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Friday, July 6, 2018

Visiting the Yorktown Victory Center (Virginia - Revolutionary War and Civil War Site) with Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

Visiting The Yorktown Victory Center by Savvy Mom Ruth Paget

When the weekend rolled around, we all enjoyed sleeping in until 7 a.m. while mess crank on the USS Austin still required us to get up at 4 a.m.

The end of June was approaching.  The even hotter months of July and August were yet to come.  We took long, cool showers that hardly steamed up the bathroom they were so cold.

I packed a picnic lunch full of goodies.  We headed out to the Yorktown Victory Center.  The Center had picnic tables outside the entrance, so we decided to eat our lunch first before our visit.

One of the things that bothered me about picnics was ants and other insects that crawl on the table.

I solved this problem by putting a nice tablecloth on picnic tables whenever we went on a picnic.  I used an ironed tablecloth that had pastel-colored flowers on it to set off our picnic basket.

New and old fabric tablecloths can keep picnic area surfaces clean of bird feces and other animal waste products, too.  Tablecloths are easy to clean.  This is a health-before-etiquette practice.

I told Florence, “We look like we are characters in an Impressionist painting with a tablecloth on our picnic table.”

Inside the picnic basket, leather straps held real China dishes in place along with metal cutlery.  A built-in container held China cups.  There was room for two plastic containers that held sandwiches.  (I thought that we could make these items in the US, too.)

We drew a lot of interested looks from passers-by with our nifty picnic gear.

We had humble food to eat, but we all liked it.  Nutella sandwiches with sliced bananas on French baguettes.  We drank chilled water and the French soda Orangina.

Once we were all well fed, we lingered by the entryway and read the panels about the important events that led up to the Revolutionary War.

One of the most interesting facts was that the expense of winning the French-Indian War prompted the English government to impose a series of taxes on the thirteen colonies.

The colonists wiggled their way out of paying most of these taxes; England’s Prime Minister Pitt seems to have been rather dull.  However, the tax on tea was the one the colonists could not find their way out of.  Revolt against the tea tax led to the Boston Tea Party.

This information bored Florence.  As soon as we arrived inside, Florence wanted to go back outside where cannons were going off.  The guide dressed in brown breeches said that a cannon should be called “a gun.”

Our guide wanted to debunk the myth that cannon balls shoot up high in the air.

“They fired at a level height,” he said on his mission of enlightenment.

“They also do not explode on impact and were used not much to kill as to disrupt lines of advancing artillery,” he said to develop our military prowess.

We went back inside to a play center where Florence:

-could dress up in colonial clothing

-play with computers that had quizzes about American history

-practice saying her letters with hand-held planks called “horn books” for practicing letters

-play with a mancala game board

-play a ball and cup game

-read picture books about colonial times

-play with mystery boxes requiring you to reach in and try to describe objects like turkey feathers

-play at a table where children could do rubbings of colonial objects

I read a few books to Florence and then helped her make some rubbings.  That activity fascinated her.  Rubbings are like magic.  People in England get rubbings this way when they rub their ancestors’ effigy faces on tombs.

After visiting the kids’ section, we went back outside and visited the farm.  The most interesting place to visit was a reconstruction of a colonial kitchen located in a building separate from the main house.

The guide said a fire had to be kept going at all times to dry food and protect the dried food from mildew.

Eating only dried foods in winter did not seem appetizing to me.  Summer and its resplendent gardens and orchards (called fruit tree gardens sometimes), full of juicy fruit take, on a whole new light when you think about eating dried fruit all winter long.

The guide also said the colonial kitchen had a tendency to burn down every three to five years.

Outside the kitchen was a garden with flax growing in it.  An exhibit next to it described women’s work with flax.  Once the flax matured, the women of the house spun it into thread, wove it, and made it into fabric for sewing.

Colonial women had their work cut out for them.  Technology makes some tasks easier like washing dishes, but creates others like getting oil changes, chauffeuring children and husbands to school and work, learning new computer programs, and learning new language every few years in the modern era.

Our visit would not have been complete without a visit to the Yorktown Battlefield.  I discovered that warfare during the Revolutionary War and during the Civil War was all about digging trenches and trying to enclose the enemy’s trenches.  It reminded me of Chinese Checkers that you play on a star-patterned board.

On the way home, we stopped at an ice-cold, air-conditioned Kentucky Fried Chicken and ate a fried chicken bucket dinner.  I took leftovers home and bought a chocolate cake and a gallon of lemonade, too. 

I was having ton of fun in Hampton Roads.  My family thought Norfolk (Virginia) just a harbor, but it was so much fun that they started visiting, especially when they found out that it was the North American headquarters of NATO.


By Ruth Pennington Paget, author of Eating Soup with Chopsticks and Marrying France

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