Yorktown
is full with older buildings some of which are owned by the park service and others
by individual. There are also not so old
homes, and even some older apartment buildings.
It is a nice combination, and a pleasure to walk. The
photo here is from the Nelson House,
which dates from 1730 (here is another reference for the Nelson House). It is a nice historic building that gives you
a flavor of the importance of Yorktown in its hay days. It’s amazing how fleeting some of these things
such as fame and fortune can be, and only some will be kept in our memories
forever. People build monuments to themselves,
such as ex-governor Nelson who seems to have built the largest house on
Yorktown, or maybe the largest surviving house in Yorktown. Guess we still do this in modern time, but I
assume that most of the McMansions here in the US that are stick built, will
eventually deteriorate, and few will remain as monument to their owners. This is so very unlike the Europeans who
built with brick and stones and where you still see many old buildings.
Now in modern time we have other means of leaving a legacy
or our own monuments. Some do it with
the (non-biodegradable) trash they throw out of their car or fill the landfills
with (my wife and I generate less than 2 bags of trash each week and compost
all our food waste). Others do it by
writing, blogging or maybe even through things like facebook, twitter, or any
other electronic way. It should be
interesting to see what will remain 100 or more years from now. I personally hope that some of my writing (a
few book chapters on scientific items), this blog, my photos on flickr or even
facebook will give me some form of immortality.
Oh well, enough rambling.
We walked back by the beach an hour later, we were tired; the dogs had
been swimming in the river and were wet.
Metal detector guys were gone and there was nothing left for future
archeologists. A lot more people were on
the beach, ready to enjoy our first really warm day in the sun.
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