Friday, April 11, 2025

Huddleston, VA - Charlottesville, VA

 

 April 8 - 11, 2025

On Wednesday, April 9 we drove to the Charlottesville KOA Holiday.  It's full hookups and $71 a night.  A little pricey for what we get.  They have a pool and other activities but no one is using them because it's too cold.

Site #28

On Thursday we went to Thomas Jefferson's Monticello.  I don't care how many pictures you see and things you watch on TV, the real experience is different.  You just get a bigger perspective on how things are laid out.

The are doing archaeology on the grounds. What they find is displayed in the museum.

We had an 11:15 tour of the house.  First you have to go through security, then go up some stairs to catch the shuttle bus to take you to the grounds.  From there you go to seating area 3, and are moved up a seating area until it's your turn for the tour.

 

Monticello


View from the seating area below the house.

Our tour guide, Tom, took us to the porch and pointed out the clock above the door and the bottom side of the weather vane in the ceiling.


Clock

 

Weather Vane

He said that most of the furnishings in the house were not original, but reproductions.  I asked if the window glass was original and he said that it wasn't, but it was made wavy to make it look like it was original.

We then went indoors where they had some paintings and other things displayed.


Bust of Thomas Jefferson

 

Portrait of Thomas Jefferson

 

The inside part of the clock.  Notice the wires going out from each side.

 

They go down on each side of the wall and have weights on them.  On Sunday the clock is wound with the help of a folding ladder and the weights are lifted to the ceiling.  The top ball right-hand set of weights reveals the day and even the approximate hour as it falls past markers on the wall (you can see two of the markers on the wall to the right), with Sunday at the top and Saturday at the bottom. Unfortunately, when the weights arrived at Monticello, the ropes were longer than the wall, so they cut a hole in the floor for the weight to pass through, and now the marker for Saturday is in the basement.  The clock is also attached to a Chinese gong that chimes the hour. In the eighteenth century, the gong rang loudly enough for field slaves to hear it three miles away.  

 

Inside Entrance Hall

 

Jefferson's Desk

 

Desk with Adjustable Top

 

Plans of the House

 

This was Jefferson's private room next to his bedroom.  Very few people were allowed here.

 

Jefferson's Bedroom

This bed looks small but was big enough for his 6'2" frame.  This is where he died on July 4, 1826, hours before John Adams on the 50th anniversary of our country.

 

Jefferson remodeled Monticello extensively in the 1790s. In his bedroom he added a skylight and a partition wall to form a bed alcove below and a closet above. The closet was reached by a steep stair or ladder.  The holes above the bed are used for ventilation.

 

All of the pediments in the house are different.

The wood floor in the parlor is original.

This is a dumbwaiter on the side of the fireplace in the dining room.  There's another one on the other side.


Tea Room off Dining Room

 

Pediment Between Dining Room and Tea Room

 

Sundial
Note the beautiful view with the redbuds and dogwoods blooming in the valley below.


Thomas Jefferson's Monticello on the back of the nickel.  Jefferson is on the front.



The blooming tulips were beautiful!

Kitchen

  

I thought this was really smart!

Kitchen

Burners

A much better idea for a smokehouse.

Fireplace coming into the smokehouse.

Where the meat was hung.

Sketch of the smokehouse areas.

Vegetable Garden

Vegetable Garden

Thomas Jefferson's tomb, which he designed before he died.  It reads, "Here was buried
Thomas Jefferson
Author of the Declaration of American Independence
of the Statute of Virginia for religious freedom
& Father of the University of Virginia
Born April 2, 1743 O.S.
Died July 4, 1826
O.S. means "Old Style." The Julian or Old Style calendar was in effect in England and her colonies until 1752, when the Gregorian or New Style calendar was adopted. This added eleven days to the current date to bring the calendar year into step with the astronomical year. Thus, the birthday of Jefferson, who was born on April 2 under the Old Style calendar, is now celebrated on April 13, the New Style date.

Cutaway of the house.

Interesting idea for collecting rainwater.

Zig-Zag Roof

What happened to the house after Jefferson died is interesting.  You can read about it at https://colonialquills.blogspot.com/2016/01/rescuing-monticello-from-ruin-by.html 

After visiting the tomb we took the shuttle back to the visitor's center.  We could have taken a trail back but it was cold so we opted for the shuttle.  We looked in the gift shop but didn't see anything we couldn't live without.  I think if it had been a nicer day we would have stayed longer, but it wasn't so we didn't.  We went and got some lunch and ran some errands.

Soon we'll be...

Roving on...

For this is what the LORD says, He who created the heavens (He is the God who formed the earth and made it, He established it and not create if as a waste place, but formed it to be inhabited): "I am the LORD, and there is no one else."  Isaiah 45:18

 

 

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