Ben Spent ten days in Cincinnati this past summer. Yesterday his Great Aunt De sent some pictures and reminisced of the time they spent together.
Tom and I have enjoyed a special summer this year. The weather has been extraordinary, less humid, not as hot as last year. Tom's great-nephew (Gail's grandson) Ben Welch came out to see us for a couple of weeks in July. We took him to see many of Cincinnati's points of interest, including the Krohn Conservatory, lunch on a B.B. Riverboat, The mechanical Pied Piper clock in Newport Kentucky, Cincinnati Museum Center at Union terminal, The Contemporary Art Center, the Cathedral Basilica in Newport, the Eden Park lookout, and the view from the top of the Carew Tower. I have included a few shots to share with you. I am sending the pictures in three e-mails.
The first set will include pictures taken on the river- The B.B. riverboat; the USS Nightmare (a decommissioned riverboat that is used as a floating spook alley at Halloween; the Big Mac/Daniel Carter Beard Bridge. In the picture taken from the top of the Carew Tower. The Carew housed Cincinnati's first television station WKRC. It remains one of Cincinnati's tallest buildings. You get to the last floor via the original elevator. That old elevator is a bit of a thrill in itself. We also attended a pig roast in rural Bethel Ohio, given by a friend of mine from work. Her husband's band entertained us and about a hundred guests. On the way back we stopped at East Fork/Harsha Lake State Park, and took Ben to see a pre-Civil War cemetery. The adjacent one-room church was last used in 1847. It is still standing and in reasonably good repair.
As some of you may know, the Cincinnati Contemporary Art Center museum has a long and somewhat controversial history. When it originally opened in 1939, it was one of the nation's first museums dedicated to Modern Art. Tom and I were at the museum in 1988, when Sheriff Simon Leis temporarily closed it because he believed that Robert Mapplethorpe's photography exhibition was inappropriate for public viewing. The case was taken to court. A jury of average Cincinnatians disagreed with him. The exhibition reopened and continued. To tell the truth, it was kind of fun to be there that day. Simon Leis had all the officers dress up in their best and fanciest uniforms, because he knew it would be a big media event. We knew that he was threatening to close the show, so we went down to see what all the controversy was about before he did. By chance it all happened after we got there. Looking back, it was much ado about nothing.
The new CAC building opened in 2002 and was designed by renowned architect Zaha Hadid. This museum contains a museum for children called The "UNMUSEUME." Designed for children, it is a hit with the adults as well. Tom and Ben took turns conducting an imaginary orchestra. As they waved their arms, the music played. They also had fun poking through a most unusual chest of drawers. Each drawer had a unique surprise inside. A full size 1950's style vacation trailer, allows visitors to get quite rambunctious. By running from one side of the trailer to the other. You can really "rock-out." Thanks to funding from Lois and Richard Rosenthal, the CAC museum admission is free on Monday nights.
Just outside the museum is Fountain Square, where most nights you can watch a big screen TV showing the Reds games, and listen to impromptu street performers.
We also took Ben to see the Cincinnati Museum of Art. This is a conventional art museum located in Mt. Adams/Eden Park. The Rosenthal's have also made it possible to see the Cincinnati Museum of Art admission free every day of the week. Thanks to everyone who buys their magazines, including The Artist magazine and The Writer etc. unfortunately that museum does not allow photographs so we have none to share.
Lastly, I have included a few shots from the Cathedral Basilica, in Newport Kentucky just across the river. This is one of America's most beautiful churches. It was built by European artisans who stopped in Newport and Covington Kentucky as they made their way across the United States in the 1800's. My own great-grandfather Welch stopped here for a couple of years on his way to Utah. Just a short distance from the Basilica, is the Pied Piper clock. This is a mechanical clock that tells the entire story of the Pied Piper acted out by little carved characters, once an hour. This was a favorite stop of grandpa Ross Wilhelmsen whenever he was in Cincinnati.
Inside the Basilica
Ben and De on the Riverboat
Ben and Tom looking through a dresser at the CAC