The Maryland Eastern Shore in Winter

Date of Sojourn: February 2017

Location: Berlin, Maryland, Assateague Island National Seashore, and Environs; Map

In February 2017 we took a weekend trip to Berlin, Maryland on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, visiting Assateague Island National Seashore, Furnace Town, and the nearby towns of Snow Hill and Pocomoke City.

In Berlin we stayed at the historic Atlantic Hotel, built in the late 19th Century and mostly recently renovated in the early 21st Century. Berlin is a small town not far from Salisbury and Ocean City, with a central business area of restaurants, galleries, antique stores, and other shops.

Our first morning we were up before dawn for a nine mile, 15 minute drive to Assateague Island National Seashore to view the sunrise.

Later we visited Snow Hill and Pocomoke City on the Eastern Shore south of Berlin.

The nearby Furnace Town Living History Village provides a glimpse into early 19th Century life at the Nassawango Iron Furnace where bog ore from the Nassawango Swamp was turned into iron used in the cities of Philadelphia, Baltimore, and New York from 1828-1850. Today it’s a collection of 19th Century buildings housing artisans’ studios and telling the story of life in swamp.

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Furnace Town is bordered on the east by a portion of The Nassawango Preserve of The Nature Conservancy. We walked the Paul Leifer Nature Trail, a one-mile walking trail skirting the Nassawango Swamp and in places crossing the swamp with a series of boardwalks. A section of the trail is on the towpath that bordered the Canal used during the time of the Furnace.

Lastly we explored the northern end of Assateague Island National Seashore, including the Life of the Dunes Nature Trail.

And no trip to Assateague would be complete without this………..

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National Postal Museum

Date of Sojourn: January 2018

Location: 2 Massachusetts Ave., N.E., Washington, DC 20002; Map

The Smithsonian Institution’s National Postal Museum occupies the ground floor of the former DC City Post Office Building, next to Union Station in downtown Washington. The building served as the city’s central post office from its opening date in September 1914 to September 1986 after which the Postal Service began a major renovation of the building, including restoring the lobby to its original design. A glass-enclosed atrium was created and became the central feature of the National Postal Museum. The Postal Museum opened in this location in 1993.

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A visit to the Postal Museum provides an opportunity to see the grand restoration of the City Post Office Building along with a variety of exhibits on the history of the US Postal Service. The The William H. Gross Stamp Gallery takes up much of the original building. In the atrium and associated space in the addition are several exhibits including the history of the Postal Service, the Postal Inspection Service, and the technology to sort/distribute/deliver mail today.

Picture Gallery