Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Jean's Passing

 On Wednesday, March 30th, 2022, Jean Anne Vollrath passed away peacefully at the age of 67.

Jean was born June 29th 1954, in Indianapolis, Indiana to Victor and Isabelle (Burnside) Vollrath.

Jean was preceded in death by her parents, her sister Ruth and her husband Greg Talbott. She is survived by her sister Dona, stepson Matt Talbott (wife Angela) and his daughter Addilyn, and her children Jessie Talbott, Ben Talbott (wife Sydney Williams) along with many other nieces, nephews, and cousins.

Jean came to North Carolina in the 1980’s and proceeded to weave together a rich life full of chosen family and quirky children. An independent woman, Jean loved fiercely and gave everything she had to the project at hand. Together with her husband she ran two small businesses, Twin Birch Products and Hickory Mountain Weavery. When her love, Greg, was taken too soon, Jean worked through her grief and raised two teenagers while earning a Master of Library Science, one of several advanced degrees. Jean loved weaving and many of her lifelong friends were found through teaching the hand craft to others.

Jean often served as a moral compass, a voice of reason, and a role model but her favorite thing in life was being a mother to Jessie and Ben. She was so proud of the humans they became, and often gave credit not just to herself but to the many mentors that lent their love and knowledge. In her later years Jean became adventurous. She pushed through her fears and learned to kayak, bought a 5th wheel camper, and kept a travel blog that can be found at almostintrepid.blogspot. Jean drove into Canada more than once, across the US more than once, and burned up the roads of the South Eastern US with such ferocity that it was often hard for her kids and travel companions to keep up!

In her last months Jean reflected how lucky she was to know so much love and community in one lifetime. Though her speech waned, she made sure to express her love and gratitude daily. If you knew our mother and would like to join us, there will be a jolly potluck in the fellowship hall at Spring Friends Meeting after the service. Bring your comfort food but be ready to take a plate home with you because our pantries have already been filled with love this week!

Her funeral service will be held (Masks required) at 2pm on Saturday April 9th, 2022, at Spring Friends Meeting. 3323 E Greensboro Chapel Hill Road, Snow Camp NC. In lieu of flowers, please send donations to Heifer Project International, an organization she supported throughout her life.

PS: If you are not able to attend but wish to watch the service we have a zoom set up for viewing. The link is below, and if you wish to join, please contact Ben at talbottbp@gmail.com for the password. 

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Atalaya with Jessie

Brookgreen Gardens entrance
Jessie has been asking me to take her back to Atalaya. I booked a weekend for us last year and she couldn't get off work. Ruthie went with me and we forgot to bring the dog crate and couldn't go into either Brookgreen Gardens or Atalaya with the pooch. I got my act together for this trip. 

In the last Atalaya post, I mentioned that Atalaya was the home of a fabulous sculptor, Anna Hyatt Huntington and that Brookgreen Gardens was started by her husband to display her work. Atalaya is located in Huntington Beach State Park near Murrell's Inlet, SC. They have an annual fall craft fair each September inside Atalaya. When the kids were small, I did that show a couple of times. Condos were available at off season rates so we made it a little vacation. While I'd work the show, Greg and the kids had fun exploring the gardens, the garden's boat ride, miniature golf and all the other delights of a beach vacation town. Jessie has happy memories of those trips which is why she wanted to go back.

So the first day there, we went through Brookgreen Gardens and took a boat tour of a river between several of the plantations Huntington's husband bought to create the gardens. The next day we visited Atalaya, much more restored than when we'd been there before. Mostly, we enjoyed taking in the local beauty and rediscovering what we'd enjoyed before. You can click on the pictures to enlarge them.

The gardens:











Atalaya:






The Park:











Sunday, October 10, 2021

Another Eggs Ramble

Brown County State Park campsite
 From a view of a tributary feeding the Ohio, we moved to a deep Indiana woods. Brown County State Park is in the heart of a place called The Little Smokies, where the glacier that created the Great Plains stopped and left wooded hills. This is our third trip here for an annual gathering of molded fiberglass trailers. It's a beautiful place just outside Nashville IN, a charming resort town full of log cabins and historic buildings now housing restaurants and art shops. The gathering is hosted by some lovely folks but there's never enough time to get to know them and the distance is too great to join their other events so this was our last visit with them. We did hit our favorite shops in town and are bringing home a few mementoes, but mostly it was fun seeing a greater diversity of Eggs than we saw at Tybee and being back in the park that was my favorite growing up. 

Casita
A Casita is probably the most common molded fiberglass trailer you will see on the road. The advantages of molded fiberglass are that they are very light and have no seams that leak, a huge advantage over stick built trailers (or Stickies as they are called). 

Scamps, which are made in Minnesota are probably next. The original molded fiberglass trailers are the Bolers, which were made in Canada and they hired the family that now owns Scamp to make trailers in the US for them. When Boler closed, the Scamp family used the old Boler molds and developed some of their own to continue making trailers and created the Scamp brand. 
Boler

Scamp















UHaul
 For a brief period in the mid 1980s, UHaul offered fiberglass trailers to rent. I'd seen smaller ones before but not this size. The gentleman who brought it said that they made only 59 of them.

In addition to our fifth wheel Escape, there were other Canadian trailers here. Back in the 1980s, Big Foot briefly made a fifth wheel trailer. I'd seen this one on a previous trip here and toured it. The owner said that he knew of one for sale and Ruthie and I were very interested, but the age put me off and I'm glad for my 2016 Escape. There was also a Big Food pull behind, which I had not seen, and 21 foot Escape pull behinds. This is the first year I've seen so many Escapes on the road. There were several at Tybee as well. I think their new management is promoting them better. The quality of the one I now own is great and I'm glad to see others happily on the road with them.
21' Escape pull behind

  
Canadian Big Foot

1980s Canadian Big Foot
It's been a great adventure, all of it. We are now in the mountains of Tennessee on our way home. We are staying at Pigeon River Campground, a place we have stayed before, right on the Pigeon River. Sadly, they have a set of camp sites that are down hill from their dump attachments which means we can't dump our black or gray water tanks into the dump attachment assigned to our site. On the way out in the morning, we'll have to find an empty site uphill from the dump attachment as they have no standard dump station, either. They also don't have any way to contact them after they close their office (we arrived at 5:05, most placed don't close their office until 8pm) except an impersonal answering service. As beautiful as the river is, I cannot report a good stay here. That said, we'll be home tomorrow, ready to organize and clean for the next trip out. Enjoy this lovely sunset.



Thursday, October 7, 2021

Underground Railroad

Lawrence River out our back window
My favorite route back to Indiana is US Hwy 52 along the north side of the Ohio River. It's mostly a winding two lane road past historic homes and barns with the river in view. This year we are in Kentucky on the southern side along Route 8. The camper is backed up within 10 feet of an Ohio River tributary, the Lawrence and just outside Maysville KY. 

Quaker Levi Coffin, a member of New Garden Friends Meeting in Greensboro NC, was often called the President of the Underground Railroad. As southern Quakers became persecuted for aiding runaway slaves, Coffin moved to a town in Indiana just across the Ohio River to continue his work. I've heard a lot about Coffin as I attend Quaker meeting not far from New Garden. Ruthie attends there now, too, and we have wanted to visit the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati since we became aware of it. What we have discovered is a much richer, broader history in towns along the river about an hour from the Cincinnati museum.

Rankin Home on Liberty Hill
We started in the town of Ripley OH just 3 miles from our campsite. The man who created the town
was an abolitionist and when he was able to build a church, Rev. John Rankin was hired to be the Presbyterian minister in 1829. We visited Rankin's home atop a steep hill on the river, named Liberty Hill as a direction for runaway slaves. Rankin, his wife, and their 13 children were all actively engaged in aiding escaped slaves and encouraging abolitionism. When Rankin met Harriett Beecher Stowe, he shared a true story of an escaping slave that inspired Stowe's famous book, Uncle Tom's Cabin. Their outspoken commitment put the Rankin family in great danger so that Rankin and his sons had to be constantly armed. The term Underground Railroad was born when a slave hunter chased an escaped slave across the river and into a manufacturing site in the town of Ripley. The hunter demanded to know from the local workers where the slave had gone. The townsmen,
Beautiful restoration of the Rankin home
 all supporters of Rankin, said they hadn't seen any slave. It was the slave hunter who suggested an underground railroad must have carried him away and used the term when he placed notices around town looking for his prey. 

Restored Rankin kitchen
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

John P. Parker home
Another famous Ripley resident was John P. Parker, who managed to earn his freedom from slavery and
built a successful iron foundry along with receiving patents for a variety of inventions. He spent 15 years working with Rankin and others to help slaves to freedom. His house is a National Historic Landmark.

 



 

Waterfront Ripley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Maysville KY also has an Underground Railroad Museum, the Bierbower Home, on a river hillside near downtown. The home once served as a safe house where slaves were hidden under floorboards until they could be carried across the Ohio River. Due to COVID, this museum was closed but we enjoyed walking the downtown historic district full of period architecture and engaging shops. 


Maysville Historic District

Maysville side street

Downtown Cincinnati

The next day, we headed to Cincinnati to the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, a museum that opened in 2007. Cincinnati is full of both wonderful contemporary architecture and equally wonderful historic structures. The Ohio River is covered with both modern and historic bridges as well, including the Roebling Bridge that, at 1075', was the largest bridge in the world when it was built in 1867. Trusses have been added and apparently it is undergoing additional repair, but it is a magnificent sight. The picture was taken from the third floor of the museum.

 I've driven several times in Cincy in the past few years and each time I find it a rough experience. The roads are not on a grid, the streets are poorly marked if at all, and drivers are aggressive. And finding parking is hateful. Twice I asked Google Maps for "parking near me". It would show me a parking garage across a divided street that would require me to drive around the neighborhood to be on the entrance side. As I'd drive past across

Roebling Bridge

the divide to start the trek, Google would presume I was there and erase the map. We did luck out and find a curbside spot we could buy for 2 hours and headed into the museum.

The museum is overwhelming. It is full of artwork, artifacts, and posters brimming with documentary information, just simply too much to take it all in. When you choose to visit, plan on making several short, intense stays and take your time--to read, to think, to view. When I look back on my formal education and how much about slavery was overlooked or disguised, it is clear that this museum's job is to correctly redocument what has been, for me and most Americans, a lifetime of misinformation. 

The museum gift shop did have an extensive collection of topic related books, including a nice selection for children. They also had African art, including clothing, bags and jewelry. I am bringing home a book about the Underground Railroad efforts along the Ohio River where we've visited and look forward to re-exploring the places we've seen.

National Underground Freedom Center

One of the larger displays was a Slave Pen, built in 1800 and taken from a farm near where we are camped. It has been fully restored. A Kentucky slave trader, Capt. John W. Anderson, built the log building to hold slaves while he prepared to move them further south for sale. Africans would be packed inside and chained to bolts through overhead beams. The conditions repeated the dark holds of the slave ships that had brought them over. Sadly, they could see across the river to land where they could have been free. There was a display of a KKK robe, some of which were designed after monsters to terrify former slaves. 

Slave Pen
 

An entire exhibit was dedicated to modern slavery and human trafficking. It included descriptions of how and where these abuses occur along with lists of organizations and businesses that are currently fighting this horrible scourge. We left the museum, exhausted, troubled by what we had learned and motivated to learn more and support the organizations fighting current assaults.

 

 

Slave Pen inside

Iron bolt for chains

 








Clan robe


On a patio off the third floor, the museum had a memorial flame that will burn until the last slave is freed.

Human Trafficking exhibit








Memorial Flame




After leaving the museum, we decided to hit two places of interest to me for craft supplies. Silk Road Textiles,  just north of Cincinnati, describes itself as "a premier retailer of fine fabrics and yarn. We bring together ethically produced textiles and fibers from around the world and offer them to the local and international community of fiber artists. We support women owned businesses and companies that value the artisans and creators of the products being offered." The collection of yarns, fabrics and hand made gifts was fabulous and the prices were far better than I expected. I am now on their mailing list...

From there we headed to the J and H Clasgens woolen mill. I'd read about it on Google and it was on the way back to the campground. The mill was started in 1862 and remained in the family, run by descendants of the two brothers who founded it. They made several

Clasgens Woolen Mill

sizes of 100% wool yarn and their website showed a nice selection of available colors. Sadly, when we arrived at the mill, the building was for sale and no further information was available on the web. 

So the day has been challenging and full, as has been this entire trip. Our last stop is Brown County State Park in Indiana for the fiberglass RV rally we've attended before. Then home to clean up and regroup for adventures ahead.

If you are visiting in this area, the Lawrence River Campground where we are staying has been pleasant as well. We are right on the river and near where we can hear trains at night. Something we haven't seen before is a campground with its own bar. Were we staying longer, we might check it out.

Sunset train bridge