What a trip. No joke, we were going from dawn to dusk every day. But there was time for fun, too. For example, here I am downtown. I've just come from dim sum in Chinatown, and in the process of walking it off, I found myself (with my homies) at a house where Eleanor Roosevelt lived from 1933 until 1942. Good vibes.
Later, we traveled to Ellis Island, where our group toured the hospital buildings (not open to the public) and the main island (definitely open to thousands and thousands of the public). You can see the Statue of Liberty from the island, which tends to make you particularly sympathetic to those who had to stay there - the sick, those to be deported, and new immigrants not yet cleared to board a ferry to the city.
Though I am not a huge fan of ferries, the one to the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island passes by the statue and provides truly beautiful views. Of course, my reaction echoed our experience at Mount Rushmore, where I thought, "gee, that's not really as BIG as I expected."
After Ellis Island, after the Tenement Museum, after Katz's Deli, we rode the subway back uptown to our digs. Our gang, christened Twee Fury by a colleague (weapons of choice: AHA totebags twirled above our heads with historical verve), dominated the train.
Jamie took this picture - as you can see, I'm watching.
4 comments:
Oooh, "Bates History." I wanna work somewhere with COOL HATS.
Do I detect snark?
I've never even heard of such a thing.
my brother lives in new york! you probably passed him on the street. lol
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