|
This pair of building comprise the
1895
Washington Hotel. It is where I slept last night and where I will
sleep tonight. The 1895 and the name Washington come from the fact that
the blue house was built in 1895 for a descendant of George Washington's
half-brother Augustine. My room is in the
brick pillared guest house.
|
|
Paducah has plenty of history-on-a-stick installations. I try to read the
titles on most of these but that's usually impossible at highway speeds.
In town, I succeed much more often. Today, on the way to something else,
I read a title that took me by surprise. What was a
"SCOPES MONKEY TRIAL" sign doing in
Paducah, KY? John T. Scopes, the man at the center of the trial, was born
and buried here.
|
|
I knew of this Peter Toth carving and was on my way to see it when I
spotted the Scopes marker. This thing is huge and just might be the most
impressive of the several Toth carvings I have seen. There is
a plaque nearby.
|
|
On the riverfront, the River Discovery Center is housed in the oldest
building in Paducah. There is plenty of history here and plus exhibits on
Paducah's modern day involvement with the river. There are quite a few
scale models of boats in the museum but the biggest and best is the
miniature Delta Queen. Built as a floating radio-controlled model,
the interior is furnished with details that can be seen only when the boat
is disassembled.
|
|
Across the street is a floodwall covered with Robert Dafford Murals and a
locomotive parked at one end. Every mural has a descriptive plague in
front of it. The one for the painting with the Delta Queen in the
center is here.
|
|
Santa has set up shop in the biggest opening in the wall and on the other
side the riverside's popularity with locals is quite evident.
|
|
William Clark played a significant role in Paducah's founding which the
city honors with this sculpture. There is a description
here.
|
|
The National Quilt
Museum is just beyond the Lewis and Clark sculpture. The museum was
very enjoyable although it was not what I expected. I anticipated a quilt
museum to tell the history of quilting and to be filled with examples
made decades ago by someone's aunt or grandmother. No quilt in the museum
predates 1984 and few, if any, were produced to keep someone warm at
night. The museum owns about 750 quilts of which 80 or so are currently on
display. Quilts on loan include collections from Joe Mallard and Susan
Carlson. There are some truly impressive works of art displayed here. The
last quilt pictured is, in keeping with the season, "Christmas
Trees" by Adrien Rothchild.
|
|
Of course, I couldn't get this close to
Apple Valley Toyland without stopping by to say hi to
Keith and see what was new. There has been both fire and wind damage since
I was here so there are a few thing I can be certain are new but beyond
that it's pretty much a wild guess. I almost missed seeing the homage to
Keith's mother who spent a lot of time frying chicken in the building that
is now a museum. Diane was in and out of the house while I was there but
rejoined us as I was leaving so I could get a group
selfie.
|
|