oldest continuous congregation in Virginia.1The congregation first started worshipping together in 1672, after George Fox made his one trip to Virginia to preach his version of true faith.)

 

A white church with a steeple.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Suffolk

https://www.virginia.org/cities/Suffolk/

 

 

(Seal of Suffolk

The seal showcases important founding dates: 

1646 for Nansemond County

1742 for Suffolk

1974 for the consolidated City of Suffolk)

 

 

We did, actually find the route we were looking for–these towns are so old you can reach out and almost touch the past.  Some nicely up kept homes, but there be a water treatment plant close by.

 

 

 

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Chuckatuc

The neighborhood is relatively small and consists of such businesses as a garden store, general store, automobile repair shop, three churches, two gas stations, a restaurant, a hardware store, and others. It has a fire department, Suffolk station nine, which is operated as the Chuckatuck Volunteer Fire Department. The community is also located near Lone Star Lakes, a recreational park.

St. Luke’s Church:  1632:  http://historicstlukes.org/      NORTH AMERICA’S OLDEST ANGLICAN CHURCH BUILDING

 

 

Rushmere     https://www.niche.com/places-to-live/rushmere-isle-of-wight-va/

(Rushmere is a census-designated place in Isle of Wight County, Virginia, United States. The population was 1,018 at the 2010 census.)

Churches & Horses

 

 

Bacon’s Castle     https://preservationvirginia.org/historic-sites/bacons-castle/

465 Bacon’s Castle Trail
Surry, VA 23883Hours

March 1 through December 29

Fri and Sat: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday: 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Memorial Day – Labor Day:Monday 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

Preservation Virginia acquired Bacon’s Castle in the 1970’s at auction and meticulously researched, restored and furnished the house in the 1980’s.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Superstition is the poetry of life. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

 

Today we’re looking at places that are associated with superstitions—all over the place we’ll go to find some SUPERstitions

 

 

 

See the source image

 

Did you know that Blacksmiths were once believed to have magical powers because they worked with fire, iron and horses—and some smiths were Blood charmers—they could heal the living.  and while I didn’t find any healers I did find a great site where the blacksmiths make beautiful things  This is in Cornwall and if you go back on this blog: to entries in June 2016 you’ll see bunches of pictures and stops about the area that I made when I stayed there—but never unfortunately here :

The Old Forge 
 Allerford Near Minehead
Allerford,
Exmoor National Park
TA24 8HN, England
And while we don’t find anything scary here the craft they have and the resulting offerings they produce is well worth a visit or a view on line…..Cornwall has it’s share of things that go bump in the night, but here those sounds are probably going to result in a fish (see above) rather than a ghost or goblin.
Back to the USA where while we don’t have healing we do have drinks, which heals a lot of ills—and it’s in a town know for it’s spooky things to see and do as well as lots and lots of drinks—I had my first Zombie here in the French quarter

the drink not the scary kind—though they have both been known to eat brains.

and I may well have stopped here—it look like a place I would enjoy—

Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop –
941 Bourbon St,
New Orleans, LA 70116- 
It was built some time in the late 18th century and has the distinction of (probably) being the oldest structure used as a bar in the US (in the rest of the world something this old wouldn’t have gotten an honorable mention).
 According to the Web site:   “The structure and fence are in the old French Provincial Louis XV or Briquette-Entre-Poteauxe style used in French Louisiana.”   It has a slate roof that is credited with saving it from two fires.   It is also credited as being a site for a smuggling enterprise by two brothers and a wealthy creole patron who did business here rather than his family home–being New Orleans one always figures there’s at least a grain of truth in the fun yarn.  Oh and by the way the rich patron who according to another legend, has haunted the place since his death in 1823 is Jean Lafitte, which  even the least historically literate of you out there just may have heard of.    But he isn’t lonely, there’s also a female spirit who is thought to be a young woman who died on the property and if that doesn’t float your boat—(Lafitte was a pirate Ha Ha) there is also said to be a demonic creature that lights up the place with his/her (?) red glowing eyes.

OK  so we found a real black smith which was noteworthy for it’s craft in Cornwall.  Then we found a bar that used to be a blacksmith shop used as a fence for stolen pirate goods….and now haunted by all manor of things, but no blacksmith.  so here we go one more time

Gay City State Park

https://www.ct.gov/deep/cwp/view.asp?a=2716&q=325202

Hebron, CT

https://bestthingsct.com/hebron-ct/

This Park site includes remnants from a former town, including the mill and other structures of  Gay City, which was built in the late 18th century and named after John Gay who was one of the founders.  The reason given for abandonment include (from assorted sources) a fire that burned down the mill that was the towns big money maker—and which had burned twice before the final decision not to rebuild as well as a series of “mysterious murders that occurred”.  Now you can wander the paths thru the spooky ghost town and maybe sight something spooky as several people have been said to have seen the ghost of the murdered victims.  But the reason this gets included in this Blacksmith section is that someone was said to have seen a headless blacksmith, hanging on to his dismembered piece (i.e. head), and running through the forest.

 

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Oh and I wanted to add something spooky in Cornwall—and I found a site in Exmoor—where the Blacksmith’s Shop is:

Dunster Castle  on Exmoor

has a reputation for eerie goings on and with 1,000 years of history, it has plenty of great stories to tell..  The last family to live here, the Luttrells, moved in in 1376 and out in 1976, and changed a medieval stronghold into a family home

9 Dunster ghost tales that prove it’s one of the spookiest places on Exmoor

Check them out here:

https://www.somersetlive.co.uk/news/somerset-news/9-dunster-ghost-tales-prove-679268

 

 

 

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Actors are notorious for being superstitious–but did you know that the play Macbeth is considered exceeding unlucky?  It is said that bad things happens to not only the players, but  the crew, as well as everyone else associated with the production.  Stories abound with everything from outbreaks of fire to the most serious I saw, which was the death of Lilian Baylis that occurred when the play was being given at the Old Vic

The Old Vic

https://www.oldvictheatre.com/
The Cut, London
SE1 8NB
0844 871 7628*

Oh and by the way this theater built in 1818 is still said to be inhabited by the ghost of that same Lillian Baylis who managed the Theatre during her lifetime and died during the production of Macbeth.  Oh and the reason for all this trouble is believed to the Witches Song which is reputed to work Evil.

 

 

Theater attendants like Actor have their own superstitions—for instance it’s a good sign if the first person that buys a seat in a new production is old and will give the play a long run and of course bad if they’re young.

 

 

Ford’s Theater

https://www.fords.org/

511 10th St NW,

Washington, DC 20004

was built in 1863 and became infamous in 1865 when John Wilkes Booth assassinated President Abraham Lincoln.  After Lincoln’s death the theater was immediately shut down.   It was was purchased by the national government and used for various purposes including storage, a museum and a Library.  In 1887 it became a War Department’s clerk’s office.  Then death struck again when in 1893 several floors collapsed and killed 22, injuring 100 more.  After all this that it went back to a storage building again.  After 1931 it sat empty.
Finally in 1964,  restoration was begun and in 1968 it  once again opened its doors as a theatre with a museum dedicated to Lincoln in the basement.  And of course the past remain with unexplained sounds and sightings of Mary Todd Lincoln and Booth and actors who have worked here since the re-opening complain of an icy cold spots on the stage.  Oh as for Lincoln—he is seen at the Petersen House across the street, but he isn’t confined there as he is also seen at the White House.  




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If you want to read a really great book that deals with Macbeth’s  Play being cursed check out Jennifer Lee Carrell’s Haunt Me Still  http://jenniferleecarrell.com/haunt-me-still-the-shakespeare-curse/

The author has a Ph.D in English and American Literature from Harvard University as well as other degrees in English  literature from Oxford and Stanford Univ.  She taught at Harvard and directed Shakespeare for the Hyperion Theatre company.   This is a story of a woman–both suspect and future victim, who along with a man who saved her life,  race to find a dangerous version of Macbeth said to contain the actual rituals of witchcraft and forbidden knowledge.  It’s a great read and will give you more in depth knowledge of the Macbeth superstitions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On the road again I just can’t wait to get on the road again Johnny Cash/Willie Nelson

and we continue on the 1974 trip to DC from Last Thurs

8/10/1974 continued:

 

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South Carolina home of gigantic Fire Works Store  

(NOTE:  “it is illegal in South Carolina to have “fireworks containing pyrotechnic composition in excess of two grains, designed to produce a loud and piercing effect, including:“ground salutes” or “cherry bombs”  M-80’s TNT salutes “bulldog salutes” small bottle rockets less than 1/2 inch in diameter and 3 inches long; all bottle rockets are not permitted.Other than that, any other fireworks are permitted in South Carolina – mortars, spinners, cakes, aerial fireworks, etc.  https://www.wistv.com/story/35802906/here-are-the-fireworks-laws-in-south-carolina/  )

 

 

I just saw my first out of captivity rattler–it was between 4 and 6 feet and was coiled on the highway when we saw it, what a day, what a day.    (Check out http://www.dnr.sc.gov/education/pdf/VenomousSnakesSC.pdf to see ALL the poisonous snakes native to the sate).

 

 

Switzerland   http://trip-suggest.com/united-states/south-carolina/switzerland/(yes that is a town in South Carolina honest)  Would you belive one nice house and a log cabin post office?  Everything rather desserted.

 

 

Ridgeland  http://www.carolana.com/SC/Towns/Ridgeland_SC.html :”Free hearing tests: and brick buildings.  The trees have begun to look like trees again, but the grass is awfully green.

 

 

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Garden Grove  and Priesters

These names are listed  in my journal just like the other towns, but there is no real definition of the…but can’t find any towns by those names  and after the second one I put:    Chickens and black people along the byways.

Miles and miles of darkening woods.

 

A road side park with nothing but trash cans.  In fact ever since Georgia we’ve passed a trash can about every two miles preceded by a sign announcing its presence.

 

 

Green slimy, musty swamp encircling tree trunks almost as a carpet but ever mobile.  A vegetable breeding lab?

 

 

 

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Charleston https://www.charlestoncvb.com/

Capt. Konos Vampire Hunter and  Frankenstein Monsters from Hell showing at the drive-in.  Now there’s a double bill.

A city like other cities with the sames stores, traffic problems and the like.

A wrong turn–I really must watch more and write less.  Some lovely old homes, restored–very nice.  Streets quite narrow–down town rather small, southern feel.  Black neighborhoods, mostly men about, standing and walking.

The harbor where the first shot of the Civil War was fired.

 

 

Mt. Pleasant  https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attractions-g54354-Activities-Mount_Pleasant_South_Carolina.html

Rabbits for sale.

 

 

Georgetown  https://365atlantatraveler.com/things-to-do-in-georgetown-sc/

Everywhere roads being graded.

The Whistling Pig Drive-in

Intercoastal waterway

 

A bus load of people setting at the road side.  Just setting on the ground by a bus at whose back a human waterfall tumbles out to the same ground.

 

 

Myrtle Beach  https://365atlantatraveler.com/things-to-do-in-georgetown-sc/

7 gigantic “mini” golf courses, unbelievable.

The beach, ferris wheels, 2 wax museums, two roller coasters–a carnival in shape of a town.  Sorta Santa Cruz, & Daytona Beach combined.  Opps there are nine golf course–just saw two more, sorry.

 

 

Sunset Myrtle Beach, South Carolina Postcard, USA Postcard

 

 

 

 

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Wilmngton, North Carolina https://www.wilmingtonandbeaches.com/things-to-do/

We stayed here for the night at a little discount motel.  All in all we only spent about $35.00 yesterday and had a very nice day–except that toward the end there I was quite grumpy because I was so tired  and, then was allergic to something in the motel–but I took an allergy pill and this morning I feel ready for all sorts of new adventures.

The town itself is fair-sized and quite pleasant with a clean town area which as tired as I was last night is about all I remember.

 

This morning is sunny, but with a hint of chill in the air–probably because we’re so near the ocean.

 

Travel trailers seem to me a waste of time–for what it costs for gas and wear and tear on a car it seems you’d save money staying in a motel.  Its rather like tying your house unto the back of your car and going somewhere for a visit.  Utterly non-understandable to me.

 

 

I love the verandas on the older houses–even the smaller ones seem more impressive, the houses in Florida, unless expensive, are generally ugly–just squares of building blocks, some ugly color and setting there without imagination or hope of redemption.

 

 

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Hampstead   https://www.familydaysout.com/kids-things-to-do-usa/hampstead/nc

Venus Fly Trap–a low slut of a building covered, like an old whore covers herself with make up, with neon signs, a bar where those who seek a certain kind of company or can afford no others, come to drink, talk and forget–whatever.

 

The rural areas have really surprised me–there are few if any farms, most country dwellers are African American, some in above average house, some in slightly worse but a large majority live in shacks, houses without paint, whose jagged boards resemble the skeleton of a starving creature leaning in their preferred directions.  Few if any stand completely upright any longer.  On their porches are usually various chairs and in the evening they gather there in numbers to talk, fan themselves, and watch the passing cars.  Several people walk along  the highway, children ride bikes.

 

On Sunday morning they walk to church, especially the older women in bright print dresses stretched over bodies enlarged by long years of starch filled diets and their brighter hats set on graying, nappy hair.   Grasping Bibles in their work worn hands.

 

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Holly Ridge  

https://northcarolina.hometownlocator.com/nearby/places-of-interest,n,holly%20ridge,lat,34.4954452515,lon,-77.5549697876.cfm

Railroad on one side, houses on the other.  Cypress lamps and deer crossings.

 

Little animals dead along the highway–we destroy so much just being human–just living our lives as we feel it must be had.

Slash Pine Plantation 1857

 

The very vegetation has changed, palms do not grow well this far north, the pines are a different breed than the scrubs of the swampy low lands and other trees are hard to find.

 

Verona    https://www.facebook.com/places/Things-to-do-in-Verona-North-Carolina/111799132165428/

Formerly attractive buildings falling to ruins.

 

Camp Griger/Marine Corp    https://www.facebook.com/pages/Camp-Geiger/131998930170706

 

Jacksonville  https://www.jacksonvillenc.gov/

Catholic churches and lovely homes, the usual row of tourist junk

The Blue Mule Lounge

 

 

  •  GRACE KELLY/PRINCE Rainier Monaco Silver Commemorative Spoon
     $35.00

 

 

TO BE CONTINUED