It was great to have Jill come and stay. Unfortunately, the weather wasn't so great while she was here. One day we went to Mount Vernon. Jill's job was to learn stuff and teach me later and my job was to corral Beckett. It was a pretty efficient system.
A view of the Washington's stately abode.
Stuff Jill taught me: The walls inside the house (no pictures allowed) are painted vivid shades of green and yellow because bright colors were in fashion at the time. The Washingtons had a lot of guests stay in their house. Some they knew and some they didn't. There were no inns to speak of around so travelers frequently dropped in. Martha Washington was known for serving at ham at evening evening meal. We also saw George and Martha Washington's bedroom, where George Washington died at the age of 63. It is quite a large and comfortable looking room. After her husband's death, Martha slept in a bedroom in the attic. It was a common custom to sleep in another room during mourning, Martha, however, never returned to her bedroom. She died in the attic room three years after her husband's death.
The back of the house looks out on the Potomac.
We looked in some of the surrounding buildings were slaves and servants worked. Here's Jill looking at the various modes of transportation available.
Beckett had a couple major high points during the trip.
One was seeing this bus. The kid loves buses. He learned to say "city bus" that very day and repeated it about 137 times on the drive.Beckett also loved the carts that the workers drove around. He called them "tractors" and tried to board this one.
The Education Center at Mount Vernon has a really fun kids room where Beckett played with a model of Mount Vernon (he knocked on all the doors, told George Washington "night, night," and drove Arthur up the stairs and on the roof). Beckett also liked the map of Mount Vernon that is inlaid in the floor of the exit. He got down on the ground and started reading all the letters, much to the amusement of all the bystanders.
Here is the tomb where George and Martha Washington were originally buried.
They now have a much more stately resting place (and the new location was chosen by George Washington before his death).
It had been raining off and on all day, but we had a nice long dryish spell while we looked at the house and some of the grounds. Then while we were at the tomb it started really raining. We had a pretty long walk to get back to the museum. Even with umbrellas we were more than a little wet by the time we arrived.
Rain and all, it was well worth the trip (even with the heinous D.C. traffic we had to face on the way home). Jill stayed for a couple more days. The weather was even worse the next day (thus no pictures), but we caught a short break while in the old section of Baltimore (Fell's Point) and had a few minutes to walk around and see some of the shops and old buildings.Jill, come back soon for some more touring.
3 comments:
Those are some interesting facts! Really cool place. I also love how Beckett is so in love with transportation. What a cute age!
Mount Vernon was one of my favorite places that we visited when I was a child. How fun that you can make trips to see all the fun things the east coast has to offer!
Wish I could have been with you three!
Post a Comment