Image: Clarion Hotel and Nantasket
Our hotel, the Clarion, Nantasket. It was some 25 miles outside Boston in a town strung along a narrow spit of land stretching into Boston Bay. A water taxi from nearby crossed into Boston and also called at the airport - which was the way we returned at the end of the stay.
Image: Plimoth Plantation composite 1
With Dave, Tara and Simon we spent a day at Plimoth Plantation. It's a reconstruction of the original Mayflower settlers village with actors 'living the life' of the colonists. Part of it is a group of native American houses. They have staff drawn from the Wampanoag people who dress, describe and demonstrate the kind of culture their ancestors would have known. The sign at the entrance was particularly appropriate.
Image: Plimoth Plantation - Wampanoag
The Wampanoag family - the man explaining about the hut (or should that be lodge?) and the woman with her child cooking quayle over a wood fire. She said the habit was not to eat set meals as a family but to eat when each individual felt hungry. Food was always being prepared. So what we consider 'grazing' is not so new.
Image: Plimoth Plantation
Here's a view down the main street. a wooden fort stands at the top of the village (behind the camera position) with a stockade around it to take the settlers in times of trouble. Wooden houses and fences make up the settlement. Farm animals and crops occupy fields. The man in the picture talked to visitors about the village and what had happened to the Mayflower pilgrims. His knowledge seemed endless and his stories came out naturally and well in character. As his audience was usually uncertain how to carry on a conversation with him his performance tended to be a monologue which could have gone on for ever. As it happened, anyone interested in the story of the Plimoth Plantation would have wanted it to, he was so good.
The strange spelling of the place? Named for the town in England, the village is given different spellings by the same author in the most influential contemporary history of the times.
Image: Plimoth Plantation
The stockade and fort on the left: the centre top photo shows the church on the ground floor of the fort. A bread oven stands in the open while sheep graze and visitors gaze.
Image: Plimoth Plantation - house scene
A brother and sister living in a small wooden house. Simon was fascinated by the man showing how a steel struck against a flint produced sparks which set fire to tinder. The small home looked pretty complete. Outside was a plot of land where they grew vegetables and corn and raised some animals.
Image: Plimoth Plantation composite 7
A three-dimensional, real world with all five senses engaged beats those new-fangled media (you know, books, TV, virtual reality gizmos) - beats them hollow when it comes to first-hand experiences.
Image: Plimoth Plantation composite 8
At a visitor centre tucked away to one side there are craftspeople making items for use in the museum buildings and educational programmes. It also helps to explain to the public how these goods are made today - often using an old style but with tools giving a more efficient, quality output. The wear and tear on artifacts like these can be much higher.
Here are the potter, upholsterer and basket weaver.
Image: Near Boston - lunch
Lunch! American equivalent of fish and chips - octopus, shrimp and other fish in batter, with fries and clam chowder. Heaven!
Image: Plymouth Rock
Plymouth Rock. The Mayflower Pilgrims landed near here.
Image: Boston - Museum of Science
Animal life (and after life) at the Boston Museum of Science - including the prototype computer mouse, bottom right. The reptile is real.
Image: Boston - Museum of Science
Boston and its harbour - push-button lights to identify places; a chameleon; an illustration of map projections and their distortions; the garage where William R Hewlett and David Packard founded their company in Palo Alto in 1939, starting the growth of 'silicon valley'; a member of the Museum's skeleton staff forms a case study showing bone articulation when bicycling; a baby incubator - the original only aroused medical support when showed at a Coney Island Fair before World War I and was used to help premature babies survive.
Image: Boston - old and new
Boston packs in many historic buildings at one scale among a heap of modern buildings at another. The effect can be to over power what is distinctly Bostonian as applied to Anywhereonearthian. Above they range from the State Capitol to a reconstruction of TV's 'Cheers' bar at Quincey Market, where we had lunch.
Image: Quincey Market
This is Quincey Market. It's at the centre of an area of urban renewal based on shopping and eating. At home in Halifax a lot of the renewal of the old centre followed what had been done in Boston and other US cities.
Image: Boston - Fanueil Hall
Fanueil Hall (apparently, but not according to everyone, rhymes with 'Nathanial'). Meeting room above souvenir shops, with a park ranger on duty.
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