Wyoming State Capitol

Cheyenne WY – August 2021

This is the Wyoming State Capitol in Cheyenne. Wyoming was ahead of the rest of the USA regarding women’s rights. Wyoming passed laws giving women the right to vote and hold office 50 years before the 19th amendment to the US Constitution giving these rights to women nationwide.
Buffalo statue on the grounds of the capitol.
Statue of calf on the grounds.
“Spirit of Wyoming” statue on the grounds.
The rotunda
Senate chamber
House of Representatives chamber
In this historic room the Wyoming Constitution was debated and ratified.
The Wyoming Capitol used wood for its banisters which creates a warm look. Also, the black and white checkerboard tile design is eye-catching.
The architect who designed the capitol purposely turned one of the balusters upside down, because he said that only God is perfect! Amen!
In many of the black tiles there are fossils.
More fossils.

Colorado State Capitol

Denver CO – August 2021

Beautiful capitol, lots of construction around the building, and the downtown is filthy. The building is gray on the main levels, then blue at the base of the gold dome.
Statue on the capitol grounds of Indian killing a buffalo.
Statue of President Abraham Lincoln has been removed, and its pedestal has been covered up. Disgusting.
The rotunda.
House of Representatives chamber.
Senate chamber.
The interior of the capitol is beautiful, but it is kind of tight. There is not much wide-open area. For instance, there is not much room between the columns and the central railings. It was close like this throughout the building.
Standing at exactly 5,280 feet above sea level! One mile high!
Me too!
Denver skyline from the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. Couldn’t see the mountains because of hazy sky.

President Dwight Eisenhower Sites

Topeka KS – August 2021

In Abilene KS, site of the home that President Dwight D. Eisenhower, our 34th president (1953-1961) grew up in. Eisenhower was born in 1890 in Denison TX, but his family moved here when he was very young. This is also where his and First Lady Mamie Eisenhower’s graves are located.
This is Eisenhower’s boyhood home.
Both graves are inside this chapel on the grounds. The chapel is closed due to COVID fears.
Statue of General Eisenhower. He was a 5-star general, one of only 5 we have had in American history. He was Supreme Commander of Allied forces during World War II. He had to resign his 5-star commission upon becoming president because the president must be a civilian. After he left office, he asked President Kennedy to reinstate his commission, which was granted. The rank of 5 star was very important to him.
The museum was closed due to COVID fear.
The Presidential Library, also closed.
At the end of the lawn are these five plaques, which honor the providence of God and the strong faith and honor of the entire Eisenhower family.

Brown vs. Board of Education Site

Topeka KS – August 2021

This is the Monroe School in Topeka KS. It was one of four schools that were involved in lawsuits beginning in 1951 to fight against segregation in public schools (one of the schools was in Farmville VA, also on this blog). When the cases reached the Supreme Court, this one in Topeka was the one that was chosen to rule on. The landmark decision in 1954 declared that segregation was unconstitutional and that public schools must be integrated.
Front door of Monroe School. The site was closed to the public because of COVID fear.
Kansas was a crucial state in the anti-slavery cause in the 1850s as well. The Kansas-Nebraska Act passed into law in 1854 may have been the most significant event that led to the Civil War. The Act made Kansas and the Nebraska Territory “popular sovereignty” territories, which enraged Northerner and abolitionists, because at the time Kansas was considered pro-slavery. “Bleeding Kansas” was a time of brutal massacres and battles in eastern Kansas in the late 1850s.

This building is the Historic Ritchie House, the home of John and Mary Ritchie in the 1850s and 1860s. They were instrumental in assisting many slaves escape from the south via the Underground Railroad. John Ritchie was considered an “ultra abolitionist”. After the Civil War, he sold and gave away land to former slaves in Topeka.