Beach Bag Connecting Threads

I guess October/November doesn’t sound like beach weather, especially on the west coast, but I never seem to make projects ‘in season’.

Beach Bag Connecting Threads

Anyway, these nice large beach bags can be used for books or the market, too. These sturdy bags are about 17″ x 14″ and can contain quite a bit.

Beach Bag Connecting Threads

There are no interior pockets, but you could certainly add them.

There is a water bottle ‘pocket’. It has no bottom; it is a casing to hold the bottle.

Beach Bag Connecting Threads

The Beach Bag pattern is a free download from Connecting Threads.

Beach Bag Connecting Threads

All of these bags are gifted.

They are easy to make, so maybe some more are in my future.

Beach Bag Connecting Threads

Beach Bag Connecting Threads

Have fun and carry on!

Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 6

New River Gorge National Park and Preserve, West Virginia

Our son-in-law recommended that we check out New River Gorge National Park and Preserve.

I am so glad that he did!

New River Gorge Bridge

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

New River Gorge Bridge

We drove across New River Gorge Bridge and turned into the park. The Canyon Rim Visitors Center is very nice and helpful to orient you to the history and points of interest in the park. Guided tours are offered, including a tour to walk across the bridge. One doesn’t walk on the highway, but there is a catwalk under it. It is not open to the public, and one must purchase a guided tour to walk there. If you choose to take this tour, never fear, you will be harnessed to the bridge!

New River Gorge Bridge

The bridge was designed by the Michael Baker Company and the final cost of construction was $37 million (equivalent to $149 million in 2024 dollars). It was approximately $4 million, or $16 million in 2024 dollars, over bid.

From the website linked above:

Height: 876 feet / 267 meters
Length: 3,030 feet / 923.6 meters
Arch Length: 1,700 feet / 518.1 meters
Weight: 88,000,000 pounds / 39,916,129 kilograms

New River Gorge Bridge

Two Statues of Liberty and one Washington Monument can fit under the arch with 20 feet to spare!

When completed in October 1977, it was the world’s highest bridge carrying a regular roadway until the 2001 opening of the Liuguanghe Bridge in China.

The New River Gorge Bridge is the longest steel span in the western hemisphere. It removed the need to navigate down narrow mountain roads across an ancient river and provides a much quicker and easier route through the Appalachian Mountains.

New River Gorge Bridge

New River Gorge Bridge

The stairs leading to the overlook are wide and have several landings where you can stop and catch your breath if needed.

New River Gorge Bridge

In 2006, the U.S. Mint chose the bridge to represent West Virginia on the state commemorative quarter.

New River Gorge Bridge

The New River is one of North America’s oldest waterways and has carved out the longest and deepest gorge in the Appalachian Mountains. Besides the scenic drives and photographic opportunities, one can hike, bike, picnic, rock climb, raft, kayak and fish.

New River Gorge Bridge

New River Gorge Bridge

The autumn colors were beautiful, as was the scenic drive through the park!

New River Gorge Bridge

I imagine the Sandstone Falls are much more exciting in the spring! Nevertheless, the view is still pretty!

New River Gorge Bridge

See the world around you!

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Cross Country Vacation Sept./Oct. 2025-Post 5

Illinois

Sightseeing and scenic drives were not all that was planned for this cross country drive.

I had in mind to do a bit of genealogy and visit some ancestor gravesites in Illinois.

I won’t bore you with photos of ancestor’s headstones (even though this would be the month to do it). My children get enough of that as it is, but they are kind to indulge me.

Although this was a ‘graveyard day’, one could still find plenty to see if one looked around. Upon passing through Jacksonville, Illinois, the first thing that caught our eyes was this lovely chapel.

MacMurray College, Jacksonville, Illinois

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

MacMurray College, Jacksonville, Illinois

The chapel belonged with a complex of buildings that made up MacMurray College.

MacMurray College was originally founded by the Illinois Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church as the Illinois Conference Female Academy in 1846. It stayed all female until 1955 when the MacMurray College for Men was started, however, the two sexes were kept separate, even eating separately, until 1967 when the dining hall went coed. In 1969 the two colleges merged.

MacMurray College, Jacksonville, Illinois

Over the years, the college suffered budget struggles, falling enrollment, lack of updates (such as air conditioners and computers), disrepair, staffing issues, majors being eliminated, Covid and more.

MacMurray College, Jacksonville, Illinois

After seventy-two years of MacMurray history, the college closed in 2020 and the buildings were auctioned off to various buyers for $600,000.

MacMurray College, Jacksonville, Illinois

Apparently, the Hubster and I should’ve spent more time in Jacksonville. From the Wikipedia link above:

The attorney Abraham Lincoln occasionally had legal business in Jacksonville, frequently acting either as co-counsel or opposing counsel with David A. Smith, a Jacksonville resident. In what is now Central Park, Lincoln delivered a strong antislavery speech on September 6, 1856, in support of the presidential campaign of John C. Frémont, lasting over two hours.

Built in 1840, the Woodlawn Farm became an important stop on the Underground Railroad for runaway slaves escaping the terrors of slavery in the South.

One of Lincoln’s early political rivals, Stephen A. Douglas, settled in Jacksonville in 1833, where he first got involved in local politics. He quickly rose up the ranks of Illinois politics and was elected to the House of Representatives in 1842.

In the summer of 1965, in order to keep up with customer demand for records by the Beatles, the wildly popular English band, Capitol Records opened a vinyl record pressing plant on the western outskirts of Jacksonville.

We also drove through Bath, Illinois.

Bath, Illinois

This is where I was beginning to get a sense of the time and place of my ancestors. They lived in this area when Abraham Lincoln was here.

Did they know him (It is possible as one of them is named Abraham Lincoln)? Did they turn out for his speeches? Did they agree with Lincoln?

Bath, Illinois

They could have been standing in the crowd right here in 1858!

Gives me chills.

Bath, Illinois

One more small town that I will share was Lewistown, Illinois.

Lewistown, Illinois

The courthouse is beautiful, and the bell still rings. I heard it while taking photos; very cool!

Lewistown, Illinois

Lewistown, Illinois

So much history…so little time!

Lewistown, Illinois

A very old section of town indeed.

Lewistown, Illinois

See the world around you!

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