Wednesday, August 26, 2015

🚗 2015 ~ August 25, Tuesday, Murfreesboro, Tennessee


We rode to St Joseph Tennessee for lottery tickets. It was getting close to lunchtime so we stopped in Lawrenceburg at Ponderosa for lunch.
At 11:23 AM, I ordered a sirloin steak medium well, baked potato, and salad with iced tea to drink.
My husband ordered a New York strip, baked potato, and salad bar with iced tea to drink.
Filled up with gas at Murphy Gas at 12:19PM in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee.

We left Lawrenceburg traveling to Murfreesboro for a day of adventure.


We arrived at Stones River National Battlefields Museum in Murfreesboro around 2PM. We were given a brochure about the Stones River National Battlefield and the Trail of Tears.
We watched a five-minute video about one of the worst battles fought during the Civil War. 
Home Sweet Home, was probably the last song many of the soldiers heard. Many men on both sides perished the next day.
Stones River National Battlefields  Cemetery

Stones River National Battlefields Museum

Stones River National Battlefields Cemetery
After the video, we walked through the museum stopping to read and take pictures. In the gift shop, we bought four postcards.
  1. Battle of Stones River Murfreesboro Tennessee-More than 81,000 soldiers fought at Stones River, and 23,000 were killed, wounded, or captured. After this ferocious battle, fought from December 31, 1862, to January 2, 1863, the Union Army controlled middle Tennessee and prepared to advance to Chattanooga. The Chicago firm of Kurz and Allison published this print of the Battle of Stones River in 1891. Print Library of Congress
  2. Courthouse of Murfreesboro, print by, J.Thompson
  3. Stones River NB Murfreesboro, TN Hazen Brigade Monument   In the months following the Battle of Stones River members of the Ninth Indiana Infantry built a monument to make the place where their brigade held their ground against four Confederate attacks on December 31, 1862. The Hazen Brigade Monument is the oldest intact Civil War monument in the nation. Print Library of Congress
  4. Stones River National Battlefield Murfreesboro, Tennessee The last Confederate attack on January 2, 1863, drove the Union soldiers across the Stones River. The pursuing Confederates ran into a storm of iron from fifty-seven cannons and fell back. Union forces then surged back across the river bringing the battle to a bloody close. Print Library of Congress
We rode over to the National Cemetery to take a few pictures. We rode through the trail but did not stop to listen at each site because we did not arrive until late. 

Our next stop was the Oaklands Historic Home Museum.
The tour had stopped at 3PM we arrived at about 3:10 but that was ok because the curator said we could walk around outside and take pictures.

The once 274-acre Oakland Plantation was now a park and museum.
I took pictures of the markers telling about the Oakland Mansion, the Manley Family, Agriculture and Gardening, Oakland Mansion Watching from the window, official Symbols of Tennessee, History Tree, Tennessee Trail of Trees, Slavery, Plantation Life, Maney spring, Wetland Ecosystem, Wetland Plants and Animals, The Civil War, NB Forrest’s Raid on Murfreesboro, the Occupied City.
In the museum, I purchased a card by artist Phil Ponder that had a picture of the mansion and on the back the history of the mansion.
Oaklands Historic Home Museum

Oaklands Historic Home Museum Card
The Oaklands Historical House Museum
The Oaklands plantation began as a 274-acre land grant which was given as a reward for military service in the American Revolutionary War. The owner Colonel Hardy Murfree died in 1809 resulting in Oaklands being inherited by his daughter Sally. She and her husband Dr James Maney and their family lived in the one-and-one-half story, two-and-one-half-room brick house with wood plank floors. After Sally died in 1857, the plantation was passed to her son Lewis and his wife Rachel. Just before the War Between the States, Oakland encompassed 1500 acres and a beautiful almost 10,000 square foot home.

On July 13, 1862, Confederate forces under the command of General Nathan Bedford Forrest prevailed against the Union Army on Oakland property. The area remained in Confederate control until the Union Army won the Battle of Stones River in January.
Due to the ravages and aftermath of the war, the Maney family was forced to sell the plantation and eventually fell into great despair. In the 1950s ten women formed the Oaklands Association and bought the property from the City of Murfreesboro with the commitment to open the home as a museum. They did … in just one year!
The artist 
Phil Ponder, a resident of Middle Tennessee, has been producing for nearly 35 years, original pen and ink watercolors and limited prints of historic homes and important buildings in the area.

Our next stop was the Cannonsburg Village a Bicentennial Community 1776-1976.

Where I took pictures and we visited the tollgate, Uncle Dave Macon's marker, a memorial to Jessee Medick, 1900s Telephone building, University House, Ash Hopper, Williamson Chapel, Loom House (one-room Log Cabin), Rio Mill marker, Word’s Largest Cedar Bucket, Doctor’s Office, County Store, The McKnight House 1860, Village Loom House, Rawlins Tractor Shed, Leeman House, Haynes Museum, L&N Caboose, F.L. Westbrooks, Murfreesboro and the occupied & Stones River Region Car Club, AACA


Mill
In 1855, W.S. Huggins and Company built a four-story brick mill building on this site. It was powered by two twenty-five horsepower engines with a capacity of 200 barrels of flour per day. In 1860, William Spence bought the mill. Both the Confederate and the United States armies used the building. After the war, it was converted to a cotton gin by Farmer's Gin Company. Later owned by C.N. Haynes, it was demolished in 1990.

Gordon's School House
 The one-room schoolhouse shows the determination of 19th-century settlers to provide their children with a basic education. After a community had a building for classes, its citizens would hire a teacher with money raised by public subscription. Students were grouped according to grades, with girls on one side and boys on the other. All grades studied spelling and the three Rs. Classes would last only to fifteen minutes each, with two or three recesses per day. Since it was not possible to find an existing period schoolhouse, this one was created from logs that came from a large corncrib located in Southern Rutherford County

Williamson Chapel
The Williams Chapel relocated from the Northern part of Rutherford County and adapted from an early schoolhouse, is representative of a small country church in the South. Its present appearance gives insight into the evolution of the building. The original simple frame structure was updated by the more ornate Victorian interior and the stained glass windows, while the steeple represents the latest effort to modernize the structure. Churches of this sort likely served as a focal point for the circuit riding minister. He probably preached here twice a month and went out among the smaller churches on the other Sundays. The extended length of service hours compensated for their infrequency. Inside, the center aisle divides the church and the churchgoers; the women and men sit on different sides. Today, this chapel is used for weddings.
 


The Leeman House
The Leeman House is a two-story log structure from Eastern Rutherford County. The circa 1820s front section was made with cedar tree trunks fitted together by skillful notching. The second-story rear was a circa 1870s addition. The house layout is typical of Tennessee log cabins with a dogtrot between the living and kitchen areas. The front upstairs was used as a girls' sleeping quarters and was not connected to the rear upstairs, where the boys slept. Among the furnishing are an ornate mantel clock, hand-made doilies, newspapers used as insulation and wallpaper, and a print of Custer's Last Stand, together with the General's mess set donated to Cannonsburg by the George Custer family. The modern kitchen facilities are used for receptions when weddings are held at the Williamson Chapel


University House 
1800s residence with dogtrot. The dogtrot, also called possum or dog run, reached its peak in the South from 1780 to 1830. Since connecting log structures is difficult, a family in need of more space would often build a second room a few feet away. Both log rooms and their connecting 'dog trot' would be covered by a continuous roof. The chimneys, either stone or brick, were placed on the exterior to avoid overheating the house from cooking during the warmer months. During the hot summer months, cooking and other family activities were done outside in the dogtrot. This house, which formerly stood on the present site of the MTSU campus, dates to the mid-1800s.


Stones River Garage

Before we left Murfreesboro we stopped at the Wat Lao Buddhist Temple. I had seen a picture of the temple online and wanted to get a picture.
Phrame Thoranee:
The earth goddess, Buddha's protector
A beautiful lady with long hair releases huge amounts of 
water to protect lord Buddha from evil invasion right
before his enlightenment, and symbolizing land fertility.

Buddha
Wat Lao Buddhist Temple

We stopped at a Buddhist Temple in Murfreesboro. Hubby sat in the car while I took pictures. I met a couple that were a member of the Temple. The man told me the temple was a community temple, his wife painted all the sculptures on the site.
I was free to walk around and take pictures. The Buddha statue had a face on all four sides. I do not know much about Buddhism. I was told that in April and May everyone dresses in elaborate dresses and put on some sort of celebration. The woman said I was welcome to come and join in the celebration. There was a monk doing lawn work. Everyone in the community joins in the maintenance of the temple and grounds. The temple was not very large but it was very impressive. Who would have thought a Buddhist Temple in Murfreesboro, Tennessee



We also stopped at a winery where we purchased two bottles of wine.


We stopped in Spring Hill, Tennessee at Cracker Barrel for dinner. 
I ordered pinto beans, turnip greens, onion, cornbread, and iced tea.
My husband ordered the seafood platter, with iced tea. YUM!

The ride home was facing the sun, as the sun went down so did my sun Visor.
I had to raise my seat up to its height, instead of lowering it so my feet would touch the floor.
We were home by 8PM.

Saturday, August 15, 2015

2004 ~Saturday March 6, Shopping at Summit Mall Birmingham, AL


Harry and Hannah  The American Adventure 
It was a beautiful day for a two and half hour drive to Birmingham to go shopping.
All the stores are build individual so we had to go from store to store.
We looked at several electronic stores but did not buy anything
Resting after shopping front of Bose Store 
Resting after shopping in front of the Pottery Barn
After a full morning of shopping we decided to eat at The Cheese Cake Factory.

Hubby and Hannah checking out the menu


Hannah holding the beeper

Hannah holding the beeper at the Cheese Cake Factory 

Hannah and Hubby discussing what to order off the menu

Waiting for a table at the Cheese Cake Factory


1996 ~ Sept 16 & Oct 14 Trying out my new (film) Canon Camera in Huntsville, AL

I had just received a new Canon Camera and wanted to try it out so here are some of the places where I took pictures.

House across street from Constitution Village 

Constitution Village
The Village rests on the actual site where the Alabama Constitutional Convention was held in 1819.
Alabama became the 22nd state admitted to the Union on December 14, 1819. This living history museum features costumed guides who lead visitors on a tour of a working village. A cabinetmaker's shop, print shop, confectionary shop, library and post office are all featured. More than eight carefully reconstructed buildings of the 1800s depict early lifestyles in Alabama, including that of African-American settlers. It also commemorates the place where the 1819 Constitutional Convention was held. 

Constitution Village 

Weeden House
Built in 1819, the house at 300 Gates Avenue is now open to the public as the Weeden House Museum and Garden.  Dr. William Weeden bought the house in 1845 and his descendants owned it until 1956.  Now owned by the City of Huntsville, it is leased by the Twickenham Historic Preservation District Association and maintained as a 19 century house museum.
Earlier residents included John McKinley who lived in the house

Ditto Landing 
Huntsville Railway Company Huntsville, Al

Huntsville Railway Company Huntsville, Al

Huntsville Railway Company Huntsville, Al

Huntsville Railway Company Huntsville, Al

Huntsville Railway Company Huntsville, Al
A Three story Museum with miniature train set on the first floor, second floor has a large model train  set to look like the depot did in 1862 and on the third floor is Civil War history 

Huntsville Railway Company Huntsville, Al
Burritt Museum
Burritt on the Mountain is a public 167-acre, scenic site overlooking Huntsville, Alabama, featuring a 19th century living history (interpretive) park, an eclectic ...

Burritt Museum
In 1955 physician and Huntsville native William Henry Burritt willed his estate and mansion known as Round Top Mountain to the city of Huntsville to create their first museum. 

Huntsville Botanical Gardens taking a Hay ride thru the garden 

Huntsville Botanical Gardens  Rose Garden
Huntsville Botanical is more than a garden, from May thru Sept the garden comes alive with butterflies, in the butterflies house, the Scarecrow Trail is filled with goblins from Sept through October and the Garden is bubbling over with Christmas lights during their Galaxy of Light. There is always something to do at the garden.

Friday, August 14, 2015

2001- 2014 Parade's Christmas, Veterans Day, Homecoming, Wild West Rodeo Stampede, Founders Day & Mule Day Parades

Attending the Leipers Fork Christmas Parade Dec 13, 2014
The 10th annual Leiper's Fork Christmas Parade is Saturday Dec 13, at 2PM. The nearly world famous, quirky, homegrown, country Christmas parade will feature pigs, sheep, horses, dogs, antique trucks, and tractors, floats and more. The parade supports the Williamson County Animal Shelter and a local rescue.

Rogers Homecoming Parade


Attending the Florence Christmas Parade Dec 12 2013
The spirit of christmas is Alive Downtown Florence, AL Dec 12, 2013 at 7:PM
Attending the Wild West Rodeo Stampede Parade Tuscumbia, AL  May 15, 2014
Thursday, May 15 at 6:00PM

Attending the Veteran's Day Parade Tuscumbia, AL Nov 11 2013
the 17th Annual Veterans Day Parade Monday, November 11, 2013 at 11:00AM 
Attending the Tuscumbia Christmas Parade Tuscumbia, AL Dec 3 2013

Attending the Founders Day Parade Killen, AL  Aug 23 2013


Celebrate the 55th anniversary of the town of Killen with a parade, a 5k run, artisans and food vendors, live musical entertainment, activities .
Attending the Rogers Homecoming Parade Greenhill, AL  Oct 19 2012
Attending the Florence Christmas Parade Florence, Al Nov 30 2012
Attending the Tuscumbia Christmas Parade Tuscumbia AL Nov 27 2012 

Attending the Christmas Parade Huntsville, AL Dec 1 2012

Attending the Rogers High School Homecoming Parade Greenhill, AL Oct 7, 2011

Attending the Rogers High School Homecoming Parade Greenhill, AL Oct 7, 2011

Attending the Christmas Parade Huntsville, AL  Dec 3 2011

Attending the Founders Day Parade Killen, AL  Aug 26 2011


Celebrate the 53 anniversary of the town of Killen with a parade, a 5k run, artisans and food vendors, live musical entertainment, activities ...
Attending the Labor Day Parade Tuscumbia, AL Sept 6 2010 
Attending the Veterans Day Parade in Huntsville, AL Nov 11 2010 

Attending the Muscle Shoals, AL Parade Dec 9 2010 
Attending the Christmas Parade Huntsville, AL Dec 4 2010
Attending the Killen Founders Day Parade Killen, AL Aug 27 2010 

Celebrate the 52 th anniversary of the town of Killen with a parade, a 5k run, artisans and food vendors, live musical entertainment, activities.
Attending the Christmas Parade at Dollywood Pigeon Forge, TN Nov 19 2009 
Everyone loves a parade, especially Dollywood’s daily Parade of Lights featuring Christmas floats adorned with brightly colored lights. Holiday characters add to the excitement as the parade makes its way, bringing holiday fun to everyone.
Attending the Veteran's Day Parade 306 Tuscumbia, AL  Nov 11 2009 
Attending the Florence Christmas Parade Florence, AL  Dec 11 2009
Attending the  Killen's Founders Day Parade Killen, AL Aug 21 2009 
Celebrate the 51 th anniversary of the town of Killen with a parade, a 5k run, artisans and food vendors, live musical entertainment, activities ...
Attending the GKW Parade 4 Kissimmee, FL Nov 1 2008
Attending the Rogers Homecoming Parade Greenhill, AL Oct 20 2008 
Attending the Rogers Homecoming Parade  Greenhill, AL Oct 19 2007 
Attending the Silver Dollar City Park Branson, MO Nov 16 2001
An Old Time Christmas, November 7 - December 30, celebrates the reason for the season with millions of sparkling lights everywhere, special holiday treats and music, a Christmas parade, and the magical and enchanting five-story special effects Christmas tree in the square!
Attending the Founders Day Parade Killen, AL Aug 24, 2007 
Celebrate the 49th anniversary of the town of Killen with a parade, a 5k run, artisans and food vendors, live musical entertainment, activities ...
Attending the  Animal Kingdom Parade Orlando, FL May 25, 2004
Mickey's Jammin' Jungle Parade is complete with floats, Disney characters (especially those from The Lion KingThe Jungle Book, and Song of the South), skaters, acrobats, and stilt walkers.

Attending the Mule Day Parade Arts Alive Parade Florence, AL May 19, 2007 
Attending the  Founders Day Fenton MO Oct 6 2001
Fenton's 1st Annual Founders Day Parade Saturday at 1:00PM Old Gravois Road

2024 Christmas Journal Activies

 Merry Christmas and Happy New Year  To all my friends and family Hope this year brought you lots of health and happiness.  Just a recap ...