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I lived in the suburbs of New
York City almost all my life and it was only when I was in
my 20's and working on 5th Avenue when I finally went to
the top of the Empire State Building. It took me almost
two decades as well to ice-skate at Rockefeller Center,
browse the Museum of Natural History, and see a Broadway
play.
Now living in New England I
still tend to overlook the tourist attractions in my own
backyard. It took us eight years after we moved to Keene,
NH before we climbed the “most-climbed mountain in the
world,” Mt. Monadnock, just a 15 minute drive from our
house.
I once read a magazine
article about a family that took a week-long vacation in
their own hometown. They visited museums, ate out every
night, and basically took in their surroundings with the
new eyes of visitors. I didn’t have a week – but a few
hours I did have. So when my neighbor suggested that we
become tourists for a day in Keene I jumped at the chance.
My neighbor and I planned a simple late morning excursion
with our kids on the Keene trolley.
I have never been on the
Keene trolley. I see it motoring around town every time I
leave my house to run errands. It looks sweet, touristy,
and fun. The windows are rolled all the way up in the warm
weather. The seats are wood. The pick-up spot was a five
minute walk from the house, so we all walked down to our
local Hannaford’s to wait for the 11:35 a.m. trolley.
Why it seemed so exciting
is beyond me. I knew where the trolley went and I’ve
seen all those spots a thousand times. I knew our final
destination was a mere one mile from our house. But
somehow, shedding the car and climbing aboard the trolley
made it all different. And the kids actually cheered (the
younger ones) when the trolley made the turn into the
parking lot.
I want to say it was a
pleasant ride and wax philosophical about the wind blowing
through my hair and seeing the familiar scenes through
different eyes. And I would if my 6-year son had not had
an intense attack of vertigo which made him exclaim (uh,
shout) that the trolley was going to tip over with all of
us in it with each turn the driver took. He insisted on
sitting up front, where the windows were closed, with me
glued to his side; I spent the entire 20 minutes of the
ride trying reassure him that this was not a doomsday
ride.
But hey, those are the
chances you take traveling with children, even if it’s
in your own backyard. The ride took us the “long way”
past the hospital, toward downtown. “It takes a lot
longer to get the Colony Mill on the trolley,” my son
said when we finally got off, relieved to be on solid
ground (the driver I’m sure was even more relieved).
The Colony Mill Marketplace
is the Keene, NH version of a “mall,” – it is
actually a renovated mill originally built in 1838 to
produce wool garments, including uniforms for the Union
troops during the Civil War and the Allied forces during
the World World Wars I and II. And it housed scores of
civilian companies and families until it closed its doors
in 1953. It was completely transformed three decades later
into a regional marketplace.
Today it houses quaint
shops like Dilly’s for Kids, Mill Toy Works (my son’s
favorite), Pocketful of Rye, Toadstool Bookshop (this is
my favorite bookstore – no Borders for me!) and True
Necessities (my daughter’s favorite). My kids, with
their pockets jingling with birthday money from
grandparents, made some modest but happy purchases – a
few shorts and a shirt for my 12-year old daughter; a
strap-to-the-head flashlight and a pull- back toy car for
my son.
We had lunch at the
mall’s atrium -- unlike your typical “mall” setting
in both food and atmosphere. Sometimes they even have live
piano music. Homemade artichoke soup from Kristin’s
Bakery, croissants stuffed with spinach and cheese; the
other choice at the Marketplace is Chinese food and I
ordered a plate of dumplings for us to share. It was good,
satisfying; not a French fry or double cheeseburger to be
seen yet all four kids ate heartily (maybe it was the
thrilling trolley ride that made them so hungry.)
Our trip ended at another
adjacent historic “mall” next door called The Center
at Keene, originally a scenic railroad station in the
1800's that now houses several retail shops and a really
good ice cream shop, Rick’s Gourmet Ice Cream. We ate
our ice cream outside (I had chocolate custard with
chocolate sprinkles – yum!). While we were enjoying our
ice cream, we suddenly saw the return trolley go by. “Oh
well,” my son said, “we can walk.” And we did --
bundles in hand -- on the bicycle path.
My friend and I looked at
each other, pleased with the day. It was already past 2
p.m. “It wouldn’t have been the same if we took our
cars,” she said. And I agree. There is really something
special about being a tourist in your own hometown.
Copyright 2004
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About
The Author
Marcia
Passos Duffy is the publisher and editor
of The Heart of New England online
magazine and weekly newsletter, which
celebrates the unique character of the
northern New England states of Maine, New
Hampshire and Vermont. To subscribe to her
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