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I backtracked into Bedford for breakfast at the
220 Diner. Cincinnati has goetta. The rest of the
world has scrapple. I think it may be most common in Pennsylvania. It was
in Bethlehem, PA, that I'd tried it and been unimpressed. I've now tried
it twice and remain unimpressed. It does not, in my biased opinion,
compare favorably with goetta at all.
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Of course, the real reason I backtracked a little was to get my gas tank
filled and my windshield cleaned without the need to get out of the car.
I'm out of the car because I WANT to be out of the car.
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I've definitely noticed the Lincoln Highway Farm as I drove by but I don't
know if I've ever photographed it. I'm fairly certain I've never
photographed the cabins a little east of the farm and not at all certain
that I've even noticed them before. The white building is more or less
across the road from the former site of the S.S. Grandview Ship Hotel
which is in the fourth photo. It has been on the brink of collapse from
the first time I saw it, and I'm always a little surprised when I look
over and see it still standing.
ADDENDUM: Sep 24, 2021 - Being only fairly certain leaves room
for escape, and I'm taking advantage of that now that Carol Ruth has
jogged my memory. Quoting from the Lincoln Highway Heritage Corridor
driving guide for Bedford County, those cabins were "Once part of
the SHAWNEE CABINS TOURIST CAMP, they now house seasonal farm
workers."
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I reached the Flight
93 National Memorial around 9:00 AM and went directly to
Memorial Plaza. At first, very few others were there
so that it almost seemed I was alone. Just a little more than a week
earlier the plaza had been filled by people observing the twentieth
anniversary of the tragedy. There were flowers and other items at each of
the panels in the Wall of Names and I suspect the recent anniversary had
something to do with that.
The Wall of Names is the row of white marble panels in the pictures. It is
aligned with the path of Flight 93 and contains the names of the forty
passengers and crew members who perished in the crash. A sandstone boulder
marking the impact site can be viewed through the hemlock
"gate". The long walkway and wall in the second and third photos
replaced a fence that protected the crash site. At one time, the sloped
wall had several shelves where visitors could leave mementos. Today just
one remains.
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I was first here in
2004 and again in
2013. My memory
thinks I was here another time between those dates but can produce no
evidence so is probably wrong. In 2004, the only structure was a small
shelter for volunteers tending to the site. By 2013 the plaza had been
added (2011). On this visit, there is a new
Visitor Center (2015).
The Visitor Center is a natural starting point and people more energetic
than I can walk from there to Memorial Plaza on a two or so mile long
trail. No photos are permitted inside. Much information is presented on
the 2001 terrorist attacks and especially Flight 93. There were a couple
of school buses in the lot and many of the visitors were high schoolers.
They were learning new facts while I was recalling memories. It's a
situation I find myself in more and more frequently but here the
difference seemed extra sharp.
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An even newer addition to the memorial is the
Tower of Voices that was dedicated in September 2020.
The text on that sign can be read here.
Apparently it is an engineering and sonic marvel. It's certainly eye
catching and close enough to to the entrance to catch eyes passing on
US-30/Lincoln Highway. It was silent as I walked to and under it. It
remained silent as I walked back to my car then emitted a single boing
just before I got in to drive away. The sign says it will create
"both harmony and dissonance" but I think at least two
simultaneous boings are required to create either. No verdict yet.
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This is the Lincoln Highway Experience which is sort of home base for the
Lincoln Highway Heritage
Corridor. The Corridor is described as a "200 Mile Roadside
Museum" while the Experience is a museum of the more common sort. It
provides information on attractions in the corridor. There is a bicycle
to get to -- virtually -- attractions in the corridor and beyond. It's
said that if you peddle long enough, you can light up those lights all
across the country. I made it to New Jersey.
One of the organization's projects placed five new roadside giants beside
the Lincoln Highway. I took a picture of one of
those giants yesterday. The "ship" in the glass case
connects to a photo taken earlier today. It is a model of what used to be
in that open space in a picture four panels back.
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All of this is in an area of the museum that didn't even exist when I was
last here. It is a typical Lincoln Highway village with a faux gas station
and motel and a very real diner. The diner is a 1938 Jerry O'Mahony
originally operated by Lou and Joe Serro. Today it was operated by Vickie
who served up some very real pie and coffee.
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I stayed with US-30 to Pittsburgh then picked up US-22 with the intention
of taking it all the way home. An accident and resulting traffic snarl
prompted me to move south to I-70 which carried me to Columbus and I-71.
That's where I encountered the first real rain of the trip which continued
all the way home. But, as I've often said, rain at the end of a trip is
not a bad thing. I'm just glad I wasn't in a Model T.
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