Tag Archive: monticello

Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

DSCF44441 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

When I left off yesterday, we had just completed our house tour of Monticello.  After which we of course headed around to the back of the house to take pictures of the famous dome.

DSCF4445 650x247 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

The area in the back of the house also has a gorgeously manicured garden.

DSCF4442 450x600 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

We even caught a glimpse of this beautiful butterfly.

After walking through the garden and pond, we headed over to the south side of the grounds to explore Jefferson’s vegetable garden.

DSCF4455 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

This 1000 foot long garden terrace makes any backyard garden look pettily in comparison.   Jefferson (aka his slaves and servants) grew over 330 vegetable varieties in these gardens.

Besides being mammoth in side, the garden boasts another unique feature, a pavilion overlooking the mountains.

DSCF4468 450x600 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

The pavilion was the perfect place for a little picture taking fun.

DSCF4446 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

Can you imagine how many nights Jefferson must have spent out here gazing at the stars?  How beautiful!

DSCF4465 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

We took the opportunity to sit here on some benches and take in the beautiful scenery.  Living in the city, we often don’t get to see the mountains so we made sure to take a breath and soak it all in.

DSCF4478 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

When we finished with our breather, we decided to explore the cellar level of the house.  As I mentioned yesterday, Jefferson designed Monticello’s northern and southern terrace to disguise the outbuildings that lie below.

In this lower level, you find the innerworkings of the plantation—the cellar, the ice house, the stables, the kitchen, etc.

DSCF4476 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

Of particular note was the Ice House.  Every winter, Jefferson would cultivate ice from the nearby Rivanna River and store it here.  The ice he collected would last an entire year in this cool structure.

DSCF4480 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

On the other side of the lower level lies the other unique feature—the kitchen.  Having fallen deeply in love with French cooking during his time in Europe, Jefferson wanted to recreate his own French kitchen here in the States.  In order to make the distinct French sauces, he needed a kitchen equipped for sauté pans.

He actually designed the kitchen to have 4 burners on a stew stove that worked like modern day stove tops, except of course for the fire.

Once we were finished exploring the lower level, it was time for our second tour, the Behind the Scenes tour.  We decided to purchase these extra tickets because they were the only way that we could explore the second and third floors of Monticello.

We again met our guide outside where she gave us some background information about the other floors of Monticello.  These floors are not included in the house tour for a multitude of reasons. Originally, these floors were used by the Foundation for their offices.  When the Foundation’s latest president arrived, she insisted that the offices be moved to a different location so that guests could explore these floors as well.  On top of that, the floors are rather treacherous.  The stairs to ascend to the second and third floor are very narrow and steep (Jefferson thought staircases were a waste of space).  Making things worse, these floors have no temperature control so they get incredibly comfortable in the summer and winter (trust me it was hot!)

With those warnings in place, she walked us to the second level.  Unfortunately, we were once again not allowed to take pictures (except of the Dome Room).  Since the Foundation has just started to redo these floors, many of the rooms only have a few pieces of furniture.

Although the rooms were empty, our guide used her beautifully interwoven stories to illuminate the rooms and the past.  Her passion and love for all things Jefferson was undeniable and at points breathtaking.  In one of the rooms, she stopped to tell us about Jefferson’s life as a grandfather.  He was said to be a very gracious and loving grandfather.  He even had a desk specially hand carved for his favorite granddaughter.  Unfortunately, the original desk never made it to her as the boat it was sailing on sunk.  To replace it, Jefferson sent her one of his favorite desks with a note asking that she keep the desk in the family as it may be of value some day.   In 1991, the same desk returned to Monticello with four armed guards.  It was the desk on which Jefferson had written the Declaration of Independence.  At this point, she started to choke up and get tear-eyed, stating, “this story gets me every time.”

As if to try to top that moment, she then led us up to the dome room where we could finally take pictures.

DSCF4499 450x600 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

The room is just as big and beautiful as it looks in pictures.  The walls are adorned in a mustard yellow while the floor is covered in green.

DSCF4495 450x600 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

The windows are bigger than life and let in a heavenly amount of light.

DSCF4486 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

Interestingly enough, although Jefferson spent an immeasurable amount of time perfecting this room, it never really served a purpose.  The documents show that this room was often unoccupied and frequently used as storage.  It turns out that while the windows made for great lighting, they also made the room’s temperature unbearable.

DSCF4491 450x600 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

Jefferson’s grandchildren did have fun in this room despite the extreme temperatures.  They turned this storage closest in the front of the room into a fairy palace.  I can just imagine little children crawling around with toys down there.

DSCF4490 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello Part II

This was truly the single most beautiful aspect of Monticello.  I literally didn’t stop taking pictures until we had to leave.

With that our tour was over and so was our day at Monticello.  It was close to closing time and we had eaten since breakfast.

I definitely recommend everyone checking out Monticello if they have the chance.  I would also highly recommend taking the Behind the Scenes tour.  Heck you drove all the way to the middle of nowhere, you might as well pay the extra few dollars to see all the levels.

I only hope that you will get a tour guide as wonderful as ours.

Stay tuned for the next post in this Charlottesville series, where I’ll talk about our bed and breakfast, the Dinsmore Inn, and hiking in Charlottesville.

Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

So last week, I may or may not have gloated about our wonderful 1 year wedding anniversary.  We decided to celebrate the beautiful occasion with a special trip to a place we had been talking about for ages—Charlottesville.

DSCF4435 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

For you other history loving dorks, you know that Charlottesville is chock full of amazing colonial history treasures like Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello and University of Virginia.  We had decided early on to make Charlottesville our first anniversary trip since it was on Mr. A’s before kids bucket list (yes, he has one and yes, it is long).

We started our trip off early in the morning on Memorial Day.  We had scheduled a 12 o’clock house tour of Monticello and with our apartment nearly 3 hours away from Charlottesville we needed an early head start.

The drive down there was really serene and beautiful as we cut through farmland and old houses.  It actually reminded me of the drive we used to take to Antrim (where we were married), making me incredibly sentimental.

DSCF4527 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

Due to our poor red light luck, we ended up getting to Monticello minutes before our tour time.  We were both a little panicked because the online reservation clearly directs you to pick up your tickets 30 minutes before you tour.

After parking, we hightailed it up to the visitor’s center to pick up the tickets and a few brochures, where the attendant kindly told us to hurry on up to the house.  Unlike Mount Vernon, Monticello’s visitor’s center is a steep 3/5 of a mile hike from the actual house.  Lucky, they provide shuttles from the visitor’s center to the house.  We hopped on the first shuttle and arrived at the front of the house in no time.

DSCF4420 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

We quickly handed over our tour tickets and rushed to join our tour group that just started.  Monticello operates tour groups of 20 every ten minutes that are led by one tour guide who walks through the first floor of the house.

The house tour begins in the front yard of Thomas Jefferson’s masterpiece.  Our tour guide took this time to provide us brief history of the house.

Construction on Monticello began in 1768 and was never really fully completed.  The entire time Jefferson lived there he was in a state of constant remodeling.  The house is inspired by the European architecture that Jefferson admired so greatly during his time as Minister of the United States to France.

Unfortunately, when Jefferson passed away, he was severely bankrupt (over $100,000 in debt) and his surviving daughter had to sell the house to pay down the debt.   The house was eventually purchased by Uriah P. Levy, the first Jewish Commodore, who greatly admired Jefferson’s stance on religious freedom.  It wasn’t until 1923 that the estate was purchased from the Levy family by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation.  Since that time, the foundation has put in a lot of resources into restoring Monticello, which fell into considerable disrepair, back to its original state.  The Foundation has managed to furnish the house with about 60% of the original pieces, an extraordinary feat considering everything was sold after his death to settle his debts.

After this brief history lesson, we were taken inside the house to tour the downstairs.  Unfortunately, visitors are not allowed to take pictures but I can tell you that the inside is breathtaking.

Jefferson imbued the house with traditional European cathedral ceilings (some towering to close to 19 feet tall) and relied heavily on natural light, including massive floor to ceiling windows and thirteen skylights.

We started first in the entrance hall which was covered in artifacts discovered during the Lewis and Clark expeditions.  Then we moved through the library, which was covered from floor to ceiling in books, one of his most beloved treasures.

We continued into his bedroom, where you can famously find his bed in a cutout of the room.  Jefferson loved alcove beds for their space saving capacities and employed them in nearly every bedroom.  Next, we moved through the parlor in the dining room and onto the guest room, which was lovingly referred to as the Madison room since James Madison and his wife spent so much time there.

DSCF4428 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

The tour then picked up outside the house on the north terrace, where we were allowed to resume picture taking.

The house is flanked by the north and south terrace which serve not only as two large decks but as discrete coverings for the outhouses (kitchen, stable, icehouse, etc.) that lie below.

DSCF4433 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

From the north terrace through a tiny break in the trees, you can see the dome of the Rotunda of the University of Virginia.  It’s been said that when Jefferson wasn’t personally overseeing its construction on site he would often peer through this opening to take a look at his beloved University of Virginia.

DSCF4444 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

At this point, our house tour was over and we were free to roam the grounds until our next scheduled tour (we decided to purchase the behind the scenes tour as well so we could take a peak at the second and third levels of the house).

DSCF4437 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

We, of course, immediately ran over to the lawn to take pictures in front of the famous dome.  I was surprised by how easy it was to take pictures without tourists around (this is nearly impossible at Mount Vernon).

DSCF4439 650x487 Charlottesville Anniversary Trip: Monticello

Since I’ve already filled your head with entirely too much random Jefferson knowledge, I’ll stop here and continue the recap of our visit in tomorrow’s post.  Make sure to stop by to see pictures of the outbuildings, gardens, and the inside of the famous dome room.