Logo graphic by Mike Hortens Design

Saturday, October 13, 2018

Massachusetts, part 2


Concord / Lincoln:
We spent a few nights in Lowell, MA.  There is so much to explore in this area!  We went to the Whistler House Museum of Art, the Concord Museum and Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.  Looks like we have another theme here!  The Sleepy Hollow Cemetery is the home of gravesites for Nathanial Hawthorne, Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Louisa May Alcott.






And we can't forget about the person who developed the concord grape!


In Lincoln we found another sculpture garden!  The deCordova Sculpture Park & Museum has some interesting works; however, my favorite was a temporary Kusama exhibition.  The installation is a mirrored box with holes in it.  It is situated outside and when you go inside, the dark space is illuminated by the outside light coming through the holes.  Mirrors inside make the dots of light appear to be infinite.  Since it was a very slow day, we were the only ones to see it and were able to stay in inside for as long as we wanted!   

"Where the Lights in My Heart Go" by Yayoi Kusama

There were some very fun sculptures, too!

I love the visitor entrance station!
"Lincoln" by DeWitt Godfrey
"Children of the Corn, Totem Pole" by Terence Koh
"Emergence" by Kimberly Scott

Salem:
Can’t go to Salem without making a trip to the Witch Museum.  This was actually quite informative and well done.

Outside is a sculpture of our favorite witch!
Samantha from the TV show "Bewitched"

We were moved to go to the Witches Trial Memorial and the neighboring cemetery which is the oldest burying ground in Salem.  Here is buried Justice John Hathorne, an ancestor of Nathaniel Hawthorne and one of the judges in the Witchcraft Court.

Witches Trial Memorial


House of Seven Gables:
Fun fact – at the time Nathanial Hawthorne visited the House of Seven Gables, the house did not have seven gables!  His cousin was living in this house and she would have shared the history and pictures of it, which inspired him to write his book.  Additions had been made to the house over several years, then removed and then added on again later!  The last renovations made were done in order to portray parts from Hawthorne’s book. It’s quite fun to explore and the tour is very helpful in understanding the history of the house as well as the relationship it has to the book.

House of Seven Gables
Parlor where Hawthorne visited with his cousin & his portrait
Hawthorne's writing desk and coat
Hidden cabinet!
Sewing machine


Rockport / Cape Ann:
Our last stop in Massachusetts was Cape Ann.  It is at the northern limit of Massachusetts Bay and includes the towns of Rockport, Manchester-by-the-Sea and Gloucester.  We visited the charming town of Rockport and it’s notable landmark: Motif #1.  This is a replica of the original 1840 fishing shack on the wharf, known as “the most often-painted building in America”!


"Motif #1"


Stay tuned for our leaf-peeping adventures…