My ghost writer? |
Here it is - - - what will most likely be my final blog posting about our summer vacation to Colonial Williamsburg.
I don't like to use the word "final" - - it's just so...final!
So maybe we'll say it's the last one until next time, for I believe there will be a future visit.
Yes, I do plan to return one day...
Visiting Colonial Williamsburg has been a dream of mine for at least 30 years, and though the money it took to get there should have gone toward paying a few outstanding bills, or repairing my 19 year old van, re-doing our bathroom, or re-shingling our garage roof, it, instead, went on building amazing memories.
But, you know what else? We needed this vacation; with the rigors and stress of everyday life, and given the fact that we've gone eight years without one, don't you agree it was time for a family holiday, all else be damned?
I mean, I work to live, not live to work.
And that's why I titled this post "The Cure for the Refractory;" we took our chances between the tar & feathers or getting some sanity back into our lives. As I said, we needed this historical sojourn because we simply had to get away from all of the trials and tribulations of our modern lives.
Our Sanity 1 Tar & Feathers 0
So, to begin the last part of my journal journey, let's look into a little about the history behind this posting's title, "The Cure for the Refractor."
Yes, sitting in front of the King's Arms Tavern was this little curio that I snapped a picture of, and the more I looked at it, the more it enticed me to research deeper:
Now...let's see what else I did during the much too short 4 1/2 days in Colonial Williamsburg:
King's Arm Tavern
For some odd reason, I did not spend too much time at the King's Arms, and I have disappointed myself here, for it was one of the places I really wanted to visit. I suppose my only excuse is that I was so overwhelmed with Williamsburg as a whole that I plum forgot about it.
At least I have the couple of pictures posted here.
Colonial Williamsburg Tavern Cookbook states: "Recent re-decorations drew on the latest curatorial research to make each space in the tavern represent how Mrs. Vobe's customers used that room for dining, drinking, gambling, or sleeping.
Some guests dine in rooms in the adjacent reconstructed Purdie House, home of Virginia Gazette printer Alexander Purdie, his wife Peachy, and the three Purdie boys."
The reconstructed home of Alexander Purdie, now part of the King's Arm Tavern. The Purdie House in the evening |
Street scenes in Colonial Williamsburg, even something as simple as a couple walking down the street with a wheelbarrow, are what makes this historic city the time-travel experience that it is |
I wrote a little more extensively about Bruton Parish Church in part one, but I found a few more pictures I thought you might enjoy:
I believe these three structures are kitty corner from the Chownings Tavern. |
Again, I am not certain which houses these are, but I love their appearance. |
It was unfortunate that the wigmaker's shop was closed the couple of times I attempted to visit. I had hoped to get a few nice shots of the interior.
As I've said before, it looks like I'll have to go back someday...
In the meantime, here's a little history lesson on the wig fashions of colonial America (taken from THIS page):
An
active social life was important for people of all classes. One's appearance
was also very important. Being fashionably dressed meant dressing from the head
down. The barber and peruke maker played an important role in keeping
Virginians supplied with the latest in hair fashions."
A
wig or queue was a fashion necessity for men of the gentry and successful
businessmen of Williamsburg. Being able to afford a wig, or sometimes several
wigs, was a means of showing one's status in society. Even the lesser sort
(those with little money to spend) wanted to own a wig or queue. The fashion
was so important that wealthy slaveowners also purchased wigs for their slaves
to reinforce their own social standing.
Most
men of all classes wore wigs or queues, especially during Publick Times when
the courts were in session.
Strolling along the lanes...
The first thing my daughter said upon awakening the morning after returning home to Michigan from Colonial Williamsburg was, "I want to watch 'Felicity.' "I found this woman over by the Peyton Randolph House. There were quite a few people around and, though I waited for a bit, I did not get the chance to speak with her like I would have liked to. |
I am not too familiar with period card games, but I caught this young lady playing what I think may be an early version of solitaire. |
"Felicity," if you are unaware, is the movie based around the colonial American Girl Doll that she received for Christmas when she was but one year of age, and then collected the accessories that went with it for years until just before reaching her pre-teens.
Mind you, my daughter is now 15 years old, and though she enjoys historical reenacting with us, when she's home and in modern clothing our time-travel hobby is the furthest thing from her 21st century mind. So to say that she wanted to watch the Felicity movie on our first day back means Colonial Williamsburg certainly had quite the positive affect on her.
And it's good that the rest of us like the movie, too.
While in Williamsburg, a presenter told us that the exterior of the Thomas Everard House was used for the home of 'extra' Felicity character, Miss Manderly, so naturally we had to visit.
The Thomas Everard House - - Hey! All you modern people! Get out of the way! (Actually, a few folks here are my family members...in modern clothing!) |
So, instead, I will include, from THIS web site, snippets about the house's history:
Built in 1718 by the first keeper of Williamsburg's Magazine, John Brush's five-bay, timber framed, story-and-a-half house of hand-split weatherboard stands in modest contrast to its lofty next-door neighbor, the Governor's Palace. But it is not without elegance of its own.
~2nd floor bed chamber~ Part of the room in the picture above this one |
~2nd floor bed chamber~ What makes a colonial house a colonial house? Why...the above stairs bed chamber window seats, of course! |
The Everard House is noted for its fine staircase with its elaborately
turned balusters, sweeping handrails, and richly ornamented carving on
the stair brackets. |
Today the home appears as it did in 1773, when it was in habited by Thomas Everard, widower, and his two daughters Francis and Martha. |
One of the presenters of the house made sure I saw this etching on one of the windows. I took this picture from the outside looking in and then "mirrored" the photograph for a better impression. |
Elkanah Deane Shop - Coachmaker & Wheelwright 1772-75 This was the site of carriage making over 200 years ago...and it still is today! |
I happened upon this shop (immediate left) quite by accident as I roamed on my own while the rest of my family were back at the hotel swimming in the pool on this hot summer Virginia day. |
I was told that the apprentices today begin on something considered relatively easy like a wheel barrow |
Yeah...making a wheel barrow may seem easy to some...but it certainly looks pretty hard to someone like me! |
There was a forge inside the shop as well. Wheelwrights, blacksmiths, and harness makers were among the artisans who worked together to make carts, wagons, riding chairs, and carriages. |
Unfortunately, I came to the coachmaker & wheelwright a little too late in the day - the work they perform out back was already done by the time I arrived. But, on the plus side... |
...I got to see a "test run" of a new vehicle! This was the first time out for this wagon. A 'test run,' you might say. |
Market Square Tavern sign |
Before this became the Market Square Tavern, it was a wig maker's shop. Around 1767 it was opened as a 'publick house' (tavern), and when George Maupin purchased it in 1771, he enlarged it and then announced it to have "the best Entertainment and Accomodations." |
...including this sort of *artsy* shot utilizing a mirror to allow me to get both of the women's faces without an obvious pose. |
I saw this young man in the back room, and it just gave me the impression of one who was an apprentice and was taking a few minutes break, or, rather, maybe was working long and hard and fell asleep at the tool bench while the master was away. This was also inside the Golden Ball. |
The St. George Tucker House was originally built facing the Palace Green but was moved to its present location in 1788. One of the neat bits of information is that this house put up the first Christmas Tree in Williamsburg. This occurred in 1842. |
One of my "long-distance shots. Click the picture to enlarge it. |
Duke of Gloucester Street |
See the picture above this one? Yep - I took this shot directly afterward. |
"Excuse me, can you please tell me where the shoe shop is? I am also looking for the Greenhow Store. I hear both are within this vicinity." (No, the gentleman on the porch is not on a cell phone, though this does give that impression. He is scratching his ear) |
"Off to the shoe shop she did go as fast as she could run.
Bought him a pair, the best that was there, and the soldier put them on!"
Next stop...the Shoe Shop! (The following comes from the Colonial Williamsburg guide book): In 1773, George Wilson & Company advertised the arrival of a "choice cargo of the best Sorts of ENGLISH LEATHER for all Manner of Men's Shoes and Pumps." |
Wilson must have had more business than he could handle since he encouraged two or three journeymen shoemakers to apply to him "next door to Mr. Greenhow's Store in Williamsburg." |
The lasts carved from a block of wood into the shape of a foot are used as molds to form each shoe. |
By the end of the next year, in 1774, I believe, the household furniture and working materials of George Wilson, now deceased, were offered for sale. |
In today's shop - the very same as once belonged to Mr. Wilson - one can see all aspects of the eighteenth century process for making men's shoes... |
...including stitching by hand with eighteenth century tools. |
I would love to purchase an authentic handmade pair. If only I could... This was a great shop, by the way, and the craftsmen who worked here were very knowledgeable and explained their trade in an interesting manner. |
And right "next store" to George Wilson's shoemaker shop, there on the west end of Duke of Gloucester Street, sits - - - -
The Jn Greenhow Store |
I found myself at the Jn (John) Greenhow Store a number of times, for it had quite the variety of historically-oriented product for sale. |
John Greenhow was a merchant in Williamsburg from about 1755 until his death in 1787. Viewed from the street, this building, which combines store and house, appears to be in three segments. From left to right: there is a counting room or office, the store with entrance (that's me standing in the doorway to the store), and then the front door to the house. |
Recently, we re-watched (for the sixth or seventh time) the John Adams mini-series from HBO, and, low & behold, here's the Jn Greenhow Store in the background in one of the scenes!
(From the HBO mini-series "John Adams") |
(From the HBO mini-series "John Adams") |
According to the guidebook, the Jn Greenhow Store is the most completely reconstructed eighteenth century commercial space in Williamsburg. From the counting room in the back to the arrangement of the counters and shelving to the sign above the front door, the store is a recreation of its eighteenth century counter-part.
Now this room looked to have a few interesting items, something a living historian might have an interest in. |
I was right! There was some very cool period commodities sitting upon these shelves, including leather dispatch cases, haversacks, waistcoats, shirts, and hats... |
...willow baskets, fine imported porcelain, floorcloths, fabrics, cooper's items, tinware, and craftsmen's tools - all items sold in Mr. Greenhow's Store 250 years ago - are still available there today, along with more modern articles, including tavern beer in bottles, wine, Chownings Root Beer, books (including "A Day in a Colonial Home" - highly recommended). |
So, with the variety of product for sale, shopping was quite fun and interesting, and the store-keep - Mr. Jn Greenhow himself? - and I had quite the fine conversation indeed! |
I had a true feel of being in a store of the past - much more than the others - and not so much a souvenir stand. |
As I moved throughout the Greenhow Store, I made a great discovery:
"Hey! They do shadow portraits here!"
Set
up very much like I would imagine an 18th century studio might look, I hem'd & haw'd on whether or not to have one done. |
The shadow portrait artist, Zach, practices the more refined style of painted shadow portraiture for his portraits. Painted shades were relatively inexpensive because they only used a single color. He uses ink and watercolor.
Zach creates authentic shadow portraits (also known as "shades" or, as mentioned above, in our modern times "silhouettes") |
The
affordability made shadow portraits appealing to the middling sort in society, and to those with aspirations of climbing a bit higher on the social ladder. |
The
sitting usually takes 40 minutes or so. Zach captures the outline of the face
in perhaps ten minutes, then spends the rest of the time filling in the color
and detail. He uses ink and watercolors. The paper is from the print shop.
|
For Zach, portraiture isn’t meant to be photographic. For him, the magic of portraiture lies in the attempt to capture the essence of a person—their personality, how they relate to the world—more than a rote likeness.
Here is my shadow portrait. I would say there is more than a remote likeness, wouldn't you? Aside from all of the photographs I took while in Williamsburg, this is, perhaps, my favorite souvenir of my time here. |
The thing is my shadow portrait was done totally as a last minute idea. Within a couple hours of this sitting (and of me taking these pictures), I was on my way back to Michigan.
Sadly, it was time to leave... |
And because of that extra time I was able to have my shadow portrait done and take the extra pictures you see above at the Greenhow Store.
With Colonel Washington |
After visiting with Colonel Washington, it was time.
Off I went to the nearest necessary to change out of my period 18th century clothing into my modern 21st century fashions.
*sigh*
As I walked down Duke of Gloucester Street for the last time, I noticed something: I blended in to the throngs of visitors. No longer was I Colonial Ken in my knee breeches, waistcoat, coat, tricorn hat, and buckle shoes. Now, in my modern t-shirt, jeans, & tennis shoes I was just plain ol' everyday Ken. That's tough for me, for while I was dressed in period-appropriate clothing, folks greeted me, nodded an acknowledgement to me, maybe even would stop to talk with me for a while. But not anymore!
No longer able to engage the presenters and visitors into immersion discussions or in colonial scenarios, I knew my time there was done...into the car we climbed and off we drove for the 12 hour journey back to metro-Detroit..
But---what an opportunity, what memories, and new friends...and the 1137 photographs!
Thank you to the good folks at Colonial Williamsburg. In four and a half short days, my family and I made memories that will last a lifetime.
God Bless you all.
"These are but shadows of the things that have been..." Our time here is nigh as we fade into the shadows and head back...to the future |
Someday I hope to return. I'm not sure how long that may take, but it is in my future-past plans.
~ ~ ~I can't forget...
My daughter: if I'm in the picture in these postings (which I am in quite a few), she most likely was behind the camera. And she did a wonderful job, didn't she? Thank you, Sweetie! |
Now, let's end this series on a fun note, with my attempt at humor:
And you thought I was purchasing a cone of sugar, a betty lamp, and a slate board! Ha! Does anyone know where I got the idea to do this *almost* meme? Send me a comment if you do! |
Until next time...see you in time.
The information on the shadow portraits came from THIS excellent site.
Quite a bit of information came directly from THIS book.
It was difficult choosing which pictures would be in which posts, and there are many still that have been left out. However, if you have enjoyed my other Williamsburg vacation postings from this past summer, then I urge you to check out the first five in this series again, for I added quite a few more photographs to them. I did this because these postings are my diary, my journal, my memory, of this fantastic vacation and I want to be able to enjoy them quickly and easily.
If you would like to see PART 1 of my series on Colonial Williamsburg, click HERE
If you would like to see PART 2 of my series on Colonial Williamsburg, click HERE
If you would like to see PART 3 of my series on Colonial Williamsburg, click HERE
If you would like to see PART 4 of my series on Colonial Williamsburg, click HERE
If you would like to see PART 5 of my series on Colonial Williamsburg, click HERE
All are loaded with a ton of photographs.
For a general overview of everyday life in colonial times, click HERE
To learn about taverns and travel in colonial times, click HERE
To learn more about cooking over the hearth in a colonial kitchen, click HERE
To learn about a colonial fall harvest, click HERE
To learn of how colonials celebrated Thanksgiving, click HERE
To learn how colonials celebrated Christmas, click HERE
To learn of life in a colonial home, click HERE
To read about a historically accurate movie about colonial life, click HERE
To learn more about men's clothing, hair, and language of the colonial period, click HERE
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Wow Ken, so much to look at and ooh and aah over. Of course I always notice interior shots with fabulous period furnishings. And the shoes, and the shadow portraits, loved that! What a fun time you had, thanks so much for sharing it all with us. Happy All Hallow's Eve to you and yours!
ReplyDeleteGina
Wow Ken-thanks for this, felt like I was on vaca with your family. What a truly magical place:-)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the exceedingly enjoyable “visit” to Colonial Williamsburg. My husband and I visited in the summer of 2017 for the first time, since taking my kids in the ‘80’s, and stayed in the Orlando Kitchen. Your wonderful series almost made me feel as though I was back! I SO wanted to wear my period clothing, just for fun,during my visit but wasn’t sure if I should. Thanks to you, next time I will :)
ReplyDeletePs. Toad in “American Graffiti” !
Thank you for the very kind comments. I am so glad my post helped you to relive your experience.
ReplyDeleteAnd thank you just as much for responding to my American Graffiti reference! Made my day!!