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Long Day’s Journey into Chicago

The Silver Palate Cookbook was published in 1982. My well-loved copy has had a place on a shelf in my kitchen everywhere I have lived since. We learned that one of the authors ran a Bed and Breakfast in Saugatuck, Michigan, that was sort of on our cross-country route. Immediately, I planned a pilgrimage, or I should say, made a reservation at her Inn.  It was a beautiful place with, wait for it, incredible food. We left the Wickwood Inn yesterday morning during the first serious rainstorm of our trip. […]

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Resenting Chevy Chase

The National Archives and Records Administration Service maintains thirteen presidential libraries. Today, we visited our third one: the Gerald R. Ford Library and Museum in Grand Rapids, Michigan. It was more modest than the Kennedy Library in Boston and the Clinton Library in Little Rock, which seemed fitting given Ford’s modest demeanor. As was the case with the other presidential libraries we have visited, the Ford library provided a fascinating window into a very specific period of American history. The documents, photographs, artifacts and videos were arranged chronologically beginning with […]

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Getting it Done

We began our final morning in Detroit at the Ford Piquette Avenue Plant, which is widely recognized as the oldest auto plant open to the public anywhere in the world. The interior has been restored to look just as it did when Henry Ford and his closest colleagues were designing and producing Model T’s and their precursors. The three-story building houses a comprehensive collection of rare Detroit-built cars from the early 1900s. They were absolutely stunning. We then drove ten miles in our distinctly not stunning Ford rental car and […]

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18 and Counting

So yesterday was it, the big one eight. 18. To celebrate, I decided to sleep in. Yesterday we visited 3 museums: The Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History, the Detroit Institute of the Arts, and the Motown Museum. Respectively, these visits were harrowing, enlightening, and uplifting. The Museum of African American History’s main exhibit, titled Rise Up, ranged from African origins to the horror of slavery, to segregation, to modern challenges and accomplishments. There was a great deal of overlap between segments of this exhibit and the exhibits of […]

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Birthday Baby

My grandmother’s words are ringing true. Where does the time go? We have called Mariah our “Millennium Edition” since she was born early in the morning eighteen years ago today. It is hard for me to believe that our youngest little pink bundle is all grown up. The first thing Mariah said when she awakened this morning was “I have to register to vote.”  She makes me proud every day. Tomorrow, she will write about today’s adventures.  I will just share with you that many weeks ago, Mariah selected both of […]

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Treasure Hunting in Cleveland

I didn’t expect the inside of Cleveland’s Rock ‘N Roll Hall of Fame to live up to the promise made by its exterior.  The building was designed by I. M. Pei who designed the Louvre’s iconic glass pyramid.  The Hall of Fame looks so much like the Louvre, in fact, that I half expected Tom Hanks to round the corner in full Da Vinci Code mode.  He didn’t.  So we went inside. Their collection is entirely unlike like the type of cheesy display that you would encounter at a Hard […]

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Father’s Day

Long before my father was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in 2005, he instilled in me a powerful sense of reverence for the United States military.  My dad volunteered as a teenager for the U.S. Army’s Citizens Military Training Camp and served as a member of the 308th horse cavalry unit at Fort Myer, Virginia. When WWII broke out, there was no call for horse cavalry. So after attending infantry camp in Fort Meade, Maryland, he applied for and was accepted to the U.S. Army Command and General Staff School […]

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Antebellum Amnesia

Yesterday’s venture was a trip to the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, which serves as both a historical resource and a testament to the efforts to combat slavery through the modern day. Located in Cincinnati, Ohio, the freedom center is a sobering reminder of how recent American slavery was and the extent to which it continues to permeate our society. When my mom and I were standing in line to purchase museum tickets, one exhibit caught my eye: Confederate Memory: Symbolism, Controversy & Legacy. It discussed the pressing issue of […]

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Louisville’s Greatest Hits

When in Louisville, you hear a lot about baseball, bourbon and betting. The Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory has placed the world’s largest baseball bat in front of its lobby doors. This replica of Babe Ruth’s 34-inch wooden bat has been reimagined in steel, weighing 68,000 pounds and towering 120 feet into the sky. We joined their first factory tour of the morning and were shown the entire manufacturing process beginning with the delivery of tree trunks to the shipping of the finished bats. They have thoughtfully designed an interactive […]

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Different Starting Points

After our last road trip, I spent a long time trying to understand the disparities between myself and my fellow Americans living only a few hundred miles away. Our differences ranged from political ideologies to lexicons to the social normalities people often take for granted in their hometowns. Today, I was once again reminded of that pressing question: how could we have so much yet so little in common? Our day was spent at the Creation Museum, a behemoth of an institution with 75,000 square feet, over a hundred exhibits, […]

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