Saturday, July 31, 2021

A Geocache at a Grave and a Mysterious Grave and More Caches and Quirks

 Friday, July 30, 2021

We started our day finding a geocache in a cemetery not far from our campground.


The intersection where we turn to get to our campground seems to be a rather unusual configuration.  We discovered why.  It is a grave site for Major John Lee.  He was killed on August 12, 1782.  He and his entire family with the exception of his son, Robert, were killed in an Indian Massacre near Winfield by an Indian war party.

The family and some neighbors were seated for dinner when between sixty and seventy Indians rushed into the house, tomahawked and scalped Major Lee, an old man named John Walker, and Mrs. Claudius Boatman and her daughter.  A young woman named Katy Stoner hurried up the stairs and hid behind a chimney where she remained discovered, and thus survived to relate the details of the story. Mrs. Lee, her small child, and a larger boy named Thomas were led away as captives.  Lee's older son, Robert, who was absent when the Indians came, returned just as the Indians were leaving, but was not discovered. He fled to Northumberland and gave the alarm.

Colonel Samuel Hunter and twenty volunteers hastened in pursuit from Fort Augusta, where Sunbury now stands.  Arriving at the Lee home, Col. Hunter's men found some of the victims of savage cruelty yet alive and writhing in agony of their wounds.  Both Major Lee and Mrs. Boatman's daughter were alive and were carried back to Fort Augusta on litters, where Major Lee died in great agony soon after his arrival, while Ms. Boatman was nursed back to health.  Without waiting to bury the dead, Col. Hunter hastened after the Indians as rapidly as possible and came in sight of them above Lycoming Creek.  Mrs. Lee was accidentally bitten on the ankle by a rattlesnake while crossing White Deer Mountain, causing her leg to become terribly swollen and to pain her so severely that she traveled with great difficulty.  The Indians, realiing they were being pursued, urged her along as rapidly as her strength would permit, but she became weaker and weaker, and when about four miles below where Jersey Shore now stands, her strength entirely failed her, and she seated herself upon the ground near the mouth of Pine Run.  By this time, Colonel Hunter's party were close upon the Indians, and in order that the poor women might not be recovered by the whites, a warrior stealthy slipped up behind her, placed the muzzle of his rifle close to her ear and pulled the trigger, blowing off the whole top of her head. Another Indian then snatched up her young child, and holding it aloft by the feet, dashed it against a tree.  The whole band then fled with renewed speed, crossing the river at Smith's fording, at Level Corner, and following up through Nippennose Valley.  When Col. Hunter's men came upon the spot where Mrs. Lee was murdered, they found her body still warm.  Happily, her child was not dangerously injured but was moaning piteously.  The pursuit was now pressing with so much vigor that near Antes Gap, the Indians hurriedly separated, further pursuit was not prudent.  His men came back and then buried the body of Mr. Lee where she died and returned, bringing back the child.  At the Lee home, they halted and buried the dead there.  They dug a hole alongside Walker's body and rolled him in. (Information from Find a Grave site noting "Indian Wars of Pennsylvania By C. Hal Sipe pg 674: Outrages in Union County in 1782")



We continued to find some more geocaches and also a few interesting and quirky things too.




This one was a joke.  Really obvious but impossible to reach. 
 The real cash was close by on the ground.


Quirky Stuff.











Wednesday, July 28, 2021

Gambling, Bar-B-Que and a Dragon

 Tuesday, July 27, 201

Today it is off to Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course.  It was a little over an hour's drive but we had a nice time on the slot machines.  Pretty much broke even for several hours of entertainment.



On the drive home, we found a quirky item outside a restaurant on Route 11/15.  He stands two stories high.



Dinner was high atop a hill overlooking the Susquehanna River.  Good Bar-B-Que.

Skeeter's Pit BBQ, Shamokin Dam, PA

Monday, July 26, 2021

Buggies in Mifflinburg, Antiques in Lewisburg and, Chef Boyardee in Milton, Pennsylvania

Sunday, July 25, 021

Today we did a walking tour of Mifflinburg, a small town near our campground.  Mifflinburg began as a small settlement to support the surrounding farms.  Began as two villages in 1792 and 1797 they joined and were incorporated in 1827. Typical businesses were blacksmiths, clockmakers, tanneries, and feed mills.  In 1855 a new industry was introduced, carriage manufacturing. 




We enjoyed walking along the streets of this quaint town, but it was rather hot and our next stop was the Buggy Museum.  Here at the museum, we met very interesting and passionate docents.  I enjoy talking to people who love what they are doing; docents and reenactors are the best people to preserve history.

We started out in the museum proper and then the home of the Heiss family.



Radio, wood stove, ice box, and not a cell phone.

How would you like to do laundry with this machine?

Next, we toured the buggy factory.  Had a little problem with the door.  It would not open for the guide so we went in on the upper floor and once we got in, we set off an alarm.  The guide had to go back to the visitor center to get the alarm shut down.




We spent a lot of time touring this building.  It was just bursting with interesting items.  You could see each step of building a buggy from the selection of wood, style, use, and interior design.  Also, there were so many exhibits representing the era.


Monday, July 26, 2021

Visited the Roller Mills in Lewisburg, PA.   The original structure was built in 1883 as a flour mill.  The beams in the front cashier area are fifty feet long without a joint.  Stacked on top of those beams are twelve 100-ton grain bins.  Flour was produced under the brand name "Oriole".  The business was sold in the 1920s, changed to small animal feeds, and ultimately sold to Ralston Purina Co. in the 1970s.

In January 1991, the Roller Mills Antique Center opened.  It is now three floors with 400 dealers.  You feel like you are entering a small town of antiques.




Our quirky stop for the day was outside the Con-Agra food factory in Milton, Pennsylvania.  A lifesize statue of Chef Hector Boyardee. I have eaten my weight in his ravioli.



Sunday, July 25, 2021

Cool Band and Good Food

 Saturday, July 24, 2021

Today was just chores around the RV and a little shopping for dinner tonight.  Bruce smoked a beef roast and we made our usual sauces, garlic, horseradish, and Bruce's tomato.  The campground had a band tonight, Honeypump.  They were really good.  Watched their whole show. There was even a brewery here, Eclipse.





Saturday, July 24, 2021

Bucket List Item, Centralia

 Friday, July 23, 2021

One of our Bucket List items was to visit the ghost town of Centralia.  This town that once had 1200 residents has only five or fewer residents left.  In 1962 in an effort to clean up the town trash dump it was set on fire.  That fire caused the mine tunnels beneath the town to catch fire and is still burning today.  There really is nothing there but some empty streets and a house or two where the last of the residents who refuse to leave live.  There are three cemeteries.  The famous tourist attraction known as graffiti road was destroyed just a short time ago.  It was a section of Route 61 that buckled from the heat but drew the curiosity of tourists and four-wheelers etc.  It was covered with graffiti.  The road has since been covered with mounds of dirt and is now impossible to see.  We waited a little too long to go and see Centralia.  Just goes to show "don't put things off."  Some other smaller roads have been hit with graffiti but it just isn't the same.






Coal Mine fire ventilation pipes.


The bottom picture is from the internet.  That was what Graffiti Highway looked like a few years ago.  The top two pictures we took on our visit there.  The highway has been completely obliterated.


Just outside of Centralia was this Shrine.  The Byrnesville Shrine of the Blessed Mother.


The second part of today we visited the Pioneer Tunnel Coal Mine in Ashland, PA.

This was an anthracite coal mine that ceased operation in 1931.  In 1963 it was retimbered and was opened to the general public.  You ride into the mine in old mine cars rebuilt to carry passengers.  Once inside the mine, you alight from the cars and follow a guided tour to learn about deep mining methods.  Our guide was an experienced miner of over 20 years.





After the mine tour, we were able to ride a narrow-gauge steam train aboard the Lokie Henry Clay.  Lokie is a colloquial term for the small locomotive.  It travels 3000 feet along the side of Mahanoy Mountain.


Our train operators.  The man on the left was our mine tour guide.


Bootleg Mine


On our way to the Lost Mine Brewery, we came across this covered bridge, Johnson No. 28, built in 1882.

Our last stop of the day was the Lost Mine Brewing Company and Restaurant.


Notice the coal car flight holder.