Day 30
6 Aug 2016
| The Plimoth Plantation |
| The indians preparing a meal |
| One of the Winter Houses covered with Tree Bark |
| Preaching in the Church |
| There was a fort with Cannon to protect the setelment |
| Walking to the settlement |
| Role-playing colinists (Pilgrims) |
| Not all houses had fireplaces like this one. |
| Fixing the Mud walls of His Home |
| Not all houses had ovens. Thoes who didn't shared this outside oven to bake their bread. |
| Pilgrims of the village |
Day 31
7 Aug 2016
| Drove to the train station where we had to ride a bus to the first stop. The tracks were being repaired at this station. |
| Riding the Subway Train into Boston |
| Waiting for our tour of the freedom walk to begin. |
| Our Tour Guide. Her real job is a 7th grade History teacher. Therefore she was very informative and did an outstanding job. She took us on the Freedom Walk to see all the historical sites. |
| Where we had lunch. |
| Standing in line for a Harbor cruise. |
| Boston from the Harbor |
| This is The Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge.It is a cable-stayed bridge across the Charles River in Boston. It has a striking, graceful appearance that is meant to echo the tower of the Bunker Hill Monument, which is within view of the bridge |
| The wood posts are normally not there. They are only Temporary for support while the ship is in Dry-Dock being repaired. |
| I went on a tour of this WW II Destroyer. USS Cassin Young (DD-793) was a Fletcher-class destroyer of the U.S. Navy named for Captain Cassin Young (1894–1942), who was awarded the Medal of Honorfor his heroism at the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and who was killed in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal in the fall of 1942. The tour was really informative and showed what the conditions were like to serve on a destroyer in WW II. |
What a great tour of Boston!Cara
ReplyDelete