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Category Archives: 2015/365
Take Me Out to the Ballfield
We had a great time a the Sox/Orioles game tonight.
Interesting events:
*Exchanged a smile and wave with Eliot the Jordan’s Furniture guy!
*Poor Sox player getting stepped on by a (very apologetic) Oriole’s player.
*Friendly fire Out for the Sox- the runner was hit by the ball, fresh from the bat, on his way from first to second base.
*Foul ball hit straight into our section, hitting the knee of the man in front of us, which scared his girlfriend causing her to toss her beer onto their friend and the Dad-guy sitting next to them. His son ended up with the ball.
Everyone knows that we’re not massive sports fans, but we fully appreciate the opportunity to see the Sox in person. The girls get a kick out of it and even the poor plays are interesting to watch. We sing Sweet Caroline and beg for peanuts and Cracker Jacks and make a good, old fashioned night of it. National Pastime for the win!
Obedience and Love
Green Thumbs
Helper
Open Mic
Pass go, Collect $200
Cleaning up
Once in a Lifetime
July 4, 1795- The Founding Fathers hide a time capsule in the cornerstone of the Massachusetts State House
1855- Workers find the capsule, clean its contents and reinter it, making their own additions.
Dec 2014- More work at the State House unearths the cache again. The contents make a visit to the MFA for cataloging and preservation.
June 17, 2015- The Wood girls make a spur of the moment visit to the State House to attend the official reinterring ceremony.
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Along with twelve hundred Free Masons and another several hundred spectators we stood at the corner of Beacon and Park streets to hear speeches from Governor Charlie Baker, Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin, and Grand Master of Masons Harvey Waugh. There was music from a fife and drum corps and a Navy quartet and we saw soldiers fire off three huge, and super loud, canons.
Perhaps most interestingly to me, the Masons performed the same cornerstone ceremony that Paul Revere and Samuel Adams performed at the original laying of the State House cornerstone in 1795.
The ceremony was far bigger, and far better attended, than I had expected. It was long, but not drawn out, and interesting even for the youngest among us. The masonic ceremony was new to us, the reading of the list of contents lined up with the images we had looked at before heading into the city, and the cannons just stole our hearts.
Having only heard about this event yesterday (on a LED sign above the highway, no less!) I am so glad that that we got to go. There is every expectation that this capsule will not be opened again in any of our lifetimes. It was so exciting to see it reinterred.