Sunday, March 6, 2016

Day Trip to Mark Twain's House & Yale

I realized I didn't much time left on the East Coast so I'm scrambling to see the rest of the nation's history before I leave.  Grabbed a few friends and headed to Hartford & New Haven this weekend.  Little did I know it was gonna be a huge schooling for me.

Hartford is 1.75 hours drive from White Plains, New York.  It's the capital of Connecticut.  After the American Civil War, it was one of the wealthiest cities in the States for several decades but today 30% of people in the city live below the poverty line and 83% commutes into the city for work... (wiki)

Here are some of the historic places it's known for:
  • The nation's oldest public art museum - Wadsworth Atheneum
  • The nation's oldest publicly funded park - Bushnell Park
  • The nation's oldest continuously published newspaper - The Hartford Courant
  • The nation's second-oldest secondary school - Hartford Public
  • Trinity College is also here 
  • Mark Twain's house as well where he wrote his most famous stuff and raised his family.

I know a $h1t ton of history in this city right?


I saw one place today - Mr Twain's House.  We were on a tight schedule to get a hoodie from Yale!  Mr. Twain apparently married a wealthy woman and networked his way into fame thru parties getting his work known amongst the wealthy patrons of his time.  It helped that he was witty and brilliant.  That's pretty much the short version of the tour.
   
Favorite quote by him so far:
“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one's lifetime.”
 
 
For those gun enthusiasts, one of Hartford's most influential 'phases' of its history was in the 1800s after the American Independence.  Samuel Colt invented the trigger in a revolver that can fire multiple times.  How many weapons use that little invention today?  Needless to say he was a multi million dollar man back in those days supplying weapons for both the Mexican-American War and the Civil War.  $15 million to be exact which is equivalent to $380 million today.   You can google the rest of that story, it's pretty cray.

Headed out to Yale after eating at Effie's Diner.  Which was not bad but not exciting either.  It's only 45 minutes away to New Haven from Hartford.

A bit of a museum nerd.  Had to pop into Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.
 
 They only had Rex's head...
 This super old turtle is 10 feet long...
 
 This is what my childhood nightmares are made of.
 Three of these guys starred in the latest installment of Jurassic Park.
 I just thought the horns were wicked.

We headed to the bookstore after the museum and got our hoodies.  There are Hebrew
letters in the crest.  It says 'Urim and Thummim' meaning 'Light & Truth' 
which is the motto of the university.
 

It was a Sunday so we didn't get to properly do a university tour but we still got to see most of the buildings.  They're totally built in Gothic style.  There wasn't really a singular gated campus to Yale like most universities I know of in California.  More of a bunch of buildings all over one area of the city - reminded me of my alma mater.
 This is John Edward's College.  (Famous theologian, also an Alumni)
 The Harkness Tower (Harkness is the guy who financed most of Yale's buildings)
 Yale started as the Collegiate School of Connecticut to train ministers in theology and scared languages in 1701.  It wasn't called Yale College until 1718 after Elihu Yale gave a substantial gift to the school.
 Yale's the third oldest institution of higher education in the States.  
Its library is also the third largest academic library in the nation.
 Nathan Cole, the first American Spy in the Revolution, was an alumni of Yale.
 Travel+Leisure listed Yale campus as one of the most beautiful in the country.
 
 
 

 

Yale's notable alums:
Bill Clinton - 42nd US President
Sr. George Bush - 41st US President
George W. Bush - 43rd US President
Hilary Clinton - Soon-to-be US President
John Kerry - Secretary of State
Walter Camp - Created American Football
Noah Webster - Lexicographer (you know like the Webster dictionary?)
Samuel F. B. Morse - ever heard of the Morse Code?
Nathan Hale - First American Spy
Jonathan Edwards - Famous Theologian
Paul Newman - Actor
Sargent Shriver - Founder of the Peace Corp
Ernest Lawrence - cyclotron inventor and Nobel laureate in Physics
Henry Luce - Co-founder of Time Magazine 
Fredrick W. Smith - Founder of Fedex
Bing Gordon - Co-founder of EA

I only listed the people I know or should know.... but the list is extensive.  You can google the rest. I'm really impressed with Yale as if I wasn't before.  Now, Mind Blown. 












Sunday, February 7, 2016

Graffiti Tour by Foot: The Bushwick Collective

I got the chance to do a walking tour of the Bushwick Collective on Saturday with www.freetoursbyfoot.com.  The tour lasted about 2hours on foot with a plethora of information on the artists behind the Graffiti in this part of Brooklyn.

I learned the difference between Graffiti and Street Art.  Graffiti is when the artist is creating pieces that are self promoting or personal versus street artists who create pieces that has a message to society.  Both are illegal though but some property owners do tolerate them while others actually commission pieces to be created.

 


 

 Asian tourists in New York?


 The Pink Panther was created by a Graffiti artist. 


 Fanakapan

This is an example of Street Art.
  
This piece was a cross the street from a church.  Almost like
a bunch of little monsters staring at the church...

Commissioned and done by the famous twins: How & Noism
This is depicting how migration has the country.
 
A female Asian artist: Lady Aiko

Commissioned piece by Fanakapan:  King Kong vs Godzilla

This one reminded me of Lefteye.

Homer+Spongebob

Jay Z + I forget who

A husband and wife in embrace
 
 


I'm told Biggy grew up around here.

The artist known as Stik was homeless for a bit until he started making stick figure art on roof tops...  He's got a pretty cool story.  Look him up.

This one is just awesome.


Old Dirty Bastard (the rapper's name)


Street Art at it's best I'd say.  Favorite piece.
 

For you Star War geeks. 

California artist.  Apparently he loves rocks and ice cream...

This piece was commissioned by a gallery.

Just amazing.

 This artist is from Italy.  This piece is so realistic, it's unreal.

I'd definitely recommend this tour if you want some history on Graffiti and Street Art with some awesome current pieces.  I didn't include all of the pieces we saw on the tour so there will be some nice surprises for those of you who decide to check it out.