My two friends and I spent three days in mid-June in the old historic part of Annapolis, where the streets are paved with brick. I will not forget the sound the loose bricks made as we stood on the sidewalk when a car drove past.
There were plenty of interesting doors, with many houses officially designated as historic sites. Sadly, I didn’t get a photo at one house where a plaque said, “Nothing important happened here.”
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| Annapolis is home of the US Naval Academy, so the anchor door knocker is appropriate. |
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| An artist spent some time embellishing the wall around this door. |
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| The main door to the Maryland State House is behind that tree. On the tower, below the flags, there is a gilded acorn, which represents strength, or wisdom, or squirrels, or something. |
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| Lion door knocker guarding the front door of the Maryland State House. |
We didn't quite know what to make of the Maryland motto on the state seal:
Fatti maschii, parole femine
which supposedly means "strong deeds, gentle words" but literally translated
is "manly deeds, womanly words". Is it enshrining patriarchy?
Not sure. Never looked up the Latin on the outer circle of the state seal.
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| This seal stands watch at the front door. |
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| Doorway into the House Chamber. |
The Maryland State House is of huge historic significance for the whole nation because it is where George Washington resigned his commission from the Continental Army in December 1783. His action set a precedent, a door, if you will, to enter the country into civilian control of the military in the US. That is, No Kings. No Napoleon. At least so far.
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| Mauve door with goose in pink bikini. |
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| Gotta love a brick-red door with a patriotic door mat. |









2 comments:
What a fun collection of photos! I love Annapolis and it's close, but we don't get there often. Last time was for a immigration-related protest in front of the state house in February.
I love the painted florals! ❤️💐❤️
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