24 December 2024

Select Sites Around Raleigh, North Carolina

We spent several days bopping around Raleigh, North Carolina. We did several walks hoping to see birds and got pretty lucky, primarily in Battle Park in Rocky Mount (east of Raleigh), William B. Umstead State Park (in northwest Raleigh), Lake Benson Park (in Garner, south of Raleigh), and while at Mordecai Historical Park (in Raleigh proper). The cover photo is a great blue heron in Battle Park, which had a crazy number of herons flying around – so beautiful!

Doug spotted this Red-shouldered hawk, who sat on this branch for a long time letting us admire him.
I love the markings on this Eastern towhee.

A 25-foot-long fallen red oak tree was transformed with a chainsaw into art by Jerry Redi and Randy Boni of Smoky Mountain Art. It took them a week to accomplish!

Some details!

Mordecai House. This visible portion is just an addition from 1826! There’s another entire house hidden behind this. This is the original plantation home on this site, built on a hill overlooking the city of Raleigh below it.
These buildings were all relocated to the historic park. The green is the Federal Building (c. 1847), used for governmental functions. St. Mark’s Chapel (c. 1847) was once part of the Haughton plantation in Gulf, N.C. The white Badger-Iredell Law Office (c. 1810) was the offices of George Badger (who became a US Senator) and James Iredell, Jr. (who became a NC governor and US Senator).

We went to Mordecai Historic Park because it had the circa 1790s cabin that President Andrew Johnson was born in, and I was able to earning more good girlfriend points with this one. There’s not much to it, and thanks to modern-day fire codes, you can’t even go upstairs where the Johnson family actually lived and where he was actually born.

The cabin was relocated here from a mile or so up the road in present-day downtown Raleigh. Several other historic buildings from the area have been saved and relocated to the historic park, as well. The centerpiece of the historic park, however, is the Mordecai House, built in 1785. At one time the house was part of a 5,000-acre plantation. We took a guided tour of the park, which spent the most of amount of time in the house and telling the family history.

Hello sign of spring!
Doug in front of the Andrew Johnson Birthplace, who was born in the cabin in 1808. The downstairs was a kitchen behind Casso’s Inn; the family lived upstairs.
Interior of the Andrew Johnson Birthplace. We were not allowed to climb those “stairs.” I suppose I can see why!

Char-Grill has been serving flame-cooked burgers in and around Raleigh since 1959. Did someone say burgers? Of course Doug was going in! This Hamburger Steak Sandwich looks kinda sad, if you ask me, but Doug said it was delicious!

Cook Out originated in Greensboro, about 75 miles west of Raleigh, but now has locations all over the region. This one gets a 10 on the picturesque scale for a fast-food burger.

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