Friday, October 18, 2013

International Spy Museum


Of all of the museums that cost money in DC, we've discovered that the International Spy Museum is, by far, the best.  You're greeted by the Green Jaguar XKR from the James Bond movie Die Another Day with the clip playing in the background.  Then they shuttle you into a movie theater via a flashy blue-lit elevator to learn about a spy's life.  The whole entry experience makes you think spying is glamorous and fun, while the rest of the museum explains why it's really not. 

You're encouraged to assume a new identity when you first enter the museum and then are quizzed and handed an assignment along the way.  I thought this part of the museum would have been more fun had there been actual actors posing as security to quiz you along the way and let you know how believable you were.  It's actually pretty difficult to memorize a bunch of pieces of information about someone in just a few minutes (although, luckily, I'd just finished the book: Moonwalking with Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything by Joshua Foer, which made it much easier).

I thoroughly enjoyed the first exhibit all about tricks of the trade, complete with lots of handy (and outdated) gadgets, plus another Bond car.  Then, it dives into a history of spying from the Greek-Trojan Horse incident to the current threat of cyber-attack.  In the basement, there is a Bond Villain exhibit, which would have been excellent had I actually watched all of the Bond movies since the beginning of time.  With the kids, we spent two hours in the museum, but agreed that you could easily spend four because it is so incredibly interesting.

Alison learning about the Trojan Horse

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Jamestown & Yorktown

Jamestown 1607: The Virginia Company sends over some colonizers to exploit the riches in a new land.  They fail, but that doesn't stop more and more people from colonizing in the exact same spot for decades to come.  The Jamestown settlement location is packed with information, a reconstructed church, a fascinating archaeological museum, a walk with signage through the different parts of town (with excavated buildings that are now just piles of stones), a glass-blowing demonstration (which was under renovation when we arrived), and great views of the James River.  It's a good place to wander about on a nice day.  I liked the archaeological museum the best, which houses the remains of some of the settlers and is built over the spot where the New World's first democratically-elected leadership body met.

Jamestown's Church
The Governor of Virginia and Some Other Guy

Main Road Through Jamestown
Jamestown is connected to Yorktown via the scenic Colonial Parkway.  Although the Yorktown museum is a bit dated, they do have a huge ship that you can walk through and the video makes it pretty clear that Yorktown was a major turning point in the Revolutionary War ("His majesty will be most annoyed.").  If you like battlefield drives, Yorktown has two loops that show the main encampments and troop movements and the historic section of town is also preserved for you to take a stroll through.

Yorktown Victory Monument

What's a battlefield without a bunch of cannons?

Both sites are fairly interesting, but if there were only time to see one of them, I would definitely pick Jamestown.  I haven't gotten the opening song in the movie Pocahontas out of my head since.