I was out in the yard too, working on a patch of grass that never looks the way I want it to. We live in this old house — it was built in 1799. It was once a tavern and a doctor’s office. A whiskey and leeches one-stop shop.
I grabbed a shovel and began to dig and hit on something hard. Another scoop and I saw the edge of brick or stone. Then I saw a granite post poking upward like it had stood there for all eternity.
At first I wondered if it was a grave marker. But the post had a hole — looked as if it once held a ring. Classic 1790s hitching post.
When he moved into a former 17th-century tavern, it clicked. It’s mostly likely where an owner of horses would have tethered the animals before going in. ” Must be a drainage basin,” I thought as I cleared more and saw the stone pattern of a circle around the post – sort of a shallow pit or basin.
Water trough.
If this place was a tavern stop, the horses would require water while their riders took rest. They used the post for the bit, and they had water in the trough.
I imagined a man in breeches dismounting and tying off a horse, brushing it down before discussing with the local doctor some ache or old wound. That post was just an everyday thing back then. And now I was mowing grass around it.
continue reading in page 2
: 1 2
Almost everyone has a pair of kitchen scissors sitting somewhere in a drawer. We use…
Ever seen little curved shavings on your desk, bed or even on your wrist when you…
I was out in the backyard a few weeks ago, attempting to cut grass with…
You might remember the sound of the spinning wheel clicker if you’ve ever spun a…
If you live anywhere in the Southern United States, chances are you already know the…
🍉 How Long Does Watermelon Last Once It’s Cut? There’s nothing quite like slicing open…