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We need to recall the freedom of the forest.

-----Bede Griffiths

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GLAM Indie Craft Show took place on Sunday, Dec. 4 from noon to 5 p.m. at Villa East. The show featured more than 50 local vendors, , including Recollections Jewelry. For more information or to get on the mailing list for next year's show, visit glamcraftshow.com.

Spring 2015

by Jenny Sangeun Jee

Sculptor Susan Hagen created "Recollection Tableaux", a series of dioramas that depict scenes from the history of Eastern State Penitentiary.

From my final photo book series called 'Recollection', which explores the theme of absence and remembrance through the possessions of my late relatives.

The Gundemonium trilogy is available for on Steam (www.steampowered.com) on September 27th, 2011.

 

Shoot first, shoot fast, shoot precisely and above all else, shoot the hell out of all your enemies in GUNDEMONIUM COLLECTION, the epic trilogy that brings together three of indie game developer Platine Dispositif's most revered and sought-after "bullet hell shooter" titles from Japan.

Recollections of domestic life. An 1893 Christmas tree. Artificial table trees with popcorn, cranberries, and candles were popular.

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Visual Arts, Exhibitions. Lorna Simpson, March 25 - July 18, 2010, Medtronic Gallery. Curated by Siri Engberg.

nO puedO descifrar el cÓdigo que guarda mi cOrazÓn la clave está dentrO de ti, tu amOr es mi redenciÓn ... cierra tus OjOs mientras capa a capa mi alma se encuera cOmO un tesOrO escOndidO ya se debe revelar ... espérame

necesitO tu querer, aunque siempre sOy fuerte, cOnfíO nO me dejarás caer ... llévame al fOndO del mar, llévame al quiebre de un manantial, llévame dOnde te guíe el vientO

te seguiré sin miedO a andar ... cOn tu amOr podré llegar ...

Recollections of domestic life. Straubel parlor, Green Bay, 1900. The upright player piano, what-not, chandelier, carved dining room table, and curtained bookcase-desk combination were the "standard equipment" of the period.

Recollections of domestic life. Dining room of the John Johnson home, Milwaukee, 1895. The carved oak sideboard holds a punch bowl, silver platters, castors, and pitchers.

Recollections of domestic life. A typical farm kitchen, 1890, before paper sacks were replaced by modern packaging.

From my final photo book series called 'Recollection', which explores the theme of absence and remembrance through the possessions of my late relatives.

President Lincoln's Cottage (officially "President Lincoln and Soldiers' Home National Monument") is on the grounds of the still active Armed Forces Retirement Home.

 

Since it's an active retirement community and also for the military, it's a bit of a peculiar place.

 

The area is where Union soldiers were garrisoned during the Civil War. Immediately next door (which, I believe, was on the grounds at the time) is a national cemetery that was in use during the Civil War.

 

The cottage here has been restored (more on current status in a moment). In the 19th century, it served as a "Summer White House" for President Lincoln. According to the Visitor Center here, Lincoln spent "one quarter of his presidency" here as he summered here every year to escape the heat and politics of the city -- which is only about three miles away.

 

Before Lincoln, President Buchanan used the cottage as well and, afterwards, Presidents Hayes and Arthur used it as their Summer White House.

 

The Visitor Center has a few exhibits with remembrances of Lincoln's time here. Basically, it highlights that, while living here, he wrote the Emancipation Proclamation at this cottage. He also rode, alone, on horseback to the White House every day, along the same route (which, when it got close to town, went along Vermont Avenue NW).

 

At the time, Walt Whitman was living at 1101 Vermont Avenue and one of the panels here is his reflection of how he could set his watch to when the president would pass and they'd nod to each other. The point, basically, is that the leader of the nation traveled a very predictable route every single day without armed escort/protection.

 

Now, in 2020, this is an active retirement home so if you want to visit, you have to arrange a ticket online ahead of time and park nearby (there is no parking on the grounds for this particular purpose). You have to present photo identification to check in at the gate and go directly to the Visitor Center a few steps away.

 

After a quick orientation, you're allowed to go directly across to the cottage, another few steps away and told you are NOT to stray around the grounds because retirees live there.

 

The cottage itself is very, very underwhelming in my opinion (and incredibly overpriced at $15 admission; I even think a $5 admission might have been slightly high, but reasonable). It's completely restored inside, but hardly a single piece of furniture, except for one desk, which they tell you isn't an original. Some of the rooms have a random quote from Lincoln. So in the end...the outside of the home looks nice, but the inside leaves a lot to be desired. The exterior looks pretty and inviting, and the grounds between there and the exit are pleasant. In the end, though, I probably wouldn't have visited here had I known how underwhelming it would be.

 

If you're a Lincoln aficionado, though, by all means, check it out. If not, there are two cemeteries within a five minute walk that are very nice to check out: the aforementioned Soldiers' Home National Cemetery and Rock Creek Cemetery, each of which have a few graves of notable people.

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Recollections of domestic life. Mrs. Joseph Smith, Wausau, 1895, wears leg-of-mutton sleeves, high-boned collar, and a hat of that period.

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She also described some of the ways in which she still actively feels the sweet presence of her good friends in her days, and the ways in which she shares that love and warmth with her children.

 

Recollections of domestic life. Interior of the Fairchild home, Madison, 1890. Lucius Fairchild was governor of Wisconsin, 1866-1872. The room reflects the cluttered taste of the time.

Nikon D600

AF-S NIKKOR 24-120mm f/4G ED VR

Manipulates how beautiful the forest looked like before it was cut

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