Category Archives: Historic Landmark

Historic Landmark

Baudette and NW Angle, MN June 27, 2017

As we drove from Kabetogama to Baudette we followed the Rainy River with views of Canada across the river.  We were glad to see sunny skies and warmer temperatures.  20170627_121912We settled in at a nice city campground.  This area of Minnesota is known as Lake of the Woods and Baudette is located in Lake of the Woods County.   Baudette is known as the Walleye Capital of the World.  Can you guess what a walleye is? IMG_20170628_145609There are no stoplights in the entire county.  Established in 1923, it is the youngest Minnesota county and there are only three and a half people per square mile.  There are two schools in the county.  One is just west of Baudette and serves preschool through 12th grade.  The other school is in Northwest (NW) Angle and serves children through sixth grade.

Our purpose for coming this far north in Minnesota was to visit the NW Angle, the northernmost point in the contiguous United States and the only place in the contiguous United States north of the 49th parallel at 49.3 degrees.  We had been to the southernmost point and the easternmost point in our travels, so we couldn’t pass this up.  Lake of the Woods has 14,552 islands and NW Angle is where the islands begin in the lake.

The thing is, in order to get to NW Angle, you have to drive to the top of Minnesota, enter Manitoba, Canada, exit Canada and re-enter Minnesota, about two hours each way from Baudette.  Which means you better have your passport handy and you have to deal with border crossings.  That never stops us, so off we went.

IMG_20170627_162205We passed into Canada after stopping at the border, showing our passports and answering the usual questions.  The Canadian border agent made us lower the back window and open the trunk.  He asked us several times if we knew anyone in Canada or were visiting anyone.  Then he sent us on our way.  After driving in Canada for about fifty miles we crossed back into Minnesota and arrived at NW Angle, population 119.  It is hard to believe this remote location is still part of Lake of the Woods County and part of Minnesota.  Signs directed us to Jim’s Corner where we had to check in with the U.S. border patrol.  This is where it really got different!  At Jim’s Corner there was a small shed.  Inside was a videophone.  IMG_20170627_164207IMG_20170627_180513There were two buttons on the phone.  One button had a U.S. flag symbol and the other button a Canadian flag.  We pushed the U.S. flag and spoke with a U.S. border patrol agent.  He asked us our names, birthdates and car tag.  Then the usual why and how long we were there questions.  We were then free to begin exploring the area​.  

IMG_20170627_162251NW Angle has a total land area of 596 square miles with 123 miles being land and 473 miles of water. Seventy percent of the land is held in trust by the Red Lake Indian Reservation, part of the Ojibwa tribe.  IMG_20170627_162325IMG_20170627_170057NW Angle was given to the U.S. by mistake during the Canada-U.S. border agreement in the Treaty of Paris.  A mapmaker’s error misrepresented the source of the Mississippi River which was an agreed upon boundary.  When the mistake was discovered, the British wanted to change the boundary in the Treaty of Ghent, but the U.S. refused to secede any land.

I must say NW Angle had the biggest black flies we have ever seen in our lives.  Whenever we stopped they immediately attacked the car with such intensity it was very unsettling.  The pings as they hit the windows and sides of the car was like something out of a  Sci Fi horror movie.  The really strange thing was the wind was blowing and whenever we got out of the car they didn’t bother us and didn’t bite.  They just attacked the car.IMG_20170627_170148

We had planned on finding some geocaches and at first I refused to get out of the car because of the flies.  But after Bill got out and convinced me the flies wouldn’t attack me, we both enjoyed finding the geocaches.  There was one geocache near this original single room schoolhouse.IMG_20170627_170235

We stopped at the smallest post office in the continental U.S.IMG_20170627_170659

Here is the one room schoolhouse which is the only school in NW Angle and the last remaining one room schoolhouse in the state. The school is K through sixth grade, has one teacher and twelve students, with enrollment and attendance varying seasonally.  29714055462_bc515bdb54_bSome children arrive by boat from nearby islands.  In the winter some students travel to school by snowmobile.

We found the northernmost marker which looked exactly like the marker in Key West, Florida except this one was blue.IMG_20170627_173231

In 1997 some residents of NW Angle suggested leaving the United States and becoming part of Canada.  This angered the leaders of the Red Lake Indian Reservation which holds most of the land.  The residents’ main gripe was what they considered to be unequal fishing regulations between the U.S. and Canada.  The NW Angle residents worked with their Congressman to get an amendment introduced to bring equity in the ways the two nations were treated under NAFTA.

After a couple hours exploring it was time to head home.  But first we had to go back to the shed at Jim’s Corner and check in with the Canadian patrol.  This time we pressed the Canadian flag symbol on the phone, but we were put on hold for almost twenty minutes.  We were very grateful we were waiting inside the shed and not outside with the flies.  There is a second phone outside in case there are people waiting.  Finally a Canadian agent came on the line and asked us almost the same questions we had been asked before.  She then gave us a four digit number to use in case we were stopped by Canadian police.  The number would prove we had checked in.

We left NW Angle and re-entered Canada.  Our drive through Canada back to the Minnesota border was uneventful.  When we re-entered the U.S. at the Canadian border we now had a real in person United States border agent.  He didn’t ask us to open the trunk, just wanted to know what we did in Canada and if we had anything to declare.  Very easy getting back in.

I read that the lack of in person border patrols at NW Angle has caused some safety concerns since 9-11.  It is possible to enter the area by car or boat without being easily detected.

We arrived back home after our six hour adventure.  And what an adventure it was!

This is the northernmost point in our 2017 summer travels.  When we leave Baudette we will head back south.

Next stop:. Leech Lake Recreation Area, MN

Voyageur National Park, MN June 25, 2017

Minnesota has certainly been cooler and wetter than we expected and things did not change as we moved from Ely northwest to Kabetogama, Minnesota and stayed at the Woodenfrog State Forest Campground.  We were there for two nights and both nights it got down into the forties.

After getting settled in our campsite we drove twenty five miles north to International Falls, population 6,400.  We were curious to see what the city was like and we were definitely underwhelmed considering it is a key port of entry and supply point for Ontario, Canada.  We drove to the International Bridge linking the United States and Canada and were disappointed to see just an ordinary bridge.  We didn’t even take a picture.  International Falls has a paper mill and there was a bad smell that permeated the area.

Next we visited the Smokey the Bear Park and found a geocache.  At 26 feet tall, made of steel and fiberglass and weighing 82 tons, it is the largest Smokey the Bear statue of its kind in the country.  It was unveiled in 1954.IMG_20170625_153902

We also found a geocache at Big Vic, a 30 foot statue of a voyageur, honoring the French-Canadian fur traders who once navigated the rivers and lakes in this rugged area of Minnesota.IMG_20170625_155855

Since we left Duluth we have had to rely on small local markets for groceries.  The choices are extremely limited and the prices high.  So I was happy to find that International Falls had a Super One grocery store and before heading back home we stopped for some groceries.

Our reason for coming to this area was to visit Voyageurs National Park, the only national park in Minnesota. The park is 218,000 acres with 30 lakes, 1,000 islands and 600 miles of bedrock shoreline between Minnesota and Canada.  There are four main lakes in the park which eventually drain into the Hudson Bay.  Lake levels are controlled by dams at the international border at Fort Frances, Ontario Canada and International Falls, MN as well as dams at Kettle Falls and Squirrel Falls on Namakan Lake.

Our campground was near the Kabetogama Visitors Center in Voyageurs National Park, one of three visitors centers.  The visitors centers are accessible for road, but the interior of the park is accessible only by water.IMG_20170625_143840  There are many resorts and private campgrounds near the park, but the campsites in the park are only accessible by boat.  We advance booked a boat tour since it is the only way to see the park.  In the summer the park can be accessed by motorboat, houseboat, canoe or  kayak.  In the winter it is accessible by snowmobile, snowshoe or cross country skis once the lakes freeze.  The Park Service plows miles of ice roads on Rainy Lake for ice fishing and wildlife viewing.  Voyageur National Park became a national park in 1975.

When we left the RV Monday morning to head to the boat it was 55 degrees, pretty chilly to be out on the water!  Not far from the campground Bill spotted a red fox on the side of the road, but it ran away before we could get a picture.

We boarded the pontoon boat with a park guide and a park employee driving the boat.20170626_09394120170626_09522120170626_135731  We were provided with binoculars  and a blanket which came in very handy for the next two hours.  We toured the park with views of Canada across the water.  We stopped at several locations to see bald eagles, birds and a loon which is the state bird of Minnesota.  IMG_20170626_101438IMG_20170626_105042IMG_20170626_10402220170626_10411620170626_111116IMG_20170626_111529IMG_20170626_141905IMG_20170626_144321IMG_20170626_144539We were amazed at all the bald eagle nests and the guide told us there are many more in the park we couldn’t spot.  We saw several fishing boats as well as some houseboats which the guide told us are available to rent from some concessionaires in the area.20170626_140950

We stopped at the Kettle Falls Hotel for lunch.  Built in 1913, the hotel was frequented by loggers, prospectors and commercial fishermen.  During Prohibition bootleggers took advantage of the hotel’s proximity to Canada and its remote location to smuggle liquor south of the border.  Legend has it that a Madam financed the construction of the hotel who later staffed the hotel with the “fancy ladies” who “entertained” the guests.  William E. “Big Ed” Rose, a timberman, sold his Kettle Falls holdings to Robert Sloan Williams in 1918 for $1000 and four barrels of whiskey. IMG_20170625_143924IMG_20170626_11585120170626_120145The hotel and restaurant was sold to the National Park service in 1977 and is operated jointly by the Park Service and a concessionaire.  The hotel is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  Kettle Falls got its name from the naturally formed kettles in the bedrock below the falls.  The kettles were formed by hard rock being swirled around soft rock over thousands of years.

The hotel restaurant was understaffed and it seemed to take forever to get served lunch.  While we waited we walked around the hotel.  We noticed the badly slanting floor in the bar area.  When the hotel was built the owner wanted it done as cheaply as possible so they did not build a foundation.  The clay soil often accumulates water which builds up and can become mushy over time, causing the earth to sink.  The hotel floor sank creating a sloping floor for the entire bottom level of the hotel.  IMG_20170626_123754When the Park Service renovated the hotel in the 1970’s they decided to repair the foundation of the floor but preserve the sloping in order to preserve the uniqueness of the hotel. The original hotel had eighteen guest rooms but since the National Park Service acquired the property and brought it up to fire code it now has twelve guest rooms.  It is still being used as a hotel today and they had one room open to visit.  The hotel’s original owner furnished the hotel with second hand furnishings or castaway items.  It really is a high class hotel…notice the box fan for air conditioning and the fly swatter on the wall.   The hotel is not open in the winter because there is no heat upstairs and there are no televisions or Wifi either.20170626_12391720170626_12393020170626_124007

After lunch our guide led us on a short walk to the Kettle Falls Dam.  IMG_20170626_134737The falls are now under the dam.  There is a stake in the ground showing the boundary of the United States and Canada.  IMG_20170626_134953When standing at the Kettle Falls overlook and looking towards the dam, it is one of the only places in the continental United States where you look south to Canada.

We then boarded the boat for the trip back.  While we were walking to the dam it started to lightly rain.  IMG_20170626_135647We have learned that bright blue skies in Minnesota in the morning does not guarantee a day without rain.  It was a very cold ride back even with a blanket and coats.  Even though the boat was covered we occasionally felt the rain and the ride back was sometimes  rocky.  We saw the Minnesota’s state bird the Common loon.IMG_20170626_151430 By the time we got back we had been gone for six hours, four of which was on the water.  IMG_20170626_150057We were cold and glad to get back on land and in the warm car.  On the way home we saw a doe and her fawn. IMG_20170626_155638 

Next stop: Baudette, MN

Ely, MN June 23, 2017

We woke up to 48 degrees and a heavy fog on our travel day from Grand Marais to Ely, Minnesota.  By the time we were ready to pull out of the campground, the fog had lifted and we saw blue sky.

We headed south and west to Ely, MN.  The roads could have been worse, but they certainly could have been better too.  We said goodbye to Lake Superior, passing several small waterfalls along the side of the road.  The fields of wildflowers were lovely but unfortunately do not show up well when taking a picture from a moving vehicle.

Three hours later we arrived at Fall Lake Campground, a national forest campground in Superior National Forest.  Many campsites are not reservable so we got up at 6:30 AM to get there in plenty of time to secure a site, especially since campgrounds fill up very early in the summer the closer you get to the weekend.  We rarely get up that early, even on travel days!  Our early bird plans got us the worm since we were able to get a pull through site with 50 amp power.

IMG_20170624_150317Ely, population 3,400, is located at the gateway of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. The wilderness is a million acres of ancient forest and 1,500 waterways still untouched by civilization and is the largest wilderness area east of the Rockies.  The best way to experience it is by canoe like the Native Americans, trappers, fur traders and explorers did centuries ago. There are thousands of miles of canoe routes which are linked by rivers, lakes and portages.

The number one attraction in Ely is fishing with access to more than 5,000 lakes, streams and rivers in the area.  It is common to see fishing lodges, canoe outfitters, and many boats, canoes and kayaks everywhere.  It is said this part of Minnesota has some of the best fishing in North America.

Nicknamed “The End of the Road” because of its extreme north remote location, Ely was first home to the Ojibwe people in the late 1600’s, followed by the first French explorers in the early 1700’s.  Trapping and fur trade quickly grew and in the mid 1800’s the gold craze had begun.  Even though the region never produced gold, the precious metal iron ore was discovered.  Northern Minnesota’s early ore mines helped greatly with the needs of the nation’s steel industry.  Ore exploration led to the growth of the logging industry in the region. By the 1900’s recreational activities such as fishing, hunting and canoeing turned the area prevalently into a tourism industry.

Ely got its name from a rare rock formation known as Ely greenstone which formed more than two billion years ago when lava flows solidified underwater.  An outcropping of the Ely greenstone is visible in the town and is known as Pillow Rocks.IMG_20170623_162036

We enjoyed the many murals around town showing the rich history of the region.IMG_20170624_14405220170624_14334120170624_143238

On Friday we drove to the nearby town of Soudan to visit the Soudan Underground Mine State Park.  Our purpose for coming here was to take the underground mine tour.  IMG_20170623_10324020170623_104047We donned hardhats and rode the mine elevator shaft 2,341 feet underground.  IMG_20170623_112326IMG_20170623_112352We then boarded railroad cars that took us through a 3,000 foot tunnel deeper into the mine.  We climbed a narrow spiral staircase to reach Level 27 in the mine.  We had an excellent guide who talked about the process of mining iron ore as well as what working conditions were like for the miners. 20170623_112556He let us experience the mine without any lighting and then with a single candle. Miners had to provide there own lights and safety gear for many years. IMG_20170623_113802

During the gold rush of 1865, one prospector didn’t discover gold but he did discover iron ore which led to the mine opening in 1882. The mine is known as Minnesota’s oldest, deepest and richest iron mine and one of the richest iron ore deposits in the world.  The mine is 1.5 miles long and is part of the Vermilion Iron Range along the shore of Lake Vermilion.  It is called the Soudan Iron Mine and the ore from the mine was especially valuable because this ore had a high oxygen content that was used to make high quality steel in open-hearth furnaces.  Only this Minnesota mine and one other one in Michigan had this high oxygen content ore.  In 1962, technology changed and this type of ore was no longer economical.  Also the use of taconite pellets made from a low grade iron ore became popular.  Due to these two factors, the Soudan Mine closed in 1962. In 1965, US Steel donated the Soudan Mine to the State of Minnesota to use for educational purposes.20170623_10364820170623_104105

It was fascinating to be lowered in an 80-year-old electric mine hoist (elevator) and then travel in rail cars to tour the mine.  We really enjoyed our visit and had an even larger appreciation for what working conditions were like for miners in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

IMG_20170623_161646After a picnic lunch in the car (cold and windy), we drove back to Ely and toured the International Wolf Center.  This is one of the top attractions in Ely and highly advertised.  We toured the facility with informative displays and sat in on a program on wolves.  We were a little disappointed they only had five wolves at the facility and we only saw three Arctic wolves visible behind glass.IMG_20170623_15585120170623_16003620170623_160240IMG_20170623_160508

Last year the center received two Arctic Wolves.IMG_20170623_143230

Here is what one of the new wolves look like today.IMG_20170623_155448

This is a collection of the wolf playing with his stick (animated).

Wolves are big animals.IMG_20170623_143636IMG_20170623_143645

On Saturday Bill attended the Ham Radio Field Day in Ely.  This once a year National Amateur Radio Field Day is held at public locations around the country.  The purpose of this event is to showcase amateur radio and allow people to experiment with electronics and radios.  In 2016 over 35,000 people from thousands of locations participated in Field Day.  Last year Bill participated with a group in New York.  Bill really enjoyed his time with the friendly Ely radio club. They entertainment Bill with stories of winter ice fishing and talked about the black bears they regularly feed.  One man spends the winter in Arizona at an RV park we are scheduled to visit in November so we will look him up!IMG_20170624_114850  

Next up:. Voyageur National Park and a boat ride

Ely recognitions:

  • 2016 “One of the World’s 9 Places to Go to Enjoy the Great Outdoors” (National Geographic)
  • 2014 “One of 10 Great Small Towns to Visit” (MSN Living Magazine)
  • 2012 “America’s Most Interesting Town” (Reader’s Digest)
  • 2009 “100 Best Adventure Towns” (National Geographic Adventure Magazine)
  • 2009 “One of the Top Best Small Towns in the Country” (Outside Magazine)

And many more not mentioned

Grand Marais, MN June 18, 2017

We left Duluth and drove up the North Shore Scenic Drive to Grand Marais, forty miles from the Canadian border.  Grand Marais, population 1,351 is a beautiful town situated on Lake Superior.  It has a summer vacation destination vibe with small tourist shops, restaurants, a few hotels and tons of gorgeous scenery.  There are no fast food restaurants or big stores located in Grand Marais.  Like the rest of Minnesota, it is a fisherman’s dream come true.20170619_13432920170619_134220IMG_20170619_133607

We stayed at a city campground/marina with beautiful water views.  The campground was a short walk from the small downtown area.  One day we strolled downtown and wandered along the waterfront.  Bill had a great fish lunch at the Dockside Fish Market where you can buy lunch or pick up fresh fish to take home.  Bill had fish and chips with what he said was delicious whitefish.  The only way to get it fresher was to go out with your own fishing pole!20170619_14221620170619_130722IMG_20170620_103636

Tuesday we drove forty miles up to Grand Portal State Park located right at the US/Canadian border. IMG_20170620_113532 In fact when we turned into the entrance to the park we could see the border crossing just ahead and the welcome to Minnesota sign for those arriving from Canada.  The state park, established in 1989, is actually located on the Grand Portage Indian Reservation.  The Native Americans lease the land to the state of Minnesota for $1 a year.IMG_20170620_114509IMG_20170620_11462620170620_114528

Our purpose for coming here was to see the High Falls, which at 120 feet is the tallest waterfall in Minnesota.  To view the Falls we walked an easy half mile along a beautiful boardwalk through a forest setting.IMG_20170620_120159

The High Falls were gorgeous and we could see the Pigeon River which is part of the international border between Canada and the United States.  Here, the Pigeon River is twenty miles of a series of treacherous cascades and waterfalls on its way to Lake Superior, making this section of the river completely unnavigable.  For this reason a “Grand Portage” was necessary.  In this case, the Portage consisted of a 8.5 mile foot path used to carry boats and supplies from Lake Superior to the Pigeon River.  It was followed by voyageurs (French for travelers) to Port Charlotte and the boundary waters separating Minnesota and Canada. Through this portage passed all the trade goods from Montreal and furs from the Canadian Northwest.  Along this 8.5 mile path voyageurs carried two 90 pound packs as well as their canoes.IMG_20170620_12132720170620_122501

Native Americans were the first to develop and use the portal from Lake Superior inland for centuries.  The Ojibwe called the portage “The Great Carrying Place”.  The Ojibwe people frequently traveled the portage carrying birch bark canoes and baskets of fish, garden seed, wild rice, and copper. The two oldest copper sites in North America come from the Lake Superior basin. When the French traders came in the 17th century the Native Americans showed them the portage which they then used to transport goods from large lake canoes to smaller canoes.  The Grand Portage was the earliest European presence in the Great Lakes region with the first documented travel along the Grand Portage in 1731.20170620_13211820170620_132407IMG_20170620_132421

Next we stopped at the nearby Grand Portage National Monument.  We saw an excellent movie on the history of the area, with an emphasis on the Native American viewpoint.  The Visitors Center also had interesting exhibits and displays.  We then walked down the hill to a reconstructed Ojibwe village and Voyageur Encampment reconstructed based on archeological excavations.  The furnishings are in the 1797 style.  The settlement consisted of a stockade, great hall, kitchen and warehouse.IMG_20170620_131434IMG_20170620_13163320170620_13192920170620_14022520170620_14021020170620_14042520170620_13590520170620_135926

In 1763 after the French and Indian War, France ceded Canada to Great Britain and the British took control of the fur trade away from the French. From 1784 to 1803 the North West Company, owned by Highland Scots, ran a very profitable fur trading operation in the Great Lakes area.  The company’s headquarters was located at Grand Portage and was the largest fur trade depot on the continent.  It was a profitable time for the Europeans as well as the Native Americans.  They got along well and traded goods each needed.  The Native Americans taught them how to build birch bark canoes and traded pelts and their immense knowledge of the area for glass beads, wool clothing, kettles, axes, firearms and liquor.  20170620_143240IMG_20170620_141537Some of the voyageurs even married Native American women.  Much of the settlement was empty most of the year as the men were out hunting, but every July they held the Rendezvous, an annual gathering when furs from wintering posts in Canada were delivered to Grand Portage.  20170620_13220820170620_132532

Hundreds of vogageurs came to the Grand Portage and it was a time of great celebration for the voyageurs as well as the Native Americans.  The North West Company shipped fur pelts originating from over 100 trading posts through the Grand Portage.  In the 1700 and early 1800’s, fur pelts were used for fashionable clothing.  Furs for hats made up more than 65% of all English fur imports.  Beaver pelts accounted for over 60% of total pelts traded in one season during the height of the Grand Portage between 1785-1802. The use of beaver pelts for hats severely depleted the beaver population in North America, Europe and Russia.  In 1793 alone 182,000 beaver pelts passed through the Grand Portage.  Beaver was considered the highest quality fur. The Rendezvous was when the voyageurs received their pay for the past year’s work and once the celebration ended the trappers headed out for another season of travel and trade.

The North West Company left the Grand Portage in 1803 when the new United States claimed the area in a border agreement with Canada.  The Company knew possibly doing business with the new United States led to issues of citizenship, licensing and import duties they wanted to avoid.  Their leaving the area after years of profitable trade with the Indians led to hard times for the Native Americans in what they called “The Starving Times”.IMG_20170620_143357

In the early 1800’s there was an intense and sometimes violent rivalry between the North West Company and the Hudson Bay Company for business.  The two companies merged in 1821 into the Hudson Bay Company.

In 1958 the Grand Portage Band of the Minnesota Chippewa tribe donated the land to the United States and it became a national monument.

On our last morning in Grand Marais, Bill took some great pictures of a sunrise and found a beaver friend swimming in the bay.IMG_20170621_050124IMG_20170621_050938IMG_20170621_050329
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Beavers like to slap the water every now and then

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Here are two videos for you to select and view:


Next stop: Ely, Minnesota

Altura, Wabasha & Winona, MN June 8, 2017

IMG_20170609_154231Leaving Chester Woods County Park on Thursday, we continued traveling north through Minnesota’s dairyland.  We only had to drive a short distance to Whitewater State Park near Altura, Minnesota.  This is a lovely state park with lots of green areas and nice spacing between sites.

After getting settled into our spot, we decided to take a short hike in the park to Chimney Rock.  We crossed a pretty bridge with a little babbling creek beneath it.  The hike was rated as moderate and it definitely was not easy with many steps, some steps high and requiring stepping up high, not easy for someone with short legs like me.  Along the way I really wished I had brought along my walking sticks, but Bill is always willing to give me a helping hand.IMG_20170608_145345IMG_20170608_141441IMG_20170608_145157IMG_20170608_143154IMG_20170608_143101IMG_20170608_141341

20170609_103047On Friday we drove to nearby Wabasha to visit the National Eagle Center.  Wabasha is a lovely historic town, one of the oldest towns on the upper Mississippi River and the oldest continuous City in Minnesota.  Across the river you can see Wisconsin.  Wabasha is named after Sioux Nation Indian Chief Wapasha III.IMG_20170609_102740  It has over fifty buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  Wabasha was called the “City of the Healing Waters” by Mark Twain.

The scenery along the riverwalk at the Eagle Center was lovely.20170609_10281520170609_104742

The writer of the movies “Grumpy Old Men” and “Grumpier Old Men” starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau, had a grandfather who lived in Wabasha.  He thought the little historic river town was the perfect setting for the movie.  The town celebrates the “Grumpy Old Men Festival” the last Saturday of February each year.IMG_20170609_122730

IMG_20170609_123555The National Eagle Center is dedicated to educating the public about eagles and caring for injured eagles brought to the center.  The center is an impressive two story building with floor to ceiling windows overlooking the Mississippi River.  We saw three bald eagles and a golden eagle.  We attended an excellent, informative show presented by a center volunteer.  The center also had many educational exhibits about these majestic raptors.  We really enjoyed our time there.IMG_20170609_10283120170609_10411420170609_104542(1)IMG_20170609_104001IMG_20170609_104011IMG_20170609_11331920170609_113435IMG_20170609_114115IMG_20170609_115053IMG_20170609_11491920170609_11572820170609_11582120170609_120024

20170609_122011After lunch at an Irish pub in Wabash, we decided to cross the bridge into Wisconsin and drive along the Mississippi River on what is called the “Great River Road”.  Along the way we saw limestone bluffs common in this part of Wisconsin and Minnesota.  This southeastern part of Minnesota is the only a part of the state that did not once have glacial activity.  A shallow sea covered much of North America, including southeastern Minnesota five hundred million years ago.  Sediment accumulated which turned into rock hundreds of feet thick.  The sea withdrew over four hundred million years ago and erosion has been cutting through the bedrock, creating these bluff lands.IMG_20170609_133345

Along the way we stopped in the tiny town of Alma, Wisconsin to see Lock and Dam #4, one of a series of many locks and dams along the Mississippi River.  It was not unusual to see population signs of 400 or less as we passed through these small towns.IMG_20170609_134635IMG_20170609_134653

We crossed from Wisconsin back into Minnesota across a new 2,300 foot concrete bridge and ended our tour in the town of Winona.  It was founded in 1851 by a steamboat captain.  Winona profited early on from the lumber industry and by 1900 it claimed to have more millionaires per capita than any other place in the United States.  Today it still has a large number of architecturally significant historic buildings and grand homes. It is the largest Minnesota river town south of the Twin Cities.  While there we drove to the Garvin Heights Overlook where we stood on a 575 foot tall bluff with a fantastic view of Winona and the Mississippi River valley.  Another great day!IMG_20170609_143834PANO_20170609_143749

Saturday temperatures were forecasted to climb into the 90’s so we stayed close to home and visited the Whitewater State Park Visitors Center.  The only negative about the park is it sits deep down in a valley and therefore we had no cell phone service and therefore no internet.  The Visitors Center had WiFi so we checked our email while we were there.

Sunday we head further north to Wild River State Park near Center City, Minnesota.

West Branch, IA May 30, 2017

20170530_115021(1)On Tuesday May 30th we left Hannibal, Missouri and soon crossed over into Iowa, a new state for us.  On the way north we made a stop at the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum in West Branch, Iowa.  Another presidential library to mark off the list!IMG_20170530_141859

We started at the Visitors Center where we watched a twelve minute movie.  Then we began a walking tour of the area.  When Hoover was born in 1874 the town of West Branch had a population of 350 people who were mainly farmers.  IMG_20170530_150534Hoover’s father did not like farming so he had a blacksmith shop.  The walking tour around the Herbert Hoover National Historic Site included his birthplace cottage, the schoolhouse where he attended school, the Friends Meetinghouse where he attended church as a young boy with his family and a replica of his father’s blacksmith shop.IMG_20170530_144912

IMG_20170530_150506The birthplace cottage, 14 by 20 feet and built in 1871, was sold and later bought and restored by Herbert Hoover and his wife.  Hoover said the cottage “was physical proof of the unbounded opportunity of American life”.

The schoolhouse was built in 1853.  This Quaker community believed strongly in education for both boys and girls.  We saw evidence of how Hoover’s Quaker upbringing and faith shaped his life as we toured the Presidential Library and Museum.IMG_20170530_165204

The Friends Meetinghouse, built in 1857, was simply furnished with wooden benches and an iron stove.  Hoover’s family belonged to the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), and his mother was a minister and devout Quaker who often spoke on temperance and other causes.  Services of silent meditation were held here twice a week.  People sat for long periods of time waiting for anyone who had an insight or spiritual message to feel compelled to speak.  Hoover said those services lasting hours taught him great patience and “intense repression”.  20170530_164919Notice in the picture there is a partition that could be lowered between the two sides.  Men and women were separated with the idea that the separation would allow women to feel more free to speak up.

IMG_20170530_150733Also in the historic area was a statue of Isis, the Egyptian Goddess of Life.  It was given to Herbert Hoover by the children and citizens of Belgium in gratitude for his work on their behalf during and after World War I when he was Chairman of Commission for Relief in Belgium.IMG_20170530_150719

IMG_20170530_151111Next was the Presidential Library and Museum, built in 1962 and dedicated by former Presidents Hoover and Truman.  The library/museum was small but well done and gave us great insight into our 31st President.  Before this visit we thought of Hoover as a lesser known President who led us into the Great Depression and was a failure as President.  We came away with a greater appreciation of Hoover the man and the struggles he faced as president.

As a young child Hoover faced great tragedy.  His father died in 1880 when Hoover was six.  His mother used life insurance money to buy food and clothing and did needlepoint to bring in extra money.  His mother made sure the children remained strong in their community, school and religious activities.  Four years later in 1884 he was orphaned at the age of ten when his mother died of typhoid and pneumonia.  Hoover and his two siblings were split up when Hoover went to live with a maternal aunt and uncle in Oregon he hardly knew.  He left West Branch with a suitcase full of clothing, a little food, and two dimes sewn in his clothing.  His siblings remained in Iowa but in separate homes.

In Oregon he was quickly put to work, spending long hours helping at home.  His time there was not a happy one, though his aunt and uncle loved him and taught him a strong work ethic. He dropped out of school at the age of thirteen and went to work at his uncle’s real estate office. He later went to night school and attended Stanford University where he graduated with a degree in mining.  While at Stanford he met his wife, Lou Henry.

After graduation he worked as a mining engineer in Nevada, California and Australia.  Later Hoover and his wife lived in China where he was a chief mining engineer.  While in China the Boxer Rebellion trapped them there in 1900.  While the city they lived in was under fire, the Hoovers worked to help defend the city, with Hoover guiding U.S. Marines around during the battle because he knew the terrain.  Mrs. Hoover helped in hospitals and was fearless as she carried on her duties with a 38 pistol strapped to her side.

20170530_151504Hoover became an independent mining consultant, traveling around the world, and becoming a millionaire by the age of 40.  He had investments on every continent and offices in San Francisco, London, New York City, St Petersburg, Paris and Burma.  He specialized in helping troubled mining operations, bringing them back into the black and taking a share of the profits for his expertise. By 1914 he had an estimated fortune of $4 million.

After World War I began in 1914, Hoover helped organize the return of around 120,000 Americans from Europe, distributing food, clothing, steamship tickets and cash.  When Belgium suffered a food crisis after they were invaded by Germany in 1914, Hoover led an immense relief effort to feed the entire Nation during the war.  They obtained and imported millions of tons of food to distribute to the Belgium people, being sure none of it went to the German army.

20170530_152125In 1917 President Woodrow Wilson appointed Hoover to head the U.S. Food Administration to ensure the United State’s food needs during the war. Hoover believed “food will win the war” and in an attempt to avoid rationing he came up with “meatless Mondays, wheatless Wednesdays and the slogan when in doubt eat potatoes”.

After his efforts during World War I, Hoover was well known, perhaps second only to President Wilson.  His rags to riches story and humanitarian efforts were very appealing to the American people.  But it wasn’t yet his time to achieve success in politics though he considered running in 1920.

After Harding was elected president in 1920, he appointed Hoover as Secretary of Commerce.  He remained in that office until 1928, serving under both Harding and Coolidge.  Much of his work as Commerce Secretary centered around eliminating waste and increasing efficiency in business and industry.  He worked on the early organization, development and regulation of radio broadcasting and was influential in the early development of air travel.20170530_152826

20170530_153946He ran for president in 1928 on the Republican ticket and won a landslide victory with 58% of the popular vote.20170530_153818

Hoover held a press conference on his first day in office and in his first 120 days in office held more press conferences than any other president, then or since.

His plan was to reform the nation’s regulatory system, believing a federal bureaucracy should have limited regulation over the country’s economic system.  Hoover wanted a balance among labor, capital and the government.

Hoover early on tried to warn of the dangers of speculation and rampant investments in the Stock Market.  He tried to discourage people from uncontrolled investments and encouraged people to invest in bonds rather than stocks.  But only months after he took office the Stock Market Crash of 1929 occurred, resulting in the Great Depression.

20170530_155002Hoover implemented many policies in an attempt to pull the country out of the Depression but in 1930 the unemployment rate was 8.9%, rising to 24.9% in 1932.  Businesses had defaulted in record numbers on loans and more than 5,000 banks failed.  Homeless people lived in shantytowns called “Hoovervilles”.

Hoover believed in a balanced budget and to pay for government programs and make up for lost revenue he signed the Revenue Act of 1932 which raised taxes.  Top earners were taxed at 63%, up from 25% when Hoover took office.  Also estate tax was doubled and corporate taxes were raised almost 15%.

Hoover did not take a salary as president, instead he split his salary between a number of charities and put the rest toward the salaries of his staff.

Hoover ran against Franklin Roosevelt in 1932.  As he campaigned around the country he faced the most hostile crowds of any sitting president as he was pelted with eggs and rotten fruit and heckled during speeches.  On several occasions the Secret Service stopped attempts on his life.

20170530_154413Despite Hoover’s efforts, he was blamed for causing the Great Depression.  Roosevelt won the election 57.4% to Hoover’s 39.7%.  Roosevelt was the first Democratic Presidential nominee to win a majority of the popular vote since the Civil War.

20170530_154356Hoover left office bitter at his election loss and continuing unpopularity.  He was a constant critic of Roosevelt and the New Deal.  He wrote more than a dozen books, many critical of the New Deal, and even hoped to possibly run for president again in 1936 and 1940.  He lost to other Republican candidates both times during the nominating process.

Following World War II Hoover became friends with President Truman.  Truman appointed Hoover to a commission to reorganize the executive departments which became known as the Hoover Commission.20170530_153138

In his retirement he continued writing books and was a major fundraiser for the Boys Club of America.  He died at the age of 90 in 1964. (Mrs. Hoover passed away in 1944). They are both buried a short walk from the Presidential Library and Museum in very simple graves, reflecting the Quaker ideals.IMG_20170530_163843IMG_20170530_163809

His time as president was unfortunate.  Perhaps he is best remembered as the “Humanitarian President”.  As well as feeding millions during wartime, he increased the Federal budget to include children’s programs.  He had the first ever White House Conference on Child Health and Protection.  In 1949 he co-founded UNICEF.  He oversaw disaster relief for ten states after the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927.  He achieved unprecedented prison reform including building new prisons and increasing rights and humanitarian treatment of prisoners.  He increased the amount of land in the National Park System and canceled private oil leases on public land.  There can be no denying the influence his early life as the poor son of Quakers in a small town in Iowa had on the man who would one day become President.

IMG_20170530_142723My country owes me no debt.  It gave me, as it gives every boy and girl, a chance.  It gave me schooling, independence of action, opportunity for service and honor.  In no other land could a boy from a country village, without inheritance or influential friends, look forward with unbounded hope.  My whole life has taught me what America means.  I am indebted to my country beyond any human power to repay“.  Herbert Hoover, 1920

Next stop: Forest City, Iowa

Hannibal, MO May 28, 2017

Our time in St Louis came to an end and we left with great memories of a wonderful and historic city.  We drove north to a Corps of Engineers park outside of Hannibal, crossing the Missouri River.  The park was located on the Mark Twain Lake, a result of the construction of the Clarence Cannon Dam and Power Plant.  The campground was full for the Memorial Day weekend and we were glad to be off the road and away from the holiday traffic.

IMG_20170528_143010Our main reason for coming to Hannibal was to see the Mark Twain locations.  First we went to the tiny town of Florida, Missouri which was the birthplace of Samuel Clemens who became known as Mark Twain.  The population of the tiny town has declined over the years and according to the ranger the current population is four.  Yes, she said four!

IMG_20170528_134430The Mark Twain Birthplace and Museum, owned by the Missouri State Parks was quite impressive.  Mark Twain’s parents moved here from Tennessee in 1835 and Twain was born later that same year in November, two weeks after the appearance of Halley’s Comet.IMG_20170528_134526IMG_20170528_134545

IMG_20170528_141225He died in 1910, one day after Halley’s Comet appeared once again.  When Twain was four the family moved to Hannibal which was the inspiration for St Petersburg, the fictional home of Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer. His birthplace, a two room cabin, was moved to the current site at the museum and the museum was built around the small house.IMG_20170528_142337IMG_20170528_142433IMG_20170528_143643IMG_20170528_143656

There were many exhibits on Twain’s life including a handwritten manuscript of “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer” and furnishings from his Hartford, Connecticut home.IMG_20170528_144436

Over the course of his life Twain was:

  • an apprentice for a printer (after quitting school after fifth grade),
  • riverboat pilot,
  • miner,
  • writer,
  • humorist,
  • entrepreneur,
  • publisher
  • and lecturer.

Twain’s personal life was tragic.  Twain’s father died when he was eleven.  His only son died at nineteen months, two of his three daughters and his wife Olivia predeceased him.IMG_20170528_144647IMG_20170528_144659

Twain lost a substantial amount of money on bad investments.  His writings and lectures helped him recover financially, including a year long around the world tour in 1895 for the purpose of paying off his debts.  We were surprised at the amount of time Twain and his family lived overseas in Europe, mainly England and Austria.  Later in life Twain suffered from depression due to the deaths of his wife and children.  There are no known descendants.

Afterwards we drove the short distance to the original location of the cabin where a red granite monument marks the spot.

We then drove to Hannibal, population 18,000.  Here Mark Twain tourism is evident.  There is the Mark Twain Boyhood Home and Museum (privately owned), IMG_20170528_170823IMG_20170528_163959the Mark Twain Cave and the Mark Twain Riverboat to name a few.  In the area were a number of buildings including Becky Thatcher’s house,IMG_20170528_163948IMG_20170528_163910

reconstructed Huckleberry Finn’s houseIMG_20170528_165152IMG_20170528_165124

and a statue of Tom and Huck.IMG_20170528_164821

Hannibal is a pretty little riverboat town and we walked over for a glimpse of the Mississippi River.IMG_20170528_165652IMG_20170528_165643IMG_20170528_165603IMG_20170528_165708IMG_20170528_165858

IMG_20170528_171632Before leaving town we rode by the Molly Brown Birthplace and Museum.  Molly was born in Hannibal and is best known as a survivor on the Titanic who helped with the ship’s evacuation and had to be persuaded to get into Lifeboat No. 6.  She insisted the boat go back to look for survivors and threatened to throw the crew overboard if they didn’t.  She became known as “The Unsinkable Molly Brown”.  I remember watching a movie by that name starring Debbie Reynolds in 1964 and there have been many movies and musicals about her life.

Next stop: Iowa

St Louis, MO Part 4 May 25, 2017

We originally planned to stay in the St Louis area for four nights, but it became evident we couldn’t see everything in four days so we extended our stay an additional night.

20170525_103805Thursday we had two places to visit.  First up was Grant’s Farm.  This 281 acre farm is operated by Anheuser- Busch and is the ancestral estate of the Busch family.  Open since 1954, it has 900 animals, a Clydesdale stable and breeding farm, animal shows, a collection of the Busch family’s carriages and trophies and the replica of a 19th century Bavarian village.  The farm is named in honor of Ulysses S. Grant who built a cabin here in 1856 on land he once owned and farmed.20170525_104254

The tram guide pointed out that this fence was made from welded civil war gun barrels.IMG_20170525_143127IMG_20170525_143142

Entrance to the farm is free but you do have to pay $12 to park.  The only way in and out of the farm and village area is by riding a free tram with a narrated tour of the property.  Lines to the tram can get quite long and by the time we left in the early afternoon the line stretched back to the parking area.

It would be pretty impossible for the farm to match our zoo experience the day before, and it didn’t.  We didn’t expect it to.  Our main reason for visiting Grants Farm was for the camel ride.  For $6 each we were able to mark an item off our bucket list.  We rode a camel and didn’t have to go to the Middle East to do it!  It was lots of fun riding Ruby but I found it very uncomfortable sitting on the hump, especially without a saddle.  I certainly would not want to ride one across the desert!IMG_20170525_104850IMG_20170525_105005

We attended an elephant show where the trainers told us about elephants and had the elephant do some tricks.20170525_11195120170525_111745IMG_20170525_11234120170525_112826

We had lunch at the little Bavarian village with Bill getting a Bratwurst and each visitor over 21 receiving free beer.IMG_20170525_121838IMG_20170525_122231IMG_20170525_105905IMG_20170525_105601IMG_20170525_105752

We enjoyed our time at Grant’s Farm but it is definitely geared more for small children.

IMG_20170525_142600Next we drove down the road to the Ulysses S. Grant National Historic Site.  First we watched a sixteen minute introductory film and then walked up to look at the house.  This 9.65 acre site was the family home of Grant’s wife Julia Dent.  Ulysses and Julia purchased the farm from her family during the Civil War.  Tours of the house are available but we did not take it.  IMG_20170525_132353We did spend time inside the stable which is now an interpretive museum, similar to a presidential library.  The museum was very well done and informative covering his early years, military career including leading the Union Army during the Civil War, and two terms as president from 1869-1877.  20170525_141331IMG_20170525_14240120170525_141645During his presidency he stabilized the country in the years after the war ended and enforced civil rights and voting laws.  20170525_134950He signed the Civil Rights Act of 1875 and strengthened the Republican party in the South.  His administration implemented the gold standard and tried to strengthen the dollar. He was unable to effectively halt a five year depression after the “Panic of 1873”.  This produced high unemployment and bankruptcies.  Corruption charges escalated during his second term and Grant’s administration faced more charges of corruption than any other 19th Century president.  20170525_13453220170525_134628Grant died from throat cancer in 1885 at the age of 63.  He had been a heavy cigar smoker.  He is buried at Grant’s Tomb in New York City along with his wife Julia.20170525_141612

On our last day in St Louis we made another stop by Ted Drewes Frozen Custard for one last treat.

We must say we really really enjoyed our time in St Louis.  We were impressed with all the free attractions and friendly people.  The traffic in and out of the city was not at all bad, even with all the construction around the Arch.  There is still so much we didn’t get to see so we hope to return someday.

Next stop: Hannibal, Missouri to visit Mark Twain

REVISED: St Louis, MO Part 3 May 24, 2017

This replaces previous post of the same name; three videos are available below.
On Tuesday we took the RV to get two new front tires which took a good part of the day.  On Wednesday morning we were ready to head out for some more St Louis sightseeing.  Our plan for the day was to visit Forest Park where there were several places we wanted to see.

IMG_20170524_103109Forest Park is one of the largest municipal parks in the United States (larger than Central Park) and covers 1,300 acres.  This park was the site of the 1904 World’s Fair.  First we stopped at the Visitors Center to purchase a $2.00 all day trolley pass that would allow us to hop on and off at various places in Forest Park.IMG_20170524_165938

IMG_20170524_101553We hopped on the trolley and our first stop was at the St Louis History Museum.  A free museum, it was built on the site of the main entrance to the 1904 World’s Fair.  It was originally built as the first national monument to Thomas Jefferson and honors Jefferson’s role in the Louisiana Purchase, preceding the Jefferson Memorial in Washington DC.  IMG_20170524_101857Exhibits feature the history of St Louis from 1764 to the present day.  While we were there they were having a special exhibit on Route 66 called “Route 66: Main Street Through St Louis”.  Route 66 was known as the “Mother Road” and the “Main Street of America”.  We really enjoyed seeing the exhibits on the important role this famous road had in American history.    IMG_20170524_103411IMG_20170524_104326IMG_20170524_104602IMG_20170524_104735IMG_20170524_104829IMG_20170524_105124

IMG_20170524_105611

Do you know what these are? (Answer at end of Blog)

They also had a replica of the Spirit of St Louis airplane. This Spirit of St Louis Sister Plane was used in the 1957 Jimmy Stewart movie.IMG_20170524_110201

We rode the trolley to our next stop, the St Louis Science Museum, another free museum and one of only two free science centers in the United States.  Advertised as one of the largest in the country, one of the top five Science Museums in the country and one of the most visited in the world with 700+ permanent galleries as well as a planetarium and OMNIMAX Theater, our expectations were really high and we were somewhat disappointed.

IMG_20170524_115013IMG_20170524_121921 It was a great science center for children but did not have much for adults.  Unfortunately we just missed a King Tut exhibit set to open May 27th.  Our favorite thing was the pedestrian bridge over the interstate connecting the north and south sections of the Center.  The bridge had glass windows in the floor where you could look down and see the vehicles pass underneath you. They also had windows with radar guns so you could clock the speed of the vehicles as they passed by.

select video above also

Select video above

We took the trolley back to our car and drove a short distance to Pickles Deli, a highly rated deli where Bill got his favorite Reuben sandwich.  On the way out of Forest Park we stopped to take a picture of a Confederate​ statue.  We noticed a news van and some people milling round.  Ironically minutes later on the way to the deli we were listened to the local radio station and heard that this very statue was vandalized the evening before.  Like many other Confederate statues across the country today, discussions are being held about removing this Confederate statue from Forest Park.IMG_20170524_123407IMG_20170524_123335

On the way back to Forest Park we drove by the beautiful Cathedral Basilica of Saint Louis, built between 1907 and 1914.  We didn’t have time to go inside but that is definitely on our list for next time.IMG_20170524_132228

Our final stop of the day was the St Louis Zoo. This zoo is free and is advertised as one of the top zoos in the United States and was voted America’s top free attraction.  This zoo really wowed us and we really enjoyed our time here and was quite impressed.  During our time in St Louis we were really impressed with all the free museums and other places that usually charge an admission in other cities.  Well done, St Louis!IMG_20170524_144333IMG_20170524_144452

The zoo has over 24,000 animals, many of them rare and endangered.

IMG_20170524_144729

Golden Lion Tamarin

IMG_20170524_155952IMG_20170524_153157IMG_20170524_154133IMG_20170524_145239IMG_20170524_152131IMG_20170524_145440IMG_20170524_145908IMG_20170524_162154

We did pay to ride the Emerson Zooline train which is the nation’s largest miniature rail line, providing a 1.5 mile long narrated tour through the 90+ acre park.  The train engines are one third size replicas of the Iron Horse, the historic steam locomotive that helped build the transcontinental railway.  We passed through two tunnels as we traveled around the park.IMG_20170524_140416

We loved seeing all the animals but our favorites were the giraffes, hippos and penguins.  We were amazed at how close we got to the animals and were especially thrilled with the large number of penguins.IMG_20170524_150803IMG_20170524_150756IMG_20170524_163202

Select video above

IMG_20170524_154713IMG_20170524_154900IMG_20170524_155154IMG_20170524_155228

By the time we got back to the car our Garmin pedometers said we had walked over seven miles. What a great day!

Next:. Our last day in St Louis and a camel ride!
Answer: Speakers used at a drive-in theatre.

St Louis, MO Part 3 May 24, 2017

On Tuesday we took the RV to get two new front tires which took a good part of the day.  On Wednesday morning we were ready to head out for some more St Louis sightseeing.  Our plan for the day was to visit Forest Park where there were several places we wanted to see.

IMG_20170524_103109Forest Park is one of the largest municipal parks in the United States (larger than Central Park) and covers 1,300 acres.  This park was the site of the 1904 World’s Fair.  First we stopped at the Visitors Center to purchase a $2.00 all day trolley pass that would allow us to hop on and off at various places in Forest Park.IMG_20170524_165938

IMG_20170524_101553We hopped on the trolley and our first stop was at the St Louis History Museum.  A free museum, it was built on the site of the main entrance to the 1904 World’s Fair.  It was originally built as the first national monument to Thomas Jefferson and honors Jefferson’s role in the Louisiana Purchase, preceding the Jefferson Memorial in Washington DC.  IMG_20170524_101857Exhibits feature the history of St Louis from 1764 to the present day.  While we were there they were having a special exhibit on Route 66 called “Route 66: Main Street Through St Louis”.  Route 66 was known as the “Mother Road” and the “Main Street of America”.  We really enjoyed seeing the exhibits on the important role this famous road had in American history.    IMG_20170524_103411IMG_20170524_104326IMG_20170524_104602IMG_20170524_104735IMG_20170524_104829IMG_20170524_105124

IMG_20170524_105611

Do you know what these are? (Answer at end of Blog)

They also had a replica of the Spirit of St Louis airplane. This Spirit of St Louis Sister Plane was used in the 1957 Jimmy Stewart movie.IMG_20170524_110201

We rode the trolley to our next stop, the St Louis Science Museum, another free museum and one of only two free science centers in the United States.  Advertised as one of the largest in the country, one of the top five Science Museums in the country and one of the most visited in the world with 700+ permanent galleries as well as a planetarium and OMNIMAX Theater, our expectations were really high and we were somewhat disappointed.

IMG_20170524_115013IMG_20170524_121921 It was a great science center for children but did not have much for adults.  Unfortunately we just missed a King Tut exhibit set to open May 27th.  Our favorite thing was the pedestrian bridge over the interstate connecting the north and south sections of the Center.  The bridge had glass windows in the floor where you could look down and see the vehicles pass underneath you. They also had windows with radar guns so you could clock the speed of the vehicles as they passed by.

also

We took the trolley back to our car and drove a short distance to Pickles Deli, a highly rated deli where Bill got his favorite Reuben sandwich.  On the way out of Forest Park we stopped to take a picture of a Confederate​ statue.  We noticed a news van and some people milling round.  Ironically minutes later on the way to the deli we were listened to the local radio station and heard that this very statue was vandalized the evening before.  Like many other Confederate statues across the country today, discussions are being held about removing this Confederate statue from Forest Park.IMG_20170524_123407IMG_20170524_123335

On the way back to Forest Park we drove by the beautiful Cathedral Basilica of Saint Louis, built between 1907 and 1914.  We didn’t have time to go inside but that is definitely on our list for next time.IMG_20170524_132228

Our final stop of the day was the St Louis Zoo. This zoo is free and is advertised as one of the top zoos in the United States and was voted America’s top free attraction.  This zoo really wowed us and we really enjoyed our time here and was quite impressed.  During our time in St Louis we were really impressed with all the free museums and other places that usually charge an admission in other cities.  Well done, St Louis!IMG_20170524_144333IMG_20170524_144452

The zoo has over 24,000 animals, many of them rare and endangered.

IMG_20170524_144729

Golden Lion Tamarin

IMG_20170524_155952IMG_20170524_153157IMG_20170524_154133IMG_20170524_145239IMG_20170524_152131IMG_20170524_145440IMG_20170524_145908IMG_20170524_162154

We did pay to ride the Emerson Zooline train which is the nation’s largest miniature rail line, providing a 1.5 mile long narrated tour through the 90+ acre park.  The train engines are one third size replicas of the Iron Horse, the historic steam locomotive that helped build the transcontinental railway.  We passed through two tunnels as we traveled around the park.IMG_20170524_140416

We loved seeing all the animals but our favorites were the giraffes, hippos and penguins.  We were amazed at how close we got to the animals and were especially thrilled with the large number of penguins.IMG_20170524_150803IMG_20170524_150756IMG_20170524_163202

IMG_20170524_154713IMG_20170524_154900IMG_20170524_155154IMG_20170524_155228

By the time we got back to the car our Garmin pedometers said we had walked over seven miles. What a great day!

Next:. Our last day in St Louis and a camel ride!
Answer: Speakers used at a drive-in theatre.