Our last update had us bidding farewell to Reston VA and the Mossoffs. We now are at Heartland RV Park in Campbellsville, Kentucky working at an Amazon.Com fulfillment warehouse. Our schedule hasn’t given us as much time as we expected for working on our updates and other leisure activities. Most of our off-time is consumed by catching up on our sleep, eating, and household chores. More about Amazon.Com later.
Our first destination after leaving VA was the Flight 93 National Memorial Site near Shanksville, PA. We found ourselves on another section of the Lincoln Highway; this time going through a scenic mountain area called the Laurel Highlands.
Museum at Flight 93 Memorial Site
Presently, a temporary museum is set up in the old mining shack that was used for the collection and investigation of bodies and debris evidence. Inside there are some history boards and a small display of tokens left on the fences by the first visitors. There also is a place to write your sentiments about your visit or about the 911 attack. It was moving to read the new messages as they remain strong and deeply felt even nine years after the attack. Local residents volunteer to man the site so you hear their stories as well. The crash site now covered by fill, is still under construction and from the design plans will look totally different from what we saw.
PITTSBURGH
We were delighted to find our stop in Pittsburgh, a city that we had never visited, so interesting. The city at the confluence of the Ohio, Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers makes a striking picture from high atop the opposing steep banks of Mount Washington where two remaining funiculars still take citizens up and down.
Coming through the Fort Pitt Tunnel from the suburbs, Pittsburgh suddenly bursts into view, surely a stunning sight at night. As we entered the city it was immediately evident that there were a multitude of bridges here (not surprisingly, almost all of them were made of steel). On the Just Ducky tour we passed some of the many old and new architecturally important buildings that cluster around the area that once was a kind of Wall Street for oil and gas investment interests. The tour guide told us that Pittsburgh had more bridges than any other city in the world, four hundred and something (can’t remember the exact number). On the river we could see the influence of Carnegie and Heinz on the signs for the major attractions lining the shore.
Carnegie Science Center and Heinz Stadium
We stopped to see the wonderful stained glass windows in the Heinz Memorial Chapel on the U of Pitt campus after having Pittsburgh’s version of a steak and cheese sandwich in Little Italy.
Courage was theme of this window
We had tried eating in the trendy historic market area known as The Strip but it was so abuzz with activity that there was not a parking space to be found, as well as lines out front of most of the restaurants. Driving through we saw all kinds of retailers, seafood and produce merchants, specialty shops and sidewalk vendors.Our self-guided tour of the capitol building in Columbus began in The Crypt or basement and then was mostly spent opening the warren of doors connecting the 1901 Judiciary Annex with the 1861 Statehouse trying to find the right doors leading to rooms we wished to see. When found, those rooms were locked and any openings looking in were covered up. The rotunda was being used for a wedding. We don’t have much to remember about this capitol.
We chose to tour the National Museum of the Air Force and the John W. Berry Sr. Wright Brothers Aviation Center from the listing of aviation places one can visit in the area. We took the special tour including 4 Presidential planes plus some experimental planes, never heard of or seen by the public. Kennedy’s plane was the first to be called “Air Force One’’. The earlier planes were given names such as Roosevelt’s “Columbine” or Truman’s “Independence”.
We learned about horse care and horse business with a visit to the riding stable owned and operated by Leslie, Tim’s wife. We learned the difference between hay and straw, between a paint and a pinto. Later at Tracey’s, a newly-purchased horse arrived with a severe head cut so there was an unanticipated vet’s visit and an overnight medication vigil for Tracey. Such is the life for horse or livestock owners.
Tim has one of the best jobs in the world. He is a corporate pilot and ferries the company brass all over the country in a 2010 King Air 350. He is also responsible for seeing to the maintenance and repair of the plane. They had just completed some avionics repairs and Tim wanted to take it up for a test flight. It was a special treat for Mike to be invited to go along. Mike was amazed at how much avionics has changed since his flying days. No more little round dials. The panel is made up of several LCD displays that provide all of the data necessary to fly the plane. Tim made a couple of ILS (instrument landing system) approaches which allowed Mike to observe the panel displays and on-screen charts in action.
Staying one night in the local Wal-Mart parking lot we got to see the Amish carriages and carts more closely. Wal-Mart has provided a barn in their parking lot with water and shelter for the horses, plus shovels and barrels for the horses’ droppings. The carriages symbolize Amish values of separation, simplicity, tradition and community. A speaker from the Menno-Hof Center in Shipshewanna told us the interesting history of the Anabaptists and the differences between the Amish and Mennonites.
As we had some time to spare before we were due at Amazon.Com we decided to try camping at Lake Patoka. Carmen, our GPS voice, took us there by a narrow, winding, desolate county road. From there we took some car trips. On one of the hottest days ever, we went to visit Santa Claus; that is Santa Claus, Indiana. The holiday décor throughout the town looked a bit bedraggled as we did in the heat.
The museum offered the story that back in 1856 when the town was founded, the founders wanted to have the name Santa Ana but was refused as it already had been taken. Therefore, they opted for something close, Santa Claus. There was a scrapbook someone had made with post marks from all the places they had visited with holiday names. How many can you name?
Another day found us at the Lincoln Boyhood Memorial near Gentryville. The park tells how Abe‘s boyhood here, from the age 7 to 21, made him into the man he became.
On the memorial building are 5 sculptured panels that depict the steps in Lincoln’s life that brought him from a cabin to the White House and 9 inscriptions illustrating some of Lincoln’s beliefs. A beautiful cabinet stood amid the other crude furnishings inside the farm cabin. The docent said that Tom Lincoln made a decent income from making furniture for others and that probably the inside of the Lincoln home was much more refined than the way it was being depicted.
Tom Lincoln’s Farm
The friendly new owners of the Singing Hills RV Park, Beth and Eldon Brown, gave us a recommendation for a lunch stop in Glascow which was on our route to Campbellsville. Beth is writing a children’s book about the animal critters that live in the park, 6 geese, a cat and a lizard. If her book is as entertaining as her conversation, it should be a success. Before lunch at A Little Taste of Texas, we roamed the 30,000 square feet of artifacts that tell the story of the people and events that makeup the “Barrens” at the South Central Kentucky Cultural Center. When commenting on the derogatory name of Barren, we got two explanations of why the county and area are so named. In 1784 the name was applied on an early map of Kentucky denoting this South Central Kentucky area as a vast treeless, grass-covered prairie with little water. The other view was that no one could come up with a name that depicted something about this area, so they simply said it was barren. Long-time residents have been interviewed for some interesting oral history exhibits. They also have contributed possessions that are used in the exhibits that include a 40’s kitchen, a one-room schoolhouse and a log cabin.
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