2017-07-14T17:18:03-04:00

Call me a sucker for old southern ways and charm, but the Storybook Inn run by Ms. Elise Buckley is a trip back in southern time. This house is really quite amazing. It has bedrooms named My Fair Lady, Casablanca, Gone with the Wind, and it looks like something out of Gone with the Wind. It is located on Highway 62 on the edge of Versailles, and it’s impressive. Set up as a bed and breakfast, complete with friendly cats... Read more

2017-07-14T16:47:01-04:00

I’ve spent a lot of time on the coasts of North and South Carolina. Most of the last 65 summers I’ve been down there. But one thing I have never done, until last June, was take the ferry and go visit Bald Head Island. In the 60s, back at the dawn of time, when I was in high school, I was in an environmental group called ECOS. We wanted to prevent the development of various of our pristine barrier islands,... Read more

2017-07-14T19:08:21-04:00

Somewhere in the 1880s, about 1884 a woodworking factory in Louisville, owned by an immigrant family, the Hillerich’s, turned mainly into a bat factory, home of the Louisville Slugger. The reason for this transformation was because of the local budding baseball team, which in due course was to move and to become the Pittsburgh Pirates. And then there was, just up the road the Cincinnati Redlegs as well. Bud Hillerich, the son of the owner created a bat for Pete... Read more

2017-07-09T15:21:06-04:00

This is the cathedral of Bede’s burial, and St. Oswald, of St. Cuthbert, of the Lindisfarne Gospels, of Lightfoot, and Westcott, and Moule, and yes Tom Wright too. It’s always a blessing to visit this sanctuary. Here is the tomb of Bede, and two of his famous writings. Bede’s most famous work, The Ecclesiastical History of England, is actually what determined for the West the date when it was assumed Christ was born, the dividing line between B.C. and A.D.... Read more

2017-07-09T14:46:18-04:00

The greatest Norman cathedral in the world, built in the late 11th century, is Durham cathedral— hands down, no debate, it is the greatest. It sits on top of a hill on a peninsula hovering over the river Wear and the city of Durham. First of all, here’s the river- And here’s the view from the river…. Here’s the pathway up to the cathedral from the river… How many pilgrims since 1070 have trudged up this hill to receive a... Read more

2017-07-09T14:50:33-04:00

Those of you who read my blog will know I’ve been working hard on getting published the sermons of a great Durham scholar and Methodist, C.K. Barrett, and his father Fred Barrett, in a series called Luminescence, of which the first volume is available on Amazon, and the second is on the way. Ann and I returned to Durham where we lived for three years in the late 1970s (B.C.— before cellphone, B.C. before computers). I was the last doctoral... Read more

2017-07-09T13:48:06-04:00

You’ve heard of haunted castles, how about haunted cathedrals? The Roman Catholic Cathedral in Drogheda is very large indeed, and includes, in a glass case, the head of a martyred saint—Oliver Plunkett, who was martyred at Tyburn in 1681. The shrine contains the preserved head of the saint. Another showcase displays his shoulder blade and other bones as relics. Also on exhibit is the cell door of Newgate prison in which he spent his last days. So, let’s get this... Read more

2017-07-09T08:10:00-04:00

The last day of our tour was spent in Drogheda (pronounced Draw-he-da). It’s not far from Dublin, and it was an ancient walled city, as we shall see. The city has gone through many changes over the years, and here is what it used to look like. The city has its usual pubs, with cheeky signs like this– Being a river city, with a river that goes out to the sea, Drogheda is a fishing city hence…. Perhaps its most... Read more

2017-07-09T07:58:31-04:00

On our last day in Dublin, after giving some lectures for the Irish Bible Institute, they took us out to dinner, and we say ‘the spire of Dublin’, sarcastically called the Needle, since this part of Dublin is where a good deal of the drug trade happens. The spire seems to be right in the middle of an intersection at first glance, but really it’s in a square. It’s proper name is the Monument of Light and it is a... Read more

2017-07-09T07:48:04-04:00

One of the great, newer museums in all of Europe is the Titanic Museum in Belfast. Indeed, it bills itself as the most visited museum in Europe. And the museum sits right in front of the very slip, where the Titanic was launched into the water and began its fateful journey towards America. The poles on either side of the concrete designate where the Titanic was launched from. Here’s what the shipyard looked like back then… And here’s the grand... Read more

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