I could have slipped in unnoticed today...
Moderator: Adminlizzieborden
- nbcatlover
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I could have slipped in unnoticed today...
There were "red hat" ladies going in the front door.
For a minute, I thought I saw Lizzie.
For a minute, I thought I saw Lizzie.
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- nbcatlover
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- nbcatlover
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Here are more taken today. My photos load too large to submit them all as attachments.
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0333.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0341.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0342.jpg
The house is set at the slight bend in the street which makes it visible from a large area:
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0352.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0347.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0348.jpg
This was taken from Spring St. near St. Mary's Church:
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0361.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0333.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0341.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0342.jpg
The house is set at the slight bend in the street which makes it visible from a large area:
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0352.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0347.jpg
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0348.jpg
This was taken from Spring St. near St. Mary's Church:
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a343/ ... 0_0361.jpg
- theebmonique
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Lovely pictures Cynthia. Thanks for sharing.
Some of you may already know this...by using the 'paint' program in Windows, you can easily reduce the size of your pictures. Then when you upload them to photobucket not only do they upload faster, but you can click on the IMG link, click copy, then paste it into your 'reply' message. Doing this will post the actual pictures in the forum verses posting a link.
Tracy...
Some of you may already know this...by using the 'paint' program in Windows, you can easily reduce the size of your pictures. Then when you upload them to photobucket not only do they upload faster, but you can click on the IMG link, click copy, then paste it into your 'reply' message. Doing this will post the actual pictures in the forum verses posting a link.
Tracy...
I'm defying gravity and you can't pull me down.
- Allen
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- nbcatlover
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- nbcatlover
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I had mixed feelings about the removal of the cobblestones, because they gave it an authentic period feel.
However, I talked to some of the "neighbors" from the apartment complex next door while I was taking photos. They are thrilled that they have been removed! Most of them are elderly, and several of them had fallen or had near falls on the cobblestones.
They seem to feel they can walk more safely in the neighborhood now that they are gone. It just makes the point that the Borden house today, like in 1892, is part of a real neighborhood and not a spot developed just for tourist.
However, I talked to some of the "neighbors" from the apartment complex next door while I was taking photos. They are thrilled that they have been removed! Most of them are elderly, and several of them had fallen or had near falls on the cobblestones.
They seem to feel they can walk more safely in the neighborhood now that they are gone. It just makes the point that the Borden house today, like in 1892, is part of a real neighborhood and not a spot developed just for tourist.
- nbcatlover
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- Harry
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I liked the cobblestones too but they can get slippery when wet.
In an Herald News article dated 6-29-2003 this paragraph mentions cobblestones:
"With an interest in protecting the city’s history, [Mayor] Lambert said the creation of a Victorian district that would encompass a several-block area of Rock Street has been on the drawing board for some time. Working with the Historical Society to collect pieces of the past, Lambert said he pictures cobblestone sidewalks underfoot and gas lamps lining the street of historically appropriate homes and businesses."
Save those cobblestones Lee-ann!
http://www.heraldnews.com/site/news.cfm ... 9784&rfi=6
Was the sidewalk cobblestone in 1892? From the few photos we have it's hard to tell but it doesn't look like cobblestone to me.
In an Herald News article dated 6-29-2003 this paragraph mentions cobblestones:
"With an interest in protecting the city’s history, [Mayor] Lambert said the creation of a Victorian district that would encompass a several-block area of Rock Street has been on the drawing board for some time. Working with the Historical Society to collect pieces of the past, Lambert said he pictures cobblestone sidewalks underfoot and gas lamps lining the street of historically appropriate homes and businesses."
Save those cobblestones Lee-ann!
http://www.heraldnews.com/site/news.cfm ... 9784&rfi=6
Was the sidewalk cobblestone in 1892? From the few photos we have it's hard to tell but it doesn't look like cobblestone to me.
I know I ask perfection of a quite imperfect world
And fool enough to think that's what I'll find
And fool enough to think that's what I'll find
- nbcatlover
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We have cobblestone streets in part of New Bedford's downtown. I can't tell you the number of pairs of shoe (heels) I've wrecked on them over the years. But they do create "atmosphere" when it is in a non-residential area.
If, like the Borden house, you are bordering senior housing, maybe it's not so great.
If, like the Borden house, you are bordering senior housing, maybe it's not so great.
- Susan
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Great pics, Cynthia, thank you for sharing them with us! It would be too much to ask for, but, wouldn't it be cool if they brought the Kelly house back to what it looked like in Lizzie's day? 
“Sometimes when we are generous in small, barely detectable ways it can change someone else's life forever.”-Margaret Cho comedienne
- nbcatlover
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Ad--when I was taking these pictures, I really did wonder what the Churchills could see that day, and what they could observe and hear from the different floors of their home on a daily basis. With windows open in the summertime, I would think they might know an awful lot about the Bordens.
I don't think their house was this far away:

From a second floor level, they could probably see into Emma's room and the guest room with the shutters open. This is especially true of the guest room if the front window was also unshuttered and letting in more light:

I don't think their house was this far away:

From a second floor level, they could probably see into Emma's room and the guest room with the shutters open. This is especially true of the guest room if the front window was also unshuttered and letting in more light:

- FairhavenGuy
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Just for the record, the rectangular stone pavers like the ones used in the streets of downtown New Bedford are "Belgian blocks" or paving blocks, not cobblestones. Cobblestones are naturally shaped rounded stones of varying sizes. Real cobblestone streets have a much more irregular surface and are horribly bumpy to ride on. But they were better than mud, I guess.
Oh, and I doubt pavers or cobbles were used regularly on sidewalks. Sidewalks were slates, flagstone or brick if they were paved. (New Bedford has this right.)
Oh, and I doubt pavers or cobbles were used regularly on sidewalks. Sidewalks were slates, flagstone or brick if they were paved. (New Bedford has this right.)
I've met Kat and Harry and Stef, oh my!
(And Diana, Richard, nbcatlover, Doug Parkhurst and Marilou, Shelley, "Cemetery" Jeff, Nadzieja, kfactor, Barbara, JoAnne, Michael, Katrina and my 255 character limit is up.)
(And Diana, Richard, nbcatlover, Doug Parkhurst and Marilou, Shelley, "Cemetery" Jeff, Nadzieja, kfactor, Barbara, JoAnne, Michael, Katrina and my 255 character limit is up.)
- Kat
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These are what I call Cobblestones which were at the bottom of the driveway and part of the sidewalk area by #92 Second Street, Fall River, as late as August 3rd, 2005.FairhavenGuy @ Mon Nov 07, 2005 10:36 pm wrote:Just for the record, the rectangular stone pavers like the ones used in the streets of downtown New Bedford are "Belgian blocks" or paving blocks, not cobblestones. Cobblestones are naturally shaped rounded stones of varying sizes. Real cobblestone streets have a much more irregular surface and are horribly bumpy to ride on. But they were better than mud, I guess.
Oh, and I doubt pavers or cobbles were used regularly on sidewalks. Sidewalks were slates, flagstone or brick if they were paved. (New Bedford has this right.)
They were definitely rounded- maybe from wear.
Stef took this picture.

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- FairhavenGuy
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I can't really tell from the angle of the photo, Kat, but here's an illustration of what I mean.


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I've met Kat and Harry and Stef, oh my!
(And Diana, Richard, nbcatlover, Doug Parkhurst and Marilou, Shelley, "Cemetery" Jeff, Nadzieja, kfactor, Barbara, JoAnne, Michael, Katrina and my 255 character limit is up.)
(And Diana, Richard, nbcatlover, Doug Parkhurst and Marilou, Shelley, "Cemetery" Jeff, Nadzieja, kfactor, Barbara, JoAnne, Michael, Katrina and my 255 character limit is up.)
- Kat
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It looks in old pictures like there was a sidewalk and a dirt road with a tree growing in it.
Morse says he thinks it was macadan, but the pictures of the day don't quite look like it.
I think the cobblestones predated the pictures, so that maybe as the sidewalks wore away the cobblestones were exposed as we moved into more modern times.
Therefore, a flat sidewalk might be more original-looking to Lizzie's day.
It's just my opinion from looking at the old pictures of 1892/1893.
~~~~~~
Go to the Privy and I will hopefully show you all how to attach and upload pictures on this site without going outside the address here.
Morse says he thinks it was macadan, but the pictures of the day don't quite look like it.
I think the cobblestones predated the pictures, so that maybe as the sidewalks wore away the cobblestones were exposed as we moved into more modern times.
Therefore, a flat sidewalk might be more original-looking to Lizzie's day.
It's just my opinion from looking at the old pictures of 1892/1893.
~~~~~~
Go to the Privy and I will hopefully show you all how to attach and upload pictures on this site without going outside the address here.
- FairhavenGuy
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Thanks, Kat.
It only took eleven edits to finally get it right. I was copying the file incorrectly.
And this only only took one edit. . .
It only took eleven edits to finally get it right. I was copying the file incorrectly.
And this only only took one edit. . .
I've met Kat and Harry and Stef, oh my!
(And Diana, Richard, nbcatlover, Doug Parkhurst and Marilou, Shelley, "Cemetery" Jeff, Nadzieja, kfactor, Barbara, JoAnne, Michael, Katrina and my 255 character limit is up.)
(And Diana, Richard, nbcatlover, Doug Parkhurst and Marilou, Shelley, "Cemetery" Jeff, Nadzieja, kfactor, Barbara, JoAnne, Michael, Katrina and my 255 character limit is up.)
- Fargo
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Now I am glad that I postponed my vacation. I was hoping that by when I go there again that the barn would be rebuilt and that the trees, plants and the rest of the yard would be redone to be as they as they were in 1892. What I kind of expected when I visited there in 2004, was for the street to be much as it was in 1892. I knew that the Churchill and Bowen houses were gone but other than that I expected the street to look quite the same. I didn't know that the street had changed so much in 100 years. I especially had'nt expected that the downtown would have expanded into the area where the Lizzie house is.
I don't know when Pear season is, except that they are ready in August. I would like to eat pears in the barn. It should take me about five to twenty minutes.
From the looks of the pictures, the rear entrance to the cellar has been rebuilt as well.
I don't know when Pear season is, except that they are ready in August. I would like to eat pears in the barn. It should take me about five to twenty minutes.
From the looks of the pictures, the rear entrance to the cellar has been rebuilt as well.
What is a Picture, but the capture of a moment in time.

