Thursday, September 13, 2018

Little Rock, Arkansas September 12, 2018

Having never been to Arkansas, we were pleasantly surprised by its natural beauty.  It has been nice too to finally turn off the air conditioner and enjoy the sounds of nature.  We camped in a Corp of Engineers campground with our campsite on the banks of the Arkansas River.  There is a wonderful bike path there complete with repair stations along the way.

The State Capitol was completed in 1915 at a cost of 2.2 million dollars. A lot of money for 1915.  It is a beautiful building.  The front entrance doors are made of bronze and they are 10 feet tall and 4 inches thick.  In order to keep these uncoated bronze surfaces shining as the architect envisioned, the doors are polished by hand, inside and out, each week. The cupola is covered in 24 karat gold leaf.  Just about every direction one looks is marble imported from Alabama, Colorado, and Vermont.  Because Congress is not in session, the Supreme Court, Senate, and House were in the process of major renovations.  We were able to peek inside the House while the construction crews were working.  The only public artworks commissioned for the Capitol are the four Heerwagen Murals.  Paul Martin Heerwagen, a Bavarian-born artist and interior decorator from Fayetteville, Arkansas completed the four murals in 1914. We have included the one entitled Religion in the pictures.

The Arkansas Old State House is the oldest surviving Capitol building east of the Mississippi.  Although the building was moved into in 1837, the building was completed in 1842.  The Old State House hosted the admission of Arkansas to the Union, was the site of a fatal knife fight between two legislators and was where Arkansas voted to secede from the United States and join the Confederacy.  Later it served as a medical research center for hookworm and malaria and the site of two acceptance speeches by the President of the United States.  The building is constructed of bricks made by slaves that were then covered with plaster.  Today this building is the site of the Arkansas museum which contains very little Arkansas history, rather, within the walls are an eclectic mix of articles from all over the world.  We have provided a couple of pictures to provide a feel for these oddities.

Like all Presidential Libraries, the Bill Clinton Presidential Center is a building established for preserving and making available the papers, records and other historical materials of the U.S. President.  Beyond that this, like other Presidential libraries, have become tourist insights into the views, accomplishments, and lives of those in the White House.  This museum contains a timeline of Clinton’s career as well as 16 policy alcoves that provide in-depth information on such aspects as education, health, crime, the environment, the economy and more. There are various letters displayed that were written to the President by world leaders and celebrities.  Within the library are pictures and information on Clinton’s youth as well as many gifts received while in the White House.  Various binders to peruse are available that contain the President’s daily schedules.  Of note is that every minute of the President’s day is planned often in 5-minute intervals and that includes any leisure activities too such as watching a football game.  The building design contains open bridge like trusses and it cantilevers over the Arkansas River.  The architect successfully echoes Clinton's campaign promise of "building a bridge to the 21st century".

The desegregation of Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, gained national attention on September 3, 1957, when Governor Orval Faubus mobilized the Arkansas National Guard in an effort to prevent nine African American students from integrating the high school.  These individuals would go down in history books known as the Little Rock Nine.  They later attended after the intervention of President Dwight D. Eisenhower. By the end of September 1957, the nine were admitted to Little Rock Central High under the protection of the101st Airborne Division (and later the Arkansas National Guard), but they were still subjected to a year of physical and verbal abuse.  This high school is still in operation today, however, its student body is almost entirely African American as the demographics of the area have greatly changed over the years.

The Arkansas Governor’s Mansion was built in 1950.  The home is not often open to tours as it is currently the home of Governor Asa Hutchinson and First Lady Susan Hutchinson.  It is located in an area known as the Quapaw District that contains some beautiful homes built from 1880 to 1920.

While in the downtown area, we really enjoyed a simple meal we had at 'Three Folds Noodle and Dumpling Company'.  We only wish this restaurant were located in our hometown. 

We leave tomorrow for Bentonville, the birthplace of Walmart.


Nice View of the Arkansas River from our Campsite
Bike Trail at Campsite along the Arkansas River
Arkansas State Capitol
Governor's Reception Room
Arkansas State Capitol
Inside House of Representatives during Renovation Construction
Arkansas State Capitol
Ceiling Inside House of Representatives during Renovation Construction
Arkansas State Capitol
 Arkansas State Capitol
The state seal
Arkansas State Capitol
 The Old State House
 Booger Mask
1982 Canada
Iroquois Tribe Mask Used in a Healing Ritual
The Old State House
Bertabell Doll
Chicago 1971
Dolls made by Roberta Bell
Depicting Abolitionist and Women's Rights
The Old State House
Actual Scale of the White House Cabinet Room
Clinton Presidential Center
 A Gift to the President
A House for Socks their Cat
Clinton Presidential Center
 A Gift to the President
God of Knowledge
Gift from India
Clinton Presidential Center
Bill Clinton's Parents
His Father died 3 months before he was born
Clinton Presidential Center 
The Cassidys
Bill Clinton's Grandparents
They raised him while his mother went to Nursing School
Clinton Presidential Center
 Bill Clinton with his Step Father Roger Clinton
Clinton Presidential Center
Bill Clinton played the Sax
Clinton Presidential Center 
Bill and Hillary in their Hippie Years
Clinton Presidential Center
Bill and Hillary Wedding October 11, 1975
Clinton Presidential Center
Bill is sworn in as the Youngest Governor in the Country
1979
Clinton Presidential Center
 Little Rock Central High School
Arkansas Governor's Mansion
A great simple lunch
Three Folds Noodle and Dumpling Company

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Tupelo,Mississippi September 10, 2018

Thirty miles outside of Tupelo we blew a trailer tire and it happened while there was a huge thunderstorm accompanied by lots of lightning.  While it was an unexpected delay, we are counting our blessing as we were able to find tires in Tupelo.  The tires only had 12,000miles on them, but that is the second one that has blown so we decided to replace all four.  We are headed to Manitoba in some remote areas and we do not want to miss out on traveling with the group due to not being able to find a tire if we have a problem.  We are carrying the 2 remaining 12,000-mile tires with us as additional spares.

The most significant monument of Tupelo, Mississippi, I think most would agree, is a small two-room house where the King of Rock & Roll, Elvis Presley, was born on January 8, 1935.  His twin brother was born stillborn.  The house was built by his father, Vernon Presley, with a $180 loan during hard depression times.  The house had no running water.  One room was a kitchen, the other room all of them slept in. The family lived in the house for about three years.  They lost the house when his father, Vernon, went to Parchman Farm—the Mississippi State Penitentiary— to serve eight months of a three-year sentence for altering a four-dollar check.  During this time, Elvis and his mother took the long bus ride to Parchman on the weekends to visit his father.  The family lived in other places in Tupelo until when Elvis was 13 when they moved to Memphis Tennessee.  After losing their home they lived in a succession of low-rent homes before they all left for Memphis in 1948 in search of affordable government housing.  What a blessing that would end up being as Elvis records his first song in 1953 in Memphis. 

The Elvis birthplace memorial includes the two-room house he was born in, the Assembly of God church he attended, a museum and the Elvis Presley Memorial Chapel.

While in Tupelo we also visited the Tupelo Automobile Museum-120,000 square feet of automobiles, many we have never seen and also some we have never heard of.  Enjoy the pictures.  It was a great museum.

Next stop is Littlerock, Arkansas.


 Our Shredded Tire
 Elvis Presley Two-room Birth House
Elvis Presley Two-room Birth House
 Elvis Presley Two-room Birth House
Elvis Presley and his Parents
Assembly of God Church that Elvis Presley Attended
Inside Assembly of God Church that Elvis Presley Attended 
Elvis Presley Memorial Chapel
Elvis Everywhere
1886 Benz
1904 White Model D
1910 Haynes
1914 Hispano-Suiza Boat-Tail
 1929 Packard
1933 Morgan
1941 Ford Woodie Wagon

 1948 Jaguar Mark IV
1948 Tucker
 1954 Kaiser-Darrin
1 of 435 made
 1955 Messerschmitt
 11957 BMW Isetta
 1957 FordSkyliner
1957 Corvette
 
1967 Amphicar
Part boat part car
1974 Volkswagen SP-2
Only 10,000 were built
 1981 DeLorean DMC
That is all Stainless Steel
1982 DodgeDart Electric
Only 50 were made and it had a total of 20 batteries
1958 Toyopet Crown Deluxe
Toyota's first full-scale passenger car
It was the first Japanese car to be sold in the Mainland United States