Sunday, May 4, 2025

A Taste of Blacksmithing

Yesterday I took an introductory class in blacksmithing at the Minnesota School of Horseshoeing in Ramsey, MN. The course was offered through St. Paul Public Schools’ adult education and taught by The Guild of Metalsmiths’ volunteer instructors in a one-day, hands-on Saturday session. After a quick welcome, safety briefing and about 30 minutes of basic instruction, we were out in the shop and using the tools of the trade. Wrought iron bars were heated in the coal-fired forges with hand-cranked bellows to the ideal red-orange working color (approximately 1,500-2,000F), then shaped with hammer and anvil until it cooled and the process was repeated. It took some practice, but we soon had the basics down and were amazed at how straightforward it was to move the hot metal in the desired direction and create a new shape. The eight students, all complete newcomers, were soon crafting functional art such as hangers, hooks and key rings.

After lunch in the school’s classroom, we were back at the forges. There were occasional demonstrations of new techniques, but for the most part we were free to practice and create, encouraged and guided by the friendly, knowledgeable and passionate instructors and volunteers. The first blacksmiths can be traced to the Hittites around 1,500 BC, and I always get a thrill learning an ancient skill that carries on in the modern world. From the lunchtime conversation, I think that we all felt this connection to history and were thoroughly enjoying the experience. 

According to the American Farrier’s Association website, the Minnesota School of Horseshoeing is one of only 25 member schools in the nation that still teaches the trade of equine hoof care. The Guild of Metalsmiths is a local non-profit dedicated to preserving the art of blacksmithing, and partners with the Minnesota School of Horseshoeing to use their facilities for instruction and community-building activities. This was the first time that St. Paul Public Schools offered this course through their adult education program, and it filled up quickly. Our group learned a lot, met some great folks, made some useful and decorative hardware and had a blast. It was a terrific experience that I would recommend to anyone who’s interested. Map link: Minnesota School of Horseshoeing

Bonus Question: Who was the Greek god of blacksmiths? Who was his Roman counterpart? (Answers at end of post)

Photo by Rebecca Hroback

Look what I made!

The new blacksmiths, with their teachers.
Photo by Marty Masters

Bonus Question Answers: Hephaestus, son of Zeus and Hera, was the blacksmith of the Greek gods and made all metalwork, armor and weapons in Olympus. He was the only Olympian god with a physical imperfection, typically described as a limp. His Roman counterpart was Vulcan, son of Jupiter and Juno and brother of Mars.

Thursday, April 24, 2025

More Boston, MA

On Tuesday we had another all-family YMCA workout, followed by lunch at home. Then Danielle, Kathleen and I went to the Museum of Science, built on the old Charles River Dam, which connects the West End of Boston with Cambridge. The museum was busy, with lots of school groups, but they cleared out in the late afternoon. The outside drop-off zone at the museum is also one of three boarding areas for Boston Duck Tours, a popular sightseeing attraction that takes tourists around the city and harbor in replicas of the amphibious DUKW vehicles used in World War II and Korea. We took one of these tours many years ago and had a blast! Map Link: Museum of Science

Bonus Question: Besides humans, what is the only species that domesticates other creatures? (Answer at end of post)


The world’s largest Van de Graaff generator.
Built in 1933, it was used to study the atom
and can produce more than one million volts.
It is used today for demonstrations of high
voltage electricity and man-made lightning.

Canal through the Old Charles River Dam


After the museum, we met Kathleen’s sister Scarlet for dinner at Chilacates, a Chipotle-type Mexican restaurant, then Danielle went to her evening class at BU, Scarlet went home to Somerville and we took the Green line and 57 bus back to Brighton.

Wednesday was a rest day, filled with relaxing, reading, knitting and concertina practicing. In the evening we watched Conclave, the 2024 movie thriller about the College of Cardinals’ selection of a new Pope; very timely given the passing of Pope Francis three days ago. The College of Cardinals was created in 1059 and the current form of the papal conclave began in the 13th century and is the oldest method of selecting a head of state in the world. Fun fact: The Pope’s official title is “Bishop of Rome, Vicar of Jesus Christ, Successor of the Prince of the Apostles, Supreme Pontiff of the Universal Church, Primate of Italy, Archbishop and Metropolitan of the Roman Province, and Sovereign of the State of Vatican City.” The term “Pope” is a nickname dating back to the third century, derived from “papa,” Latin for father. 

On Thursday we decided to chill some more. The weather was beautiful, with a daytime high in the upper 60s, bright sun and light winds. Kathleen and I took a long walk in Brighton, through the campuses of Boston College and St. John’s Seminary, and around Chandler Pond and Gallagher Park. In the evening, our last in Boston for this visit, we met Scarlet again in Somerville for dinner at Sarma, a popular, tapas-style Mediterranean restaurant. 

Brighton Courthouse

Boston College baseball field

Saint John’s seminary, established in 1884

Gallagher Park and Chandler Pond

Kitty caddy for TV remotes 

Bonus Question Answer: Certain species of ants domesticate aphids. The ants protect the aphids from predators and move them to new feeding spots, while the aphids produce honeydew, a byproduct that ants use as a food source.


Monday, April 21, 2025

Happy Easter 🐣 and Patriots’ Day 🇺🇸

On Easter Sunday we spent a relaxing morning at home before getting outside for some exercise on a super windy day, with 40-mph gusts. Kathleen’s sister Scarlet came over for dinner and made us a special holiday meal of amazing Mexican food and margaritas. We finished off the evening with a game of Carcassonne and Scarlet’s chocolate cake with homemade whipped cream. Yum!


Today is Patriots’ Day, the third Monday in April and a holiday observed in seven U.S. states. It commemorates the inaugural conflict of the American Revolution, fought at Lexington and Concord on April 19th, 1775. It is an important local holiday and this year marked 250 years since the original battle. Bonus Question:  What is the word for a 250th anniversary? (Answer at end of post). 

Patriot’s Day is also celebrated by the running of the Boston Marathon. More than 30,000 runners begin in Hopkinton with the goal of making it 26.2 miles to Copley Square and getting their finisher’s medal. Participants must qualify for this race and only about 10% of all marathon finishers are ever fast enough to compete in Boston. 

Twice we walked the 20 minutes from Danielle and Jay’s house to Commonwealth Avenue in Chestnut Hill, where we stationed ourselves at Mile 22 and joined the estimated 500,000 spectators who watched the race in person. The first time was to see the elite racers whiz by at their five-minutes-per-mile pace. The second was to cheer on Kathleen’s friend and former colleague, Kari, a veteran runner from the Twin Cities who was competing in her first Boston Marathon. Police presence was heavy, the result of the 2013 terrorist bombing near the marathon’s finish line which killed three spectators and injured 264 more. There were no incidents today and the weather was pleasant, with temps in the mid-50s and moderate winds.


Our favorite spectator sign

Bonus Question Answer: A 250th anniversary is commonly referred to as a semiquincentennial, literally meaning “half of five hundred years.” Other terms sometimes used are sestercentennial,  bisesquicentennial and quarter millenium.

Bonus Quote: “Borrow money from pessimists, they do not expect it back” - Stephen Wright

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Salem, MA

Today we took a day-trip 20 miles north of Boston to Salem, known worldwide as the home of the Salem witch trials. In 1692, more than 150 citizens, including a four-year-old girl, were accused of practicing witchcraft and imprisoned. Nineteen were hanged, one was tortured to death and at least five died in prison. The four-year-old, Dorothy Good, was eventually released after nearly eight months in shackles and the execution of her mother, Sarah. 

Salem today has a witchcraft identity, with witch museums, ghost tours and shops dedicated to the occult practically on every corner. The high school mascot is a witch and there is even a statue of Elizabeth Montgomery as Samantha from the TV show Bewitched on display in downtown. A Witch Trial Memorial consists of a stone wall with 20 benches, adjacent to the oldest cemetery in Salem. Each bench is engraved with the name, date and method of execution of the men and women who were put to death in 1692. Ironically, two of the witch trial magistrates, John Hathorne and Bartholomew Gedney, are buried in the cemetery. Map Link: Salem, MA

Elizabeth Montgomery statue

Witch Trial Memorial bench and offerings

While the story of this human rights tragedy is the main event in town, we were more interested in Salem’s role as an important early-American seaport. Most of our visit was spent at the Salem Maritime National Historic Site, a nine-acre park with 12 restored structures on the Salem waterfront plus a downtown visitor’s center in the restored Salem Armory (Fun fact: Salem is the birthplace of the National Guard, which first mustered here in 1636). 

Salem once had as many as 50 wharves in its harbor for unloading goods coming into the colonies in the 17-19th centuries. The longest was 2,045-foot Derby Wharf, which remains today, although only two of its 20 buildings still exist—Pedrick Store House and Derby Lighthouse. The Customs House at the head of Derby Wharf had massive scales, dipsticks, gauges and other devices for measuring cargo, and clerks there meticulously calculated duties owed to the government. In the days before sales and income taxes, import duties were the largest source of the country’s revenue, and Salem was an important spoke in the wheel. During the American Revolution, Salem was the colonies’ most active privateering port, capturing about 500 British vessels, and Salem privateers would capture another 300 British ships in the War of 1812. By the 1840s, larger cargo ships were too big for the shallower waters of Salem Sound, and maritime trade gradually shifted to deep-water ports like Boston and New York, leaving Salem to fade from glory.

Bonus Question: Can you place the following historic alcoholic volumes in the correct order, largest to smallest? Barrel, butt, firkin, flagon, gallon, gill, hogshead, nipperkin, pint, tun (answer at end of post).


Derby Wharf and Lighthouse. Souce: NPS

Customs House

Salem was the home of Nathaniel Bowditch—his bible of seamanship, The American Practical Navigator, has been in continuous publication since 1802 and is still carried aboard every commissioned U.S. naval vessel. Kathleen and I have a copy at home.

Salem is also the birthplace of Nathaniel Hawthorne, author of The Scarlet Letter (another tale of New England intolerance) The House of the Seven Gables and The Life of Franklin Pierce, a biography of our 14th president, who was a Bowdoin College buddy and lifelong friend of Hawthorne’s. The House of the Seven Gables was based on an actual Salem residence, built in 1668 and now a museum, and Hawthorne’s birthplace was relocated to the grounds in 1958. Fun fact: Hawthorne was the great-grandson of Judge John Hathorne, one of the Salem witch trial prosecutors—it is believed that the author added the “w” to his surname to distinguish himself from his infamous ancestor. 

The House of the Seven Gables. Source: Salem.org

We made a quick stop at Ye Olde Pepper Companie, which claims to be America’s oldest candy store, then had lunch at Boston Burger before driving out to Winter Island and Fort Pickering, built in 1643 for the defense of Salem Harbor and used into the 20th century. All that remains of the fort today are sections of the original stone walls and three ammunition bunkers. There are walking trails around the perimeter and out to the rocks and tidal pools overlooking the picturesque harbor and nearby Waikiki Beach. After enjoying some quaity ocean time, we braved the heavy traffic back to Boston.

Winter Island Light

Fort Pickering ammunition bunker

Waikiki Beach

Jay & Danielle, Winter Island Light, Salem Harbor 

Photo Journal: Quirky stuff seen in Salem







Bonus Question Answer: Largest to smallest: Tun (216 gallons), butt (108 gal), hogshead (54 gal), barrel (36 gal), firkin (9 gal), gallon, flagon (1 quart), pint, gill (1/4 pint), nipperkin (1/32 pint).


Friday, April 18, 2025

Boston, MA

We’re visiting Danielle and Jay in Boston, staying for a week over Easter. Jay picked us up at Logan Airport, named after Edward Lawrence Logan, a military officer, judge and politician from South Boston. After a late breakfast, we relaxed, dozed and then walked to lunch at Ziggy’s when Danielle got home from school—she is a grad student at Boston University’s School of Public Health. They live in Brighton, a western suburb of Boston. Map Link: Brighton, MA

On Friday, we woke up early—quickly reminded of how loud Canty, our family cat who now lives with Danielle and Jay, can be in the morning. After a family trip to the neighborhood YMCA, Jay got to work, Danielle went to school, and Kathleen and I went sightseeing. Our first stop was Fairsted, the home and office of Frederick Law Olmsted, considered to be the father of American landscape architecture. Olmsted—and later his two sons—designed and oversaw major projects such as New York’s Central Park, the U.S. Capitol grounds in Washington, D.C., Prospect Park in Brooklyn, North Carolina’s Biltmore Estate, and public parks and university campuses in practically every U.S. state. 


Next we visited the John F. Kennedy Birthplace National Historic Site in Brookline, a southwest suburb of Boston. Joseph and Rose Kennedy, grandchildren of Irish immigrants, lived in this modest Colonial Revival house from 1914 to 1920 and four of their nine children were born here. Jack, the second son, was born in the second floor master bedroom of 83 Beals Street on May 29, 1917, and would become our 35th president and the first Catholic president. 

Bonus Question: You must be born in the United States to serve in which of these federal offices? (Answer at end of post)
A. President
B. Congress
C. Supreme Court
D. All of the above


We traveled around Boston on foot, by bus and by train and had a great experience on the city’s public transportation. It was a beautiful day; sunny with temperatures in the 60s and a moderate wind. Spring is in bloom here, with trees and flowers showing off their colors everywhere.




Our last stop of the day was at the central branch of the Boston Public Library in Copley Square. The city was busy with preparations for the 129th running of the Boston Marathon on Monday, and we walked out of the subway to throngs of runners picking up race packets, spectators milling about, workers setting up the finish line and bleachers, and police officers keeping everything secure and safe. Map Link: Copley Square, Boston, MA

We enjoyed the people-watching, then toured the beautiful library before relaxing in the Bates Hall reading room on the second floor, where Danielle met us after classes. The BU medical campus is about a mile away in South Boston. We crammed onto a crowded Green Line subway train, then met Jay at Cafe Landwer in Chestnut Hill for a nice meal of Israeli food, then home for UK Jeopardy, hosted by Stephen Fry.

Boston Marathon finish line on Boylston St.

Boston Public Library

Bates Hall, Boston Public Library

Courtyard, Boston Public Library

Bonus Question Answer: A—only the President must be born in the United States. One can become a U.S. Senator after nine years of citizenship and a Representative after seven years. Fun Fact: There are no specific qualifications to be a Supreme Court Justice. You don’t need to have been lawyer or even have graduated from law school, only have “training in the law.”



Wednesday, April 16, 2025

St. Paul, MN

I thought that I’d write next about our current home and Kathleen’s hometown—St. Paul, Minnesota, After leaving the Navy in 1995, we lived in Minneapolis for 21 years, then downsized and relocated to St. Paul in 2016, purchasing the condo left by Kathleen’s late parents. With a population of 304,000, the city is one of two U.S. state capitals located on the Mississippi River. Bonus Question 1: What is the other? (Answer at end of post) Map Link: St. Paul, MN

Source: visitsaintpaul.com

The first Native peoples to this area were the Hopewells about 2,500 years ago, followed by the Dakota and Sioux. Hopewell burial mounds are preserved in Indian Mounds Regional Park on the city’s east side, although only six out of the dozens of mounds that once existed survived St. Paul’s development push.

Indian Mounds Regional Park

The first American settlement here was at Fort Snelling, completed in 1825 at the confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers. The fort soon attracted a squatter’s settlement, called Camp Coldwater, and included a moonshine still owned by Pierre Parrant, a French-Canadian nicknamed “Pigs Eye” on account of his near-blindness in one eye. Fort Snelling’s commandant did not approve of the still’s proximity to the fort and ordered Parrant to vacate. He moved a few miles downriver, resumed his trade, and was soon followed by other settlers. The new location was known as “Pigs Eye’s Landing” until 1841, when a French priest, Father Lucien Galtier moved to the territory and was horrified to learn that his new diocese was named after a bootlegger with a lazy eye. Father Galtier quickly constructed a log chapel, named it after Saint Paul the Apostle and the town had a new name. Parrant would inexplicably abandon his whiskey business and the area in 1844 and his life after leaving what was now St. Paul remains a mystery.   

Fort Snelling today 

First chapel of Saint Paul

The other Twin City, Minneapolis (“city of water”), was settled on either side of St. Anthony Falls, a natural power source that turned it into a major lumber and flour milling center. The soft limestone of the riverbed eroded easily, moving the falls upriver by 1-4 feet per year. To stop the erosion and protect their livelihoods, mill owners destroyed the natural falls and replaced them with a sloping timber apron in 1880, which was changed to concrete in the 1950s. The power source was preserved, but the centuries of erosion had left the river below the falls strewn with rocks and debris, creating a section of shallows and rapids that was unnavigable to larger watercraft. St. Paul became the logical head of navigation and the last stop on the Upper Mississippi and rapidly grew as riverboat traffic exploded with settlers and goods. Minneapolis would not enjoy safe, deep-water river navigation until the 1960s, when locks were built up to and around St. Anthony Falls. The uppermost lock was closed in 2015 to prevent the spread of invasive aquatic species further north into Minnesota fisheries.

It was river commerce that put St. Paul on the map, but it was the railroads that kept it there. The most famous local railroad magnate was Canadian-born James J. Hill, nicknamed “The Empire Builder” and his Great Northern Railroad connected St. Paul and Seattle via the northernmost transcontinental railroad in the country. Hill’s railroad still exits today (as the Burlington Northern Santa Fe), as does his Summit Avenue mansion, completed in 1891. Still the largest home in the state, the house has 42 rooms, 13 bathrooms, 36,500 square feet of living space and 44,500 square feet of total area and is a popular tourist attraction. 

James J. Hill house

Across the street from the Hill house is the Cathedral of Saint Paul, a stunning structure and another popular stop on city tours. Completed in 1915 and built from Minnesota granite, its copper dome soars 186 feet above Cathedral Hill. Construction was spearheaded by Archbishop John Ireland, whose name graces the boulevard connecting the cathedral and the state capitol. Our current capitol, the third since Minnesota statehood in 1858, was designed by Cass Gilbert and completed in 1905. It is the second-largest self-supported marble dome in the world, after St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City.



We live at The Commodore, opened in 1920 as a long-term residential hotel in the historic Cathedral Hill neighborhood and a half-mile from the James J. Hill house and Cathedral of St. Paul. We’re one block from Summit Avenue—its five miles from the Cathedral to the Mississippi River has the highest concentration of Victorian-era homes in the country, and includes the Minnesota Governor’s residence. F. Scott Fitzgerald was born a few blocks away on Laurel Avenue, went to school at the original St. Paul Academy on Dale St. and wrote his first novel in his parents’ attic on Summit Avenue in 1920. Bonus Question 2: What was the title of this book? (Hint: It’s not The Great Gatsby). While Fitzgerald is celebrated as St. Paul’s most famous native son, he only spent about seven years of his short life here (he died in Hollywood at the age of 44 after a long struggle with alcoholism). The Commodore was briefly home to F. Scott and his wife Zelda in the Roaring 20s, and the two were popular in the restaurant and basement speakeasy, which is now our parking garage. The Fitzgerald’s loved to party, and were evicted for rambunctious behavior from fine hotels around the world, including The Commodore (twice). After being asked to leave The Commodore for the second time in 1922, the Fitzgeralds departed St. Paul for good. Other guests at The Commodore were Eleanor Roosevelt, actor Gloria Swanson, author Sinclair Lewis, and a Who’s Who list of early 20th-century gangsters, including John Dillinger, Al Capone, “Baby Face” Nelson, “Machine Gun” Kelly and the Ma Barker family. St. Paul was a popular hangout for criminals, who took advantage of the “O’Connor Rule”—Chief of Police John O’Connor (and his successor Thomas Brown) openly permitted mobsters to reside unmolested in St. Paul as long as they paid bribes on time and committed their crimes in Minneapolis. Map Link: The Commodore

The Commodore in 1925. Source: Minnesota Historical Society

The Commodore dining room

The Commodore mirrored bar, added in 1934 after
Prohibition was repealed 

Our neighborhood coffeeshop is named after Nina Clifford, who ran an upscale brothel and is a local legend. Vice crimes, including prostitution, gambling and alcohol sales, were exempt from the O’Connor Rule, and thrived within St. Paul. Likenesses of Nina (pronounced “nine-uh” and born Johanna Crow) are in several locations, usually angled towards her former business. Contrary to popular belief, the Blair Arcade, where Nina’s coffeeshop is housed, was not the site of her brothel—it was located in Downtown St. Paul at the bluffs where the Minnesota Science Museum now stands. It was also widely believed that there was a tunnel connecting the brothel to the Minnesota Club, where the rich and famous of the era socialized, but this was debunked when excavation for the Science Museum found no evidence. Fun facts: When Nina’s establishment was demolished in 1937, one of the bricks was put on display with a plaque at the Minnesota Club, and a chandelier was relocated to the private office of the Mayor of St. Paul and remains there today. 

Nina Clifford carving, facing her business

We live adjacent to St. Paul’s Rondo neighborhood, which was the backbone of the city’s black community for much of the 20th century. Between 1956 and 1968, Rondo’s core area was destroyed and the remainder cleaved in two to make way for the construction of Interstate 94, with the displacement of at least 650 families and businesses. Rondo Days, held annually in July, commemorates the neighborhood and is the largest African-American festival in Minnesota. St. Paul has more than 36,000 Hmong residents, the largest number of any U.S. city; most are refugees and their descendants who fled Southeast Asia following the Vietnam War.

St. Paul is the home of Bethel College, Century College, Concordia University, Hamline University, Macalester College, Metropolitan State University, St. Paul College, the University of Minnesota-St. Paul campus, College of St. Catherine, College of St. Scholastica, Mitchell Hamline College of Law, and the University of St. Thomas, Minnesota’s largest private institution of higher education.

The city is the location of the Minnesota State Fair, where in 1901 Vice President Teddy Roosevelt first spoke his famous foreign policy mantra “speak softly and carry a big stick.”

St. Paul’s Xcel Energy Center is home to the NHL’s Minnesota Wild and the PWHL’s Minnesota Frost, while Allianz Field hosts the Minnesota United FC Loons MLS soccer team and CHS Field in Lowertown is home of the St. Paul Saints, a minor league baseball team affiliated with the Minnesota Twins, 10 miles away in Minneapolis. 

There are 17 Fortune 500 companies headquartered in Minnesota, the 10th-most of all U.S. states, with Ecolab and Securian Financial in St. Paul and 3M in Maplewood, an eastern suburb.

Besides F. Scott Fitzgerald, other native St. Paulites include “Peanuts” creator Charles Schultz, U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren Burger, actors Loni Anderson, Josh Hartnett and Emily Rudd, comedian Louie Anderson, explorer Ann Bancroft, “Miracle on Ice” hockey coach Herb Brooks, skier and Olympic medalist Lindsey Vonn, Olympic gold medal gymnast Suni Lee, and baseball Hall of Famers Jack Morris, Paul Molitor, Joe Mauer and Dave Winfield.

St. Paul photo album:

Union Depot

Dragon boat on Lake Phalen

Minnesota State Fair

Landmark Center. Andrew Volstead, the Minnesota
congressman who authored the Prohibition Act
had an office on the fifth floor 

Minnesota Irish Fair on Harriet Island

St. Patrick’s Day Parade, first held in 1851

Winter Carnival ice sculpture 

Winter Carnival ice castle 

Sunken Garden, Como Conservatory

Schmidt’s Brewery, now artist lofts

Science Museum

Minnesota History Center

Fitzgerald Theater

Minnesota Transportation Museum. “Peanuts” statues
are all over town.

Mickey’s Diner

Bonus Question 1 Answer: Baton Rouge, LA, is the only other state capital located on the Mississippi River. Coincidentally, both St. Paul and Baton Rouge are on the east bank.

Bonus Question 2 Answer: F. Scott Fitzgerald’s first novel, This Side of Paradise was an overnight hit, and vaulted him to instant fame. Zelda had refused to marry him until he was a commercial success, as had Fitzgerald’s first love, Ginevra King, a 16-year-old Chicago socialite who was his muse for Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby. After F. Scott quickly became rich, Zelda rekindled their engagement and they were married a month later. Fitzgerald would not publish his third and most famous novel, The Great Gatsby, until 1925. It did not sell well, received only modest reviews and was not critically acclaimed as one of America’s finest novels until after Fitzgerald’s death in 1940—he died believing himself to be a failure and his work forgotten. St. Paul and many other cities nationwide are currently celebrating the book’s 100-year anniversary with festivals and other remembrances.

A Taste of Blacksmithing

Yesterday I took an introductory class in blacksmithing at the Minnesota School of Horseshoeing in Ramsey, MN. The course was offered throug...