Showing posts with label War of 1812. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War of 1812. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

National Museum of American History, Part I

The National Museum of American History (Smithsonian Institution) is located in the heart of Washington, D.C. We visited on Martin Luther King Jr. Day since street parking was free. The museum is free to get in  (as are all of the Smithsonian museums). We drove in early to find a spot which meant we had fifteen minutes to spend before we could enter the building.

Obligingly, the museum has an outdoor exhibit. Arches of Life is a wooden sculpture by Foon Sham, an American born in Macau, China, in 1953. He's a professor of art at the University of Maryland and has done other outdoor sculptures for the museum.

Arches of Life

Sheltering from the cold

More arches

Is this also art?

The garden area also has an imitation Victory Garden. During World War II, food shortages in England, America, and Germany inspired locals to plant gardens in their yards that grew fruits and vegetables. Such a gesture was a small contribution to the war effort. The museum's garden wasn't very impressive, probably because we visited in January.

Victory garden

A variety of plants 

Lettuce called "Red Deer Tongue"!

More vegetation waiting for spring to come

View to the EPA building

We walked around to the Mall side of the building to stand in the sunshine as we waited for the last five minutes to go by.

Washington Monument and museum sign

The edges of the building also have plants growing.

Ornamental Onion tree

Sneezeweed, so we were happy for January weather

Seriously, I didn't make up the name

We finally made it inside. The very first exhibit we saw was the Star Spangled Banner. This flag was the one flown over Fort McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore in 1814. British ships shelled the fort all night. Francis Scott Key witnessed the bombardment and wrote the famous poem that became the United States national anthem.

Entrance to the Star Spangled Banner exhibit

Photography is not allowed in the exhibit since the flag is so old. It's in a case full of special gas under low lights to preserve it as long as possible. The flag is huge--thirty feet by thirty-four feet. Mary Pickersgill made it in her home and was paid over $400 for the project. Since it dates from 1814, it has fifteen stars and fifteen stripes for the fifteen states.

We walked around and discovered the Batmobile from the first Tim Burton film in 1989. The movie ushered in the modern era of superhero films with a more serious take on the character and more convincing visual effects.

Batmobile under the purple lights--Curse you, Joker!

The museum has lots of random historical items in displays throughout the building.

Etch-a-Sketch, Mickey Mouse ears, canned goods, etc.

Some of the exhibits are interactive and designed to draw children's attention. One creative place is the Spark!Lab.

Going to the Spark!Lab

Inside, visitors can try out various crafts, like designing makeup for performers or helmets for athletes.

It's good to practice on someone else, or something else in this case

Making a helmet so it's more protective

Right outside the Spark!Lab is Object Project, a less interactive but still interesting display of household items from American history. One interactive exhibit has visitors pick out clothes and see what they look like.

Zombieparent as a golf pro from the 1920s

A display showed various refrigerators and the sort of stuff we keep inside them.

Kitchen chills

Ice containers/trays

Another section of Object Project has a display on bicycles from a by-gone era.

Bike shop

Interacting with the exhibit

Another rider

Entertainment at home has been important ever since homes were invented. Some modern items on display are record players, phones, and computers.

Old-style CD player

Rotary phone

The original Macintosh computer

Another interactive display had us playing The Price is Right. My son was better at guessing the initial cost of one of the first instant cameras on the market.

Price is Right display

My bid was too low

One corner has a display on the Transcontinental Railroad, with a map on the floor showing the routes of the original tracks that crossed the North American continent.

Railroad info

Some historical items

The map

The meeting point

More from the museum in the next post!

Monday, April 23, 2018

Federal Hill Park, Baltimore

After visiting the Maryland Science Center, we went after a nearby geocache, Guns to Bear on Baltimore. The cache is located on top of Federal Hill in the aptly named Federal Hill Park. It's only a five minute walk from the Science Center, so the trip was easy, except for the cold, damp, windy weather.

Federal Hill, Baltimore

The steps

The climb was not too hard but leg-length definitely made a difference for how fast the kids got up the hill.

First to the top

The cache was fairly easy to find except that it was not for the vertically-challenged or immature. I was able to spot it and just about reach it.

Nearby is a statue dedicated to Samuel Smith, a merchant and politician who served in America's Continental Army during the War for Independence from Britain. He served as major general (his highest military rank) during the War of 1812 when he organized the local defenses during the Battle of Baltimore in 1814. He also served as a congressman and senator before and after the War of 1812, finishing his political career as mayor of Baltimore (1835-1838). He died in 1839.

A patriotic composition

Samuel Smith

Smith's view of the Inner Harbor

Another memorial is dedicated to George Armistead. He was the officer in command of Fort McHenry during the War of 1812 and led them through the bombing that inspired Francis Scott Keys to write The Star Spangled Banner.

Armistead memorial

Off to the side of the hill is a fancifully-decorated American Visionary Art Museum. Maybe we will visit it someday.

American Visionary Art Museum

Another view of the Inner Harbor (Science Center on left)

The hill was made into a fort in 1861 to keep the pro-Confederacy part of Baltimore's population under control. The fort had 42 guns and could house a thousand soldiers if needed. Only one gun remains today.

Our little regiment

Gun's eye view

Vintage flag from the War of 1812 days--fifteen stars!

The park also has a very nice-looking playground. The cold and damp kept us from playing there, but surely when we visit the Science Center under better weather we will try it out.

Playground

Walking back to the car, I saw some neat local buildings. Living in this neighborhood would be fun but probably very expensive.

Row houses that go all the way back

More modern construction--I would be on those roof-top viewing areas all the time