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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

road trip

Vacation round-up, part three: On the way back to Pennsylvania

August 14, 2021

This is the final post in a series about our road trip vacation to and from Illinois: Part One: On the way to Illinois; Part Two: In and Around Illinois; Part Three: On the way back to PA. If you’re on Instagram, I posted a daily photo round-up of our trip. Some of the visuals in these posts will be the same, but some will be different.

Here we go!

And we’re back in the car …

All good times must come to an end. Monday morning we started our goodbyes and took showers and loaded up the car then officially said goodbye as we headed toward central Illinois to meet up with a friend for lunch. Amanda and I were college roommates for a year and she was in our wedding, and I was so tickled that she could meet us for lunch.

Yeah, we still look good.

We went to Avanti’s in Normal, IL, a regionally famous (I guess) Italian restaurant that Phil’s parents frequented when they were college students. They were only doing carry-out but we could order and then eat in the restaurant. This is a common practice we saw while on vacation. Restaurants are able to prepare and cook the food but don’t have enough help for table service. It’s okay. It works. Our son ordered a pizza burger that was essentially a meatball sub but he wasn’t complaining. Our daughter ordered cheese ravioli with pesto alfredo. Phil and I shared a gondola sandwich, which is a signature dish at Avanti’s.

A big sandwich

We had a lovely visit, catching up and telling stories of recent travels, all while enjoying good food.

Then we headed on to Danville, IL, where we hit the jackpot with Roadside America sights. First, though, we drove through Kicakapoo State Forest on Amanda’s recommendation. It was a pretty drive and we saw two fawns along the road. We needed to stretch our legs and use the bathroom, so a walk around downtown Danville was in order. First, we stopped to see the Lindley Sign Post Forest, a collection of signs pointing to destinations all over the world.

Signs, signs, everywhere signs …

Nearby was a mural depicting all the famous people from Danville (more than you’d think … Jerry and Dick Van Dyke and Gene Hackman among them).

Familiar faces

Another block away was a brick sculpture of people of Danville.

We read some good stories about these people

Our next goal was to make it to Franklin, Indiana, before 6 p.m. Eastern (we were about to cross the time change line again) so we hustled. At one point while we were driving, Phil shouted, “Damn!” as we passed a literal actual dam, and we all roared with laughter because his timing was so spot on.

Why did we have to make it to Franklin before 6 p.m.? Because my friend Tiffany owns a bookshop there and I am Instagram obsessed with it and wanted to see it in person. If you’re ever near Indianapolis, please take the time to head to Franklin and visit Wild Geese Bookshop.

There are A LOT of books in this little shop

It’s a cute little shop (soon to be a cute bigger shop) with a wide variety of books and gifts. I told the fam that everyone could pick out one thing (easier said than done in a bookshop). We made some good selections and I enjoyed catching up with Tiffany in person. From there, we walked downtown to Greek’s Pizza and Tapp Room for dinner: pizza, breadsticks and beer (for the grownups). It was a good meal.

I don’t even remember what was on it, but it was good

Then we drove some Indiana backroads to get back on the interstate toward Cincinnati, our destination for the evening.

Our hotel choice for the evening left a few things to be desired. The parking lot did not instill a lot of warm, fuzzy feelings in us. There were broken down cars without windshields on the lower level of the lot, so we parked ourselves on the upper level, under a light, next to a contractor’s truck and took as much of our stuff inside as we could manage. At check-in, we were given a room on the sixth floor, but when we got to it, the door was slightly open and I thought I heard sounds. So, we hauled our stuff back to the lobby and asked for a different room. The desk clerk gave us a room on the seventh floor, and we could see our car from there. The room itself was nice, and since we were just looking for a place to sleep, it worked out fine, after our anxiety calmed down a bit. Next time, I’d probably spend a little bit extra on a different hotel in downtown Cincinnati. Live and learn.

Breakfast the next morning was grab ‘n’ go, so Phil and our daughter went down to get four bags. We had breakfast in bed, which sounds a lot more glamorous than it really was. We left the hotel a little after 8:30 to drive across the river to Covington, Ky. to park and view the Roebling suspension bridge.

I don’t have a thing for all bridges, but suspension bridges are magnificent

We found parking in a lot nearby and walked down to the river to see the bridge from below. In our first year of marriage, Phil read The Great Bridge by David McCullough, which is all about the building of the Brooklyn Bridge. Since then, he’s been fascinated by the Brooklyn Bridge and all bridges engineered by John Roebling.

This particular bridge is currently closed to traffic but pedestrians are still able to use it, so we walked across the bridge. Some of us found this more fun than others. I like to tell people we walked to Cincinnati and back, but I forgot to track the mileage so I have no idea how far it actually was.

Are we in Kentucky? Are we in Ohio? We can’t be sure!

Next up: the William Howard Taft National Historic Site, also in Cincinnati. Unless you’re into presidential history, you probably know Taft as “the fat one,” right? I’m so glad we visited this site because he was a fascinating man. We watched a short movie about Taft’s parents and his early childhood in the home we were about to tour, then took a self-guided tour through the home. A ranger was available to answer our questions, and boy, did we have questions.

Period decorations in old houses are my jam

Here are some things we learned: 

– First Lady Nellie Taft planted the first cherry trees in Washington, D.C. This had me thinking about legacy and the things we do today that outlive us.

– President Taft added 10 national parks/public areas during his presidency and signed two states into statehood

– a lot of Tafts went to Yale

– the bathtub … our son wanted to go to the Taft house because of the story about Taft getting stuck in a White House bathtub. There was a little bit of information there about it: the White House did install a bigger bathtub, but there was no explicit statement that it was because Taft got stuck; at the time of his presidency, he did weigh 335 pounds

– But he was always a big guy; his nickname as a kid was “Big Lub”

– Taft started the federal income tax and when he was chief justice of the Supreme Court after he was president, he streamlined the workload and gave the Court the ability to choose which cases they would hear; he also chose the architect for the Supreme Court building as we know it today

– as Secretary of War, he oversaw the construction of the Panama Canal

– he was the last president to have a family cow

Side view of the house

When we had finished there, we went to Raising Cane’s for lunch. It’s a chicken joint with a super simple menu–three of us had chicken tenders and one of us had the chicken tenders on a sandwich. The tenders came with fries, cole slaw and Texas toast. We ate outside, fending off birds.

It was good chicken

On the way out of town, we drove past the house that William and Nellie had had built when they moved back to Cincinnati. I got the address from a ranger. I thought maybe it was a private residence, but as we drove past, it was clear that it’s in some disrepair and maybe undergoing renovation. I hope someone is able to save it.

I’m a sucker for old houses in disrepair but I have zero skills for rehabbing them

We headed to Columbus, Ohio, next for the Topiary Garden at the Old Deaf School Park. The topiary is a re-creation of the Georges Seurat painting, “A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grand Jatte.”

Greenery … sigh

It’s been a long time since I’ve been in an art museum, so this was a delight. Phil said it had a Mary Poppins feel to it, like the painting had come to life. It was so neat to have a 360-degree view of the scene in the painting. Unfortunately the gift shop at the park was closed. Maybe we’ll have to come back. I don’t know what Columbus is like overall, but this was a pretty area and a nice place to stretch our legs.

Art comes in so many forms

On to Zanesville, Ohio for another roadside attraction: Vasehenge, a circle of ceramic vases that are probably 7-feet tall. Apparently Zanesville used to be a ceramics capital. Bees were living in a couple of the cracked vases, but this was still a fun little stop. Our son stood on one of the empty squares to pretend he was a vase. I guarantee you he couldn’t stand still long enough for anyone to make that mistake.

Vasehenge in Zanesville, OH

We crossed the famous Y-bridge in Zanesville, which was part of the National Road, a historic landmark we would learn more about the next day. Our dinner stop was in Triadelphia, W.V. (we were just trying to hit ALL the states on this trip) at The Hillbilly Snack Shack, which sounds exactly like its name.

We’re not from around here …

You know in movies when an out-of-towner walks into a bar and the music stops and everyone looks at the person who entered? That’s a little bit how we felt walking in. We wanted to sit outside, so we ordered at the counter and paid for our food and then went outside.

Another “salad”

I had an anti-pasta salad (that’s what it said on the menu), which was lettuce with Italian neats, provolone cheese, mushrooms and olives with an Italian dressing. Our daughter had a lemon pepper chicken wrap. Our son had a bacon cheeseburger. Phil had something called an oilfield trash burger. All good and greasy.

And just like that, we were back in Pennsylvania. Interstate 70 is fun because there’s just this tiny little strip of West Virginia that you drive though from Ohio to PA. We stopped at the welcome center so we could get our photo with the sign where it all started 13 years ago. Then we headed back to Uniontown, PA, but to a different hotel than where we stayed at the beginning of our trip. It was a much better experience than our previous night. We watched the Olympics until it was time for bed.

Wednesday, the last day of our trip, we headed to nearby Fort Necessity National Battlefield.

It’s more impressive after you learn the history

Breakfast at the hotel was a little bit disappointing for me (I could not eat another bagel) so I ordered Panera and went to pick it up. It was the first time I’d driven the car in 12 days. We got to the battlefield a little bit after the visitor center opened and watched a 20-minute video about the site. Then we walked through the lengthy display in the visitors center about Fort Necessity and the National Road. SO much to take in. My daughter and I walked through a little more quickly than the boys and learned there would be a ranger-led tour of the site, so we gathered the rest of our crew and let the ranger tell us about the significance of the site.

“GW” … I wonder what that means?

To sum up (I’ll try): George Washington (yes THAT one) is in the Virginia regiment trying to build a road through the mountains when he gets in a skirmish with the French and an important Frenchman is killed. (There’s some dispute about who fired first in this skirmish.) His brother (the dead Frenchman’s) gathers troops and goes to find Washington’s militia to enact revenge. Washington is camped at what we now know is Fort Necessity. They fight for 9 hours. The French say they want to talk and send a letter for Washington to sign, ending the battle. The ink is smudged and Washington’s translator is Dutch so they miss the part of the letter where Washington claims personal responsibility for the death of the Frenchman. Afterwards, the British declare war on the French and go on to fight the war we call the French and Indian War (but in Britain and maybe the rest of the world it’s known as the Seven Years War). After that war ends, King George decides he needs some money to fund his new empire, so he starts taxing the colonists across the pond because in his mind, they started the war. The colonists don’t like it. They rebel, declare independence and BOOM! we’ve got ourselves the United States of America.

(Please understand this is wildly simplified and probably only three-quarters accurate.) My biggest takeaway is that this little battlefield seems insignificant but it was a spark that eventually flamed into independence. The weight of that felt heavy as we walked around the encampment. It’s a small, defensive structure, reconstructed because the French burned it after the battle. In the visitor center displays, there are pieces of the original fort uncovered during archaeological excavation. Seeing artifacts is one of my favorite things–it’s like proof of life from the past.

Oh, look, my son found another cannon

Albert Gallatin’s name popped up again–he was an advocate for the National Road (currently U.S. Route 40 that starts in Cumberland, Maryland and ends in Vandalia, IL. It’s a someday dream of mine to travel these cross-country roads, like this one and U.S. Route 30 to see days-gone-by areas of our country). We learned that the word “turnpike” originated with the National Road. Tollbooths were set up at regular intervals and a pike, or log, was set across the road. Once the toll had been paid, the pike was turned so the carriage could pass. Thus, “turnpike.”

Have I mentioned how my imagination is captivated by old taverns?

We paid a quick visit to Mount Washington tavern, which is also on the site, an 1800s era building reflecting what it was like when travelers on the National Road would stop in. The building is more than 90 percent original. Fodder for my imagination.

Beautiful restoration

To get back to the current turnpike, we drove some backroads through the Laurel Highlands, another area we’d like to spend more time in someday. We made it to Somerset and grabbed Arby’s for lunch. I was hangry and this point and Phil and I got in a small conflict over things that were said when I was hangry. We ate in the car and followed the turnpike home to Lancaster.

Thanks for following along on this vacation journey!

Filed Under: 2021 Road Trip, Summer, Travel Tagged With: fort necessity, john roebling, meeting up with friends, road trip, roadside america danville, traveling home, visiting cincinnati, william howard taft

Vacation round-up, part one: On the way to Illinois

August 12, 2021

For vacation this year, we took a road trip back to Illinois, stopping along the way there and back to see some things. In years past when we’ve driven to Illinois, we tried to knock out the 14 hours as quickly as possible. This time, we took our time to make it feel more like a vacation. We packed a lot in, so I’ve got a vacation round-up in three parts for you. Part One: On the way to Illinois; Part Two: In and Around Illinois; Part Three: On the way back to PA. If you’re on Instagram, I posted a daily photo round–up of our trip. Some of the visuals in these posts will be the same, but some will be different.

Here we go!

I love driving through the western PA mountains at sunset

Because Phil’s vacation time is limited, we try to maximize our time by leaving after he gets off work on Saturdays. By 6 p.m. that night, we had our Sheetz order in hand and were headed to our hotel in western Pennsylvania. As I passed around the order, we discovered two sliders that belonged to someone else’s order. Oops. Nothing we could do. We pulled into the Super 8 in Uniontown, PA around 10 p.m. and the front of the building was lit with colorful lights. Hotels were a point of anxiety for me as I made reservations. Reviews are so mixed online. This one turned out to be just okay. All we really needed was a place to sleep. (The front desk clerk offered me the opportunity to play the video slots in their game room. I declined. 10 o’clock is already past my bedtime, and I’m no gambler.)

We had hotel breakfast the next morning: a smattering of continental choices, then headed out to Friendship Hill National Historic Site.

Friendship Hill National Historic Site

We planned most of our stops around national parks/historic sites because that’s our jam. We had two left to visit in western Pennsylvania after last year’s vacation when we visited the Johnstown Flood Memorial, the Flight 93 Memorial and the Alleghany Portage Railroad National Historic Site. Friendship Hill was the first this year. It’s the home of Albert Gallatin who was Secretary of the Treasury under Thomas Jefferson.

That’s Albert Gallatin above the fireplace

Friendship Hill is the house he built for his retirement. We had arrived earlier than the visitor center was open, so we wandered the grounds for about 30 minutes. There’s a gazebo overlooking the Monongahela River, and we took a short walk to the supposed site of Gallatin’s first wife’s grave.

We’re sort of awake.
Sometimes they love each other

When the visitor center opened, we got a thorough introduction from the park ranger on duty. (Shout out to park rangers! They are knowledgeable and friendly, in our experience, and willing to answer any and all questions.) We did a self-guided tour of the house, which we had to ourselves anyway. Some of what we learned:

– the Marquis de Lafayette (yes, that one!) visited Gallatin’s house in 1825 and it was a big freaking deal. The county where Friendship Hill is located–Fayette County–is named after him.

– Our son was super interested in a display about tongue-and-groove construction.

– Gallatin was involved in the Whiskey Rebellion and had opposing views from Alexander Hamilton; he is also buried at Trinity Church in New York City. (We’ve seen Hamilton’s grave. We probably missed Gallatin’s because we didn’t know!)

– Gallatin founded the town of New Geneva and most of its businesses, including a glass shop (as in, they blew glass there)

I just love old houses and the history they contain. I like to imagine what they were like in their day and sometimes I can almost feel the presence of those who’ve been there before. I get a thrill walking in the footsteps of history. (Lafayette was there and so was I!)

After some obligatory purchases from the shop, we headed to our lunch stop, about an hour away in Washington, Pa., a place called Hog Father’s that I found on the map. An unofficial rule in our family (carried over from my family) is that we try not to eat anywhere that we could eat at home. (So, no fast food or chains that are found everywhere.) As a kid, this made me nervous because I hated the pressure of having to order something from an unknown place. I knew what I liked at the familiar places and didn’t like having to make a decision. Now, I know better what I like in general, although I still don’t like to take a lot of time to read the whole menu. When I find something I like, I order it.

Our son had a southern fried chicken sandwich and fries, and in his words: “This is the best chicken sandwich I’ve ever eaten.” He proceeded to tell two people who worked there that this was the case. Our daughter had the same chicken but in a wrap with cole slaw. Phil had a southern brisket sandwich, green beans and cornbread.

That’s a MEAL!

I had a brisket salad, and I use the word “salad” loosely.

There’s a salad under there, I promise

There was so.much.meat along with fries and crispy onions on the salad. It was topped with their homemade barbecue ranch dressing. We needed more stomachs for all that food. And a nap.

But we got back in the car. We were planning to stop in Youngstown, Ohio, at an attraction I found on Roadside America, but we had an extended bathroom break and gas fill-up just across the Ohio border, so we scrapped that stop and headed for Cuyahoga Valley National Park. We’ve passed signs for this park many times, and our kids made a brief stop there one year with their grandparents. We knew we wouldn’t have a lot of time, so we made a quick stop at the visitor center.

That’s his National Parks passport book on his head

We consulted a map and thought about trying to see one of the sights in the park called The Ledges, but when we got to the trailhead, we realized the hike was going to be longer than we had time for. So, we drove to the Great Heron lookout, which was our planned stop in the park. We saw a bunch of heron nests in the trees but were a little too late in the season to see any birds.

If you look closely, you can see the nests in the treetops.

The drive through the park was beautiful and we’re already talking about taking a long weekend to come back and do a bunch of hiking.

Traveling back to the turnpike, we had a near-miss accident on the road. We were in the blindspot of a car that had just entered the highway. It started to change lanes and was inches away from hitting us. Phil was able to ease us onto the shoulder as the other car swerved back into its lane. We were shaken up but mostly okay. Then came several hours of anxiety-induced travel on the Ohio Turnpike. This is not my favorite road ever. I’m discovering for myself how bodies remember the trauma of place, and mine certainly seemed to remember that day so many years ago when I totaled a car on this very road.

We finally made it to our dinner stop in Toledo, a place we found off the turnpike years ago–Tony Packo’s.

If you’re in Toledo, look them up

The only way to describe it is Hungarian fast casual food. We had never eaten at the original location, only a fast-food style one in another part of town. This building also includes a hot dog bun museum–yes, you heard that right. Famous people (and locally famous people) have signed hot dog buns that are now on display throughout the restaurant.

Artificial hot dog buns signed by a couple people you might have heard of

Also, the food is amazing. Among the four of us we had sausages and hot dogs, mac and cheese, chili mac, chicken paprikas over dumplings, stuffed cabbage, pickles, cole slaw and cucumber salad. Phil and I each had a local beer.

Chicken paprikas

Our hotel in Michigan was only another half an hour away, and we rolled into the Tru by Hilton around 9 p.m. after a small detour through town. I should mention that we let the 13-year-old navigate on this trip. Phil sent her maps and she told him when to turn. Except that in Monroe, Michigan, he hadn’t included the hotel, just the town name so the GPS took us to the center of town instead of out to the hotel.

A note about the hotel: we had never stayed at this brand before and it was pretty great. Certainly the best hotel of our stay. 10/10 would book again. 

There was a beautiful sunset out our window. A great welcome from Michigan, which was a first visit for most of our family.

A Michigan welcome from the sunset

Monday morning, Phil woke up early to run to Lake Erie, which was only a couple miles from our hotel. He got some beautiful sunrise and bird pictures.

The sunrises are also pretty in Michigan

The rest of us took our time and went downstairs for hotel breakfast. The highlight of breakfast was the pancake machine. You waved your hand in front of the machine and it plopped some batter onto a conveyor belt and spit out a cooked pancake at the end. The kids were obsessed and I was fascinated. (I’m not a big pancake eater.) A quality hotel breakfast here, as well.

When we were all fed and ready to leave, we headed to our next park site–River Raisin National Battlefield Park.

A little-known (to us) battle

We were there before the visitor center opened, so we walked around the site and read all the plaques, then took a walk around the meadow.

Knowledge!
Battlefields require imagination, which we have in abundance.

The visitor center opened at 10 and was a short drive from the battlefield, so we we went there and watched a short movie and listened to a park ranger give us an explanation of the map. After the movie, we viewed the large diorama of Frenchtown, which was what the settlement was called at the time of the battle.

River Raisin was the bloodiest battle on Michigan soil and the worst defeat of the War of 1812 for the American military. We heard a connection to our friend, Albert Gallatin, who helped negotiate the surrender at Ghent. Our son enjoyed the 3-pounder cannon mounted on a sled because the battle was fought in winter.

If there’s a cannon, he’s there.

This visit raised lots of questions for us about what the Native American narrative would be about these events. There are some troubling parts to this story, but we didn’t ask our questions.

“Remember the Raisin!” became the battle cry of the western campaign of the War of 1812.

We had originally planned to eat lunch at a unique restaurant in Monroe, but it didn’t open until 11:30 and we were ready to leave town well before that, so we headed to Ann Arbor. We passed the University of Michigan stadium on our way to Washtenaw Dairy.

Legend-dairy!

We picked this place because apparently Superman ice cream is a Midwest treat we’ve never tried and they serve it here. (The side of the building says, “We’re legend-dairy.” I love a good pun!)

Better than I expected

Three of us had Superman ice cream, a blend of blue moon, lemon and red soda/pop. Our daughter had lemon custard. I would not have ordered Superman ice cream if we were on one of our normal ice cream visits, but I was glad I did. It was unique and oddly delicious. Since we skipped our lunch plans, we also ordered donuts at the dairy and had a nutritious lunch of donuts and ice cream. Donut flavors we tried: maple glazed with peanuts, vanilla with sprinkles, coconut flakes, cinnamon sugar and chocolate glazed.

Not long after we got back on the highway, we were diverted by Google to some backroads due to accident traffic. Our next stop was Battle Creek, Michigan, home of the Kellogg Company. We passed the headquarters, but that’s not why we were there.

On the Roadside America site, I found the Fantasy Forest, part of the Leila Arboretum.

The details are astounding

It’s a collection of trees that were killed by the emerald ash borer and instead of pulling out all the stumps, the arboretum asked artists to design and carve them. It is incredible. Our son was excited for the life-size Groot.

“I am Groot.”
Do we look hot? Because it was SO hot.

As we drove through Michigan, we noticed all the roads named “mile,” such as 28-mile road. Can someone from Michigan explain this to me? Also, marijuana is proudly legal in Michigan. How do we know? All the billboards! (We still live in a state where marijuana is only legal for medical use, so we’re not used to seeing this kind of openness.)

Our next goal was the Indiana Dunes Visitor Center, which we thought closed at 4 p.m. central time. So, we were hustling to make it and pulled in to the parking lot before 3:30 p.m., only to find out they’re open till 6. Oh well. The Indiana Dunes is only a couple of hours from our hometown but neither Phil nor I can ever remember going there. This was another park that we couldn’t spend a lot of time at and that is still on our list of parks to visit. We asked a ranger what we should see if we only had an hour. She seemed disappointed. (To be honest, so were we.) We shopped the gift store and then headed to Kemil Beach. Our first glimpse of Lake Michigan from this side was awe-inspiring. We could see the Chicago skyline. (Usually we see Lake Michigan from the Chicago side.)

If you squint, you can see it.

It was hot, though, and everyone but us was dressed for the beach so we didn’t stay long. Phil and our son took a short hike on one of the dunes while our daughter and I refreshed ourselves at the car then joined them for the last little bit. On our way out of the park, we drove through an historic part showcasing houses from the 1933 World’s Fair.

I would live in a pink house.

Our dinner stop was White Castle because we’d had the frozen microwaveable burgers once and Phil wanted to convince the kids that the burgers fresh from the restaurant were better. This particular White Castle was in a gas station, which totally tracks for White Castle’s vibe in my mind. There were double sliders, chicken and waffle sliders, single sliders, fries and onion rings in our order. Why do we do this to ourselves?

Mmmm … greasy gas station food

We rolled in to our hometown–as my son put it, “our last hotel” aka my parents’ house–before 9 p.m. and watched the Olympics before turning in.

Filed Under: 2021 Road Trip, Summer, Travel Tagged With: family vacation, national park sites, pandemic travel, road trip, summer break

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