The Accolade-Video Book Trailer
This is a Great Adventure Book available on line now, at Barnes and Noble or Amazon websites. Get your’s today!
With so many dying of drug overdoses at this time in our country, this book portrays a cautionary tale, that leads to a better path. It has adventure and romance, and is great for personal reading as well as family, class, or group reading. It concludes with a surprise ending.
Huntington Gardens and Library
 When we first moved to Southern California, with our eleven year old daughter, naturally we did what you’d expect.  We took her to Disneyland.  We found that we could get a Disney So.CAl. family pass for one year.  We found however, that many days on that pass were blacked out.  We also found how crowded  a visit to that park could be.
In time, we learned that our new location had a number of world class gardens.  The Huntington Gardens and Library were  the cream of the crop, to be sure.  While the price has gone up to $25. per person, for a day, it is still worth it, even if you are an out of town visitor.  But, if you get a family season pass, you can go many times in the year and take in all the seasons.  Your underage children, including grandchildren go in on that family pass.   One of the major attractions is of course  the mansion of the Huntington’s, who in short, were railroad moguls.  They graciously gave up their estate to the rest of us upon their passing, perhaps because they had no other posterity.   Outside you can see the spectacular grounds, with statues and fountains.  And yes, if you are wondering, film productions have found this to be an excellent location for their work.   Antiquity from abroad may be found inside and out.
And those tapestries!
This one reminded me of one of our daughters.
To me, this bucolic miss en scene of a family  gleaning at harvest, is more endearing than the most aristocratic soiree.
Tapestries and rugs that belonged to French royalty are in this library. Â But, the royal embellishment was removed.
View from inside the mansion.
Each season is celebrated.
 The library boasts millions of manuscripts and hundreds of thousands of rare books, such as the Gutenberg Bible.
Bring a blanket, and take a nap on the green lawn. Â If you try that at Disneyland, they tell you to move along.
Or meander the roads and paths.
You’ll see Bonsai trees in the Japanese garden.Â
There are even pomegranates on one.Â
One of our special favorites is the Chinese garden. Â There is actually a restaurant which sells excellent food. Â And/or you can simply order a pot of hot tea. Â Next you wait for your order to be brought to you . Â You may enjoy it at tables outside, or in the lovely tea house as you take in the lily pond with it’s elegant bridges. Â Afterward, you may traverse the bridges of the pond or walk around it’s edges to see the many Asian attractions along the way. Â Â Chinese artisans have recreated for you, an authentic landscape.
 Chinese Garden
Visitors taking a breather.  .
I think I see the Japanese house again.
The Rose Garden  is awe-inspiring.  We have
taken many romantic strolls through it.Â
So grab a cup of coffee at the coffee shop and smell the roses.
Not only can you pretend to be royalty walking through your own garden, but you will see a number of roses that are named after famous people.
There is the Japanese house in the Japanese
Garden.
California: More than Big Cities
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New York State and the Erie Canal
Harriet Tubman’s home.
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The Gould Hotel, Seneca Falls
The Downtown Deli
The Canals
Lockport, aptly named.
Subterranean caves provided water power for mills.
Pennsylvania
Elfreth’s Alley is the oldest residential street still in use in the U.S. Â It is in Philadelphia and dates back to 1720! Â The nations beloved Benjamin Franklin is buried in Philadelphia also!
Independence Hall
President Washington who was  a tall man, sat in that big chair up front, facing the rest of the room and our famous forefathers.  This room is no replica, but may have some accessories  to help recreate the picture.
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It all happened right here.
It is lamentable, that they did not want to tackle the plight of the African Americans then. Â It was thought, that it might be too difficult to get everyone on board with the signing. Â Sort of an act of Congress. Â However, this only exacerbated the problem of slavery in the ensuing years, resulting in the bloodiest war, killing more Americans than all of our other wars combined.
From Philadelphia you may cross the bridge into
New Jersey.
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The Dream Garden
by Maxfield Frederick Parrish
Don’t leave Philadelphia without checking out The U.S. Mint! We may show that on another post.  The history is rich. Young to old will enjoy it.
The Liberty Bell
The smaller part of the building on the right side is where the cooking was done. Â But, this is actually the back side of the house.
Plowing, the hold fashioned way!
Thanks to William Penn, religious freedom became a natural way of life in America.
The beckoning towns along the way….
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A great place to go in the Autumn…
This door leads into the former home of John Sutter, of Californias Gold Rush.
Monuments galore
Overlooking the battlefields…
Elsewhere in this beautiful state is another modern battlefield. Â That battle took place on 9/11. Â Flight 93 National Memorial is located in Shanksville Pennsylvania. Perhaps we will share that at a later date. Â So much bravery in one state!
Bakersfield California of Yesteryear
Hello world!