A Little Time and a Keyboard: History
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Beyond the Railroad: Learning Batavia, Illinois History Inside the Batavia Depot Museum

Tuesday, June 28, 2022

 

Beyond the Railroad: Learning Batavia, Illinois History Inside the Batavia Depot Museum

Batavia Depot Museum is quite the treasure tucked away near the Fox River in Batavia. On a recent day off, we found ourselves looking for something a little different to do. We love walking along the riverwalk in Batavia. We noticed that the Batavia Depot Museum was nearby, so a perfect little afternoon formed.

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Experiencing Copenhagen History and Architecture by Boat

Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Experiencing Copenhagen History and Architecture by Boat

Experiencing Copenhagen History and Architecture by Boat

Copenhagen is traversed by a network of canals, so admiring the city sailing through her canals is an ideal way to explore. During our visit to Copenhagen, we were so enamored with a boat tour of the city appreciating architecture and history that we savored two canal boat tours. In addition to absorbing the city while enjoying time on the water, we learned quite a bit from each of our tour guides.

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Fort Snelling: Frontier Fortress on the Mississippi

Friday, June 15, 2018


**Disclosure: Thank you to Visit Roseville for hosting our incredible visit to Roseville, Minnesota! Views are 100% my own.

I first visited Fort Snelling as a child when my grandparents took our family to visit St. Paul. Always the history buff, I was immediately fascinated by the fortification sitting above the Mississippi River. When we decided to visit Roseville, Minnesota for a family weekend, I knew that I had to bring my daughter. The day was sweltering and there is little shade at the fort, so we didn't spend as much time as I would of liked. However, we still learned quite a bit!

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Traveling Through History at French Lick West Baden Museum

Tuesday, December 12, 2017



French Lick West Baden Museum

The French Lick West Baden Museum is a perfect place to start a trip to French Lick, Indiana. The museum does a fabulous job unfolding area history beginning with when buffalo once migrated through stopping for a lick of minerals left behind by evaporating spring water. French Lick started becoming famous for this mineral water in the 1840's when Dr. Bowles built French Lick Springs Hotel in 1845 as an escape where people could heal from the therapeutic waters. An interesting resident, Dr. Bowles was a physician and a minister, served in Mexican-American War and was a Copperhead during the Civil War. Some of the many interesting things we learned at the museum!

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Revolutionary War Reenactment at Cantigny Park

Friday, September 29, 2017

Revolutionary War Reenactment Cantigny Park, Wheaton, Illinois

Cantigny Park in Wheaton, Illinois is an incredible treasure with magnificent gardens, the First Division Museum honoring the Army's First Division and the Robert R. McCormick Museum. Colonel McCormick served in the First Division during WW1. He would later become an editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune. The park and all of its gems are a gift from the Colonel to us!

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Allaire State Park and Historic Village in New Jersey

Tuesday, April 25, 2017



Historic 1830's industrial village Allaire, New Jersey

Allaire State Park and Historic Village gives a unique peek into the early industrial history of New Jersey. The historic site is the location where iron was ored and smelted into pig iron. The pig iron was then transported to New York where it was used in ship building.

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Apple River Fort Historic Site on the Illinois Frontier

Thursday, September 1, 2016


The Apple River Fort reconstruction in Elizabeth, IL was constructed using the same materials and tools pioneers would have used.

The Black Hawk War often receives little mention in our history books. So, we were surprised to learn about the Apple River Fort State Historic Site in Elizabeth, Illinois commemorating frontier life during this period. The site consists of an interpretive center and a reconstruction of the fort.

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Exploring Western Pennsylvania History and the Special Toys Exhibit at Heinz History Center {Pittsburgh}

Tuesday, April 12, 2016


During our first visit to the Heinz History Center a few years ago, we were immediately amazed by the wealth of engaging exhibits. We spent close to three hours going through each gallery gathering a store of knowledge about the history of Western Pennsylvania. We were just as captivated on our recent visit, soaking in familiar exhibits as well as appreciating the special Toys exhibit and exploring the Heinz exhibit that was being remodeled during our earlier excursion.

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Sneak Peek Inside Barrington's White House, Stocking the Kitchen and Upcoming Open House

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Barrington's White House
Barrington's White House ready to welcome the community! Image taken by Deborah Leydig, owner of Norton's U.S.A.
Barrington has been celebrating its 150th Anniversary this year in glorious fashion with various special events including an 1865 Street Festival back in April, a birthday celebration at Citizen's Park and more to come! Along the way, the town renovated one of its most iconic and historic structures, Barrington's White House. Anyone who has traveled along Main Street this past year cannot have missed this massive community effort. In fact, fresh in my mind is viewing the home this spring still encased in evidence of ongoing construction. The house above once looked like this:

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A Grand Tour of the Bellamy Mansion {Wilmington, North Carolina}

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

**Disclosure: Thank you to Wilmington, North Carolina for hosting our tour of the Bellamy Mansion. No compensation was received. All opinions are 100% my own.

After seeing so many magnificent historic homes during our horse-drawn carriage ride, we definitely had to tour one while visiting. One house seemed to really exude Southern elegance to us. As soon as I saw the Bellamy Mansion, I knew that we had to go in! I am sure you can see why!

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5 For Labor Day: Have a Wonderful Holiday!

Monday, September 1, 2014


As you are celebrating Labor Day with friends and family, take a few minutes to see how far we have come:

  • At the height of the Industrial Revolution, the average American worker worked 12-hour days, seven days a week to make a very basic living. Children as young as 5 or 6 worked.
  • As labor and unions organized to improve working conditions, some of the rallies that served as a foundation for Labor Day turned bloody. During the Haymarket Riot in 1886, several workers and policeman died. During the Pullman Railroad Stike of 1894, dozens died.
  • While the holiday can be traced to a New York City parade in 1882, Labor Day did not become a national holiday until 1896.
  • Union leaders pushed for a September date for Labor Day to coincide with the New York City Knights of Labor Conference. The Knights of Labor happened to be one of the largest unions.
  • There is some debate over who the founder of the holiday is. Some credit Matthew Maguire, a secretary of the Central Labor Union, for proposing the idea first. Others credit Peter McGuire, co-founder of American  Federation of Labor.
Have a great day with family and friends! 

Sources: History Channel: Labor Day
             Huffington Post: The Bloody Origin of Labor Day
             Time Magazine: Here's Why we Celebrate Labor Day
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Unfolding History at the Hendricks County Historical Museum

Monday, June 30, 2014


While enjoying the Mayberry in the Midwest Festival, we were able to duck into the Hendricks County Historical Museum in Danville, Indiana for a peak. My daughter and I both are total history buffs, so a stop at the museum was a must. What I was not expecting was the amazingly large collection of artifacts in the museum and the jail--yes, the jail--in the basement!

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Columbus Day History {for a little fun}

Monday, October 14, 2013

Today is Columbus Day, so some of you have found yourself home with the kiddos. My daughter has really been enjoying learning about the explorers and actually began her long weekend by watching a little video about none other than Christopher Columbus.

I am total history junkie and I love reading about holidays because you always learn something new! Here is a little trivia for today:

  • Columbus presented his plan to sail West to reach China to both Portugal and England before Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain gave him their support.
  • By 1492, most educated Europeans knew that the Earth was round. The ancient Greeks had already proved this.
  • When Columbus discovered Hispaniola, he actually thought that the island could be Japan.
  • By his third voyage, Columbus realized that he had not reached China.
  • Columbus sent Queen Isabella 500 Native American slaves as a gift. She was abhorred and believed that as Spanish subjects, they could not be enslaved.
  • Columbus' rule over the new colony was often brutal and he was brought back to Spain in chains. Yet, Ferdinand would still finance the explorer's final voyage.
  • On his last voyage to the New World, Columbus made it all the way to Panama.
  • Columbus' remains were moved several times until he reached his final resting place in Seville, Spain.
  • President Franklin D. Roosevelt made Columbus Day an official national holiday in 1937.
  • Columbus Day is not a public holiday in Alaska, California, Nevada and Hawaii. 
  • In Hawaii, the day is known as Landing Day or Discoverer's Day in honor of the state's Polynesian discoverers. South Dakota observes Native American Day while Berkley, California observes Indigenous People's Day.

Sources: History.com, Wikipedia, CBS News
The Northwest Florida Daily News
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The Illinois Holocaust Museum: An Important Journey

Thursday, February 28, 2013

We are very lucky to live an area with many resources that aid our children (and ourselves) as we learn about life, the world, and our place in it. The Illinois Holocaust Museum in Skokie is one of these treasures. This month, we were given the opportunity to visit the Illinois Holocaust Museum to learn about the mission of the museum, gain more knowledge about the Holocaust, and see what our children will see when they visit. The Illinois Holocaust Museum has so much to offer that we have opted to discuss our visit in two posts. This post will focus on the main exhibit.

Be prepared to be moved as you visit the Museum. The main exhibit is extremely poignant and is appropriate for those 12-years-old and older. Through the main exhibit, you will follow a path that will wind you through the history of the Jewish people after WWI in Germany leading up to the Holocaust, through the Holocaust itself, and on to life after the Holocaust. There are many artifacts along the route which bring a reality to the Holocaust experience that can be sometimes lost if your knowledge is only garnered from textbooks.

Here is some of what we each took away from our visit to the Illinois Holocaust Museum:

Photograph by Jim Schnepf
Mel's take: When I learned that students from my daughter's school had visited the Illinois Holocaust Museum, I knew that I had to visit before my daughter did in order to  prepare for her questions. What I did not know was how much I would learn myself. The main exhibit really struck me in ways I did not expect. I was amazed by how the Museum used artifacts, videos, and special effects such as light and sound to impress upon visitors the stages of the Holocaust, life before, and life after. I teared up when I saw elements displaying how Holocaust victims still tried to have pieces of life during the Holocaust. Most of the exhibits were varying shades of black, gray, and white. However, I noted a red knit dress of a little girl who escaped to China and colorful drawings made by children--sparks of life amidst tragedy. 

The Museum light effects move from darkness as you move through the Holocaust to light when you reach the liberation and life after the Holocaust sections. As we move into the light, we bring life out of the Holocaust and the mission to not allow it to happen again. The light effects add poignancy to the exhibit.

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