Monday, October 24, 2022

October 17, 2022 Weekly Recap


JAUNTS
No jaunts this week. 

CLASSES
Tuesday started my AppGen class titled, "Lost & Overwhelmed AncestryDNA - Sorting, Organizing and Using Results to Grow Your Family Tree" taught by Mary Kircher Roddy, CG®
This class is one that I have been excited about. I gave this idea to Lisa and she presented it to her group. Mary said she could teach it. The first session was interesting and I was able to complete the homework on time. Now waiting for Mary's comments. 

VOLUNTEER WORK
This was the week I volunteered at the FHL on Wednesday evening. I learned how to use the new Epson flatbed scanner. I was able to scan some of my larger photos. I still need to label and file them. 

WEBINARS
"Verifying Descent from Salem's Accused Witches" presented by David Allen Lambert and American Ancestor's by New England Historic Genealogical Society
Barry attended this also. His family claims that one of their ancestors is Mary Estes. She was hung as a witch during the Salem Witch Trials. 

I hosted CGS' presentation on Saturday, "Ancestral Time Travels: Timelines" presented by Jennifer Holick. I have known Jennifer for about 5 years. I hired her to help obtain documents of my Grandpa Griffin's time in WWII. I also was in a few of her writing groups. I loved the presentation. 

MEETINGS
CGS Membership Sub-Committee
FHL Volunteer Mtg. 

OTHER STUFF
Picked up the framing I had done at Michaels®. It was a week overdue and I still had to wait a few more days. Michaels® is aware I was not a happy customer. A photo of the framing is below. It's the tallest one. I purchased the canvas from Amazon.com and I absolutely love it. I'm over the moon about how our mantle looks this year for Halloween.


This was also Bingo week. I have not been in a few months due to our traveling. It was fun to see everyone again. I came home with one prize so Barry is happy. He would be happier if I came home with nothing....LOL!

I worked all week on decorating the inside of the house and Barry worked on the front yard. First Halloween since the pandemic shutdown. We are expecting 500-600 kids this year. Unfortunately, I paid for it all week. Major hip and back pain all week. 





Copyright © 2022 by Jacqueline Threet Henderson, Jacqueline's Jaunts. All rights reserved.

Saturday, September 10, 2022

September 01, 2022, Thursday, Salem, Massachusetts Part II


Salem, Massachusetts
Part II
JTH Steps 10,168



From Nathaniel Hawthorne's house we steered ourselves toward the Salem Witches Museum. We had about a 10 minute walk and followed the map with no problem. The building was originally a church and I would like to look up the history of the church at some point. Some of the reviews talk about how "cheesy" this museum is and I agree the beginning part is, but the important part is the narration at the beginning of the tour. It walks through the main events that happened. I didn't realize the witch trials were only from February 1692 and May 1693. The red circle photo below is on the floor of the front part of the museum and is lit from underneath. Very cool to see all the names of the people that were executed. Mary Easty is somehow connected to Barry's family but I don't know how. I need to help him through an investigation of the relationship....that would be so much fun to research!
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      

If you look between 12:00 and 1:00
you can see Mary Easty's name



The next room is some artifacts but what I liked was a timeline of the events and how they related to the rest of what went on in the world during the same time. I couldn't get the whole timeline in a photo so I bought a little book that gives the same information and can't wait to read through it. On another wall is a display how fear and scapegoating lead to the witch trials and a few other world events. I thought this is one of the highlights of the exhibit. I stood there and thought about this for a few minutes and could see the correlation. I have never thought of this before but makes total sense to me. We bought a few things in the gift shop and headed down the street to the Hawthorne Hotel to have lunch in the Tavern. One of the people from the giftshop recommended it. Yes this is the Hawthorne Hotel where Nathaniel Hawthorne's birth house was located from. 

Think about this formula

                                                                                                                                                                           
                                                             
The Hawthorne Tavern was everything we thought it would be. A little history is at the top of the menu  and posted below. I had a watermelon Pink Lemonade that was delicious; pink Whitney Vodka, Lemonade, and Watermelon Puree. Doesn't that sound thirst quenching?  There is also a short video of The Tavern below. 

Great lunch menu




After lunch we headed to The Witch House or The Jonathan Corwin House. Judge Jonathan Corwin lived here and is the only building still standing that is related to the Witch Trials. He is the judge that investigated the witch accusations. The house was believed to be built between 1620 to 1642. This house is where we saw the document with Mary Eastey's name on it, a family ancestor. A part of the transcript from the witch trials. Mary was hung as a witch. 

The front of the Witch House or
The Judge Jonathan Corwin House


The examination
of Mary Eastey document. 



The back of the Witch House. This is where
we entered.


The table in front of the 2 women on the right has the
Mary Eastey document displayed. The document was
covered by another but one of the docents moved it
for us in order for Barry to take a photo.
She was so helpful. 


Since this is an original home this section
of a wall was removed in order to see
how the walls were constructed.

                                                                      
These markings are on the stairs
leading 
to the 2nd floor. This was
to ward off 
evil spirits from
moving upstairs.


 
From here we decided to walk over to the Essex Street Pedestrian Mall. A section of the street that is paved with cobblestone and plenty of shops to browse through. We stopped by the Chamber of Commerce for a restroom break. The door was locked but a woman came from down the hall and she was going home for the day and opened it for us. She was an attorney who has been in Salem for some time and introduced herself as Effie. We ended up talking to her for 30 minutes. She was full of current information about Salem and the "true" history of salem, other than the witch trials. She says there is more to Salem than witches. One of the other attorneys is creating an organization to start tours that focus on the history of Salem that does not include the witch hysteria. She is also not happy with the element of people the witch history brings to Salem from now until Halloween. Not everyone, but just the people that feel it gives them an excuse to come her and create havok. I wish I could remember everything she spoke about. 

Essex Street Pedestrian Mall is one witch shop after another. We only went one that Effie told us about, Black Craft Cult. The people that opened it this year are from the Bay Area. They are in an old bank location and painted the interior all black, something she felt destroyed the architecture of the building. Can't say I blame her. The photos below are dark because of the black so you will have to blow them up to see the inside of the store. 

This shop is owned by a couple that moved
 to Salem from the Bay Area.



We walked back to the wharf and sat at the wharf side bar and had a drink before we took the last ferry back to boston. A gentleman and his wife sat next to us and he had a Vietnam Vet hat on. I asked if he served and we talked a bit. We also bought them a round of drinks for his service. They were very thankful. What a great way to end our day in Salem. The ferry ride back was very cool so we sat inside most of the trip. 
Tomorrow we take a ferry to the Boston National Historical Park to see the USS Constitution. 


Below are random photos I took walking through Salem. 
                                                     

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Copyright © 2022 by Jacqueline Threet Henderson, Jacqueline's Jaunts. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, September 6, 2022

September 01, 2022, Thursday, Salem, Massachusetts Part I



Salem, Massachusetts
Part 1
JTH Steps 10,168


The Salem Ferry it was bigger than I
thought it was going to be 

    
Today we went to Salem via Ferry. The first ferry left at 9:30 so we decided to walk down to Starbucks, get a coffee and pastry. We sat in an area with tables and again enjoyed the view, we can't get enough of it. It was a beautiful day and we couldn't have been more lucky. The ferry ride was about an hour to Salem and follows the shore. You also can see the ship lanes marked by buoys all along the route. Even though it was morning everyone on the ship was in shorts and short sleeves. The entire trip we could see huge houses along the coastline. They must get hammered during a storm. I can't even imagine. 
                                                                                   
Deck we waited for our ferry while
enjoying our Starbucks. Look how clean it is!




Even the littles were in short
sleeves it was so nice
            







Coastline view all the way to Salem


Large homes along the coastline


Our ferry arrived at 10:30 AM and we had an 11:00 AM tour scheduled at the House of the Seven Gables, the home Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote about. Once we landed we needed to make our way to the house promptly to make our tour. Again, who decided on these early morning tours.....meeee but don't tell anyone.  We arrived in plenty of time and was able to walk around a bit. Our tour guide was quite the character, with some sarcasm I found amusing. Nathaniel Hawthorne's cousin, Susan Ingersoll, became the owner after her sea captain father died at sea. She never married because she would lose her wealth....smart woman for the times.  We got to walk up the "secret door" stairs to another room. It was added onto the house later because she thought it was cool, not the word used then. It has 17 rooms and 8,000 square feet. It's the oldest colonial mansion in North America. I loved this tour and the gardens. Beautiful property. The ocean views from the windows were priceless. I especially loved the diamond shaped window panes. I know there are many photos posted of this house but there is nothing like touring yourself and taking your own photos. I took many photos and had a hard time deciding what to post. These are my choices below and hope you appreciate them. 




Garden View of the home
   
Garden outside the house

View of the ocean from the garden



Apothecary room but I think this would 
be a great craft room!

Diagonal windows I love

                                                                            
The House from the garden

   

                                                                             
Nicely hidden liquor closet



One of the children's' room but they also used
this room to entertain which is an interesting concept



The secret stairway-If you look closely you can 
see how small the stairs are



Our next stop was Nathaniel Hawthorne's home he was born in. He didn't live there long and it was moved next to the House with the Seven Gables much later when the Hawthorne Hotel was built. The house sat on the site the new hotel was being built on. This home was much smaller so this was a self guided tour. So cool to see these old colonial homes in person after only seeing them online. 

Home was built circa 1750

Front of the house

Information about the house

Nathaniel Hawthorne's Children

His son died in San Francisco in 1934 
and I wonder where he is buried?

The room Nathaniel was born in

These stairs are wider than any
in the Seven Gable house





Copyright © 2022 by Jacqueline Threet Henderson, Jacqueline's Jaunts. All rights reserved.