Thursday, October 31, 2013

Turnip-O-Lanterns


One of our favorite times of the year is upon us once again...HALLOWEEN!

The Colonel and I carved more turnips this year. My turnip is the one with the tooth. We may have to make this an annual event.


Monday, October 28, 2013

Drazana's Pet Lizard

Drazana, my lilliputian, rock garden alien has a pet lizard.


Drazana is only eight inches tall and has very small shoulders, so you can image how tiny the lizard is.

Yam was walking past Drazana when she spotted the little lizard perched on the alien's shoulder. Of course I had to run inside and get my camera. I wanted to document this scene.

The lizard was extremely brave for its size...it never moved the whole time I was snapping away with my camera. How cute.


 
 
 


Sunday, October 27, 2013

A Love Affair, Clearly

 

I think my love affair with sea glass began when I lived in Key West, Florida (1998-2001). My family and I would walk the beaches and pick up the tumbled and worn sea glass. Now, whenever we take a stroll along any beach we look for sea glass (as well as shells and shark teeth).

The first piece of sea glass jewelry I purchased was a pair of earrings from a little shop in Key West.



A recent sea glass jewelry purchase was this necklace below. It was hand made by a local woman.



My Darling-Sister-In-Law made this sea glass jewelry set for me and gave it to me for Christmas one year.


I bought more glass-centric jewelry recently but not sea glass this time. This pair of earrings is made with ancient Roman glass. When I wear these earrings I wonder...was this glass once a piece of a bottle or jar that held perfumed oils for a highborn Roman woman?



My love for glass in jewelry puts me in the company of King Tutankhamen. A famous piece of King Tut's jewelry has Libyan Impact Glass incorporated in it.

 
The yellow scarab in the middle of the jewelry piece is made from Libyan Impact Glass (LIG). LIG was the result when a meteorite impacted the Sahara Desert about 29,000,000 years ago on the border of Libya and Egypt. Extremely high heat melted desert sands and formed this translucent glass. LIG was first used by man about 10,000 years ago. Nearly pure silica, it is the purest natural glass in the world. It can be heated to 1700 degrees Celsius. There is said to be metaphysical properties associated with LIG. It is supposed to increase sales and profits. Creates good luck; especially spiritual.
 
The Colonel's sister gave him this piece of Libyan Impact Glass as a present.
 
  
The Colonel and I also like old bottles. We've found them in water and in the ground. We have also purchased old bottles.
 
 
This beautiful blue bottle was purchased in a Savannah antique shop. It is a John Ryan Soda bottle from 1866.
 

 
The Colonel and I dug up this green bottle as we were cleaning up a lot. It is a Royal Palm Soda bottle. Royal Palm Soda was once part of Coca-Cola Bottling Company.
 

 
I like the look of glass in all its forms. I have various kinds and shapes around the house and I like to decorate with it.
 







I've got bags of sea glass just waiting for the time I get inspired and make something with it. Maybe I should make a sea glass "sister" for Shelly some day.
 
 
 
 

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Antebellum Octagon Hall


The Colonel and I love to visit/tour/stay-in old, historic houses (or hotels). So, when we were traveling back home from Indiana, the last time we went there, we saw that Octagon Hall was just off the highway as we headed south.

Octagon Hall is in Franklin, Kentucky, just south of Bowling Green. It is listed on the Register of Historic Places.

In the mid 1840s a New England architect espoused the benefits of octagonal houses in a book he authored. He said octagonal houses had better airflow, strength and usable square footage. This book caused a fad to start and thousands of octagonal houses were built around the country. Most were built in New England and the upper Midwest. Approximately 83 are still in existence today. Octagon Hall is one of four surviving brick octagonal houses and the only one in Kentucky.

In 1847, Andrew Jackson Caldwell laid the first foundation stones (natural limestone blocks weighing up to1 1/2 tons) for his unusual house. Using handmade bricks from local soil and timber from his woods, he completed, with slave labor (Caldwell owned 25 slaves by 1865), his house in 1859.


Below is the picture of Mr. Caldwell and his second wife, Harriet Morton Caldwell. It hangs over one of the fireplaces in Octagon Hall. Caldwell's first wife, Elizabeth, died before the house was completed.


Andrew Jackson Caldwell was an ardent advocate of the Southern Cause and many Confederate soldiers found shelter in his house throughout the Civil War. There once was a cupola atop the house where soldiers (and family valuables) were hidden. The cupola had bee hives in it, so the Caldwells placed the soldiers in bee suits when they hid them there. The bees would deter the Union soldiers from searching the cupola. The cupola was removed in 1918 due to fire damage from a lightening strike two years earlier.

Octagon Hall was a strategic asset to both Confederate and Union forces. It was located on the L&N railroad and the Nashville Pike which made it ideally suited for an observation post and camp site. On February 13, 1862 approximately 8,000 Confederate soldiers camped at Octagon Hall on their march to Tennessee.  Union forces occupied the area days later.

Mr. Caldwell died in 1866 of Typhoid Fever and his wife Harriet lived in Octagon Hall until 1918 when she sold it to Dr. Miles Williams, an osteopath from Nashville. Dr. Williams lived in the house until his fatal heart attack in 1954. His heirs made the house a rental property. Octagon Hall remained a rental property until The Octagon Hall Foundation was formed and obtained the building in 2001. It is dedicated to the restoration and preservation of the only eight-sided house in Kentucky.

Octagon Hall today is a museum and houses the Kentucky Confederate Studies Archive. The house contains Civil War artifacts, Native American artifacts, genealogical and historical research materials.


 
A plantation slave tag
 

Octagon Hall has been featured on The Discovery Channel and Syfy Channel. It is reported to be haunted (that made The Colonel and I even more interested in visiting). Billy Byrd, Executive Director of Octagon Hall, welcomed us on our visit to Octagon Hall. He told us we could open any door of the house on our self-guided tour (right up my alley...I always want to know what is behind a closed door). Billy also told us about the hauntings and his own personal experiences with paranormal activity in the house. One incident he relayed to us was the time he hung the picture of Elizabeth, the first Mrs. Caldwell, and heard the voice of a little girl say, "Mama" behind him. Billy was the only one in the house that day.


Elizabeth Caldwell was the mother of Mary Caldwell. Little Mary died at Octagon Hall when she caught fire as she was playing near the fireplace in the basement's kitchen. Billy Byrd thinks Mary's ghost uttered "Mama" when he hung the picture. Below is a picture of Mary and the kitchen she caught fire in.




There are also stories of people hearing the sound of a man moaning like he is in pain. The moans come from the area where the cupola once was. The reason for the sounds may be because the ghost of a Confederate soldier is said to haunt there. During the Civil War, the Caldwells reportedly hid the wounded soldier in the cupola. The soldier was shot in the foot and when the pain and pressure became too much he cut his boot in search of relief, which allowed the blood to flow more freely and he bled to death. In 1911 a split boot with bone fragments in it was found in the attic

The door to the attic and beyond to where the cupola once was is in a closet in Dr. Williams' old bedroom. I opened the door and snapped a picture. It felt a bit strange and creepy to look up into that space (part of me wanted to go up in there).


Soldiers were also hidden under the stairs at the front door. They gained entrance to under the stairs from inside the basement. Bullets and buttons from the Civil War have been found there.


 

Recently a tunnel was discovered and excavated in the kitchen's cupboard. It is believed that it was used to hide soldiers and may have been an escape route to a nearby cave entrance located near the railroad at the rear of the property. The false floor would be replaced and covered by cooking staples to disguise the tunnel's entrance. Billy Byrd told us that the museum was going to rent a ground penetrating radar unit to see how far and where the tunnel was on the property.



Mr.Byrd showed us a couple of pictures that some ghost hunters had taken when they spent the night at Octagon Hall. In the first picture below you see the image of two ladies in long dresses, standing in the doorway next to the ghost hunter in a wheelchair. In picture number two you can see the ghostly image of what looks like a soldier in the yard.



The Colonel and I did not see or experience anything paranormal during our tour of the house and grounds.

Here are pictures of little Mary's room. It is said the curtains move on their own at times.




Pictures of the other upstairs bedrooms.







Octagon Hall was used as a hospital for the wounded Confederate soldiers. There were mannequins set up to represent this (I bet they are creepy when the ghost hunters spend the night).



 
 
This is a picture of the entryway from the front door. It was small, but this allowed for larger rooms.


These are pictures of the rooms downstairs.

 
This yellow room was the dining room and it once held an 18-seat walnut table when the Caldwell's lived here.

 This room (pictured above and below) was once the parlor.

This room was once Dr. Williams' office.
 
The following pictures are of the basement. The kitchen was where Mary caught fire and where the hidden tunnel was found.








There was a summer kitchen down a path behind Octagon Hall.

 



A weaver's house was also on the grounds.




The first Mrs. Caldwell, Elizabeth, little Mary and an unnamed baby boy are buried in a tiny graveyard behind the house.



Past this little graveyard, down a narrow path is the slave graveyard. Two unknown soldiers are buried just before the slave graveyard. One soldier was from Morgan's Men and died in 1864. The other soldier was from Wheeler's Cavalry and died in 1865.


 

Visiting Octagon Hall was a wonderful experience. Billy Byrd was very friendly and informative. Having free reign of the place was terrific (peeking in all those closed doors). It was a unique experience to tour the inside of an octagon house. I was surprised at the size of the rooms; indeed great use of square footage. Next time we head north...who knows...we may pay another visit to Octagon Hall.