Friday, February 23, 2018

Flavor by Loews Hotels


Loews Philadelphia Hotel introduced "Flavor by Loews Hotels", an innovative food and beverage experience serving up the best of Philadelphia’s local flavor so that guests can dine like a local within the four walls of the hotel. 

The featured venues include:
La Colombe, sourced and roasted with care, the best coffee the city has to offer.

Metropolitan Bakery, a nine time Philadelphia Magazine “Best of Philly” winner.

Saint Benjamin Brewing Company is a Kensington craft brewery and taproom.

www.facebook.com/LoewsHotels

Virginia's Presidential Precinct: Albemarle County 2



I have found that the way to truly begin to understand the private side of an individual’s personality is to visit their home and peer into their personal spaces and presidential homes are very popular. The most visited of these homes is Mount Vernon, residence of George and Martha. Mount Vernon is located in Virginia 16-miles south of Washington, DC. and approximately 90-miles south are the homes of the third and fourth presidents, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison. Their plantations, Monticello and Montpelier, are a few miles from Charlottesville and within close proximity of one another. www.visitcharlottesville.org
                  
Both estates strive to present the personal and professional lives of these men as well as the enslaved who were also residents. The goal of both sites is to alter the prevailing narrative and depict the slaves as individuals with families, friends, desires, personal spaces and separate lives. www.virginia.org
                  

Monticello, the more famous of the two, was the home of Thomas Jefferson from the ages of 26-46 years old. Jefferson owned several properties and approximately 600 slaves and most worked at Monticello. Plan to spend several hours visiting all the sites. Tours begin with an orientation film and proceed into the gallery to view four exhibitions. Shuttles take you around the grounds and to the mansion. www.monticello.org
                  
Most people are familiar with the house because it is depicted on the nickel but they have little idea of the intricacies of its design. The interior of the home is 90% original as are 30% of the glass and 60% of the furnishings. Slaves including master carpenter John Hemings completed much of the building. Your tour begins in the 2-story entry where Burwell Colbert, the enslaved butler, greeted guests. It is filled with artifacts, many Native American. Antlers are the only original item, the remainder are recreations made by descendants of the original artisans.
                  

Jefferson read and wrote in 7 languages and his library held over 700 books. The displayed books are the same titles and editions as the originals. Jefferson’s bed was situated in an alcove and on one side was his study, on the other side his dressing room. He died in this room. In 1998 DNA linked Sally Hemings, an enslaved woman, to the Jefferson Family and it is believed he fathered her six children. Currently they are excavating a windowless room that they believe was hers. A  Hemings Family Tour is offered. www.home.monticello.org
                  

The house was designed with the dependencies all connected along passageways. The most interesting areas are the Wine Cellar, the cook’s room and the kitchen, said to have been the best equipped kitchen in America. Be certain to tour Mulberry Row, where free and enslaved craftsmen lived, and the slave cemetery. Your final stop will be Jefferson’s grave in the family cemetery.
                  

Montpelier was the home of James and Dolley Madison after his presidency. The estate had been in his family since the 1730s and after his birth in 1751 his father built the current house. Rooms were added to the home and later he added wings on either side. He and Dolley, America’s first First Lady, would live there until his death.
                  
Dolley was a Quaker who wed John Todd, a lawyer, at the age of 22. They resided at 4th & Walnut in Philadelphia from 1791-93. In 1793 Dolley’s in-laws, husband and baby died. In 1794 Aaron Burr introduced Madison to her and later that year they wed. Tours of the Dolley Todd Madison House are offered seasonally. www.phlvisitorcenter.com/attraction/todd-house
                  

James Madison was the 4th President of the United States, the Father of the Constitution, the Architect of the Bill of Rights and owner of a plantation with more than 275 slaves. Touring Montpelier is a totally unique experience because it deals with all of the historic contradictions in our culture. Madison and other founding fathers set forth the ideal of freedom for everyone but slavery at its height was a more than $3-billion industry and every state benefitted from it. In most cases profit trumped moral imperatives.
                  
There are two exhibits and an introductory film inside the Visitor’s Center. Grills Gallery features items connected with the Madisons including Dolley’s engagement ring. The Center’s Exchange CafĂ© offers a wonderful dining experience. Their barbecue is ranked #1 in the area and 30th nationwide. Everything is made using fresh local produce.
                  
The home has been architecturally restored and it is exciting to see and learn the history. Madison retired here in 1817. By the 1830s Dolley bedroom was in the left wing and Madison, who was ill, slept in a room behind the dining room. He became paralyzed and was attended by Paul Jennings, a slave, for many years. He died in 1836, the last of the Founding Fathers. Dolley sold Jennings after Madison’s death to Daniel Webster. Webster allowed him to purchase his freedom. He wrote a book, “A Colored Man’s Reminiscences of Madison”. In 1844 Dolley sold the 2,650-acre estate for $35,000 to pay debts. Dolley died in 1849 and was buried in Montpelier in 1858.
                  

The story of slavery at Montpelier and in society is told in the best exhibit I have seen. Two cellar galleries interpret the private and public lives of the slaves in state-of the-art displays. “The Mere Distinction of Colour” is based on oral histories of Montpelier’s slaves. Uniquely the film is presented as shadows on the walls evoking the ephemeral existence of the enslaved. A slave cemetery and six cabins dating from the 1700s are featured on the tour. Additional areas on the our include walking trails, gardens, 200-acres of Piedmont Forest and archeological sites. www.montpelier.org
                  

The George Gilmore Cabin is located nearby. He was a slave born on the Montpelier plantation. He purchased 19.11-acres of  land and his cabin is the nation’s first Freedman’s site. Montpelier’s 1910 Train Station has been restored to its Jim Crow era appearance. Displays are based on oral testimony by area residents.        

The original 3000-acres that is now the Clifton Inn belonged to Peter Jefferson and later Thomas Randolph, Jefferson’s son-in-law. The building was a warehouse and the stone foundation is part of the hotel’s main house. This historic property features luxurious accommodations in the main house and in the dependencies. The restaurant offers gourmet cuisine and exemplary service. This is perfect for meetings, a romantic getaway, a retreat or reunion. www.clifton-inn.com



Friday, February 9, 2018

Virginia's Presidential Precinct: Charlottesville & Albemarle County



Virginia was the site of the first permanent English settlement in America. It is also the place where the first slaves disembarked.  Eight Virginians have been elected as President of the United States, four being among the first five presidents: Washington, Jefferson, Madison and Monroe. These factors make Virginia a microcosm of both colonial society and the American culture that flowed from it. Great care has been taken to interpret history holistically there, and there are numerous museums, historic structures, tours and hundreds of markers to guide you. Every site with African-American links highlights the contradictions of life and liberty in the US. (www.visitcharlottesville.org)

Although the first land patents were issued in 1727, Albemarle County was officially established in 1744.  It was named in honor of the second Earl of Albemarle. Charlottesville became the county seat with a main street that previously served as a Monacan Indian trail from the Blue Ridge Mountains to Richmond. The 50-acre, hilly, village was named after Princess Charlotte, who would later become the wife of King George III. Charlotte — considered the first Black Queen of England–was a direct descendant of the African branch of the Portuguese Royal House. (www.albemarle.org).

Peter Jefferson, father of Thomas, purchased land in 1737,  making his son’s ties to this region permanent. Thomas was born on a 200-acre tract of land on the Shadwell plantation in 1743.  The home burned down in 1770, but the name lives on. Shadwell’s Restaurant, winner of the 2017 OpenTable Diners’ Choice Awards, is known for serving the best seafood in Charlottesville. Their crab cakes are particularly popular and are made of lump crabmeat from the Chesapeake Bay with no bread filler. (www.shadwellsrestaurant.com).

In 1987, the University of Virginia (UVA) was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Thomas Jefferson is credited with the concept and design of the “Academical Village,” which was conceived to encourage interdisciplinary studies and dialog. The basic design included pavilions to function as professor’s housing, dining hotels, student single room dormitories and the Rotunda. The Rotunda — modeled after the Pantheon — was to be the site of examinations, a library, worship services and a focal point of the university. The cornerstone of the $400,000 university was laid on October 6, 1817,  with Jefferson, Madison and Monroe in attendance. (www.virginia.edu).

UVA is currently committed to completing “Virginia Mist,”a granite memorial to the enslaved laborers who were instrumental in building and maintaining the university. The school owned 100 slaves and rented out about 40 of them.  It is believed that throughout time, more than 4500 enslaved worked at UVA from 1817 until 1865. Two male slaves, used to clear the land, were the first on site.  By 1832, UVA owned four. Ultimately, there was approximately one slave per 20 students. Slaves often accompanied the students. Edgar A. Poerented a local slave from his master for his personal use. Poe’s room, West Range #13, has been restored to its 1826 appearance. Visitors can peer through a glass door and press a button for narration.(www.virginia.edu/slaverymemorial).

Jefferson School African-American Heritage Center is housed within a 1926 building that was the only area high school for Black students. It was desegregated in 1959 and fully integrated in 1967. The Center seeks to honor, preserve and promulgate Charlottesville’s African-American legacy. The permanent galleries of “Pride Overcomes Prejudice” are divided into: “The Freedom Generation (1865-1895)”;“The Migration Generation (1895-1926)”; “The Community School Generation (1926-1939)”; “The Civil Rights/Massive Resistance Generation (1939-1959)” and “The Desegregation Generation (1959-1970).” The Contemporary Gallery presents a series of changing, provocative, art exhibits. A schedule of events and programs is available online. Visitors can obtain a copy of the African-American Trail for Albemarle/Charlottesville guide here. It lists 21 sites, a map and biographies. (www.jeffschoolheritagecenter.org).


Highland was the official residence of James Monroe, the nation’s fifth President, from 1799 to 1823. Monroe was born in 1758, the second of five children, in Westmoreland, Virginia. In 1790, he purchased land in Charlottesville that held a stone house and the land upon which UVA stands. In 1793, he purchased 1,000-acres from Jefferson and William Carter. His estate, Highland –later called Ash Lawn —  offers a 40-minute, 28 site, self-guided tour that includes a residence, gardens, overseer’s house and slave quarters. At one point, there were as many as 250 enslaved persons living there,  making Monroe one of the county’s largest slave owners. He believed in gradual abolition, but never freed any slaves of his own. The reproduced slave quarters allow visitors to walk through and view demonstrations of the work done by the enslaved. (www.highland.org).

Graduate Hotels are well-curated hotels that marry the college experience, local flavor and prime locations and the Graduate Hotel Charlotte is no exception. The hotel is located a 5-minute walk from UVA and a short drive to the other sites on this tour. From the moment you enter you experience outstanding hospitality and a series of touches that are reminiscent of college days. Room keys are ID cards featuring pictures of well-known UVA graduates. The accommodations are inviting, complete with Malin+ Goetz amenities and great mountain and UVA campus views. There are two dining venues: the Heirloom Restaurant and the Sheepdog Café. The rooftop Heirloom Restaurant offers expansive views of the area and great food. The Sheepdog is casual and has both indoor and outdoor seating. A 24-hour fitness center is located on the second floor and bikes are available. A stay here is a great experience. (www.graduatehotels.com/charlottesville).

Virginia is the fifth largest producer of wine in the US.  There are 30 wineries within a 30-mile radius of UVA. Visitors can follow the Monticello Wine Trail, so named because of Jefferson’s love of winemaking and the fact that this is considered the birthplace of American winemaking. (www.monticellowinetrail.com).                                

TRAVEL TIPS:

Baltimore is commemorating Frederick Douglass’ 200th birthday with a variety of events throughout the city. Many of the events will take place in February. For a complete schedule go to www.baltimore.org/article/bicentennial-frederick-douglass-birth-events