Minerva
“I am not certain if I can. At least I’ll gladly try.” Betsy Ross
The Betsy Ross House (opened 1937 )
239 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Within the stripes of the American flag lies a treasure trove of history, mystery, and controversy. “Old Glory” appears in fifty states and on the moon; thousands have died fighting for or against it. The Marines raised the Stars and Stripes to commemorate the victory in the Pacific; the draft-dodgers burned it in protest of the military in Southeast Asia. As the Twin Towers crumbled, three New York City firefighters rigged a makeshift flagpole and hoisted the symbol of resilience. Millions visit the Betsy Ross Home to pay homage to the universal icon.
HEART
Stirring Salute (1970)
The Painted Bird
“I am as clear as the child unborn.”
The Rebecca Nurse Homestead (opened in 1909)
149 Pine Street, Danvers, Massachusetts
Witch-hunts are the thread that runs through the tapestry of history. The Romans fed the Christians to the lions; the Nazis consigned the Jews to the crematorium; the United States incarcerated the Japanese Americans. Three centuries ago, Salem targeted those the Puritans had decreed bore the mark of a witch. The importance of the Rebecca Nurse Homestead: it stands as sentry to the consequences of when hysteria and hatred triumph over humanity.
Of Them All
Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace (opened 1956)
10 East Oglethorpe Avenue, Savannah, Georgia
“The only way we can kill for a moment our pain is by unselfishness.” Juliette Gordon Low
“The cookies are coming! The cookies are coming!” so sounds the annual cry that leads to Thin Mints, Tagalongs, or Caramel deLites. Girl Scout cookies satisfy a sweet tooth and supports a charitable cause. Troops around the world take “the midnight train to Georgia” to visit the Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace to salute their founding mother.
The Devil's Brew
“I believe in being everlastingly on the warpath.” – Carry A. Nation
Carry A. Nation Home & Museum (opened in 1950)
209 Fowler Ave., Medicine Lodge, Kansas, the United States
The lyrics to Peter, Paul, and Mary’s folksong was the promise, “If I had a hammer/I’d hammer in the morning/I’d hammer in the evening…” Carry A. Nation’s choice of weapon, as instrument of social justice, was the hatchet.
Little. Frog
Set the Night on Fire
Cemeteries do not rank high in the hierarchy of romance with the exception of Pere Lachaise in Paris where several immortal couples lie together for eternity: Abelard and Heloise, Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, Simone de Beauvais and John Paul Sartre. Another tomb with echoes to love is Pere Lachaise’s most visited grave- of rock royalty Jim Morrison. A photograph taken over it features a ghostly apparition, a white figure with arms outstretched- the prince of music bemoaning separation from his cosmic mate.
Yes-No
The Merry Prankster
The Summer of Love. Those four words conjure a 1960s moment frozen in an American snow-globe; mythical months in San Francisco when visions of peace, love and harmony hung in the air-interspersed with quantities of sex, drugs, and rock n’ roll. It also represented a hippie love story, one between the guitarist-troubadour Jerry Garcia and his Mountain Girl.
The Truth (1876)
For Remembrance
After the Fall
It is Warm (1880)
Mrs. Blue-Eyes
The Stolen Hours
In Waiting for Godot two hapless tramps struggle to find meaning in a landscape of existential emptiness. They embody “the dangling conversation,” to pretend to be connected to another, to drown out loneliness waiting in the wings. Their only hope is the enigmatic Godot-who remains a steadfast no-show. But the author, Samuel Beckett, did not suffer such soul-sucking alienation though succor from across the sea.
The Seven of Us Can't Do (2013)
The Lady and the Tramp
Where Rosemary Goes...(1968)
Any Other Man
One of the most challenging jobs in the world is that of the evangelist: hand-wrestling the devil over souls. Fortunately, when it came to saving his own, the Reverend Billy Graham had his fellow crusader in Christ, his “soulmate and best friend.”

