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Tagged With: traveling in the US

Day six Chancellorsville and Spotsylvania

  If you read my blog yesterday you know that I explained Appomattox Court House is a town.  Today I am going to tell you that Chancellorsville is not a town, it is a house!  Go figure.  The battle of Chancellorsville is really interesting.  The Union was defeated, mostly by itself, and had about 17,000 … Continue reading »

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Day five – Appomattox Court House

  First off, I’d like to explain that Appomattox Court house is not a courthouse.  It is a town that is the county seat of Appomattox County.  This is important because if Grant would have asked Lee to meet him at the courthouse, Lee would have assumed he was going to be arrested and tried … Continue reading »

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Day Four –Confederate Relic Museum and Greensboro, North Carolina

In 1896 members of the Daughters of the Confederacy founded a museum in Columbia, South Carolina.  The point of the museum was to do two things.  First, to keep and protect the history of the Confederacy and second, to help the history of the Confederacy to become a part of the whole history of the … Continue reading »

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Day three- Fort Sumter and a kayak trip!

Fort Sumter was built in 1829.  It is an island at the mouth of Charleston Harbor, and perfectly positioned to defend Charleston from invaders coming from the Atlantic.  The island is man-made.  They sunk 70,000 tons of granite plus bricks from local plantations to create the foundation of the island. In April 12th at 4:30 … Continue reading »

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Day two- Boone Hall, Gullah Culture, walking tour of Charleston and Old Slave Market

This morning dawned partly cloudy, very warm and humid.  I, however, was sleeping at the time!  We had an 8:45 start to our day today.  We started out at Boone Hall.  This is a plantation with amazing history.  The original plantation house was built in 1681 on 500 acres that was granted to John Boone … Continue reading »

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Day one of the 2013 Teaching American History Grant Trip

  I’ve been up since 2:30 am this morning.  We hit the airport in Denver by 3:30.  The good thing about that horrible time of the night is that there was no waiting at security! We flew first to Chicago and then transferred flights and ended up here in Charleston, South Carolina.  Thirty teachers plus … Continue reading »

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Jellyfish

Last summer, we had the great fortune to be able to snorkel at Buck Island Reef National Monument near St. Croix in the US Virgin Islands.  Buck Island snorkeling is really great.  There’s a kind of canyon of rock and coral that you can snorkel over.  The park service has added markers on the sea … Continue reading »

Categories: Banishing the word should!, Random thoughts on being me | Leave a comment

What a delight, to be alive and in the mountains on the first day of Fall!

Thursday evening we decided to go camping near Bridger Peak for the weekend.  An hour later the trailer was full of food and water and hooked up with the 4-wheelers on behind.  After work on Friday, we were off! Saturday morning brought us an absolutely beautiful, mountain morning.  The Fall colors were perfect, the weather … Continue reading »

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Philadelphia with Teaching American History Grant

I’m just back from ten days in Philadelphia and Washington, D.C.  with thirty-one teachers and a terrific professor as our guide, mentor and teacher. We all read and wrote papers all winter to prepare for the trip – focusing on the Revolutionary War and the writing of the Constitution. Here are highlights from my trip: Tuesday, June … Continue reading »

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Boston 2011 – Looking Back at Boston

Fenway Park before the game. The hot dogs were great , company was fun, and the Sox won! Last summer I went to Boston along with about 30 other teachers on a Teaching American History grant.  At that time, I posted these blog entries on another site.  Since I just this summer have returned from the second year … Continue reading »

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