Author: admin

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 8 (Electric Circus Taco Bar in Williamsburg)

    2022 US Trip – Day 8 (Electric Circus Taco Bar in Williamsburg)

    20220925_145117

    This taco bar is one of the food outlets located at the Precarious Beer Project in Colonial Williamsburg. You order the tacos at their outlet and they give you a buzzer to collect the food when it’s ready, meaning that you can then sit anywhere in the venue. I choose to go back to sit at the bar with my beers, but I can’t imagine that coming as much of a surprise. This whole food and drink arrangement feels on-trend without being formulaic, which is a difficult balance to get sometimes, but the staff were welcoming and it all felt informal and relaxed.

    I went with the Circus Shrimp and the Spicy Chorizo tacos and they well presented and that lime created a handy zesty finish, with the ingredients being of a high quality. Lots of flavour from the shrimp and chorizo, although they were a little small and something larger would have been even more delicious. I adore jalapenos and am always pleased when they’re generously served to add some extra heat and texture to the food. Refreshing though, they went well with my IPA, despite being slightly awkward to eat without making a mess.

  • Streets of Norwich – Willow Lane

    Streets of Norwich – Willow Lane

    Part of my Streets of Norwich project…. [updated in October 2023]

    Screenshot-2020-05-08-at-22.18.29

    Willow Lane connects St. Giles Street to Cow Hill, a looping road that is shaped by the St. Giles’s Church site. The lane takes its name from the willow trees which were once on the south side in the seventeenth century, with the Mayor of Norwich being responsible for checking them. Despite this being a relatively short road, there are nine listed buildings along it.

    20200508_101932

    This is the St. Giles Street end of the road, the building on the right (which is 53 St. Giles Street) is the side of Ellis Second Hand Books and then the building behind is 1 Willow Lane, an early nineteenth-century residential property which was sold in 2019.

    20200508_101958

    The next building along is a former Catholic church which was built in 1827 by JT Patience, which was then turned into a Catholic school. The building is now used by Rogers & Norton solicitors and George Plunkett has a photo of when the building was still used as a school.

    20200508_102005

    Looking back towards St. Giles Street, the former church is on the left behind the fence.

    20200508_102008

    What looks like a Georgian building on the left, the entrance to the former church site is now on the right of this photo.

    20200508_102019

    The series of buildings on the left-hand side are early nineteenth-century residential buildings, which remain as houses. The white building on the right-hand side is number 9, also known as Willow Lane House, an eighteenth-century residential building that has been converted into offices.

    20200508_102040

    The brick building on the right is 15 Willow Lane and is a seventeenth-century residential building that was extended in the nineteenth century. It was also the home of Francis Blomefield (1705-1752) who was a local historian who wrote the ‘History of Norfolk’. The building was used as a boarding house in 1939, so the register gives an interesting look at its occupants. There were:

    Mary and Stanley Page (boarding house owner and husband was a hairdresser)

    Barbara Dash (assistant in grocer’s shop)

    Alice Nicholls (billiards room attendant)

    Sarah Barber (private nurse)

    Jacob Black (steel bender)

    Mary Black (unpaid domestic duties, wife of Jacob)

    Elizabeth Ledleve (boot and shoe branding).

    There were also two other people on the register where the record remains closed, so it’s possible that they’re still alive.

    20200508_102105

    Looking back the street from the Cow Hill end. The street feels very Georgian and unchanged, and there’s also the hidden property that was once the George Borrow museum, where the author lived between 1816 and 1824. However, this now has more in common with Cow Hill, so more on that in another post.

    Norfolk Pubs also suggests that there might have been a licensed premises called the Cellar House located along the street in the early nineteenth century.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – Agnes Lee)

    2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – Agnes Lee)

    20220924_092504

    I can’t offer anything on this other to note that Agnes Lee lived between 12 May 1887 and 22 November 1890, dying at three years of age and then being buried at Hollywood Cemetery. The average life expectancy, from birth, in the United States in 1860 was just 35, although by the time that Agnes was born it had increased to 41, but that’s still a lot of deaths in early life.

    So why is there a blog post about this? Well, primarily as I liked that little sheep (I assume that’s what it is) on the grave, it’s quite an emotive image and it made me wonder what the family must have thought when standing there in 1890. And, also, because time was so incredibly cheap at that point in time of Richmond’s heritage, not least meaning that information about Agnes seems to have been lost to history.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – Jefferson F Davis)

    2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – Jefferson F Davis)

    20220924_092103

    The history of the world would have been very different (and I doubt in a positive way) if this man, Jefferson F Davis, had been able to lead the Confederate States to a victory in the American Civil War. Davis was the only President of the Confederate States as it was a short-lived office, but for the years he was in power (1861-1865) he was a very important political figure around the world. By most accounts, he wasn’t the most competent of leaders and his time in office was very troubled to say the least. His support for slavery has also meant that his historical reputation has gone from one of respect at the time to one more of contempt, although as with everything, views differ.

    20220924_092118

    As this tablet suggests, Davis had previously been the Secretary of War between 1853 and 1857. Davis had close links to Richmond, it’s where he lived and was inaugurated as President and hence that was why he was buried here at Hollywood Cemetery, although other US cities put in claims as well. He had died and was buried in New Orleans, but his remains were quickly exhumed and transport to Richmond.

    20220924_092124

    I’d like to think that his statue is safe in this graveyard, but images of Davis have been attacked throughout the United States over recent years. Davis was arrested after the end of the Civil War and many people tried to unite the nation that had nearly split in two, with Davis not being adverse to helping with that. Certainly a controversial figure even today, it was certainly interesting to see where he was buried.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – President John Tyler)

    2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – President John Tyler)

    20220924_085408

    As I mentioned earlier, there are two Presidents buried at Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, John Tyler and James Monroe.

    20220924_085612

    The grave of John Tyler (1790-1862), who was President between 1841 and 1845, and there is something quite thrilling about seeing where a former leader of the United States is buried. Perhaps I just need to get out more, but there’s some considerable heritage here.

    Tyler was the tenth President of the United States, slightly unexpected as his predecessor William Henry Harrison had only lasted for one month before dying and that’s still the shortest period in office for a US President. There’s an historians’ view of former Presidents at https://www.c-span.org/presidentsurvey2021/?category=6 which puts Tyler towards the bottom of the list, although not as far down as Trump so that’s one thing.

    Tyler had fifteen children, a record for any US President which is unlikely now to be surpassed, and in terms of his political legitimacy, some of his political opponents referred to him as “His Accidency”. This was a tricky route to navigate as Presidents hadn’t previously died in office and some thought that Tyler should just temporarily manage the responsibilities of the President and not take over the entire role which is what he ended up doing. This whole situation wasn’t formally resolved until the 25th Amendment to the Constitution in 1967, but credit to Tyler for managing to stay in the post for the full four years.

    The burial of Tyler took place in 1862 and Jefferson Davis started to get involved with that whole arrangement, ignoring Tyler’s wishes for a simple funeral. Tyler was buried under a Confederate flag, the only former US President not to have been covered with the flag of the United States.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – President James Monroe)

    2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – President James Monroe)

    20220924_085408

    There are two former Presidents buried at Hollywood Cemetery, James Monroe and John Tyler.

    20220924_085506

    The grave of James Monroe (1758-1831) who was the fifth President of the United States, serving between 1817 and 1825, and one of the Founding Fathers. Often noted for the Monroe Doctrine, which defined the foreign policy of US politics for over a century, as well as being one of the people responsible for the Louisiana Purchase earlier on in his career. That purchase is still staggering, Monroe and others were meant to go and buy New Orleans from the French for no more than $10 million, but he managed to buy half of what is now the United States for $15 million.

    20220924_085534

    Quite an ornate exterior, Monroe was initially buried in New York at the Marble Cemetery and wasn’t re-interred here in Richmond for 27 years. I’m not entirely sure what he would have thought about that little arrangement.

    And here he is in a painting by Samuel Morse from 1819. Two potential quiz questions here, Monroe died on Independence Day, 4 July, the third of the first five US Presidents to do so, but none have since. Also, with the exception of George Washington, he’s the only US President to have a capital city named after him, in this case, Monrovia in Liberia.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – Confederate Army Memorial Pyramid)

    2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – Confederate Army Memorial Pyramid)

    20220924_082607

    This large pyramid is located at Hollywood Cemetery and was erected here in 1869 to commemorate the 18,000 Confederate men who lost their lives in the Civil War and were buried here. The cemetery itself prefers the interpretation not that the Civil War was “a lost cause” but that it united the nation and set the foundation for the future.

    20220924_082617

    The pyramid stands 27 metres high and was designed by Charles H Dimmock (1831-1873).

    20220924_082658

    The 1869 stone marking that the pyramid was erected by the Hollywood Memorial Association.

    20220924_082309

    Some of the thousands of Confederate graves which have been well cared for.

    20220924_082726

    Located next to the pyramid, this feels slightly out of place in the cemetery……

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – Iron Dog)

    2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond – Iron Dog)

    20220924_083354

    OK, my final post about the Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond…. This is one of the best known graves because of the cast iron Newfoundland dog. The dog is guarding the grave of a little girl (there’s not agreement on her first name, although her surname was Rees) and it’s traditional to place toys here to commemorate her life. As to why the dog is present, many historians seem to agree that it was placed here in the early 1860s during the Civil War to prevent it being melted down for the war effort, although it could just have been placed here by the little girl’s family. Whichever story is true, this is now an iconic location for the city of Richmond.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Free Public Transport in Richmond)

    2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Free Public Transport in Richmond)

    20220924_095747

    There are a number of cities in the United States who are doing great things with public transport in a country where the car dominates nearly everywhere. There’s also Chicago where the public transport system is, frankly, outdated if we were in the 1950s. But I’ll be coming onto that complaint in a few days. Indeed, I might spread those complaints out over several posts as the system is so ineptly run I can’t recall seeing anything as badly planned in any city I’ve been to.

    Anyway, unlike Chicago, Richmond is pioneering with its work on public transport and there will be a little more on this as I returned to the city after going to Williamsburg. One of the things that they’ve done is make public transport free until 2025 and it certainly seems from my observation of passenger usage to be very popular. Every bus stop also has a code which then gives live information on where the buses are, which wasn’t entirely perfect but it worked well enough.

    20220924_100609

    I double checked that it was definitely free when boarding, just in case I had got muddled up, but, all was as expected. As free as a bird…. Unless it’s a caged one. I digress I think.

    20220924_101154

    And the bus sailing off after safely depositing me near to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. I’d better add that’s where I wanted to get off, I wasn’t removed from the vehicle. But, a very impressive effort from the city of Richmond to increase the usage of public transport, I was very impressed.

  • 2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Abortion Protests in Richmond)

    2022 US Trip – Day 7 (Abortion Protests in Richmond)

    20220924_101730

    I’ve never seen anything like this before, which were some protesters standing outside of a women’s health centre in Richmond, next to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. The banner is the centre’s as abortion is still legal in Virginia, but the men standing nearby with the “Baby Lives Matter” had a megaphone and were saying what they thought about the abortion advice that was being offered inside. There was a lot of “you can adopt your baby rather than murder it” which was it’s fair to say quite emotionally charged language for anyone sitting inside.

    Anyway, I’ve heard of this sort of protest but it’s the first time that I’ve seen anything like it. The midterms are on 8 November here and the abortion issue is a huge one in the United States, perhaps slightly favouring the Democrats for these elections more than the Republicans.