Showing posts with label mooresville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mooresville. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2022

2021 Oct 21-26, Trip to Mooresville, North Carolina with sisters (6 days)

 Day 1: Oct 21, 

Traveled from hwy 43 to hwy 64, taking 207Al, turning into 11TN through Minor Hill to 31A through Pulaski to I-65. From I-65, we took I840 to I-40, stopping in Crossville to eat lunch. We stopped at Cracker Barrel, which was closed until 10:30 that morning. We stopped at I-Hop, but they were short-handed and had a long wait. 

So we walked next door to Stake and Shake. They did not have a waiter or waitress. We had to order and pay for our food at a kiosk and then pick it up at the counter. 

It's not much fun traveling when you cannot find a place to stop and eat. 

I ordered chicken fingers, fries, and a Diet Coke. I bought gas at the Shell Station and put $45.16 on my credit card. 

Once everyone finished eating, we got back on I-40 and headed east into Knoxville. We took the I-40 through Smokey Mountain into North Carolina. We arrived at our destination around supper. Paula had baked a shepherd's pie, and we enjoyed a couple of mixed margaritas.

After supper, we sat, talked, and decided who would sleep where. Becky and I slept on the sofa. Teresa slept on the mattress on the floor, and Emmalee slept in the bed. 


Childers Vineyard 


Day 2:Oct 22, 

Everyone got ready and walked upstairs for breakfast and breakfast, which Tonya had prepared. 

Today, we are taking a tour of Childers Vineyard at 12 P.M. We arrived a little early (11:30 A.M.), so we walked around in the gift shop until it was time to take the tour. It was a huge group. When the tour ended, everyone was given a sample of wine. We each decided to buy a bottle of wine instead of paying $20 to sample five different flavors. 

We ended up with four bottles of wine, which was cheaper than doing the sampling. I bought a bottle of Muscadine Sweet wine for $11.99 and two chocolates for seventy-nine cents. 

At 5:30 P.M., we rode to Lake Norman to take a dinner cruise on the Queens Landing Catawba Queen from 6:30 to 8:30 P.M. 

It was a three-course meal with a salad, Chicken Marsala (a lightly coated chicken breast based on Marsala), mushrooms, green beans, a roll, and creamed potatoes.

Our dessert was cheesecake. We also ordered a bottle of wine.

Our boat had an upper and lower level and was full. When we finished eating, we walked outside and watched the darkness fall onto the lake. 

We began the cruise as the sun was setting. 

Another eventful day



Emmalee, Barney, and Me


Day 3: Oct 23, 

Today, we are going to Mount Airy, the birth home of Andy Griffin. 

By the time we arrived, everyone was hungry, so we walked to Barney's Cafe. But before we went to eat, we stopped at the public restrooms. It was a good hour's ride to Mount Airy. 

It was lunchtime, so we had to wait in line for several minutes. 

Mount Airy History Museum

Finally, I was seated in the back of the restaurant. I ordered a BLT with onion rings and Diet Coke and paid for everyone's lunch. 

When we finished eating, we walked to the History Museum. We spent the remainder of the time shopping in the gift shops. We looked for the jail but kept going in circles. We were worn out from all the walking, so we returned home. 

Later that night, Tonya lit the fire pit, and we had Weiner and marshmallow roasts and made smores. 

Another eventful day


Open-pit Weiner and Smores night 


Day 4:Oct 24, 

Today, we had planned to go to the Renaissance Fair but decided it would be too crowded, so we decided to go to Goodwill. 

Everyone bought something. 

Paula, Amber, and I had lunch at McAlister's and then took it to Lake Norman. I ordered a half Reuben and Southwest salad. 

Reuben corn beef, sauerkraut Swiss cheese, Thousand Island dressing, and marble rye bread. 

Southwest salad with chicken, avocado, roasted corn, black beans, mixed greens, tomatoes, cheddar, jack, blue, and corn tortilla strips with chili.

Teresa, Becky, and Emmalee went somewhere else, but they ate there. 

We meet them at the park later. The kids enjoyed wading in Lake Norman. 

When we returned home, Teresa spent the rest of the evening washing clothes, and we helped Paula clean. 


Day 5:Oct 25, 

Today, we went to Publix Grocery, where I bought some banana bread and a drink. We each had an appointment to get a one-hour massage at Hand & Stone Massage. When we finished, we rode to Cracker Barrel for lunch. I ordered grilled chicken and pinto beans with cornbread and Diet Coke. Becky paid for everyone's meal. 

Kendall and I watched movies while everyone else was upstairs talking. We watched Hocus Pocus and Nightmare Before Christmas. They all ate leftovers, but I ate nothing because I was too full from lunch. 

Packed for the trip home tomorrow. 


Lake Norman


Day 6: Oct 26, 

Travel home.  

For breakfast, I got biscuits from McDonald's in Lenior City, TN. We were home before dark. Becky and Emmalee slept most of the way home, and Teresa and I talked as she drove.  

Traveling I-40 through the Smoky Mountains 



Monday, December 14, 2015

🎄🎄🎄🎄2009 December 6, Saturday, Belle Mont Mansion Tuscumbia and Walking tour of Mooresville, AL

Two of my grandchildren and I rode to the Belle Mont Mansion in Tuscumbia for the Plantation Christmas Event. 
This event offers entertainment and raises funds for further renovations of the Mansion, which it desperately needs. 
It is a Jeffersonian-style plantation home built in 1828 for Doctor Mitchell and sold to the prominent Winston family of Tuscumbia. 
The family abandoned it, and it soon began to deteriorate. In 1983, the house and 33 acres were donated to the Alabama Historical Commission.
I parked my car along the wheat fields and several other vehicles.
There was a bus shuttling people to the Mansion, but my grandchildren and I walked along the gravel road to the Mansion.


As we started up the gravel road, we saw the historic marker that read.

Belle Mont Marker
Belle Mont Marker
Built between 1828 and 1832, Belle Mont is a foremost example of Jeffersonian Palladian Architecture in the Deep South and one of Alabama's first great plantation houses. 

It was built for Dr. Alexander W. Mitchell, a native of Virginia, a graduate of the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, and one of the first large-scale ~ planters and slaveholders in this area. 

1833 Mitchell sold this 1,680-acre plantation to another Virginian Native, Isaac Winston. Winston, a prominent planter and strong supporter of the Confederacy, was the uncle of Alabama's first native-born Governor, John Anthony Winston. Belle Monte remained in the hands of Winston's heirs until 1941. 



In 1983, the house and 33 surrounding acres were donated to the Alabama Historical Commission.

Belle Monte Mansion Christmas 2009
The mansion's front door was decorated with a green wreath with gold balls and a red ribbon. The white handrailing was covered in greenery, with red bows and orange-red and green balls. Greenery was also above the door and on the second-floor front porch.
Inside the Mansion, green vines winded along the staircase leading to the second floor. Vines, green plants, and red apples were over the fireplace and on other pieces of furniture.
There were women dressed in beautiful white and red ball gowns and men in black suits.


In the dining area were a long table, a silver bowl full of greenery, a silver teapot full of hot cider, and a silver bowl full of punch. There were several silver trays of finger food. 

Women dressed in Red and White Christmas Ball Gowns. 
We drank a cup of punch and helped ourselves to the finger food. 


On the walls were paintings of family members who had once gracefully walked through the rooms of this Mansion, and a painting of the Mansion was sitting on an easel.

 Finger foods
Belle Monte 
Every room had a curator, filling our heads with the plantation's history.

Scott's book Lady of the Lake was placed on a bedside table in one of the bedrooms. 
Men in suits and women in red and white holiday ball gowns were gathered in the family room. A couple of women were playing Christmas tunes on flutes.

We walked upstairs, where a display case showed the construction and layout of the Mansion in its grander years.
We finished our tour and walked outside to get a better view of the three chimneys, the two tear, six white columns front porch. The house was built out of red brick, with six windows on the west side and four on the front with two front doors. The backside of the house had a root cellar, with a large landing of stairs leading to the ground. It had a large back porch, two bedrooms, and doors leading outside.
This was to get easy access to the outhouse.
Belle Monte Mansion Back porch 
Entrance to the Dining Room @ Belle Monte Mansion
Brick Church in Mooresville
Refreshments at Brick church Mooresville
Post Office in Mooresville
Historic homes in Mooresville

My grandkids and I rode to Mooresville to take the Christmas Walking tour. 
We toured the Post Office, the Stagecoach Inn, the Tavern, and the Brick Church. 

We walked up and down the streets of the small community, enjoying the Christmas decorations. 


The Brick Church was open for the tour, so we stepped inside and enjoyed a cup of hot cider and a woman playing the piano.
The Post Office was opened for the tour, and the employees showed how it worked. The post office is still used by the community.
The old tavern was opened with a fire in the fireplace, greenery on the mantel, and a small library of books in the back room.
Stage Coach Stop 
The tour ended at 5:00 P.M. By that time, it was cold and dark outside.
The grandkids and I loaded into my car, and I drove home. 

I spent a wonderful day with two of my grandchildren. We learned some local history about the Belle Mont Mansion and the historic town of Mooresville. I took many pictures and hope the grandkids remember our time on both tours.



We saw several historical markers telling the history of Mooresville. 

Mooresville Incorporated in 1818
The post office contains original call boxes 
Old tavern, 1817, used as a stagecoach stop
Red Brick Methodist Church 1817
U. S. Gen. James A Garfield was stationed here in 1862
White frame church is more than a century old 
Andrew Johnson was apprenticed tailor here
Neoclassic architecture
1971 by Alabama Society Daughters of the American Revolution 

Mooresville, Alabama Incorporated November 16, 1818
Mooresville Post Office, c.1840, is Alabama's oldest operational post office. It has served the commuNovember 16he same building since it constructed sawmill lumber in 1840. The mailboxes and office furnishings are even older, having been transferred from the original post office in the Stagecoach Tavern. The mailboxes are numbered 1-48; some families have had the same box numbers for several generations. The building is owned and maintained by the Town of Mooresville.

Mooresville Stagecoach Inn and Tavern
The Stagecoach Inn and Tavern were built c.1820 and served as the post office before the current post office was constructed around 1840. An Act of Congress on March 13, 1818, authorized mail delivery to and from neighboring Huntsville and necessitated the establishment of a post office in MooresMarch 13, a road was built between the two towns, and horse and rider carried mail. The Stagecoach Inn and Tavern were listed on Tanner's Post Map of 1825 with supper priced at "2 bits." The original post office was located on the right side of the building, and mail may have been deposited and received through the small window. This window is also believed to have been used for the after-hours sale of liquor. The first floor was a standard room with an outside stairway leading to two sleeping rooms on the second floor. The Stagecoach Tavern is currently used as a museum and the official town hall.

Mooresville Brick Church
Completed by 1839, this Greek Revival Structure was under construction for several years. On November 18, 1838, Alabama's 2nd Governor, Thomas Bibb, and his wife Pamela deeded this property to William K. Adams, Monroe F. Moses, and, on November 18, trustees of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. This denomination retained the title but, over the years, permitted the Baptists and Methodists to meet here.

Outstanding religious leaders who preached here were Cumberland Presbyterian "Father" Robert Donnell, the early leader, and Constantine Blackmon Sanders, the "X+Y=Z Preacher," as well as Methodist Clare Purcell, later Bishop of North Ala., West Fla. and Central Conferences.
National Register of Historic Places Mooresville Historic District 4/13/72

The Cumberland Presbyterian Church
This faith was organized in Dickson County, Tenn., on February 4, 1810, as an outgrowth of the Great Religious Revival of 1800. Its founders were ministers of the Presbyterian Church who rejected February of the election and reprobation. They formulated and published a "Brief Statement" setting forth the points wherein Cumberland Presbyterians dissented from the Westminster Confession of Faith.
Robert Donnell, one of the church's founding fathers, was preaching in this area as early as 1810. About 1834, he moved from Tenn. to Mooresville and was primarily responsible for the early growth of the faith locally.

Mary Ann Walton, a local benefactor, died in 1899, willing much of her estate in trust to the Presbytery. The Alabama Supreme Court contested and upheld her will three times in Woodroof vs. Hundley.




Trip to San Antonio Feb 16-22, 2025 Diamonds in the Rough

  Day 1: Sunday, Feb 16, Everyone meets at the Club bus, which arrives at 7:30 A.M., and we leave for Texarkana, AR, at 8:00 A.M. We stopp...