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Showing posts with label massachusetts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label massachusetts. Show all posts

Monday, December 20, 2010

Suspended from School

Cambridge, Massachusetts ~ May 6, 2006

I really don't know why this guy is suspended from the ceiling - or if it is a guy, or if he's real. I only remember that we were visiting my cousin, and since his kids were in the science fair being held at MIT, we met them all there. This was the expansive lobby we walked through to get to the science fair. Oddly, I have no recollection of what this bizarre scene was about!

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Friday, April 23, 2010

A Tree Thing in Massachusetts

Masachusetts ~ May 6, 2006

I'm not sure why the tree has a roof. If you enlarge the photo, you can also see the large slot down the left side of the stump. I took this photo from the car riding between Boston and Lexington, so I didn't get a chance to investigate, and I am also not sure about the location. I do love the charming New England architecture, which has a flavor all its own. And the flowers? Always delightful.

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Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Buckman Tavern, Lexington

Lexington, Massachusetts ~ May 7, 2006
Rendezvous of the Minutemen
Now a museum

All history aside, there is a beauty and genteel simplicity about rural New England that feels so different from almost anywhere I'd been before. I've always lived in the Western United States, and I love it. I love the rugged land and so much about it, but there was a specialness here among the flowering trees, green grass, and three-hundred-year-old buildings that had seen it all and seemed the wiser for it.



Built 1709
Rendezvous of the
Minute Men
before the
Battle of Lexington
April 19, 1775


The green commemorating the skirmish is across the street, marked by several plaques and the famous Minuteman statue.

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Saturday, April 3, 2010

One, Two, Three, Infinity

The Harvard Mark I Calculator, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts Cambridge, Massachusetts ~ May 5, 2006
The "Harvard Mark I" Computer
Harvard University

About the Harvard Mark I Calculator, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts
About the Harvard Mark I Calculator, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts You can also read about this history-making monster on Wikipedia.

This blog is sponsored by Tapir and Friends Animal Store.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Airport Ghosts

Empty Rocking Chairs, Logan International Airport, Boston Boston, Massachusetts ~ October 13, 2008
Logan International Airport

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Saturday, March 20, 2010

The Old Ship Church

The Old Ship Church, Hingham, Massachusetts Hingham, Massachusetts ~ May 6, 2006

After reading a couple of your comments, I should say that the huge wooden beams inside are reminiscent of those used in ship-building. I didn't get a chance to see the inside, because it was late in the day when we visited.

"The Old Ship Church is the oldest meetinghouse in continuous ecclesiastical use in the United States" [see The Old Ship Church link above] and is "the only remaining 17th century Puritan meetinghouse in America." It is also famous for its hammerbeam roof, constructed in a bold Gothic style. The Washington Post said, "Within the church, 'the ceiling, made of great oak beams, looks like the inverted frame of a ship.' "

At least two of my immigrant ancestors, Thomas Joy and his wife, Joan Gallop, are buried behind the church along with ancestors of Abraham Lincoln and are still listed on web sites as notable burials in the churchyard. I'll post photos of the cemetery in future blog entries. After arriving in the New World in 1635, Thomas Joy, a carpenter, made his home in Boston, where he built wharves and a number of other buildings. Although styled as "a carpenter," he in fact became one of the area's most prominent builders and architects. He built the first Town-House (Town Hall) in Boston "from his own design," which we know from an extant contract dated 1657. The Town House burned down in 1711 and was replaced by The Old State House.

The building of the Town-House in Boston took place after Joy's return to Boston. He had moved to Hingham (about 12 miles from Boston) about 1646 to enlarge a grist mill and establish a sawmill, and had stayed for a number of years. He had been persecuted in Boston by Governor Winthrop because Joy had signed a petition to grant suffrage to a greater number of men than had been allowed under the colonial government which, "since 1631 had restricted the right of suffrage to the members of the local Puritan churches, excluding more than three-fourths of the adult male population from any participation in public affairs." [Thomas Joy and His Descendants, p. 14, by James Richard Joy.] Thomas Joy had acquired property in both locations, but died in Hingham in 1678.

Thomas died a few years before the 1681 construction date given for The Old Ship Meeting House, but it has many features of Boston's first Town House, which Thomas Joy designed and built. The 1681 Old Ship replaced a "first rude meetinghouse." I don't see Thomas Joy listed anywhere in conjunction with the design of The Old Ship Meetinghouse, but his influence was certainly felt and emulated.

I would also like to honor the memory of Bradner (Brad) Petersen, and thank him posthumously for compiling and writing the book, Ancestry of the Jameson,Gilbert, Joy, Skinner and Related Families, which has been and continues to be such a tremendous resource for me.

This blog is sponsored by Tapir and Friends Animal Store.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Would Thoreau Have Been Surprised?

Painted Trash Can at Walden PondWalden Pond near Concord, Massachusetts ~
May 7, 2006

This painted trash can stands only a few paces from the tiny cabin (or its replica?) where Henry David Thoreau began his two-year experiment in simple living, beginning July 4, 1845.

This blog is sponsored by Tapir and Friends Animal Store.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Monday, February 8, 2010

Mt. Auburn in Spring

Mt. Auburn Cemetery, Watertown, Massachusetts - Spring Flowering Trees Mt. Auburn Cemetery, Watertown/Cambridge, Massachusetts ~
May 8, 2006

We sought out this place on the map because I have a number of ancestors buried here. What I hadn't realized was how beautiful the place would be, or how historic.

January 3, 2012: I'm revisiting this post today to link it to the "Taphophile Tragics" meme. Check it out!

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