We left York, Pennsylvania, on a glorious, cloudless day,
nothing but blue skies—and tons of traffic—as we made our way to Cherry Hill RV
Park in College Park, Maryland.
A gorgeous and enormous family-owned park (500
RV/Tent/Yurt/Cabin sites) with a plethora of amenities (even a
pickleball court). And it has a
steep price tag to boot ($102/night).
We are here because we had a $92 credit on account from 2021 when
our tire delamination debacle and a side trip for repairs in Indiana prohibited
us from coming at that time.
The perk to staying at Cherry Hill Park is that it has a Metro Bus
Station right on the premises, which will take you to the train station to get
into D.C. It eliminates worrying about
parking, knowing traffic patterns, or dealing with congestion within the city.
This is the third time we have stayed at this park with advanced reservations, but the first time we have been assigned an inappropriately-sized site. Perhaps it is the young, inexperienced staff of college-aged employees? Who knows. But not only was it too short to fit our RV, Suite Retreat, but its proximity to car parking for yurt guests made it impossible to access with the turn radius of our medium duty truck, Big Boomer. We were given the opportunity to review three other sites, so we chose the longest one available with adequate access. We called them to advise which site we selected. We also noted that we did not receive a pass for my Rambling RV Rat Pack Rubicon, despite them charging us at check-in an additional $7 for an extra vehicle (They charge for anything over two vehicles/site, even if they all fit within the confines of your assigned spot.) We were informed to return to the office to pick up the car pass and to get an updated tag with the new site number on it. No words of apology for our inconvenience. Wouldn’t it be proper customer service for a staff member to have delivered these to our site?
As you can see, it was a VERY tight squeeze, even in the revised site assignment. |
After reacquainting ourselves with the Park, my parents decided to use what an Office Staff member described as an “underutilized” pickleball court. Guess that staff member didn’t really know what transpires here, ‘cause we went several times over the course of our stay and each time the court was in use. Furthermore, no one was applying the generally-accepted practice of lining up paddles to rotate in people to play. Instead, one day my parents waited over an hour before they were granted use of the court to play one game against a couple of youngsters who were new players. On another occasion, my parents offered to play doubles with a couple. However, the couple declined, citing their preference to play singles. Obviously, my parents’ endeavors to play pickleball over our 3-day visit were a bust.
We were happy, though, to reconnect with Susan, a long-time
full-time RVer who is back working at Cherry Hill Park as shuttle service. We met her years ago when she and her hubby John were running the café/grill here and we were still in a sticks/bricks just
RVing during weekends/vacations. We had
been reading their blogs already, but it was a wonderful opportunity to meet in
person back then and ask specific questions about the nomadic lifestyle and
work-camping. Susan/John were our inspiration in bringing our
full-time RVing plan to fruition (While some folks are spontaneous and can
jump right in, my parents are more structured.
They researched the lifestyle for over a decade and worked toward the
goal of being completely debt-free, paying off the sticks/bricks, custom-built
truck, and new RV before pulling the trigger in 2012 to start our nomadic
journey).
The next day we had an easy commute via the Metro bus/rail system. Our mission was to pay our respects at the Pentagon 9/11 Memorial (as we had done at the Trade Center in New York City and the Flight 93 Memorial in Shanksville, Pennsylvania back in 2021). The Pentagon 9/11 Memorial is done tastefully, with 184 granite benches, each inscribed with the name of a departed soul, resting over pools of reflective waters. The benches are arranged by birth year of the victims, ranging from 1930 (Age 71) to 1998 (3 years old).
Since we were in the general vicinity, we revisited Arlington National Cemetery. We walked throughout the many hallowed graves of the men and women who served our Nation with honor and valor. We watched the solemn changing-of-the-guard ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. We stopped at the gravesite of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Resting beside him is Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and two of their children who died as infants. (The remains of John Jr. and his wife Carolyn, who died in a plane crash together, are not here. Instead, they are buried at sea.) And we said a prayer at the Memorial for the Columbia astronauts, which was not on the grounds the last time we visited.
Changing the guard, Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. |
Monument to the Columbia astronauts on far right. |
The Kennedy Gravesite in foreground, Arlington House in background. |
Of interest to us in conjunction with our Civil War Battlefield Tour, was a stop at Arlington House at the top of the hill within Arlington National Cemetery. This was once home to Confederate General Robert E. Lee and his wife, Mary Anna Randolph Custis Lee (who was his childhood friend AND distant cousin).
The mansion was built by slave labor between 1803 and 1818
by General Lee’s father-in-law, George Washington Parke Custis, grandson of
Martha Dandridge Custis Washington (yup, that’s the one--wife of good old I-cannot-tell-a-lie
George). General Lee and Mary Anna
were married in the parlor of the home, as were two of their slaves, and George
Washington Parke Custis lived in the home until his death in 1857. It was at this home that Lee, a West Point
graduate and officer in the United States Army, made the painful decision to
respectfully decline President Lincoln’s request for him to head the Army of
the Potomac. Instead, Lee supported the
decision of his beloved home state of Virginia to secede from the Union, and he
became the Commander of the Army of the Confederate States of America. As a result of the South’s loss of the Civil
War, the Union confiscated the Custis/Lee family’s cherished Arlington House
and its 1,000+ acres, eventually creating Arlington National Cemetery (wow, that must have been one giant NJ middle-finger salute to the Commander of the Confederate Army).
The view from Arlington House. |
Depiction of a slave family. (Hey, whose that guy in the mirror! He wasn't part of the exhibit!) |
In addition to losing the family plantation, General Lee, though never incarcerated, was considered a war criminal—that is until 1975 when then President Gerald Ford pardoned Lee, 110 years after the end of the Civil War.
In keeping with the theme of plantations and a “family” connection, we visited Woodlawn in Fairfax County. This was the home of Eleanor Parke Custis. She was the sister of George Washington Parke Custis (General Lee’s father-in-law who built Arlington House) and the granddaughter of Martha Dandridge Custis Washington (President George’s wife). The acreage was initially part of Mt. Vernon, George Washington’s plantation. In 1799, George presented 2,000 acres to Eleanor and her husband Lawrence Lewis (nephew of George Washington) as a wedding gift from him and Martha, and he hired an architect to build them Woodlawn Mansion, completed in 1805. (Holy cow, the Six Degrees of Separation concept is real!)
The Woodlawn docent (who introduced himself as a “public
historian”) gave a wonderful lesson of life at Woodlawn, but from the
perspective of the enslaved people who toiled here. Though informative,
enlightening, and an important story to tell, the Woodlawn Tour should not be
billed as a “house tour” since it included virtually no information on interior
design and/or architecture. Mom queried
why most rooms were devoid of any period furnishings, to which the docent replied they were
removed to avoid “distraction from the narrative.”
The grand staircase. |
The property itself has an interesting history. Seemingly, George Washington’s Last Will and Testament indicated his slaves should be emancipated upon his death. However, Martha, his wife, made no such decree in her will. Therefore, upon her death, many of her Mt. Vernon slaves were transferred to her granddaughter, Eleanor, to toil at Woodlawn Plantation. But as the years transpired, the soil lost nutrients, and the tobacco crop waned. It was increasingly more difficult to maintain Woodlawn Plantation. So, in 1846, Eleanor sold a parcel to a group of Quakers from New Jersey, who, as staunch abolitionists, farmed the land without the use of slaves. They bought/sold more parcels as time went on, ultimately selling the mansion and some acreage to John Mason, a Baptist minister. The sale came with two stipulations: no alcohol on the premises and no slavery. Having lost considerable acreage through eminent domain for the building of Fort Belvoir, Woodlawn Mansion consists now of only 126 acres, owned and operated by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
Also on the property is the Pope-Leighley house, a structure
designed by Frank Lloyd Wright which was saved from eminent domain demolition (for I-66) and moved to its current location at the Woodlawn
complex. Now this House Tour was
terrific, earning a Rambling RV Rat 5-cheese award! The docent provided architectural/interior
design information, family history, and anecdotes about F. L. Wright.
F.L. Wright's principles for owning one of his Usonian home designs. Like full-time RVing, minimalism and functionality are essential. |
The home has some signature F. L. Wright designs like a
cantilevered carport roof and the "compress and release" small entryway way into the spacious living area. The home was constructed of glass, red
tidewater cypress, concrete, and brick.
Wright employed radiant heat flooring (saying it kept pets off
furniture) and a green cooling concept.
He utilized plywood in his design, a cutting edge material for the
building industry back in 1940.
The hallway "compression"... |
..."released" into the spacious living area. |
Small but functional kitchen.
|
Mr. Pope got a loan from his employer of $5,700 to finance
the building of this home, which he repaid through payroll deductions. To stay on budget, Mr. Pope and his wife could
not buy Wright’s lighting package, so the home has only recessed
lighting. Similarly, they had to nix
Wright’s carpet package. Wright gave
them the directive that only beige or teal carpet would complement his design palette. The furniture provided by
Wright was minimal, but versatile. In the end, the home cost $7,000. However, Wright did not take the final
payment, having developed a friendship with Mr. Pope during the building
process that continued throughout the rest of their lives.
The Popes, having suffered the loss of their child in this
home, sold the property to the Leighleys in 1946 for $17,000. The Leighleys retained the integrity of the
home and were responsible for having it moved and preserved for future
generations.
And with that, I will sign off. Talk to you again soon!
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