"American Pride" off Boy Scout Road
On Friday morning we saw the California crew off and then drove over to Oakland in my new car. First stop: the Garrett County Museum of Transportation. Downstairs they have "things with wheels," while upstairs is everything from boats to ski mobiles, as well as a history of the dam and the lake.
"Gangster" car from the 1930s
This 1952 Roadster feels 20-30 years older in its design.
Right front: Cub Scout Derby car; left side: multiple WWII-era toys made of rubber, which we found surprising given the rationing and requisitioning of rubber for the war effort.
Above: Craig Abrahamson was a wood carver, then he had a hand injury, but rather than do formal physical therapy, he carved this life-sized motorcycle instead.
Below: a miniature wooden motorcycle.
Upstairs we learned that Deep Creek was dammed in 1925 to generate hydroelectricity. This created a 12-mile-long mountain lake with 65 miles of shoreline that is, arguably, more successful than the power plant. Outdoor recreation here includes the water (boating, fishing, swimming, kayaking, rafting, etc.) and the land (skiing, hiking, camping, birding, etc.). There have been a number of camps (United Methodist, Boy Scouts) and businesses, such as Deep Creek Lodge (below) and the Cabin Lodge (where we bought our French fries and ice cream yesterday!).
Above: Deer Park Water was originally bottled here for the B&O Railroad to serve on its trains.
Below: The museum was hosting a traveling exhibit from the Smithsonian Museum on revitalizing rural communities; as part of that, there was an "Old and New Game," which involved matching pictures of older and newer versions of the same technologies that I thought would make a great Brownie Scout activity, and I'm also contemplating how I could turn it into a teaching activity as well.
We ate lunch at
206 Alder, a bistro & bar, and attempted to visit the Garrett County Historical Society Museum, but it was inexplicably closed, so we moved on to the third museum in downtown Oakland, the
B&O Railroad Museum.

Like the Transportation Museum across the street, the B&O Railroad Museum is a semi-professional affair with a mish-mash of exhibits and labels, some of which are still printed on simple computer paper. I wanted badly to turn lose a historian friend of mine, who would surely whip things into shape. The building is the third to stand on that spot; railroad president John Work Garrett ensured that the westernmost county in Maryland (named for him!) had a beautiful train station in Oakland; construction began in 1884, the same year he died. That's a 1920 locomotive next to the fountain out front--it blows "steam"! Left is the "Cincinnatian," and below are photos about eating on the train.
"Nothing Could be Finer Than Dinner in the Diner.."
The oddest thing we found at the railroad museum was a couple of scrapbooks that belonged to one of the elderly docents, whose son had purchased them for him secondhand. They contain newspaper clippings from the 1920s and are badly in need of conservation. My mother and I were fascinated by these pages about the time a leaky steam pipe caused an explosion in the basement of a Cleveland Clinic building where old x-ray film was being stored, sending poisonous gas through the ductwork that killed 124 people throughout the hospital (May 15, 1929)--neither she nor I had heard of it before!


In the late afternoon we drove 15 minutes over to the Deep Creek State Park, where we threw a Nerf football around in the water before lying out in the sun on the small sandy beach to dry off. Back at the cabin it was leftovers for dinner while watching Wicked, and then one last sit in the hot tub before bed. Saturday morning we packed and packed and then returned to Oakland for their year-round Saturday farmers market. We loaded up on fresh produce--including peaches that required a 10-15 minute wait in line--and enjoyed cheeseburgers while sitting in the shade of a tree on the banks of the Upper Youghiogheny River.
In the background you can see the cupola of the B&O Railroad Museum.
And that's it! We drove home, unpacked, did laundry, lazed about, and reconciled with Rosamunda. It was a wonderful vacation, but it's time to answer emails and get back to work/