Summer 2018, Day 3: Fort Necessity NB, Friendship Hill NHS

Trish and I went for a ride this morning:

Summer_2018_Day03_001

Summer_2018_Day03_002

Summer_2018_Day03_006

Summer_2018_Day03_007

Not a bad spot for the Northeast:

Summer_2018_Day03_003

Summer_2018_Day03_004

Summer_2018_Day03_005

With M and I driving the motorcycles, and B riding with me, we visited a local iron furnace.  The furnace was similar to the one at Saugus Iron Works National Historic Site:

Summer_2018_Day03_008

After loading up the motorcycles, we visited nearby Fort Necessity National Battlefield:

Summer_2018_Day03_009

It was here that then-Colonel George Washington was defeated and surrendered his fort after starting the French and Indian War at Jumonville Glen a month earlier:

Summer_2018_Day03_010

Looking embarrassed:

Summer_2018_Day03_011

Summer_2018_Day03_012

We walked down to the fort:

Summer_2018_Day03_013

The fort was hastily built, so there’s not much to it:

Summer_2018_Day03_014

We saw this fancy fellow on the sidewalk:

Summer_2018_Day03_015

The visitor center placed the battle of Fort Necessity in its historical context:

Summer_2018_Day03_016

During the war, Washington built a road through the area for moving troops and supplies.  50 years later, Albert Gallatin would use Washington’s road as a portion of the National Road.  It was an interesting tie-in to our next stop, Friendship Hill National Historic Site, the home of Albert Gallatin:

Summer_2018_Day03_017

Gallatin was a Congressman, Secretary of the Treasury, and US Ambassador to Great Britian and France, among many other accomplishments.

The house was burned by arson before becoming a National Park Service site.  The new roof line shows the location of the old roof lines of the various additions to the home:

Summer_2018_Day03_018

Summer_2018_Day03_019

We continued south to a dispersed camping location at the foot of the Summersville Lake dam, but it turned out to be more like a homeless camp, so we continued south, but first stopped at an overlook for the lake:

Summer_2018_Day03_020

Summer_2018_Day03_021

We’re overnighting at the Walmart of Fayetteville, West Virginia.  It’s pretty warm here:

Summer_2018_Day03_022

See the alternating yellow line in the trip map for today’s drive.

Summer 2018, Day 2: Allegheny Portage Railroad NHS, Johnstown Flood NM

This morning Oreo was keeping an eye on things:

Summer_2018_Day02_001

Our first stop today was Allegheny Portage Railroad National Historic Site:

Summer_2018_Day02_002

Summer_2018_Day02_003

Oreo checked out the visitor center:

Summer_2018_Day02_004

The site preserves a section of the Allegheny Portage railroad, a series of inclined planes used to pull barges floated to one side of the Allegheny Mountains up and over the mountains to the canal on the other side.

This model shows how the barges were divided into sections and loaded onto railcars:

Summer_2018_Day02_006

Summer_2018_Day02_007

For flat sections between the inclined planes, engines like this pulled the railcars:

Summer_2018_Day02_005

We walked down to the railroad:

Summer_2018_Day02_008

Summer_2018_Day02_009

This building housed the steam engine used to pull the railcars up the inclined plane:

Summer_2018_Day02_010

Looking down the hill:

Summer_2018_Day02_015

The works in the building:

Summer_2018_Day02_013

Initially hemp ropes were used, then replaced by steel cables, adapted from the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge:

Summer_2018_Day02_014

These blocks were used to anchor the railroad ties:

Summer_2018_Day02_016

Our next stop was Johnstown Flood National Memorial:

Summer_2018_Day02_017

Summer_2018_Day02_018

The site is located near the South Fork Dam, which failed on May 31st, 1889.  The raging waters flooded the town of Johnstown, 14 miles downstream, and killed over 2,200 people.  The visitor center’s main room recreates the wall of debris that pushed through the town:

Summer_2018_Day02_019

Our overnight location is a dispersed camping location near Wharton Furnace, PA.  The gravel road leading to the site is so steep that we had to switch into 4WD-LOW to get here:

Summer_2018_Day02_020

Summer_2018_Day02_021

We unloaded the motorcycles:

Summer_2018_Day02_022

Summer_2018_Day02_023

Summer_2018_Day02_024

Summer_2018_Day02_025

Summer_2018_Day02_026

M and I went for our first ride:

Summer_2018_Day02_027

It’s pretty warm up here, even Oreo is suffering:

Summer_2018_Day02_029

See the alternating yellow line on the trip map for today’s drive.