Fredericksburg Battle Site

Just before the traffic went down the shitter this morning we stopped at the site of the Battle of Fredericksburg. Back in December of 1862 the US Army got its ass handed to it while trying to cross the road in the town of Fredericksburg, VA. It was a really crappy few days for the United States.

It’s our third Civil War battle site. We went to the site of the two battles of Bull Run in Manassas, VA a few years ago, and 15 years ago this week, on our honeymoon, we went to the site of the Battle of Gettysburg. The USA won that one so we’ve got that going for us.

We didn’t stay long today. We went to the visitors center and we walked a short way down the sunken road. I took a couple of pictures that don’t really show anything.

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Yorktown Victory Center

The vacation picture bombardment continues. These are from the Yorktown Victory Center which has a working replica of a small colonial era family farm, and a canon demonstration.

What’s with the zig zag fences?
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This is the family house. Tiny, yes, but the kitchen is a separate building.
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Everywhere we went; checkers and chess.
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Inside the kitchen.
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They were making soup for lunch.
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They had chickens. Lots of chickens.
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Vegetable garden.
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They had turkeys too.
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And of course, tobacco.
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Off to Phillip Morris perhaps?
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Now on to the cannon demonstration. They had a mortar, which they fired, and a light gun, which sure didn’t look light to me.
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Ka-BOOM!
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Yorktown Battlefield

The pile of Virginia vacation pics continues. These are from the battlefield known as the battle of Yorktown. This is the place that General Cornwallis surrendered and the fighting in the American Revolution ended.

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Yorktown was mostly a siege, with the Colonials and the French entrenched around the British troops.

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According to the info we got on site, most of the nastiest fighting took place in two mini forts, called redoubts. The French and Colonial trenches were separated by redoubts nine and ten. The Americans took one and the French took the other. Then the two lines were joined and the only hope for the English was to try crossing the York river to their rear. They tried, but the weather didn’t cooperate and they lost their boats. At that point they were just plain screwed.

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Confederate History Museum

Last week we visited the Confederate History Museum in Richmond, VA. The museum includes the Confederate White House. The place that Jefferson Davis lived and worked during his time as a treasonous leader of a treasonous nation.

Just in case you thought I was a Confederate sympathizer or something.

The one thing about the visit that fascinated me the most can be summed up in this picture:
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The story is that when Richmond finally fell in April of 1865, President Lincoln took a ride down from Washington and visited the mansion. We did the same thing, only 148 years later.

The house was cool. Very ritzy in a Victorian kinda way. Gaudy by today’s standards, I think, but definitely swanky.

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The absolute highlight of the visit came at the start of the tour. Our guide took us to the front entrance way and told us how the street outside was dirt, meaning mud, back in the 1860s. As a result, the entrance way was always dirty. To combat this, they didn’t have tiles on the floor, they had a mat that was painted to look like tiles. It was disposable, so every few weeks it would get dirty enough that they would peel it up and put a new mat down.

The guide then told us that the marble walls were not actually made of marble. They were covered with a wall paper that looked exactly like real marble. You couldn’t tell the difference until you were close enough to touch it.

After sharing these two neat details (as well as a few others) he asked if anyone had any questions. My step son then proved that he is the cleverest human alive. He raised his 10 year old hand, and when called on asked, “Why is everything in here fake?”

Huge laughs. It is possible that the Federals in the room were laughing louder, but that’s okay. Some of our group seemed to be under the impression that the war was still on going. Some seemed to be under the impression that the South won. Those of us who live in an place that did not secede from the Union knew better, and that was our little dig against the rebellion. Whatever your historical political leanings may be, my step son is one damn funny kid.

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Cameras were not allowed inside the mansion, which is why you’re only seeing the outside here. The museum was interesting. Again, it sort of glossed over the fact that all of the Confederate triumphs still lead to their defeat. What can you do though, it wasn’t called The Civil War museum, it was the Confederate History museum.

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I traveled through Richmond back when I was in High School and I remember not being impressed at all. Last week I thought much more highly of the place. At least the little bit that we explored. There were some great old houses. I’m not sure it’s someplace that I’d like to live, but I would definitely visit again.

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Bad Virginia Beach Pano

I do love the iPhone camera’s new panorama function. I just wish I took better pictures with it. This is Virginia Beach on our one really warm day last week.

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Click the image to go to Flickr, then click the actions button and select view all sizes from the drop down. Then click original to see the full size image.

Bald Eagle? Maybe?

What kind of bird is this? by robj_1971
What kind of bird is this?, a photo by robj_1971 on Flickr.

I posted pics of a bunch of birds we saw in Virginia. Most of them seem to be vultures. This one, however… is this a bald eagle?

If only I’d had my Nikon 55-200 mm F/4 5.6G ED-IF AF-S DX VR Zoom lens on instead of my Nikkor AF-S DX 18-105mm f/3.5-5.6 ED VR. (he said as if he knew what he was talking about) I would have been able to get closer to this bird and maybe had an easier time figuring out what it was.