Hey, hey! This is , and I am pleased to bring you a brand new edition of #TravelDigest! ❤️
Today's post is going to take you on a virtual tour with stops at a museum in the United States, a castle in France, and another museum in Venezuela. We also have the honourable mentions list, where you can get a few more travel postcards from Spain, Indonesia, the United Kingdom, Norway, Venezuela, Cuba, and Argentina, so don't forget to check these posts too! 😊
Caroline and Rensselaer moved to Waterloo from New York and built the house. Lillian was born and lived her whole life in the house. My grandfather, Russell and his sister Maxine were born and raised in the house also . My grandparents (Russell and Pauline) who I am writing the book about moved into the house with their children, my mom and her brothers after Lillian died in 1946. My mom was 6 years old at the time.
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The fortress at the height provided a strategic advantage in the defense of the city, a natural protection against barbarian attacks, and with the source of drinking water on the top of the hill, it was secured against longer sieges.
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This room is very interesting because of the relief carvings on the walls and the wealth of information provided to visitors. At the entrance, we’re greeted by a relief depicting two white fish set against clusters of purple and green coral. A little further on, we see a fisherman hard at work, casting his chinchorro to catch a shark. Among other items, there’s a life preserver which, like the chinchorro, a fishing line, and a net, is an authentic artifact.
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