Showing posts with label Lyndon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lyndon. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Scenes from a Summer’s Hike in Lyndonville

Sign at Lyndon Institute.jpg
The sign showing the beginning of the trail behind Lyndon Institute

Pond on the Hike.jpg
The pond at the beginning of the hike

Invasive Snail in the Pond.jpg
An invasive snail in the pond

Invasive Purple Loosestrife-1.jpg
Invasive Purple Loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria)

Scene at the Pond.jpg
A pond scene

White Water Lily-1.jpg
White water lily

Spotted Joe-Pye Weed (Eutrochium maculatum)-1.jpg
Spotted Joe-Pye Weed (Eutrochium maculatum)

White Cohosh (Actaea alba).jpg
White Cohosh (Actaea alba)

Examples of Squirrel and Chipmunk Middens.jpg
A squirrel or chipmunk midden

Indian Pipe (Monotropa uniflora)-1.jpg
Indian Pipe (Monotropa uniflora)

Examples of Squirrel and Chipmunk Middens-2.jpg
Another midden

Examples of Squirrel and Chipmunk Middens-6.jpg
Squirrels and/or chipmunks vertically potted dozens of pine cones along the trail and in the woods.

Examples of Squirrel and Chipmunk Middens-9.jpg
A third midden

Marsh Bellflower (Campanula aparinoides (Campanula uliginosa))-1.jpg
Marsh Bellflower (Campanula aparinoides) (Campanula uliginosa)

Burke Mountain View from Trail-2.jpg
A view of Burke Mountain

Trail Signs.jpg
Trail sign in fern forest

_/\_/\_

Monday, August 11, 2008

My Class at Lyndon Institute

Last week I took a three day graduate class — "Teaching Mathematics to Students with ADD/ADHD and LD." It was at Lyndon Institute (LI) in Lyndon Center, Vermont. What follows are some photos that I took of the views and area around the campus.

It has been raining daily for weeks (roads out, roads washed away, crops ruined, cats going nuts inside) and below you can see a rainstorm going over Burke Mountain in Burke. This photo is the view from LI.

Burke Mountain — the mountain barely visible on the left in the back.
There is a road through the cemetery (foreground) that is named the Heaven Road.
It was raining when I drove by or I would have taken a photo of the sign.

Lyndon Institute Alumni Museum and Alumni Center at Thompson Cottage 2006.
Dedicated to the memory of Norma Gordon Austin '40 for her faithfulness.

Darling Campus
Dedicated in honor of the significant contributions, lifetime service and generosity of the Darling Family throughout the history of Lyndon Institute.
October 31, 1992

Another view from the front lawn of LI. The church is
the Free Baptist Church of Lyndon Center.

I would love to read a summer novel in these chairs on the front lawn of the school.

The view of Burke Mountain on the third day.

ELIZABETH ROWELL THOMPSON

Born in Lyndon, Vermont, in a log house, February 21, 1821.

Daughter of Samuel Rowell, a farmer, and Mary Atwood, being one of twelve children and brought up under hardships and privations, Elizabeth had little schooling. At age nine she went out to work as a domestic servant at twenty-five cents a week.

Elizabeth Rowell was both beautiful and kind. At age twenty-two she met and married Thomas Thompson of Boston, Massachusetts, a wealthy graduate of Harvard College and collector of valuable fine arts. Together they did much to alleviate the sources of human misery for others.

After Mr. Thompson's death she was interested in and gave to find the causes of yellow fever, provide business pursuits for the heads of families, improve medical and scientific research, help child widows in India, and improve and establish the right relations between capital and labor.

She founded the town of Longmont, Kansas in the Rocky Mountains [see note below] and gave to Congress Carpenter's painting of the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation by Lincoln in the presence of his cabinet.

She would have been a remarkable woman at any time but was one of the great women of her time.

Died in Littleton, New Hampshire, July 20, 1899.

NOTE: Elizabeth did not found a town in Kansas, but in Colorado.
Everyday I went over Miller's Run Bridge (built 1878, restored 1995) from VT Rte 122 to the school.


Technorati Tags:
_/\_/\_