Showing posts with label US railways. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US railways. Show all posts

Friday, August 22, 2008

I've visited Saluda, NC

I promised you two days ago to show you more photos from our journey to North Carolina. Driving from Asheville NC, take this exit 59....


...and after some minutes nice mountain driving you'll see this picturesque little town: Saluda. It is like cut out of a picture book, so neat and clean, with good restaurants and a lot of nice shops in the main street - you cannot miss it, it's so small. :-)

This is the view to the main street from the other side of the railroad crossing, only some houses, that's all.


Shady trees in the main street, with inviting shops everywhere


This is the window of the City Hall. It's like the time stopped and never came back. Do you see that great old type writer in the window?


As you know already, I like to photograph details, and flowers - like this scene here.....


...or this one! I love the wooden bench too.


Flowers are everywhere in this pretty little town!



Tomorrow I'll show you a series of photographs I made about something very special I have seen in Saluda. And I met a very nice person there too. Stay tuned for tomorrows post!


Below you can read what the Internet has to say about Saluda.

Since the turn of the century, Saluda, North Carolina has been a favorite vacation destination. Need an escape from the heat or a respite from the hectic pace of life? Long for peaceful tranquility, scenic beauty and fresh mountain air? Come discover one of Western North Carolina's hidden jewels. Nestled at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains, Saluda is a great place to enjoy seasonal beauty throughout the year. Convenient to many wilderness, architectural, civic and otherwise "charming" attractions, Saluda invites you to visit for a day, a week, or longer.




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Monday, July 28, 2008

Florence, SC In The Rain and The Henry Timrod House

The poet Henry Timrod and his one room school house


Henry Timrod was born on 8th December 1829 in Charleston, South Carolina. His father, William Henry Timrod, was a staunch patriot and also contributed to a literary magazine. It is no surprise, therefore, that Henry also grew up to have these characteristics.

Despite his father's early death, Timrod was still able to attend Charleston's finest school and later attended the University of Georgia. On graduating, he returned to Charleston and at first practiced law, before later becoming a private teacher. This suited him well as it also gave him time to pursue his literary ambitions.

During the Civil War, Timrod not only enlisted in a volunteer regiment, but also made the conflict the focus of his poetic works. His patriot lyrics are said to have inspired many a soldier and civilian and helped him acquire a reputation as “the laureate of the Confederacy”. One of his finest pieces to come out of this time was Ode to the Confederate Dead at Magnolia Cemetery.

Plagued by recurring illness throughout his adult life, Timrod was soon left unfit for service on the front line and instead became a war correspondent. By 1864 he had become the editor of the Columbia South Carolinian.

Despite his ill health, he married and had a son, who died shortly after the end of the war. When Timrod himself died of tuberculosis, virtually in poverty, on 7th October 1867, he was buried next to his son in the graveyard of Trinity Church in Columbia.

Only one volume of his works had been published during his lifetime (in 1860), but further collections were edited posthumously. Amongst his most memorable poems are The Cotton Boll, Carolina, and Ethnogenesis.

You can find his poems to download here:
http://www.poemhunter.com/henry-timrod/biography/


The historic sign in front of his little house


Monument in the yard and the Timrod Park in Florence


The little red caboose of the Atlantic Coast Line. Just in that moment the rain set in and I had a hard time to get around in "down town" of Florence for more photos.


This is the only one picture I could capture from the real down town area after that it was raining hard - and we left back to Charleston.


Of course, outside of Florence there was no rain anymore and I photographed this pretty water scene at sunset time.



If you like to know more about Florence, SC read here please:
http://www.sciway.net/city/florence.html

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