Sunday, February 19, 2012

The Baby

One of the big reasons for the purchase of our new house is so that we can finally take in our Baby.  The Baby has been living in a foster home since August of 2010 when we moved it out of my parents' home in preparation for the estate sale.  We simply do not have room for it here.  It will have a prominent spot in the living room at the new house.  This piano has been in my family since 1913.


The story goes that my great-grandparents -named Roehm - had a piano for my grandmother's sister Lucille.  Aunt Lucille was one of those rare and lucky people who could hear a song and sit down and play it without any music.  Well, that first piano was lost in the flood of 1913 that hit Dayton.  One of the first things my great-grandfather bought after the house was cleaned out was another piano - this one.  Someplace in storage I have a little booklet that records his monthly payments to the piano store.  I think the piano cost him $500, and I think he might have paid $5 a month on it.  

So this piano was in their home until they both passed away.  The piano then went to another aunt who didn't play the piano.  I'm not sure why she was the one to get it, but I suspect Aunt Lucille didn't have room either.  Before Aunt Kay had a place to put the piano, it "visited" my grandmother's home.  My mother was a young girl at this time, and she desperately wanted to take piano lessons.  Grandpa couldn't afford lessons for most of the time the piano was there, but then just when they got her signed up for lessons, Aunt Kay took the piano back, leaving my mother with no piano to take lessons on.  She was heartbroken, and she carried that with her all her life.  

When I was about 7, we moved to a house big enough for a piano, and getting me one was very high on my mother's agenda.  My parents bought an old upright from some neighbors who were moving and put it in our family room.  I started taking lessons at age 8 and continued until I was 16 when we moved to a new town.  

Once I moved out on my own, I never had room for a piano.  I bought an electric keyboard, and that worked well for travel because I could take it to visit grandparents for small concerts, but it was a weak substitute.  In 1995, my mother finally inherited the family Chickering from Aunt Kay, so my upright got moved to the basement, and the Chickering got a place of prominence in the family room.  

When my parents passed away, I chose to leave the old upright at their house (the buyers said they wanted it), and I had the Chickering moved to the home of some friends until I could take it.  These friends have been loving foster parents, and their teenage son has loved playing it, but now it will finally take its rightful place in my home after all these years.  

I think we might just have a Welcome Home party for The Baby, but not until I've had a chance to practice first!


Next Blog

Hello Readers!
Do you see that little link at the top of your screen right now that says "Next Blog"?


Have you ever clicked on that?


Well, let me tell you, if you haven't, you should.  Each click has the potential to take you to a new and interesting world.  It is not unlike clicking the channel-changer on your TV remote, only with this, you have no idea what you're going to get.  (Unlike the TV when you can be 95% sure you're going to land on a commercial with a baby or a dog in it.)


Every time I get in the mood to browse the blogs, I find things of interest.  If I chose to "Follow" every interesting one I find, I'd have a follow-list a mile long and no time to actually follow them all, so I've stopped "Following" unless I just can't pass one by.  


In today's browsing, I read about a restaurant someone visited on their trip to France, saw some lovely photos of unique homes in Mexico, learned about some interesting places to visit on my next trip to New England and saw some really interesting artwork.  Best of all, the writing of all of these blogs was lively and fun to read, which totally restores my faith in the English classes of the world!  


So, the next time you have a few minutes to spare, and after you've read MY latest entry, which of course is really why you are here after all, hit "Next Blog" and see where the road takes you!  I guarantee you will enjoy the journey!


Happy Browsing!  



Smooth Sailing after Inspection

The home inspection was completed on Friday, February 17.  While our inspector wasn’t Mike Holmes, he was very thorough.  Gary arrived an hour before we did and completed much of the main inspection, then his assistant continued with some tasks while Gary took us around and talked to us about every little detail.  He spent 2 hours explaining everything – roof, inside and out, foundation, windows and doors, furnace, water heater, fuse box, plumbing. 

As Gary was talking, I was taking pictures and making notes.  I photographed curtain rods, appliances, closets – things I am going to wonder about while we wait for the next 5 weeks to get the keys.  And I measured things.  This task is made much easier by the fact that the new house is the same floor plan as the old house.  Although Hubby says the new house is 1 foot shorter from end to end, we aren’t finding it. 

When we arrived, we got to meet the seller and his agent.  Then during the exterior inspection we met the neighbor to the west.  Just as we were finishing up and about to walk out the door we met the neighbor to the east who came over to bring back the seller’s little dog.   Both neighbors were very friendly and seemed like they will be great neighbors.  

The upshot of the inspection was that everything seems to be in excellent shape.   A few hours later we got a full report as a PDF on email, complete with many photos and details of every little thing. 

I think we like the house even better now than we did the first time we saw it!  On Saturday we ventured out and did some exploratory shopping.    We had a nice discussion with the salesman at Rite Rug about carpeting.  We learned some things, and we found some carpet we both like.  At this time, we aren’t sure if we will go with them or with someone else.  We also visited La Z Boy Gallery and looked at couches.  We learned a bit more about what works for us and what doesn’t.  We found a style and color we both like and got some info. 

Saturday night we brainstormed a wish-list of changes and added some cost estimates beside each one.  One important factor for me in making the initial list was that we not censor ourselves, but really put everything down we could think of or might want to change/fix.  

So, that’s where things stand.  It should be smooth sailing on the house purchase now until closing on March 23.  Then the REAL work begins!

Sunday, February 12, 2012

The Adventure Begins

First, some background:

For the last 1.5 years, Hubby and I have been house-hunting. We’ve both actively looked online and watched the papers. We’ve done many drive-bys and attended numerous open houses. The search has been a roller-coaster of emotions. First comes the excitement and uphill climb of finding something that “might be the one” only to suffer the screaming down-hill effect of the realization that there are major deal-breakers that make this house, in fact, NOT “the one”.

The last time we house-hunted was in 2001 when we were preparing to move from Lima to Westerville. We were sort of in a hurry because we just had a summer to get moved before school started, so we weren’t really too picky, and we weren’t thinking in terms of buying a house we’d be in for more than 5 years or so. Our main goal was just to get here. We also didn’t know much at all about the local market, nor about how to buy a house because we’d never done it before. Luckily we had a very good realtor to guide us, and we ended up in a decent house where we’ve been fairly comfortable for almost 11 years.

Since then, we’ve watched way too many hours of shows on TV: everything from This Old House on PBS to the big house shows on HGTV like House Hunters, Holmes on Homes and Holmes Inspection, and lots of shows featuring remodels and renovations. We now know just enough to be dangerous to ourselves and to the real estate market!

Last week, along with another screaming ride down on the roller-coaster of happiness into the valley of despair, came the realization that what we thought we wanted and needed in a dream house really might not be out there – at least not within a comfortable driving distance of school. Not to be deterred by that realization though, and pushed to find a solution by my tearful declaration that I really didn’t want to spend the rest of my life without my piano, Hubby sprang to the challenge and found the perfect end to our house hunt. It was under our very noses! “The house around the corner is for sale,” he proudly declared! So? “So, we buy it!” Um…. Yeah….? “Yeah, and we live in BOTH houses!!!” WHAT? “Seriously, I’ve got it all figured out…” He then proceeded to spend the next half hour reading to me his list of reasons and explaining that this was really a very good idea. He was right! It is a BRILLIANT idea!

We contacted our realtor and said we wanted to see the “House of Interest”, and an appointment was set up. As we walked into this house with our realtor (the same realtor who helped us in 2001), he asked if we were interested in this for comparison purposes. It does, after all, have almost exactly the same floor plan as the house we live in now, so that was a very natural question. Hubby looked at me, and I looked at him as if to say, “it was YOUR idea, YOU tell him”! We explained why we thought it would make sense to buy it – and live in it – and our realtor was amazingly supportive. He could have told us we were nuts – that this just isn’t done – that no one he knows has ever done this! But he didn’t do any of those things. He took it all in stride and was totally non-judgemental.

That was on Thursday night. On Saturday morning, we signed an offer on the house, and by 1:30 pm on Sunday, an agreement had been reached. We close on March 23, just in time to have the keys in ours hands by Spring Break!

And so, the great adventure begins! It is an experiment in dual-house living. It is an experiment in coordination and planning. One priority is to keep this adventure from over-taking our lives to the point where it interferes with our ability to do what we need to do (or to remain sane)! Our skeptics may speculate that we are really splitting up, and this is just a nice way to do that. Not so! If anything we will have to work more closely on this than on anything we’ve ever done in 30 years of marriage. We are looking at it as a “project” that we are embarking on together, and we plan on enjoying every step of the process. This is about enriching our lives by giving ourselves the space we’ve needed. We’ve felt very much “pinched” for the last 11 years – into a house that is really too small to fully meet our needs. We have had to sacrifice some of our interests due to lack of space. No more! We will now have more than 2500 square feet of living space: 6 bedrooms, 2 living rooms, 2 dining rooms and 2 kitchens, a 3 car garage and a glorious, spacious, well-built 3-season room! It isn’t really all that different than having a primary home and a vacation home – ours just happen to be within walking distance of each other.

I intend to blog about the progress of our adventure so that others might share in our joys. Perhaps some readers may realize that this is the perfect solution for them as well. Stay tuned…. The next step is the inspection! Since it probably won’t be Mike Holmes doing the inspecting, we will be looking over his shoulder until he swats us like noisy flies!

Update on the Healing Process


We’ve just passed the 1 month anniversary of the death of my colleague.  His hometown funeral was on the Saturday after his death, and then our town/school had a memorial service on the 2nd Saturday after.  I think that our local memorial service really marked a turning point in the healing process.  Until then, there was a huge memorial area set up in a prominent showcase in the front lobby of the school, and there was also a make-shift memorial in the hallway outside his room.  All of that was cleared away in preparation for the formal memorial service which was held in a large church near our school. 

The memorial service was attended by hundreds of people.  Most of our building’s staff members and retirees, many district administrators and former admins, many students and former students and some of their parents attended the service.  Some of our colleague’s family members also drove up from his hometown in spite of the snowy/icy conditions. 

The service was lovely and a very appropriate tribute to his life and showed how loved he was by the entire school community.  Several of his closest friends spoke in loving tribute sharing anecdotes, and several other colleagues performed musical selections, and our school’s show choir sang in his honor as well.  The group even learned a song in Spanish since that is what he taught.   The school even took down a bulletin board which had hung in his room to display at the service.  It was covered with memorabilia that he had collected over his years in that room.

I noticed a definite change in the mood at school after that service was over.  I think that once the school community was able to grieve together at this service, they were able to sort of let go and move on.  We continue to collect money for a scholarship fund in his name, and so there are regular references to him on the announcements as fund-raisers are held.  And certainly there is an air of sadness every time his name is mentioned.  I also know that individuals who were particularly close friends of his are still struggling privately with missing him.   Overall, however, it seems that many aspects of our life at school has returned to normal.  Obviously there is no way to know how much his death has impacted the individuals who knew him the best and worked closely with him daily.  I’m sure there are still students of his who struggle with walking into his room every day. 

I’m sure each situation like this is different in the specifics, but it seems to me that the general healing process for a large group of people probably follows a pattern.  I really didn’t know what to expect.   It has been interesting to watch the grieving process from sort of a close-distance.  Perhaps focusing on the larger process was my own way of dealing with this tragedy.  I’m sure that not a day has gone by yet that I have not thought of him at some point.  

Monday, January 16, 2012

Thoughts After A Tragedy


One week ago, a colleague of mine was murdered in a violent murder/suicide scenario.  While he was caring for his dying mother, his father went off the deep end and shot him, 2 of his mother’s sisters and himself.  It turns out that the father had already done time for murder and had also stabbed his own father at some point after getting out for the first crime.  It also seems that many people who knew him were scared of him and felt he was easily capable of violence again.

However, I digress.  The point of this piece is not the violent father.  Nor is it the loss of my colleague, to whom I was not particularly close.  The point rather is the complex reaction that I’ve seen around me to the tragedy.

I don’t know for sure when the tragedy was first reported on the local news.  It happened on Monday evening, and I don’t know if it made the 11:00 local reports.  I first heard it on TV on Tuesday morning about 6:45 when I was getting dressed for school.  I know that the administration of my school learned about it sometime late Monday evening, because a mass email was sent out at 11:59 pm announcing an emergency staff meeting for 7 am the next morning. (An email which I didn’t get until I got to school and fired up my email because I am not “plugged in” with a smart phone.) I also know that some people on the administrative team were called at 2 am.

I presume school administrators have some sort of crisis management plan in place with protocols to deal with things like this.  They must have some sort of plan because it seems clear that they acted swiftly to mobilize others.  Before school officially opened on Tuesday morning, there was a team of counselors at school ready to talk with grieving students and staff.   This is just one of many reasons I am glad I am not an administrator. 

I remember that when the tragedies of 9/11 happened, one of the things I thought about was the emotional cloud that hung over everyday life.  In the days that followed, as we were all subjected to daily reports and videos on TV, it felt like everyone was acting differently.  Even though people went on with their daily activities of going to the grocery, going to work, etc… there was a noticeable change in mood.  I think even the mood of children changed.  Even if they were too young to understand the magnitude of what had happened, they felt a change in the adults around them which affected them. At some point I found myself wondering how long the cloud would hang over us to the point where it was noticeable in public.  How long would it be before the tragedy was not the first thing I thought about when I woke up and the last thing I thought about before going to sleep?  How long would it be before I would actually go through an entire day without thinking about the tragedy?  I don’t know the answer to any of those questions because I didn’t keep track, but I do know that there did come a point when the cloud lifted and when the tragedy was no longer a part of my daily consciousness.  There was a point at which a direct trigger like a news report was needed for me to remember the events of 9/11.

On Tuesday of last week, as I watched the reactions of those around me to this recent, local tragedy, I decided to pay attention to the change in mood to see how it evolved.  On Tuesday there was a silence at school.  There was not the usual noise in the halls between classes.  When people did speak, they did so more quietly than usual. It was as if the volume of life had been turned down several notches.  “Loud” seemed offensive.  Also, many people cried openly and uncontrollably.  Many other people were on the verge of tears all day.  There was school work that was done, but it seemed to be done with apology and with a feeling that we might as well work because the alternative was to sit around and cry more. 

The only class in which I totally abandoned my scheduled lesson was in Intro to Theatre class.  I had planned to talk about Oedipus the King that day.  Somehow the idea of talking about a man who killed his father, married his mother, had children with her and then gouged his eyes out when he realized the truth didn’t seem to be appropriate for the day.  I asked the kids if they would like to watch a movie instead – they said yes.  In going through the box of the movies I usually show in theatre classes, I found Les Miz – too tragic and violent, Phantom of the Opera – too creepy,  Jekyll & Hyde – both violent and creepy.  Even the old classic The King and I ends in death.   Then I hit upon two comedies I usually show in Acting class: Tootsie and Mrs. Doubtfire.  No death, no tragedy…  Mrs. Doubtfire won the toss.  Finally, on Friday, after the movie was over, we talked about Oedipus. 

Tuesday’s lunch period was difficult.  Many of the people I eat lunch with were very close to our fallen Warrior.  I almost hesitated to go into the room where the teachers eat, and I thought perhaps others would stay away as well, but it seemed people wanted to be together in their grief.  I was also surprised that people were actually eating.  Some people have trouble eating when they are grief-stricken.  The discussion was about our colleague, and about what was being said on the news, and about arrangements that were being made.  A few people, those closest to him, seemed on the verge of tears, but no one cried openly at lunch. 

By Wednesday, the general mood of the school was still somber, but it didn’t seem that as many people were still on the verge of tears.  Perhaps those who had cried were cried-out.  The halls were still quieter than normal but not silent as they had been on Tuesday.

By Thursday, the noise was returning to the halls, and while there were select individuals whose mood seemed to be affected, the number of people exhibiting visible reactions was smaller.  There was even a fight in the cafeteria at lunch (2 of my students).   At some point on Thursday, a memorial had been set up in a showcase in the front lobby, moving some of the flowers and tokens that had been left in the hallway outside his room to a more prominent place.

On Thursday evening, we had our first snowstorm of the season, and there was some expectation that we might have a delay or cancellation on Friday.  Morning travel was challenging for many drivers and some of our busses were late arriving, so the talk of the day became more about the snow and less about the tragedy.  It felt as if people welcomed something else to think and talk about.  The noise level in the hall was close to normal, and talk at lunch was about driving to the funeral on Saturday, also in relation to the winter weather. 

So far, there has not been a day when I have not thought about the tragedy that happened to my colleague and to those in his life.  On Saturday I will attend the local memorial service for him, and I am sure that thoughts about that will stick with me for awhile afterward.   I expect the week ahead at school to be much like last week as preparations for the memorial continue and announcements are made about fund-raisers for the memorial scholarship fund.   When will the day come when I do not think at all about the tragedy?  Of course, noting that day means thinking about it and therefore negates it, unless the realization comes later.

I am left with some questions which will never be answered.  How much of the response to this tragedy was more about the dramatic nature of the tragic event than about him?  How much of this same mood/feeling/reaction would have existed if he’d been killed in a more common way, like a car accident?  What about if he’d had an illness or sudden health crisis like a heart attack?  Did he realize how much he was loved?

Of course tragedies like this serve as reminders to us that we never really know what might happen from one moment to the next.  Are we all living life to the fullest with the idea that any moment may be our last?  Are we all showing signs of appreciation and affection to our loved ones lest this be their last moment?  Are we all truly “not sweating the small stuff”?

I’m sure there will be people for whom this tragedy remains fresh and painful for a long time – months, years.  There will be people who think about it every day for the rest of their lives, but it will pass out of the daily consciousness at school for many people.  It seems trite to say, but it really is true – life goes on and wounds heal.  Sadly, there will always be other tragedies for other people in other schools to deal with.  I hope this will be the last one for me.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Cool Art

I was surfing the web today and came across an artist I've never seen before by the name of Ben Heine.

Here is a link to his website:  BenHeine.com

His Pencil vs. Camera creations are my favorite - very unique.  This is the sort of thing I'd like to hang on my walls...

Saturday, September 24, 2011

The End of an Era

I wish I could say the title of today’s entry was original with me; however, the NBC Nightly News used it on Friday, Sept. 23, 2011 before I had the chance to get my entry posted here. 

The End of an Era refers, of course, to the last episode of ABC’s soap opera All My Children.  I’m not quite sure why I feel the need to record my reaction to it here, but as I was watching, I thought to myself that I needed to write about this in my blog. 

All My Children started broadcasting in January of 1970.  I’m not sure exactly when I first became aware of it, but it was in the early ‘70s.   I can remember that I was taking piano lessons from Mrs. O’Neill, and often got to her house early and had to wait for the person ahead of me to get finished.  While I waited I would sit in the family room where her teen age daughter was watching it.  That’s how I got interested.  At some point, my lesson time changed, and I was home when it was on and started watching it myself.  I only watched it in the summer and on Christmas vacation days because it was on when I was at school – this was long before such a thing existed as the VCR. 

I paid attention to the show off and on throughout the ‘70s and ‘80s, but at some point I stopped watching regularly.  For many years I was able to keep up with the basic story line without watching every day, or even every week, but there came a time during the ‘90s when there were more characters I didn’t know than ones that I did. 

It just so happened that I had a vacation day yesterday, so I decided to watch the final episode, just because I could.   There were many people I knew:  Erica and Jack of course, Tad and Dixie (who supposedly died), Opal, Brooke and Adam/Stuart, Jesse and Angie. 

I found it interesting how they incorporated the ending of the show into the story line.  Angie talked extensively about friends who had known each other for 20, 30, even 40 years.  It was very clear that the lines were intended to have a double meaning.  It was interesting too that they found ways to bring back people who had been off the show for years (like Dixie and Brooke), and to have a big party at the Chandler Mansion was very appropriate – especially since the entry way and living room looked amazingly like the old Tyler/Wallingford Mansion.  Interesting also that it was Tad Martin who was chosen to do the big speech (as a toast), in which he too talked about Family, Friends and Neighbors who had all known each other for many years.  He made a joke about remembering them since high school.  Again, everything he said had a double meaning for those who knew the story of the story.   Of course, everyone in the scene was crying, and I’m sure many viewers were as well – as was I (but then I’ve been known to cry over Hallmark commercials!). 

I have to say that I found the ending of the show very disappointing.  The final lines, spoken by Erica and Jack, were a straight throwback to Gone With the Wind:
Erica: Jack wait!  This isn’t how I want this to end!
Jack: Frankly Erica, I don’t give a DAMN what you want. 
At least Erica didn’t follow it up with how tomorrow’s going to be another day!

Then there was the gunshot that rang out as the scene cut to black.  I was first reminded of the famous cliffhanger on Dallas – Who shot JR? - and more recently of The Sopranos which ended similarly. 

So, to me, it was disappointing that after 41 years on the air, they couldn’t come up with an original ending.  I know there have been many references made over the years to how much alike Scarlet O’Hara and Erica Kane were, but still…. Really?  Maybe all the writers were so busy crying that they just didn’t have it in them to be original in the end.  Maybe it was an inside joke that they just couldn’t pass up. 

I would like to have been a fly on the wall in the studio after the tape stopped rolling.  I’m sure the rap party was huge and very emotional.  I know how emotionally connected students get when they work on a musical for 8 weeks, so I can imagine what it must be like to work with the same actors on a show like that for many years. 

I’m glad I watched it.  It is a show that is part of my childhood, and the ending of it symbolizes huge changes in viewing habits and interests in my lifetime.  I’m also curious to see what, if anything, happens with it now.  There is talk of it becoming an internet show with or without Erica.  I’d like to see Susan Lucci hit prime time in her own series (either as Erica or not).

Yes, the End of an Era, indeed! 

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

The Help

This summer, one of the books I read was The Help, by Kathryn Stockett.  I also got to see the movie the first week it was out. 

The story is set in Jackson, Mississippi in 1962-1963, with the backdrop of the Civil Rights Movement.  It is historical fiction.  The main character is a young white woman who decides to write a book that highlights the life-experience of the black domestic servants in her town.  To do so, she enlists the help of first 1, then 2, then many who share their stories with her.  Eventually their book gets published and read by just about everyone in town.  Of course, this stirs a pot which is already boiling.

The movie does a very good job of depicting the story in the book, but as is usually the case, the book has a lot more complexity than the movie.  Some things in the book are de-emphasized in the movie, some are left out totally, and at least 1 key issue in the book is changed. 

I loved the book so much that I was sad when I finished it.  I could hardly wait to see the movie, and I enjoyed it as well, in spite of the fact that I cried at several points.  This is absolutely something I will encourage friends to read and see, and I will recommend it to my students as well.  My freshmen always read To Kill A Mockingbird  in the fall, and this movie will be a great supplement to that book.

I found several connections to this story which made it more meaningful to me than it might be to others.  When I was a child growing up near Dayton, OH, 2 of my great aunts had black domestic help.  The woman I remember the most was named Henrietta, and she worked for my Aunt S. and Uncle H.  There was also a black man who did yard work and was sort of a handyman for them.  His name was John, and he was related in some way to Henrietta.  Then Henrietta’s daughter Anna also worked first for my Aunt K, and then later for my grandmother. 

Henrietta worked for my great aunt and uncle for many years, and she had replaced a woman named Geneva (the 2 women were cousins) who had also worked for them for many years, starting around 1940.  It seems her main tasks were to clean, do laundry/ironing and cook. She worked until about 3 pm each week day.  There were always fresh homemade cookies available.  Geneva was like a member of the family to them, and Uncle H. paid for her funeral when she passed away around 1954.  Both Geneva and Henrietta were known for being excellent cooks.  When I was a child, it was common for Aunt S. to have big family gatherings at her home, and Henrietta usually did most of the cooking.  I think Aunt S worked with her though, moreso than we see depicted in The Help.

I was around these people in the early ‘60s, until about 1967 when we moved away (I was 8 when we moved away).  During those years, these servants were the only black people I had any interactions with.  Henrietta always treated me very kindly and called me “Miss Amy”.   She was a very large woman with a big gold tooth that showed when she talked and smiled.  Whenever I saw her, she was wearing a uniform.

Anna worked for my grandmother into at least the mid ’70s and mostly did cleaning and laundry/ironing.  Grandma always said she did the best ironing of anyone she’d ever known.  I don’t think Anna did much cooking for Grandma.  I remember that she rode the city bus to my grandmother’s house once a week.  She always wore a blue uniform dress with a white collar and white shoes that I usually associated with nurses.  Anna and Grandma would have lunch together at the kitchen table and talk about everything under the sun.  I think they actually became quite good friends, and they were very much mutually respectful of each other.

John was the largest man I had ever seen, and was also the darkest black person I had ever seen.  His eyes were quite large and very white in contrast to his skin.  Because of his size and dark color, I was always scared of him, so whenever he was around, I usually went somewhere else.

I don’t know how the issue of the help using the family bathroom was handled at my Aunt S’s house.  That house had a finished basement with a bathroom near the laundry room, so it is possible that was the bathroom for the help, but knowing my aunt and uncle as I did, it is hard for me to imagine that being an issue for them.  I do know that my Aunt K only had one bathroom, and I know that my grandmother’s helper used her main bathroom as well. 

It seems to me and based on what I’ve learned from my cousin that many middle class white families in Dayton had black domestic help from as early as the 1930’s into the 1970’s, although I think the practice was fading fast in the late ’60s and early ‘70s after the Civil Rights Movement. 

Sunday, August 7, 2011

New Hampshire 2011 – Trip Summary


Day 4 – Wednesday, July 27, 2011

All along, the plan had been to take the Cog Railroad up to the top of Mt. Washington on Wednesday, our final day at the hotel.  We specifically waited because all the weather forecasts for a week had been saying that Wednesday would be the best day of the week and would be clear. 

Well, let me tell you – Wednesday was anything but clear!  It was very cloudy when we got up.  Not only was the top of Mt. Washington in the clouds, so were all the other lower mountain tops around us.  Then, it started to rain.  Tickets for the cog railroad are $64, so we were not going to waste the money and the 3 hours going up into a cloud where we wouldn’t be able to see anything.  At first we thought we could wait it out, but checks of the radar indicated that probably wasn’t going to work.

And so we went with Plan B.  We checked out of the hotel and took a different route home than we had taken going up.  Instead of taking I 93 down through the center of the state, we headed west and took Rt 10 down the western border of NH.  That route took us through many little towns and gave us the opportunity to see antique shops and scenery that we otherwise would not have gotten to see. 

The town of Bethlehem, NH has quite a few antique shops.  We went in the first one we saw which, I think, was called the Hundred Acre Wood Antiques.  Here is a photo of it.  This place was really fun to explore.  I picked up a few treasures at this place and so did my cousin.  Two treasures I found there were cylinders for Edison phonographs, and the sleeves were different than those I already have with my phonograph.  Also, the cylinders were not broken or chipped, which is hard to find.  At $5 each, I couldn't pass those up.  This is also where I found the postcard of the hotel from "back in the day" which I showed earlier.  



The next shop we stopped in was near Lisbon and was called Corn Crib Antiques and Gifts.  Also a fun place to stop, with a very nice proprietor!  My big find here was a Vermont Maple Syrup bottle.  It has a unique shape and is stamped with the name of the town on it, so I am adding that to my bottle collection.





Next came Bath.  Bath, N.H. turned out to be a gold mine of finds.  It has a gorgeous covered bridge which was still open to drive through.



It also has The Brick Store which is the oldest continuously operating general store in the country.  What a cool place!  The interior was a mix of new things for sale and antiques on display.  They smoke their own meats and cheeses, and they sell fudge that is To-Die-For! I bought some of their smoked cheese, some Vermont cheddar and some fudge - YUM! 





Next to the store is At The Hop.  It’s an ice cream parlor that is decorated to the rafters with memorabilia from the 50's and 60’s – both music and TV.  There are many signed posters and some original artwork.  It is quite the fun place.  I felt a little guilty looking and taking photos without buying any ice cream, but I think the girl who worked there was used to that.







Next to the ice cream parlor was an art gallery run by local artist Craig Pursley.  He creates paintings of the area and people, and he does photography.  I bought two matted photos of the Bath bridge – one taken in fall and one in winter with snow on the water.  Check out his work at this link.  I wanted a painting, but I will have to save up my pennies for the next trip.

Lunch that day was in the town of Woodsville, where we had a great meal at Shiloh’s.  


After lunch, we mainly just rode along and enjoyed the scenery.  I took lots of photos of local barns as we passed them.  There really aren’t many mountain views in this part of the state, especially on a day that isn’t really clear.   There is quite a bit of farmland, and more of what I would call rolling hills. 

We passed through Hanover where Dartmouth is.  There was some sort of art fair or something going on in the town square which was drawing a lot of people and traffic to the center of town.  It was nice to see the lovely college buildings. 

After Hanover was Lebanon where we picked up I-89 and headed back south and east toward the Manchester area where my family lives. 

We did get off the highway one more time to check out Lake Sunapee.  It was a little cool for swimming, so we didn’t see much activity at the lake, but it is a lovely vacation spot with the perfect situation – a ski resort for winter visitors and the lake for the summer.  




After that it was back home to unpack, admire and show off souvenirs and process photos.  I really had a great trip, and I look forward to going back again in the future.  I would definitely recommend New Hampshire as a great vacation spot – it has something for everyone and the scenery just can’t be beat!