~So here we are...part four of my series on our vacation to Colonial Williamsburg (click HERE for part three, HERE for part two, and HERE for part one). Folks, never in my wildest dreams had I ever an inkling that this historic restored city would affect me in the way that it has. I love this country and its history, and Colonial Williamsburg brought the patriotic fervor out of me like little else has.
And, yes, I do stand as a proud patriotic American - through the good and the bad.
I'm not one of those faux-americans (lower-case "a" intentional here) who will say, "If my person/party isn't elected, I'm moving to Canada!"
Because the U.S. is the land that I love.
And Colonial Williamsburg helped to bring that feeling out of me even more.
I hope some of that shows in this post. ~
I'm not one of those faux-americans (lower-case "a" intentional here) who will say, "If my person/party isn't elected, I'm moving to Canada!"
Because the U.S. is the land that I love.
And Colonial Williamsburg helped to bring that feeling out of me even more.
I hope some of that shows in this post. ~
~ ~ ~
A question recently posed to me was: what was my favorite Williamsburg memory during our vacation there?
To be honest, so many wonderful memories were made there, but my most favorite was the very first time I stepped onto Duke of Gloucester Street in the early evening of Sunday June 26, only minutes after checking into our hotel room. I stood there on the corner of DoG and Queen Street, looking east and west, just taking it all in.
I was there! I was in Colonial Williamsburg!!
And only a few minutes later I sat on a bench right there near that corner and texted a good friend and fellow history nerd back home in Michigan. In this text I wrote, "Guess where I am at this very moment?"
She replied with, "Aaaah! Where?"
I responded, "Sitting on a bench on Duke of Gloucester Street!" |
Yep---I made it!
And then the next night I wrote on the Colonial Williamsburg Friends page (via my tablet) and mentioned where I was, and one of the responses (in a private message) was "HOLY
CRAP...........YOU'RE IN COL. WILLIAMSBURG?? I'm away from my computer for a
day and look what I miss! When and how did this happen? Wow - I am so
incredibly happy for you."
You see, I didn't tell many people about this trip beforehand. It seems whenever I say too much about my plans of any sort, something always goes wrong and messes things up.
So, except for about a half dozen of my closest friends, I kept it pretty hushed.
Now it's all a memory - a grand memory, mind you - and, as you well know, I have scads of pictures. Since it would cost way too much to print out all of my favorite photos, documenting and sharing our time there via my Passion for the Past blog seems to be the best way to keep my memories fresh and alive.You see, I didn't tell many people about this trip beforehand. It seems whenever I say too much about my plans of any sort, something always goes wrong and messes things up.
So, except for about a half dozen of my closest friends, I kept it pretty hushed.
I appreciate you coming along on the journey with me.
The Edinbg Castle Not really a castle, it's been said the Edinburg Castle was once an "ordinary" (an 18th century term for a tavern) that had about 13 beds |
Oh! Look out behind you!
Here we see a carriage driver taking a morning ride. |
Seeing something as simple as a girl walking down the street can be almost as special as watching tradesmen work their craft. It lends greatly to the feeling of an 18th century city |
Oh look! Another horse and carriage! |
And turn around to see another young lady stroll along the sidewalk. |
And here comes another horse & carriage, moving up to the hitching post |
Seeing colonials about, just being a part of the every day life of Williamsburg, is what makes this historic city stand out in a way no other can (or does). |
Ha! Even my wife and I enjoy being part of the colonial scene! |
The
industrial complex known as the Public Armoury, consisting of a blacksmith shop, tinshop,
kitchen, workshop, and various outbuildings, is based on extensive
archaeological and documentary research. Beginning in 1776, James Anderson, public
armourer for the newly formed Commonwealth of Virginia, planned and built this
site. During the war, he employed more than 40 men including apprentices,
journeymen, soldiers, skilled slaves, and prisoners of war.
The white building you see here in the Public Armoury is the blacksmith shop, and the brownish-red building is where the tinsmiths work their trade. |
In
reproducing the Armoury, account books were studied and, upon finding one over-looked
in the Daughters of the American Revolution archive in Washington, it was found
that the “shop was built in wartime, when the need to maintain arms for the
Continental Army and Virginia militia required expanding the operation, at
state expense.
Williamsburg
mason Humphrey Harwood was paid for constructing those foundations August 13,
1778, when he billed the commonwealth for "underpinning the armourer's
shop" with 6,950 bricks. Delivery of 13,000 nails to carpenter Phillip
Moody that October—also for the armory—further indicates that the large
structure was erected in a single campaign. Ledger entries for hinges in the
public store records allowed us to calculate how many doors and shutters
enclosed the building.
The
interpretation of the written records began to focus on Anderson's role as
public armorer at this site from 1778 until his operation moved with the
government to Richmond in 1780.”
(from
the Making History blog)
Our first stop in the Public Armoury...
...the blacksmith shop. |
A blacksmith's forge consisted of a raised brick hearth outfitted with bellows to feed its soft-coal fire and a hood to carry away the smoke. |
The forge heated bars of iron yellow-hot. With his journeymen and apprentices, the blacksmith used sledges weighing as much as 12 pounds to hammer the heated bars into various shapes. |
From steel, he made tempered cutting
edges for axes and smooth faces for special hammers.
|
Blacksmiths in Williamsburg
fashioned items from iron and steel for fellow tradesmen to use in their work
and also made things for household use. Among the tools blacksmiths used were
the following:
- forge
- anvil
- hammer
- tongs
- vise
- file
Now we'll head next door to where we'll find the "tin man/tin woman" presenting their craft from the period 1778–80, a time when, perhaps, three or more men toiled at the shop.
One man may have traced patterns onto
sheets of metal and cut out the parts. Another craftsman could have shaped
these into components and done some basic assembly, while a third person would
do the final assembly and soldering,
These workers probably learned their trade through a seven-year apprenticeship started at age fifteen. |
During the revolution, the military wanted tin items, because they were inexpensive, lightweight, and durable. |
These qualities explain tin’s use for such civilian goods as funnels, colanders, basins, pastry molds, teapots, graters, convection ovens, lanterns, snuff boxes, and needle cases. |
And also in the Public Armoury area are the artificers.
Yeah, I know...what the heck is an artificer?
Don't feel bad - - as deep into history as I am, I never heard of them until I went to Williamsburg.
In the book of Trades published by Colonial Williamsburg it states that a Military Artificer...
...provides and maintains an army's many pieces of equipment. |
An artificer working in leather makes cartridge boxes, belts, scabbards, valises, saddles... |
...shoes and other accoutrements. |
Ahhh...but what's this?
A runaway?
I wonder if they caught the young chocolate lover. Mayhaps she is over at Charlton's? |
Wood! We need more wood for the fires! |
I just saw this guy walking along and snapped the photo. Non-posed pictures can be the best. |
I wish I could jump right into this picture and once again walk down Duke of Gloucester Street. |
We next took a tour of the Wetherburn Tavern, an original building that was restored to its mid-18th century appearance in the 1960s and 70s. There is so much to see in this old building that I could not keep up with the information given, so the following text may not be pertinent to the photograph, and I apologize for this.
Like some of the other facts I have here, this came from the official Colonial Williamsbug page (see link at the bottom of this post).
There 'tis - the Wetherburn Tavern
In
August 1731, Henry Wetherburn applied for a license to operate a tavern, in this case the
Raleigh Tavern. He began to develop his reputation for keeping a good tavern.
His reputation was such that by 1736, William Randolph and Peter Jefferson
(father of Thomas Jefferson) sealed a land deal with Wetherburn's "biggest
bowl of arrack punch."In 1738, Wetherbum purchased two lots across the street from the Raleigh Tavern. He began to build a house on the lots, a typical center-passage house with two rooms on either side.
And here I am standing with Mrs. Wetherburn! |
In 1742, a group of men purchased the Raleigh Tavern,
where Wetherburn had been working as the tavern keeper. Wetherburn decided to
move across the street and open his own tavern in his house.
Wetherburn
added a new room to his tavern. The "Great Room" addition was part of
a trend in the mid-1750s to add large entertaining spaces to houses and was
also part of a building boom that occurred in Williamsburg in the mid-1750s.
The inventory gave valuable information about the quality of service Wetherburn offered his customers and the use of the rooms in the tavern. |
The inventory included mahogany furniture, pier glasses, prints, and enough china, glassware and silver to set a very elegant table. |
Taverns were the pulse of 18th century urban life, and their importance to the local community cannot be overstated. |
Another 2nd floor bedchamber |
Bed curtains to provide at least a little privacy. |
And here is a portion of a third bed chamber. |
The tavern owner was a very prominent man in town, and was thoroughly informed on all public and most private matters. He enjoyed the confidence of all who gathered around his fireside. |
The story of our War for Independence could not be dissociated from the old taverns, for they are a part of our national history, and those which still stand are among our most interesting Revolutionary relics. |
Competitive pricing |
"For the LADIES and GENTLEMEN,
There will be a BALL, AT Henry Wetherburn's on Tuesday Evening next, the 10th
instant, and on every Tuesday during the sitting of the General Assembly."
As the notice in the March 5, 1752 issue of the Virginia Gazette suggests, merriment and conviviality were specialties of the house at Wetherburn's Tavern in Williamsburg. |
Here is Wetherburn's kitchen where all the food was prepared. From colonial times through the late 19th century, it wasn't uncommon for a kitchen to be a separate building from the house. This was for a couple of different reasons: |
...in case of a fire caused by the hearth, only the kitchen was likely to burn down and not the main structure. And also, especially in the hot months of summer, the heat from all the cooking would not affect the main house. |
"Ham,
bacon & fowl pigeon of one sort or another always to be had upon the road
& often fresh meat or fish, dried venison Indian or Wheaton bread, butter
eggs milk, often cheese, drinks Rum Brandy or Whiskey, resembling Gin." From 1787 |
I see plates made of pewter and trenchers made from wood - both very common in the colonial era. |
Pottery was also a common |
The back of Wetherburn Tavern |
Kitchen gardens were a mainstay of nearly every home of the 18th century.
We just happened upon this group of young people as we strolled near the Greenhow Store area of Duke of Gloucester Street. They worked together like a family - and they very well could have all been siblings. |
Can you imagine trying to get modern 21st century kids to care for a garden these days like the kids you see in this photo? Oh, I know some do, but it's few and far between. |
Ten or eleven year old kids working in the hot summer sun. Of course, no work, no food. This was the importance of family life before the 20th century. |
She looks quite proud of her morning's work! |
Besides the varieties of squash, beans, lettuce and other vegetables used to help sustain the family, the colonial family would have also grown plants for medical purposes as well.
What most people of the 21st century do not realize about 18th century folks is that in a colonial family, everybody had their place; a family worked like a well-oiled wheel, and if one - just one - member doesn't do their job, it could cause some big problems. |
The gardeners told us these neat little items were to help keep the bugs and small animals off the plants. |
A beautiful colonial garden. |
The same garden from a slightly different angle. |
Off to town to sell their yield. |
The courthouse~ Construction began in 1770 and was completed in 1771.
This was where, in 1776, Benjamin
Waller read Declaration of Independence, right from steps you see here.
The Treaty
of Paris, which ended the Revolutionary War, was also announced here, on May 1st, 1783. |
Inside was heard the debtor's dispute with his creditor, the complaints against the pig stealer, and the apprentice's pleas for protection from an abusive master. |
Punishment was quick; the whipping post and the public stocks stood just outside, a few steps from the prisoner's dock. |
Serious cases involving free subjects (ones for which the penalty touched life or limb) were the province of the General Court, which met each April and October in the Capitol. |
Not making fun of history, but making history fun!
Speaking of fun, we were under this tree, of which I was told is a "Compton Oak," and took a few "fun" photos on this beautiful early summer morning:
I didn't fully realize the length of my hair until seeing this picture! And my wife, whether dressed modern or colonial (or even a little of both while wearing my tricorn!), always looks wonderful. (Yes, she is a member of the DAR) |
Okay...here is a "nice" picture of my wife and I. |
But our kids, on the other hand...yep---the apple doesn't fall too far from the tree! |
Night time falls on Williamsburg, looking as it has for 250 years.
Okay, maybe not quite this bright...
One of the wonderful things about Colonial Williamsburg is the opportunity to stroll the streets after sunset. I only wish I took more night time shots. |
By the way, do you know what this is?
This was the wall paper in our room at the Woodlands Hotel. I wouldn't mind replicating this wall paper for my own house! |
Before we close out part 4 of my continuing series on our vacation to Williamsburg, I'd like to speak a little about the souvenirs we purchased.
Very recently a friend of mine asked me what was my favorite souvenir from this historic place. My family and I did buy quite a few items, most of which were fairly inexpensive. Some pretty cool things, by the way - - -
~Colonial Williamsburg souvenirs~ As you can see, we didn't spend a ton of money at the stores: a few shirts, books & pamphlets, some colonial beer, Chowning Root Beer, a couple of broadsides, a silhouette, quill & ink, a mouse pad, a woman's 'pocket'...not too bad of a haul for the four of us who went there plus what we bought for our older offspring, our daughter-in-law, and our two grandkids, eh? |
Nope - it's not that.
Uh uh...not that one either, though it was a good guess.
Okay, I'll tell you...
Nothing you see here on the table.
Oh, I like my shirt, the broadsides, and especially the silhouette I had done. And I can't forget the cool little "A Day in a Colonial Home" book that I bought on a lark - very well written in a you-are-there manner.
As awesome as everything we purchased is, nothing - nothing - will beat the over 1100 pictures I took. Before leaving for Williamsburg, I got a new memory card for my camera - one that could hold 3000 pictures in the largest size - and thank God I did. Now I have so many wonderful pictures to look back on and document in my blog postings. And some to use in future postings as well.
My photos. The best souvenir ever.
Yes, so my recommendation is to purchase a momento as a keepsake - a t-shirt, a book...but concentrate on your photography. That will be your real treasure.
Now, there will be a little break before I continue onto parts 5 and 6 of my Colonial Williamsburg vacation photos series; I have living history reenactments taking place on each weekend during the month of August, and so, for the next four weeks my Passion for the Past blog will be filled with pictures and comments from these other time-travel excursions.
But, fear not, for I have plenty more Williamsburg pictures a-comin'!
With that being said, it's Back to the Future we go...
Until next time...see you in time.
~ ~ ~
Much of the informational text I used here came from the Colonial Williamsburg PAGE
In case you missed part one of this series, please click HERE
If you missed part two, please click HEREPart three? Click right HERE
And click HERE for part five
All are filled with lots of photographs and historical information...and fun.
How they cooked? Click HERE
How they traveled? Click HERE
How they celebrated Christmas? Click HERE
.
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