About this Blog

This blog does not study little ice crystals. Snow is part of my Chinese name and this is a space to record God's faithfulness in me. Enjoy!

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Great Signs

During our trip, we saw some great signs.


At the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. It was a good warning.
The next 7 miles were indeed quite a winding road.


Visitor Center, Colonial Williamsburg
Since all interpreters wore 18th-century costumes, the restroom signs at the Visitor Center also featured signs in costume. Brilliant!


Jamestown, Virginia
I am not sure if I have seen this speed limit before.


Passing through Virgina and North Carolina on our way home. As Hubby said: "we are going north and south at the same time."

Virginia - Jamestown

After Colonial Williamsburg, we made a quick stop in Historic Jamestowne, about 10 miles away.

We toured the exhibit at the visitor's center before going to the site (James Fort) by the James River, where Captain John Smith made the landing and established the first permanent English settlement in America in 1607.


The James River


The monument commemorating the 300th anniversary of the settlement


The church

While it had little information to replicate life in the 17th and 18th centuries, the way Colonial Williamsburg does, Jamestown featured an Archaearium which housed the archaeological findings of colonial life (Queen Elizabeth II visited it in 2007). My favorite part of the site, however, was the cross beside the Archaearium.



Virginia - Colonial Williamsburg

After North Carolina, we visited Williamsburg and Jamestown of the Historic Triangle (the other leg was Yorktown).

We spent a day and a half in Colonial Williamsburg, where interpreters wore 18th-century costumes to explain the colonial way of life in the thriving British settlement.

From the luxurious Governor's Palace accented with an elegant garden, to the house of George Wythe (Virgina's first signer of the Declaration of Independence), to the many businesses and public facilities along the Duke of Gloucester Street, we went back in time and enjoyed the experience.