Road trips

The Tracks of Their Tears

My good friend Scott shares my love of history and road trips. A couple of years ago he generally followed Lewis and Clark’s route between Louisville and Astoria, Oregon. To Scott, the Lewis and Clark expedition is one of the “greatest American stories.”

Then, earlier this year, Scott suggested that the two of us take a road trip roughly following the infamous Trail of Tears. After a few lame attempts at humor observing that all my road trips could be described as a trail of tears, I accepted the suggestion and we set late summer as our target date.

I then went about the task of making preparations, the first of which was to figure out what, exactly, is the Trail of Tears? I was vaguely aware that it involved a forced march of thousands of Cherokees in the early nineteenth century, but that was about all I knew. So to ameliorate my ignorance on the topic I spent a month working through a small pile of history books from the local library. Gradually I came to better understand the iniquity of the US government’s Indian removal policy that, in 1838, forced about 16,000 Cherokees from their ancestral homes in Georgia and drove them across inhospitable terrain to what was then called “Indian Territory” (but which you and I would call “Oklahoma”). About 4000 Cherokees died along the way. It is hardly one of the “greatest American stories,” but it is an important one.

Our other main preparatory task was deciding which route we should take. The Cherokees left in various groups throughout the year, following a half-dozen different routes. Scott and I decided to generally follow the northern route, because (A) it was the most popular (if I can use that word) route and (B) it accommodates a side trip through Kentucky’s bourbon country. (More on that later.)

A trek through history: Starting in Tennessee, man's walk follows Trail of  Tears | Chattanooga Times Free Press

So it was that this morning before the sun came up, my wife (who generally appears as an unseen Mrs. Columbo in these stories) deposited me at Sacramento Intergalactic Airport. And in a trice (or perhaps a few trices) I was in Atlanta, meeting up with Scott, who’d traveled from LAX.

We got our rental car and headed over to the Fox Bros. Bar-B-Q. (You just know it’s authentic when they spell the word with two hyphens.) After a satisfying (albeit artery-clogging) meal of jalapeno-cheddar sausage, beef brisket, and Frito pie, we had a nightcap at the Pour Taproom. It’s the Automat of beer bars, where you serve yourself from among dozens of automatic taps, paying by the ounce. I sampled a half-dozen beers, but they didn’t have the imperial stout I was pining for.

Scott, playing digital bartender

Tomorrow morning we’ll set out for New Echota, GA, which is considered the official starting point of the Trail of Tears tragedy. Until then.

sdb

California history · cemeteries · Obelisks · Road trips

In a cavern, in a canyon excavating for a mine…

…dwelt a miner forty-niner and his daughter Clementine. (Copyright 1884, Percy Montrose.)

The forty-niners, of course, got their name from the year in which most of them came to the gold fields of California. Hundreds of thousands came seeking their fortune, tripling the state’s population in just a few years. The original forty-niners are of course long gone, but the forty-niner cognomen lives in in various forms, including an NFL football team, an independent student newspaper at Cal State Long Beach, and an auto repair shop in Grass Valley.

There’s also a state highway with the designation “49” that cuts through the old mining towns in the Sierra foothills. The route was established in 1934, and of course its number is a nod to the prospectors who came in search of gold. (The route also bears the official nickname “Golden Chain Highway,” but I’ve never heard anyone actually call it that.)

I tell you all this because yesterday morning I set out on a trip along a goodly portion of Route 49. I began in the Goldrush-era town of Placerville. Why did I start there? Because I recently moved to the area. There’s no need for this post to go into the sordid tale of why I moved there, but if you want the full story, ask my wife. And then tell me what she said; I’m still trying to figure it out.

Placerville: Where they haven’t yet received the news that the Rexall chain closed in 1977.

Anyway, I started my Route 49 trip in Placerville (pop: 10,000). Currently the county seat of El Dorado County, Placerville was originally established as a mining camp named Hangtown in 1849. The name referenced the vigilante justice that was meted out at the end of a rope attached to an oak tree on Main Street. After a few years some of the more sensitive souls in town called for a new and less gruesome name, and Hangtown was rechristened Placerville. The more colorful, earlier name still appears around town, including the town logo, complete with a noose. (I am not making this up.)

The Placerville city logo, with its Gold Rush-era "lynching tree"
“Come for the gold, stay for the necktie party”

There’s even a saloon on Main Street called “The Hangman’s Tree.” It calls itself a “historic spot” because it’s built on top of the stump of that very tree that once bore the hangman’s noose. And in case the name is too subtle, the proprietors have hung the effigy of a man from a noose outside the second-story window, just to drive home the point.

I’m told it’s a great place to hang out.

Of course, for a town that relies heavily on tourism, this whole gallows theme clashes uncomfortably with current political tides. And so the City Council recently voted to phase out the noose (but not the “Old Hangtown” moniker) from their logo.

Naturally, Placerville tries to keep up with the likes of Denver, Colo., Trenton, Nebraska, and Boston, Mass. with its own wannabe Washington Monument obelisk. Actually, Placerville’s doesn’t look anything like the Washington Monument, but given my last post, it struck me as propitious that I’d encounter an obelisk at the beginning of my journey. Interestingly, this obelisk was erected by “The Druids of California” in 1926. I’m not making this up.

The designer of this monument first “druid” on paper…

Incidentally, I feel compelled to share with you a Washington Monument photo from the Boilard Family Archives. This is my dad, Dennis Boilard, in the mid-1960s.

A monumental feat.

Back to Placervile: An especially tourist-friendly attraction is the town’s “Gold Bug Park,” which includes a historic mine you can walk through, a working blacksmith’s shop, a stamp mill, and other attractions. There’s even a small, historic dam on a stream that once saw hundreds of gold panners.

Keep off dam fence!

After a friendly chat with the docent at Gold Bug park (a matronly woman who’s been working there for 24 years), I set out north on Highway 49. An ancient sign beneath one of those El Camino Real mission bells pointed the way.

Mysterious Marker

In 1906, cast iron mission bells were placed along the “El Camino Route” that joined California’s Franciscan missions. Much of that route is now modern-day US 101. Over the years many of those bells were damaged or stolen, but periodic efforts have been undertaken to repair or replace them. Today many of these bells can still be seen along US 101.

But what’s this bell doing along CA 49? As you can see in the photo above (those of you reading this on your smart phones may need to zoom in on the photo), it’s clearly inscribed as an El Camino Real bell. But Placerville is a long way from the El Camino Real. A little internet research found a historical marker database that claims the bell was placed there in 1948. But the photo below, dated as 1917, suggests the bell was installed much earlier. Anyone with information is encouraged to please contact me!

Maybe the bell designated a “toll” road?

As I left the teeming metropolis of Placerville behind me, I settled into a comfortable cruise along the winding, oak-lined road that is Highway 49.

Even on the open road, I did encounter a few bottlenecks.

Soon I was passing through the historic town of Coloma (pop: 529) which is where, in January 1848, James Marshall discovered gold in the water channel serving Sutter’s Mill. Word of the find spread instantly, and within months California was inundated with would-be gold prospectors. Notably, Marshall himself never made much money on his discovery, and he eventually died penniless and largely unknown. A few years after his death, however, the state Legislature appropriated funds to have Marshall’s remains dug up and reinterred under a suitable monument. That monument sits just a mile or so off Highway 49, a distance that covers the entire length of CA Route 153. The sign below explains this conundrum.

An unusual brag.

The Marshall monument is indeed impressive. Installed in 1890, it features a larger-than-life statue of Marshall pointing at the spot where gold was discovered. The base of the monument includes all manner of symbolism, from gold mining implements to the California bear to Queen Calafia.

RIP James Marshall, 1810-1885.

All along Highway 49 there are reminders of how California was fundamentally changed by Marshall’s discovery. Most of the towns along Highway 49 served miners in some way. And of course, California’s very statehood was accelerated by the country’s desire to latch onto the Sierra goldfields. And the throngs of people coming to California demanded improved transportation routes, which helped to spur the completion of of the Transcontinental Railroad in the 1860s.

One of the first towns I encountered after Coloma was Pilot Hill (pop: 750), where in 1861 A.J. Bayley began constructing a 10,000 square foot, 22-room hotel to capitalize on what he assumed would be the construction of the Transcontinental Railroad right past his property. Indeed, the Central Pacific had been planning to use that route, but the plans where changed after an easier route was discovered through Auburn. The hotel was completed, but without easy access to the railroad it never saw the business Bayley had hoped for. The building still stands next to Highway 49 on a rise, and local organizations are hoping to renovate it.

Gold Rush-era white elephant.

One of the few “big” towns I encountered on this trip was Auburn (pop: 13,000). Auburn is in Placer County, and you’d of course expect Placerville to be the county seat of Placer County. But as we already learned, Placerville is the county seat of El Dorado County. Auburn is the seat of Placer County. To add to the confusion, Highway 49 also passes through Nevada County, which is a county of California.

Anyway, as 49 passes through Auburn is crosses the historic “Lincoln Highway.” The Lincoln Highway dates back to 1913, and was the country’s first coast-to-coast highway. It ran from Times Square to San Francisco’s Lincoln Park. When US highway numbering became a thing in the 1930s and 1940s, the portion of the Lincoln Highway passing through Auburn was designated as US Route 40. I tell you all this because in Auburn there is now a marker commemorating the Lincoln Highway and Route 40, with slabs of original pavement from the route.

Roadway Remembrance

Incidentally, most of the Lincoln Highway has now been superseded by Interstate 80.

Before leaving Auburn, I took this picture of a roadside art installation. I’m told the statue was created by a local dentist. I’m not sure what it’s supposed to mean, but the sheer size is impressive.

I certainly wouldn’t mess with her.

After Auburn, one just has to get through the rival cities of Grass Valley and Nevada City before highway 49 returns to a slow, winding, two-lane road. I didn’t feel much need to stop in those cities, given that they’ve become overrun with weekend tourists, posing hipsters, and college students showing off their starter tats. Between those two cities, though, I encountered a roadside collection of fire engines. They were parked in front of someone’s property, with no signs, no explanation, and no one to ask. Even an internet search came up empty.

Hey, Mac — where’s the fire?
Circa 1939, I’d reckon.

A bit further along the road I came upon the North Star Mine Powerhouse. It was constructed in 1895, and used water power from a neighboring creek to power a mining operation. Large mining operations were, of course, a direct outgrowth of the gold rush. The stone powerhouse building is situated among trees beside the stream, and looks like something out of a Robert Kinkade painting.

Built like a brick powerhouse.
Thomas Kinkade, eat your heart out.

And now the road settled into an idyllic, meandering, quiet route that flirted with various forks and tributaries of the American and Yuba Rivers.

Eventually I came to a turnout that overlooked the town of Downieville (pop: 300). It’s not a big or even a substantial town by any measure, and yet Downieville feels solid if not prosperous, and picturesque if not beautiful.

Downieville, viewed from the final turn of 49 before it becomes the town’s main drag.

The town quickly arose in 1849 when a Scotsman named William Downie discovered gold in the area. The gold eventually played out, of course, but the isolated little town has refused to die. As the county seat of Sierra County, it does possess a handful of government buildings and a court house. It even has its own gallows, which was used only once, to hang a 20-year-old man for murder in 1881. A change to state law later that year ended local executions in California.

Insert gallows humor here

Continuing with our theme of hangings, in 1851 a young woman was hanged from the local bridge by a vigilante mob seeking justice for a murder. Josefa Segovia was the first woman to be executed by hanging in California. Her body rests in the local cemetery, not far from that of the man she supposedly murdered.

Josefa’s last stand. (The bridge was replaced in 1938.)

But let’s leave Downieville on a less gruesome note. I passed an enjoyable 30 minutes chatting with Carol at the town’s two-room museum. Carol’s husband (now 80) grew up in this town, and Carol has learned to love the place as her own. She admits that many of the town’s young people feel a need to “spread their wings” by leaving, at least for awhile. But she believes that most of them eventually come back, “at least to visit.” She says it’s a close community, and the residents take pride in the town’s ties to the Gold Rush. Her husband even paints river rocks with gold paint for Carol to give to young visitors at the museum.

Carol, doing a little Covid-strip tease.
All that glitters is not gold.

The next town I encountered after Downieville was Sierra City (pop: 200). Like so many of the other settlements along Route 49, Sierra City saw its heyday during the Gold Rush. Today the town has only a handful of structures and few signs of life. The exception to this was an enormous barn with a cluster of people standing around its open doors. I stopped to check it out.

It turns out the barn’s owner, Joshua, was holding an estate sale to raise funds to open a museum in the barn. He told me that the barn was built in 1873, and when he purchased it a few years back it was full of various old (and I mean old) pieces of farm equipment, horse tack, tools, and the like. The barn is even bigger than it looks; it has two stories above ground, and another two floor below ground.

Joshua the Barn Baron
Sam Drucker would feel at home.

While we talked, cars would stop, people would get out and look at the stuff Joshua had out for sale, and they’d ask him what this doodad is or what that gimcrack does. Joshua had a detailed explanation for each item, including its origin, history, and purpose. (I ended up purchasing a mid-19th century equine curry comb for twenty bucks.) Joshua clearly enjoys history, and he was especially enthusiastic about getting the museum up and running. The barn itself holds a place-bound story about the town, and the artifacts tell stories about our ancestors, their culture, and their way of life. Joshua sees the importance of preserving those stories. Although he grew up in the Bay Area, he (like Carol the docent in Downieville) has come to greatly appreciate his new hometown, and he (like she) works to share it with others.

After awhile I got back on the road, and soon found myself heading north and south simultaneously.

Cue the Twilight Zone music…

Finally I came to the town of Sierraville (not to be confused with the earlier Sierra City). The town’s barber had some fun referencing the town’s name.

With apologies to Gioachino Rossini.

I stopped at a small cafe for a java, and ended up chatting with a guy roughly my age who was getting a latte for his wife (or so he said). We got to talking, and he mentioned he lives in Reno. “What brings you all the way out here?” I asked. “That,” he answered, pointing across the street to a Mexican restaurant called Los Dos Hermanos. “It’s the best Mexican food in Reno,” he explained, and it took me a moment to understand what he meant. Evidently the place is so good he considers it his “local” Mexican restaurant.

I was noticing that the weather was starting to change, and there was a slight smell of smoke in the air. From Sierraville, highway 49 would head north toward the so-called Dixie fire that’s currently the state’s largest wildfire so far this year. Given my track record of encountering fire-related roadblocks on my road trips, I decided to instead head south on state highway 89 and spend the night on the north shore of Lake Tahoe. I was accommodated by my friend Chris P., who lives in Incline Village with his wife Carla. Chris and I got a couple of beers at the local brewery, then went back to his place for martinis, steaks, and red wine. I am grateful to them both for their hospitality.

This morning I took a leisurely ride around the Lake Tahoe on the Nevada side, taking in the brisk morning air and enjoying the views. Mine was practically the only vehicle on the road.

Keep Tahoe Blue!

After passing the cluster of aging casinos near the state line, I re-entered California at South Lake Tahoe. I was experiencing a hankering for a good, rich cheese danish and a cup of strong coffee. I tried several local bakeries, and while the proprietors offered me all manner of bagels, scones, and (at the natural food bakery) a CBD muffin, there were no danishes to be had. As my final stop I went to a place called Crazy Good Bakery, where I got a delicious danish, a great cup of coffee, and a heart-warming smile from the owner’s daughter-in-law, who’s up here for the summer from San Diego.

These girls are having way too much fun.
650 calories of Danish goodness.

Thus refueled, I got back on the road and rejoined Route 89 south toward Route 88 west. Almost immediately after joining Route 88 I saw a structure that resembled a fire lookout tower, but it was equipped with what appeared to be grenade launchers or mortars of some kind.

Like something Hogan’s Heroes would sabotage.

Closer inspection revealed a “Danger!” sign warning that “unexploded military shell and explosives used for snow avalanche control may be found in target areas.” Does this mean that the equipment on the tower is used to fire live ammunition at the nearby snow-covered mountain? This sounds like one of Peter D’s tall tales, but I’d appreciate it if someone could please explain.

The rest of the trip home was relatively uneventful, with the following exception: Around Carson Pass I saw a sign for a historic site named “Maiden’s Grave.” Those are two words that really should never go together. But I was intrigued, and stopped to look at a small headstone that had been placed there in 1908.

The story goes like this: Remember all those immigrants coming to California during the Gold Rush? It was a hard, dangerous journey, marked with all manner of hardship, injury, and even death. One of those deaths was a young woman named Rachael, who was crossing Carson Pass with her family in 1850. Her parents buried her there near the pass. Half a century later, Rachael’s now-elderly mother came to the area looking for Rachael’s grave in order to bring her daughter’s remains “home.” She inquired of the locals, but no one could provide information on the grave’s whereabouts. The mother left, disappointed.

Word got around about the mother’s inquiries, and some visitors at Kirkwood recalled a grave in the area marked with a crude wooden cross naming its occupant as “Rachael Melton” and noting her death as 1850. They assumed this must be the daughter that the mother sought, and they raised funds to provide a headstone for the grave. Hence, the marker that I saw, placed in 1908.

That would be the end of the story, but in 1986 (!) a landowner about 2 miles northeast of the putative maiden’s grave was clearing his land and came across a grave outlined with rocks. Historical records were consulted, research was performed, and it was determined that this was the actual location of Rachael’s remains. The landowner erected a marker for the “Real” maiden’s grave. Such was the postscript appended on a plaque near the marker I encountered along Route 88. So I did some quick Google searches, and armed with that information, I set out in search of the secondary marker. I found it on a nearby road called Tragedy Springs. Here it is:

Rachael’s actual resting place?
Short and sweet.

So, that may be the end of Rachael’s story, but then who is buried under the “Maiden’s Grave” on the side of CA-88? Most agree that it’s the body of Allen Melton, who hailed from “Henry County.” His story is all but forgotten, or ignored.

Still, the Maiden’s Grave story strikes me as a positive one. It highlights a mother’s love for her daughter, the decency of a group of strangers who volunteered to help mark (albeit erroneously) a girl’s grave, the decency of a local landowner to tried to right a historical wrong by placing a new marker on his land, and efforts by all of us, channeled through our state government, to remember and honor the hardships and losses experienced by the pioneers who founded this state. For a road trip focused on the Gold Rush, the importance of place, and the impact of history, I can’t imagine a more fitting final reflection.

Road trips · Uncategorized

Plenteous Pillar

In a recent post I observed that this country seems to be littered with obelisks in the shape of the Washington Monument. (Actually, I noted that, in my travels, I’d stumbled upon exactly two facsimiles of the famous monument in D.C.) Picking up on that implied challenge, faithful reader Joel R. offered this photo (plucked from cyberspace) of a monument to Sergeant Charles Floyd, Jr., who was evidently the only fatality of the Lewis and Clark expedition. What’s more, the monument is claimed to be the United States’ first National Historic Landmark. It’s in Sioux City, by the way.

Srgt. Floyd Monument
Derivative, but an honor nonetheless.

Perhaps, during your post-Covid travels this summer, you will find another example of this recurrent architecture. If you do, I would appreciate a photo to add to my collection.

Road trips · Uncategorized

You Say You Want a Revolution

Today we left the witches completely behind and focused on Boston’s colonial and revolutionary history.

But first let me give a shout-out to Donna’s Restaurant of Boston’s North End. Donna herself served us. Her energy and sass reminded me of Flo on the 1970’s sitcom “Alice,” but with a Boston accent. This is where I started the day with a bacon-and-egg breakfast sandwich, plus a side order of bacon. If they served bacon juice, I would have had a glass of it.

Oink.

After satisfactorily clogging our arteries, we made our way into the downtown, where we visited Boston’s “Old Statehouse.” It’s the oldest surviving public building in Boston (and one of the oldest in the country), dating back to 1713. Boston was not just the provincial capital but it also served as the political and commercial center of New England. The city (like all of New England) was of course under British rule, so the “state house” was answerable to the Crown.

Dwarfed by the newcomers.

But as we know, the early 18th century saw worsening relations between Britain and the colonists. The protests against the stamp acts, the Boston tea party, Paul Revere’s ride (Listen my children….), and ultimately the battles of Concord, Lexington, and Bunker Hill all were Boston’s contributions to the revolution. As Boston got too big for its Colonial britches, Britain suspended the colonial Assembly, which thus was prevented from meeting in the old statehouse for almost a year. After the American Revolution, the old statehouse was used for a short time as the state of Massachusetts’ legislative building, but the growing state soon outgrew it and the legislature moved to the “new” (circa 1798) state house.

The old state house then became Boston’s city hall, and then a commercial building, before finally, in the 1880s, becoming the museum that we visited today. And an impressive museum it was. This is not just because of its artifacts (which were authentic and well-displayed) or even its docents (who were helpful and knowledgeable). Rather, what struck me about the museum was its story. Boston was, quite simply, the key to the American Revolution. I’m a sucker for the inspirational, heroic, and idealistic story of the revolution. Many Americans, and especially I, tend to take our system of government for granted. We think of it as our birthright, guaranteed to afford us the rights and protections we deserve. But when you dig into our revolutionary history, you’re reminded how tenuous this experiment once was, and how much it depended on a relatively small number of patriots, statesmen, and soldiers to keep it alive. Of course those people weren’t perfect; they had their flaws like all of us. But the history reminds us of our own responsibility to do our best in protecting our democracy and upholding its ideals.

In the Old State House: A worthy reminder of the Revolution’s significance to Humankind.

OK. Lecture mode is now off.

After the Old State House, we went to visit the “new” one (built in 1798 and where Massachusetts’ legislature meets to this day). Sadly, the building was being renovated, and we were only able to see it from the outside.

Note the black construction screen over the middle section.

This nicely complements the photo I took in Jefferson City, MO on my Route 50 trip:

Another capitol under construction.

Oh, and I took this photo of West Virginia’s capitol in Charleston during my Route 60 trip:

I seem to have a knack for finding capitols under construction.

But I digress.

The rest of the day we spent at two main sites: One is the Old South Meeting Hall (constructed 1729), which was where much of the planning for the Boston Tea Party took place.

Note another with connection!

The other place we visited was the Boston Museum of Science, which was founded in 1830 and features (at least as far as we’re concerned) the world’s largest (three stories tall!) Van de Graaff generator. (If you don’t know what a Van de Graaff generator is, re-watch the laboratory scene in Frankenstein.)

It’s been a great trip. Before ending with today’s BOTD, I’ll leave you with a few random photos from today:

Art Deco “New England Telephone and Telegraph” building from 1930, in Boston. Today owned by Verizon (appropriately enough),
Covid-era T-Rex at Boston’s Museum of Science.

Check out the start times on these two signs, which are just one parking space away from each other. Clearly you’d want to choose the second one.

BREW OF THE DAY

After about 40 miles of walking this week, we sat down for a final beer at “World of Beer” in downtown Boston. The place has the misfortune of being situated in a mall, and being part of a Florida-based chain, but it makes up for it with its extensive menu of literally hundreds of beers. After careful study (and tasting a few samples), I settled on a stout from Widowmaker Brewing (Braintree, MA). Like so many of these Massachusetts microbreweries, Widowmaker was started up by a couple of young home brewers a less than a decade ago. I had their “Candymaker with Coffee” stout. The front end of this beer is just what a like: big flavor, plenty of maltiness, some roasty notes, some sweetness, and some real body. It starts out great. But then it just kind of peters out. There’s no counter-balancing bitterness on the finish, and almost no carbonation to wash away the cloying sweetness. The coffee is hardly noticeable. And the ABV is a modest 7.0. So, despite the “Widowmaker” brand, this is a milquetoast beer. I give it three points.

Not “big.”

——————————————————————

Tomorrow morning we fly back to California. Thanks to everyone for your comments and suggestions during this trip. And thanks to my good friend Vic for making this a team effort.

Until the next trip,

sdb

Road trips · Uncategorized

Ground Zero, A Midnight Ride, and Three Obelisks

Today covered a lot of ground (literally). We began our day by leaving modern-day Salem and heading out to the nearby town of Danvers (pop: 27,000). Back in the day Danvers was known as “Salem Village” (to distinguish it from the larger town of Salem which holds that name to this day). Are you following me so far?

Danvers (nee Salem Village) gave birth to the Salem witch trials. For it was here in 1692 that the daughter (Betty) and niece (Abigail) of the village minister (Samuel Parris) accused the household’s slave of witchcraft. Accusations and counter-accusations flew, until some 19 people were hanged as witches. The hysteria eventually died down, and the village did its best to leave the whole ordeal behind it. Little was spoken about the events, and after Samuel Parris died in the 1780s, his home was torn down.

Then, in 1970, a young historian in town sought permission to do an archaeological dig at the site of Samuel Parris’ home. The foundation of the original home, where Betty and Abigail made those initial accusations that set into motion the witch hysteria, was uncovered in a field. The site was purchased by the city and today is preserved as a (not-well-marked) historic site. After some Google searches and a number of passes down the same stretch of a leafy, suburban street, we eventually found a narrow path leading to the archaeological site. Soon we were standing at Ground Zero of the Salem witch trials. There, in a shaded corner of the neighborhood, obscured by trees, we could almost feel the dread and fear that had sprung from that house.

Something wicked that way came.

Not far from the Parris site is a slightly more accessible memorial to the victims of the witch trials. But still, unlike the witch-obsessed Salem, Danvers seems not to want to call a lot of attention to those past events.

Sorry seems to be the hardest word.

After paying our respects, we left Danvers and headed out toward Boston (pop: 684,000). Boston is of course known for many things, but today’s focus was on Paul Revere. This reminds me of an incident when I was about 7 years old: My brother Dave and I decided (for no discernible reason) to sneak out of the house at 1 or 2 in the morning, and walk the sidewalks of our suburban neighborhood with a bedspread draped around our shoulders. We didn’t go very far and we didn’t engage in any kind of skullduggery, but it was exhilarating to be out when the entire city was asleep. After an hour of aimless wandering, we returned to our house and our beds.

The next day the neighbor girl, Jeanine, ratted us out. We were getting out of the family sedan with Mom and Dad when Jeanine scampered up our driveway. “Oh, it was so funny to see Steve and Dave outside last night!” she exclaimed. “I happened to be up and looking through the window when I saw them. They looked so funny with that bedspread! I don’t mean to get them in trouble or anything, but boy was that a sight!” Dad wasn’t quite as amused as Jeanine, and I recall that some kind of punishment was meted out.

The next day I was talking to my grandma on the phone. “I heard about your Midnight Ride of Paul Revere,” said she. I asked her what she was talking about. “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere! You know, ‘Listen my children and you shall hear/Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere.” I still didn’t know what she was talking about. This triggered a five-minute remonstrance about how kids these days don’t get instructed in the classics.

I say all this because today, finally, I developed a decent understanding of Paul Revere’s ride while visiting his home in Boston’s North End. As my readers no doubt know, Paul Revere was a very accomplished and respected native son of Boston, and it was from this house that he made his “midnight ride” to warn of the approaching British troops in 1775.

“The meter-maid’s coming! The meter-maid’s coming!”

Apparently Henry Wadsworth Longfellow exercised some literary license when he wrote his ode to the event that later was quoted by my grandmother. For example, there were several riders that night, not just Revere riding alone, and Revere was actually captured before he reached Concord. And the placing of the lanterns (“one if by land, two if by sea”) was not to meant as a signal to Revere, but rather was used by him to signal others. Still, I found it moving later today when we visited the Old Church where the lanterns had indeed been hung.

One if by land….

After taking a lunch break at a local trattoria (this neighborhood is wonderfully full of Italian restaurants), we made our way across the Charles River to visit the USS Constitution. That wooden frigate was commissioned a few years after Paul Revere’s ride, and fought nobly in a number of sea battles. Over the centuries it has of course become obsolete, and a few times it’s come close to being scrapped. But each time it’s been saved, and today it’s a carefully-restored and well-preserved floating museum at Boston’s Charlestown Naval Yard. It’s said to be the oldest ship of any type that is still afloat.

Photo credit: Vic.

Sadly, Constitution wasn’t open to the public today. While we stood there looking at the ship from the shore, I noticed a structure that looked surprisingly like the Washington Monument. Let’s do a quick review:

Here’s the Washington Monument

Facts About Washington Monument | DK Find Out
Stock photo stolen from the Internet

And here’s the obelisk I saw in the distance behind the USS Constitution:

Doppleganger?

I asked a docent near the USS Constitution about the structure that “looks like the Washington Monument.” You’d think I insulted his family. He sharply informed me that it’s the Washington Monument that copied Boston’s memorial, and not the other way around. Boston’s memorial is the Bunker Hill Monument, erected between 1825 and 1843. (Construction of the Washington Monument didn’t begin until 1848.) We took a hike to get a closer look at the Bunker Hill version.

That’s Bunker Hill hero William Prescott at the base.

For good measure, let me share with you a picture I took in 2019 at the Devil’s Gate Dam in Pasadena. Seems that the “Bunker Hill” obelisk has a lot of company.

Baby Brother?

Tomorrow will be our last day in Massachusetts before we head back west.

BEER OF THE DAY

After close to ten miles of walking today, we felt we earned a refreshing beer at the Night Shift Brewing (est. 2012). I had the 2020 Darkling — an imperial stout aged in bourbon barrels. This is what I’ve been pining for since I left California. It’s dark as coal, rich as Midas, and big as Topsy. It has flavorful notes of toffee, coffee, caramel, and even butterscotch. The flavors constantly shift as it washes over your tongue, and they keep mixing a bit between sips. It’s balanced with a decent amount of hops bitterness and medium carbonation. At 12.8 percent ABV, this is not a beer to be trifled with. But I had two glasses anyway. I give it 5 well-earned points.

Eight ounces of malty goodness.