Wednesday, August 8, 2012

A day in Massachusetts (and a history lesson)

Last Saturday, Jonathan and I went down to Massachusetts to go to the Boston temple (in Belmont) and spent a few hours in Lexington and Concord, which is less than 5 miles from the temple.
We LOVED it!!!  Here are a few pictures and things we learned.

                       The temple grounds are spectacular and the inside is also beautiful.
The temple is 45 miles away and takes about an hour to get there.  Saturday AM is a great time to go:)

Our first stop after the temple was in Lexington.  This is the statue honoring the militia in the green where the first colonists were killed on April 19, 1775 by the British troops (as the small militia was retreating).
This is the oldest war monument in the country honoring the 8 men killed in Lexington on April 19, 1775.

 This was our very interesting tour guide.  We took a 90 minute tour on a trolley to see all the highlights of Lexington and Concord.
This was at the North Bridge outside Concord where the minute men first fired against British troops when they saw the British starting to burn the town of Concord.  A small contingent of British were guarding the North Bridge when the "shot heard round the world" was fired by someone and the war officially began.




                                  The Alcott home where Louisa wrote Little Women


I couldn't get good pictures because we just drove by on the trolley, but we went past the houses of the Alcotts (where Louisa wrote Little Women and the movie was filmed), Nathaniel Hawthorne,  Henry David Thoreau and some others I can't recall.  They all lived close to each in Concord and Walden Pond is only a mile away.  The Transcendentalist School sits just behind the Alcott home.

A History Lesson
Here a few notes I took from our tour.  Now I know as much as local 4th graders:)

The British troops (700 I think) came to Lexington and Concord from Boston on April 19, 1775 to seize weapons and ammunition that the colonists had gathered and hidden. 

Lexington had militia (unpaid volunteers--the town wasn't big enough to pay them).  Concord had minute-men who were compensated for their time away from work (farms). The town militia and minute-men already existed to protect the town from the French and Indians.

Paul Revere came to Lexington first to warn the town that the troops were coming.  He shouted "The regulars are out" not "The British are coming" because they were all British back then.  He had two riding companions to accompany him to Concord, but Paul Revere was captured en route and later released.  William Dawes escaped when Revere was captured. The remaining rider, a physician named Samuel Prescott, was the one who made it to Concord to warn the minute-men, so they were prepared.  When Longfellow wrote his poem about Revere he didn't mention Dawes and Prescott, but only Revere because it was easier to find words that rhyme with Revere.

At the North Bridge in Concord there were 95 British men guarding the bridge while other troops were burning a battery and buildings in Concord.  The minute men gathered on the hill above the bridge and saw the fire.  After one man asked "are we just going to watch them burn the town down" the minute-men charged down the hill and fired at the men guarding the bridge and chased them into town where the fighting grew.  First thing in the morning, the minute men were outnumbered 10 to 1 by the British.  More minute-men joined throughout the day until they outnumbered the British 5 to 1.

A few more tidbits:
If the British were wounded, they still had to get themselves back to Boston (about 15 miles away).  Surrender was not an option because they would be considered traitors.

The farmers at the time had to give any trees they fell with diameter wider than 24" to King George to be made into masts.  However, if a tree fell over in a storm it was called a "windfall" and the farmer could keep it.


Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Church history stops on the way to New Hampshire

Our first church history stop was in Winters Quarters  in Omaha Nebraska
(The kids had already seen Salt Lake in previous visits)

We toured the visitor center, ate a picnic outside, and walked through the cemetery and temple grounds.  Most of the deaths there in 1846-1847 were children under three.  I think it's appropriate that the celestial room of the temple looks out onto the cemetery.

 Monument at the cemetery
 Monument at the visitor center

Our next stop was in Nauvoo.
We stayed in a hotel, but Grandma and Grandpa hosted us by feeding us wonderful, homemade meals and planning out a jam-packed day that included a temple trip, two performances, an oxen ride and as many sites as we could fit in (blacksmith, brick maker, school, gun shop, Lucy Mack home, red brick store, gravesite....)   My parents live right in the middle of the village, so it was easy to split up to go look at stuff, take a nap, get a snack, reconvene for meals.  We felt very spoiled.  See photos on July 2nd blog post on beautiful Nauvoo (I wish I had more photos).  The shows were great!!

Just 25 miles from Nauvoo is the Carthage jail.   It was difficult to understand the tour guide in our group but I told Michael, sometimes it takes more effort to hear and feel the spirit.  I'm glad eye witnesses recorded in their journals what happened so we can read about it.

 In the bedroom where Joseph and Hyrum were killed by a mob

Jessica and Michael outside the Carthage jail

The next historic stop was in Kirtland.  We toured the LDS visitor center, Newel K Witney Store and the temple.  Again, our tour guide was hard to understand, but she had a sweet spirit about her.



Everywhere we went, I wished we had more time.  We could only hit the highlights because we can 8-10 hours of driving that turned into 12 hours in the car with stops and road construction.  We were pretty tired when we reached out hotel each night.


We did make one unplanned stop (not church related).  At a rest area map, Jessica noticed that Niagra Falls was only 20 miles out of our way en route to Palmyra.  We decided it was worth the detour and got there just before sunset.  We had to stay on the American side as only half of us had passports, but it was still breath-taking.  I didn't know it was a life-long dream of Jessica's, so she was elated.


                Sacred Grove
                   Smith Farm  - log cabin where angel Moroni appeared to Joseph

Our last church history stop was Palmyra.  We spent the morning at the sacred grove, Smith farm and temple grounds, all withing walking distance. 

 Palmyra temple

After hiking to the top of Hill Cumorah, Trevor said "this is a really steep hill...can I roll down it?"
 Jason with statue of angel Moroni in the background on top of Hill Cumorah

Next stop....New Hampshire!!!



Temples

Here are the temples we stopped at on our trip to New Hampshire

Winters Quarters, Nebraska Temple in Omaha
where saints set up a temporary village to use as way-station in 1846 on the trek west
Today there is a visitor center, pioneer cemetery, and temple

The stained-glass was done by the same artist who did the stained glass in the Palmyra temple and Nauvoo baptistry

                       Jessica and Jason


Nauvoo temple, stunningly beautiful on the hill over looking Nauvoo.  It is very large and a huge monument to those early saints who gave their all to building Zion.  I did an endowment session with my mom and Jessica & Michael while my dad went with the boys and Jonathan to do baptisms.

Kirtland Ohio temple
We were able to tour the inside of this temple.  The reorganized church (Community of Christ) owns it and does a great job of keeping up the building and grounds and has a lovely visitor center.


Palmyra New York temple
We walked around the outside.  This temple has beautiful stained glass depicting the sacred grove.  It sits up on a hill and looks down on the sacred grove.  Likewise, you can see the temple through the trees of the Smith farm.

                         View of Palmyra temple from the Smith Farm

I'm looking forward to seeing the Boston temple, the closest to our new home.  It's closed for three weeks right now, but we'll go next month.  It looks beautiful.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Nauvoo the beautiful (happy birthday mom)

Happy birthday, Mom.
I'm blogging for you!

We loved our stop in Nauvoo.  Thanks for the wonderful meals, mom and dad,  for getting us tickets to performances and being great tour guides and especially for going to the temple with us.  That was the highlight for me!

               Michael, Jessica, Gma and Gpa


 Group photo at the visitor center
 We went on an oxen ride
 One big happy family
 Talented young adult street performers (also put on show in PM)
 Curtis got a kick out of the non-standardize spelling in the school house
 Mother and son (Trevor) posing next to statue in the Women's Garden
Demonstration of rope making in the family living center

Jason's Choir Concert and Graduation

I took lots of photos and video because I know you would have wanted to be there:)
Jason did an awesome job.  He performed in three different choirs and had some solos and performed a duet with his pal, Josh.  He also had four costume changes.  Each choir did songs from a different musical.

Jason as the Grinch, displaying his most valuable male vocalist award



I couldn't download the videos directly.
Neil helped me put Jason's solo and duet on you tube.
Sorry for the poor sound quality.  It cut out when I changed the zoom.
 
 

Some graduation photos:
It was so nice of Jessica and Michael to come over for the big event.







disregard the video--I don't know how to delete it


Goodbye to the NW


Saying goodbye before heading East the middle of June

 To my sister Brenda and Andrus cousins


 It was hard to say goodbye to Janelle and Pam, who are like sisters to me


 We spent the our last Saturday in Oregon in Medford, first a baptism trip, then playing with cousins at Neil and Pam's


Playing at the water park in Meridian, Idaho


 Dodge Grandparents Ellen and Elmer

 We spent the night at Elmer and Ellen's house in Boise
 We stopped in to see Velvet and Carl in West Jordan then drove to Keith and Robyn's in Grantsville
 Curtis riding cousin Bailey's horse
 Curtis playing with cousin Andy

 Michael and Jason trying out Keith's jeep

Next stop: Nebraska enroute to Nauvoo