Located outside the Capitol Building in Austin is this monument to all of Texan veterans who have been disabled during their active service. The monument was erected in 1980 and the text in the centre reads ‘they offered their lives for the nation and received each for his own memory the noblest of shrines not the graves in which their mortal bones are buried but a home in the hearts of men’.
Tag: Austin
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Austin – Ten Commandments Monument
Located at the Capital Building in Austin is this monument of the ten commandments. It was installed here by the Fraternal Order of Eagles of Texas in 1961 and is made of Texan red granite.
There was a substantial court case in 2005 which was held at the Supreme Court about whether this should be located at a state building. It was decided by a vote of 5-4 that the monument was constitutional in what appears to have been an enormously complex decision.
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Austin – Frost Bank Tower
This beautiful looking structure is the Frost Bank Tower, the first skyscraper completed in the United States after 9/11. It cost $137 million to construct and has 33 floors, standing at 157 metres high. At the time of its construction it was the tallest building in Austin, although it is now the fourth tallest behind the Austonian, Fairmont Austin, and the 360 Condominiums.
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Austin – Quiznos

When I visited Denver in Colorado I went in a Quiznos as it was the first one that they had opened. I hadn’t heard of the chain before, so that visit was just experimental, but I was very impressed. At one time there were 5,000 Quiznos locations around the world, but for a series of reasons they ultimately lost out to Subway. There are now around 750 Quiznos around the world and over 40,000 outlets of Subway.
Unfortunately, I’m of the view that the wrong company has won out here with Subway’s food being bland, predictable and IMO cheap. Quiznos, in my view only, are far superior with the food actually having a depth of taste to it. Norwich has a few Subways, although one has recently closed, all of which I can’t say I’m ever tempted by, but if Norwich had a Quiznos I’d be there….

Quiznos have the option of 6 inch, 9 inch or 12 inch subs (Subway are 6 or 12 inches) and the 9 inch sub is the one that I think is the ideal snack size. Above is the Classic Italian (Italian sauce, tomatoes, red onions, olives, salami, pepperoni, ham, mozzarella, and lettuce) with a healthy (well, something like that) pack of Cheetos.
All very lovely and perhaps there will be another expansion of Quiznos in the UK, as the number is now very low (eight at the time of writing).
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Austin – Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library and Museum
I’ve been slowly making my way around all of the Presidential libraries in the United States and I’m nearly half-way through them. Unfortunately, some of them are more accessible than others in terms of their locations. The library and museum of President Lyndon Baines Johnson, the 36th President of the United States, is located at the University of Texas in Austin and so is one of the more accessible.
I took quite a few photos when I was at the museum, although unfortunately a combination of my limited phone camera of the time and Google’s compression of the photos has meant they’re not particularly clear. Behind this talking animatronic of Johnson, who was President from 1963 until 1969, are numerous caricatures of him.
A series of photos of former Presidents and their wives.
A recreation of the Oval Office as it would have looked during Johnson’s time there, with this recreation being a common theme at Presidential museums.
I liked this quote.
These photos aren’t very clear, but a few weeks before I visited the museum it had been also been visited by President Barack Obama. It’s not very clear, but the upper photo above is of Barack Obama listening to the exhibit’s phone, which I decided to also use whilst standing in the same location knowing I’d then listened to the same phone as a former President. I’m easily pleased…
On the subject of recordings, President Johnson secretly recorded many meetings and phone calls, around 800 hours of them. Many of these recordings were available to listen to at the museum, a fascinating record of the times and it gave a real feeling of being there when political events were unfolding.
As a museum it was cleverly put together and it was accessible in terms of the information provided. I don’t know a great deal about the politics of the United States in the 1960s, but this was an interesting overview of the work undertaken by the President of the time. All rather lovely.












