For The Love of Travel

My favorite places, photos and stories

October 6, 2014
by Lids
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Absolutely gorgeous sunny day so off to catch the Staten Island ferry and vistas of the Statue of Liberty and Wall St. The SOL was a gift from the people of France, and has stood as an image of the US immigrant heritage since 1886. image Edouard de Laboulaye first proposed the idea of a monument for the United States.

imageBorn on January 18, 1811 in Paris, France, Laboulaye was a prominent and important political thinker in his time, a leading expert on the U.S. Constitution, and an abolitionist and supporter of President Abraham Lincoimageln during the American Civil War. He believed whole-heartedly in the “common law of free peoples,” an ideal in which every person was born with an inalienable, sacred right to freedom.

When the Union won the Civil War, Laboulaye argued that honoring the United States would strengthen the cause for democracy in France. As the president of the French Anti-Slavery Society, Laboulaye believed that the passage of the 13th Amendment (abolishing slavery in the U.S., 1865) was a milestone and it proved that justice and liberty for all was Ten years later, with the help of friend and sculptor Auguste Bartholdi, Laboulaye turned his proposal into a reality. In September 1875, he announced the project and the formation of the Franco-American Union as its fundraising arm. With the announcement, the statue was given a name, Liberty Enlightening the World. The French people would finance the statue; the American people would be expected to pay for the pedestal.

Then a walk to the new One World Trade Centre and associated memorial site for 9-11. Very moving design for where the south tower once stood – a waterfall cascading into the depths, with those who died remembered around the rim. A single rose is planted in tribute to each person on their birthday next to their inscribed name – gorgeous!! image A visit to Chelsea Market, a food hall, shopping mall, office building and television production facility located in the Chelsea neighbourhood of Manhattan. Built in the former National Biscuit Company factory complex where the Oreo cookie was invented and produced, this complex fills two entire blocks.

imageAfter dining on oysters and clams, the High Line called….(also known as the High Line Park), a 1.45-mile-long (2.33 km) New York City linear park built on a section of a disused New York Central Railroad spur called the West Side Line. Inspired by a similar project in Paris completed in 1993, the High Line has been redesigned and planted as an aerial greenway and rails-to-trails park. New Yorkers believe the NY version is the best!! Of course!! The project has spurred real estate development in the neighborhoods which lie along the line. The park is extremely popular; as of September 2014, the park gets nearly 5 million visitors annually, me being one!! Absolutely lovely urban planning and design example.

 

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October 6, 2014
by Lids
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5/10 New York

After the deluge of yesterday, bright sunny skies this morn and perfect to visit the Convent Avenue Baptist Church. Strolled down St Nicholas Ave to get there. image Wow, what a service! Initial welcome songs from a troupe of talented (Alisha Keys sounding) ladies, to the full gospel choir, praising through song, with a very talented mezzo soprano, awesome! http://vimeo.com/90477455

Dr Jesse T Williams officiating….with a rousing sermon using an impossible number of adjectives to describe the congregation, ” we are honest, trustworthy, bold, God fearing, Bible thumping, sin hating, Devil fighting, gospel preaching people”….with attendees applauding, pumping the air and agreeing with “praise the Lord”.  Here’s an example of one of his sermons…http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=qgdUsgXKEMQ

image Quite an experience today as the first Sunday of the month service goes for 2 hrs, hung in there!

Anyway, invigorated by all that lovely gospel singing…had my first experience of NY subway, making my way to West 42 St station, to catch a theatre performance….”It’s Only A Play”, written by Terrence McNally. Thought it would be brilliant as it has Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick and Stockard Channing in it, just to name a few actors….well it was! Sooo funny, it got many an encore…and it was a preview performance, leading to the premiere tomorrow night. It’s a way of getting cheaper tickets but a rehearsed cast….worked a treat.
One of the great lines was ” Broadway is to Hollywood, as the Statue of Liberty is to immigrants”….image
Give me your tired, your poor
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore……hee, hee, hee!

Then a stroll through Times Square; odd balls abound; the famous naked cowboy strumming, hum, his guitar…..the goss is he got married last week!? Anyway, cars in grid lock, lots of cement reno’s, thank god it was twilight so I could focus on the ad images……pretty. imageimage

October 4, 2014
by Lids
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4/10 Sugarhill, Manhattan

Met up with Eric yesterday and have settled into his very comfortable apartment in Upper Manhattan.
He took me on a tour of the locale Matthanville/Sugarhill neighbourhood.

Here’s a gorgeous portico entrance, beaux arts style.  Sugar Hill got its name in the 1920s when the neighborhood became a popular place for wealthy African imageAmericans to live during the Harlem Renaissance. Reflective of the “sweet life” there, Sugar Hill featured rowhouses in which lived such prominent African Americans Thurgood Marshall, Adam Clayton Powell Jr., Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, Walter Francis White and Roy Wilkins.

imageSylvan Terrace is a historic mews which is part of the Jumel Terrace Historic District in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan. It consists of 20 wooden row houses on a cobblestone street with coachlights leading up to the Morris–Jumel Mansion (Museum). http://www.morrisjumel.org/visit/photo-tour/

The Mansion is the oldest house in the borough, built in 1765 by Roger Morris, a British military officer and served as a headquarters for both sides in the American Revolution. Because the Morris’ were Loyalists, the house was confiscated by the Commissioners of Forfeiture at the end of the Revolution.
imageThe mansion was bought in 1810 by Stephen Jumel, a rich French merchant who had immigrated to the United States, as a home for he and his wife, and former mistress, Eliza Bowen Jumel. Anxious to be accepted into New York society, the Jumel’s remodelled the house, adding the Federal style entrance and redecorated the interior in the Empire style.  Because they were not accepted socially in New York (Eliza was born in a brothel and had been a prostitute herself), the Jumels went to France in 1815. Eliza returned in a few years by herself and laden with 200 European paintings she soon made available for public exhibition. After Stephen’s death in 1832, Eliza, who was now one of the wealthiest women in New York City, married the controversial ex-vice president Aaron Burr in the front parlor of the house. She filed for divorce in 1834 on the grounds of adultery, which was granted in 1836, shortly before his death. Eliza then divided her time between Saratoga, New York, Hoboken, New Jersey and lower Manhattan, living at the property until her death in 1865. She apparently was a very generous benefactor to societies of the day that looked after women interests.

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She is buried at the Trinity Cemetery, Riverside Drive…of which I had a tour, together with about 20 NYU students this morning, courtesy of my knowledgeable and entertaining host, Eric.

My spirits remain undampened…ha ha….but we all got soaked with the unexpected bucketing rain!!  Felt very Melbourne.