My husband and I recently took a short trip to Pennsylvania. You can read about the beginning here.
First up this morning was a visit to the Boals Mansion in Boalsburg, PA. Boals Mansion began as a farmhouse over 200 years ago and expanded into the mansion that is there today. It has been continually owned and lived in by the same family for over 8 generations. We have visited many old houses and museums but this one was different than any we had seen because it had so many original furnishings and items. According to the guide, they are still discovering unopened trunks and boxes in the basement or attic. I guess that's what happens when the house stays in the family generation after generation - it never has to get cleaned out.
Besides the house, the grounds had a centuries-old chapel from Spain that had been dismantled and rebuilt on the grounds. One of the Boals' wives inherited a castle the chapel was attached to and she had it brought to PA. She also happened to be a descendent of Christopher Columbus and had some things belonging to him and his son. It was only a few years ago that they found many letters and documents from the 1300 and 1400s among the things brought from Spain. Unfortunately, the house and chapel were pretty dark, so I didn't get many pictures (at least ones that weren't blurry.)
The main house |
On display in various rooms, were dresses found recently in the basement in seven unopened trunks. |
The original door to the chapel. It was made from walnut with mahogany insets. |
They occasionally still hold masses in the chapel today. |
Almost as interesting as the mansion was this giant fungus we found on the lawn. Notice the quarter on top of it for scale. |
It was the day for interesting fungi. |
We saw lots of black walnuts everywhere. This picture is in honor of the Black Walnut Festival held in my hometown every October. |
After a good hike at the park, we headed back to State College. We didn't make it in time to watch marching band practice again, so we consoled ourselves with ice cream at Berkey's Creamery on campus. The ice cream was made with milk from cows raised at the school. We topped off our ice cream for dinner meal later with leftovers from lunch.
When I first saw the giant fungus, I thought maybe your personality had flipped and you and Ward went to a haunted house and found a "brain" on the ground. Ha. That's quite the amazing fungus!
ReplyDeleteI can't seem to get enough of touring historical homes. So neat! And that door to the chapel is gorgeous. You packed a lot of experiences into your short trip.
A giant brain is exactly what the fungus looked like. And I had visions of a haunted house, also. :) The chapel was beautiful and you should have seen the priests robes. Each one was a work of art.
DeleteNice trip!
ReplyDeleteI have never seen such a large fungus!
Me, either. And the little ones we saw on the Butterfly Trail were the cutest I've ever seen. They look like they came right out of Disney movie.
DeleteOh, is that a Giant Puffball Mushroom? I've never seen one, but, apparently they are edible!
ReplyDeleteI'm enjoying reading about your little getaway and all the places you were able to visit! Thank you for sharing pictures of your visit to the mansion, too. How lucky that the family didn't decide to declutter and clear out their attic and basement! That dress they discovered in an unopened trunk is gorgeous! I wonder if "these might be displayed in a future museum" be a good excuse for my holding onto various things? :D You and Ward did a lot on your trip!
There are so many different kinds of fungi, I can't keep them straight, so I don't know exactly what kind it was - except that it was huge. If it is edible, you could get a lot of meals out of it. :)
DeleteThat dress was one of many that they had on display thought out the house. Apparently, most if not all, of them were from French designers. Two of the wives were from France.
Big fungi! It is walnut season.
ReplyDeleteBlack walnuts are native to the area and we saw a lot of trees this trip and lots of fallen nuts. We didn't collect any for two reasons. One is I don't like them, and two is that the hulls will stain your hands black for weeks. But they are a part of fall and it was fun seeing them. We used to have a tree at our last house, but not this one.
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