Japanese Garage Memories

Tonight I am thinking back to a post that I made ten years ago.


Wednesday is a very busy day, so I will just post a couple interesting pictures from a recent trip to Japan.

The first picture is of a garage that is a bit too small.

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This was near our hotel where we stayed after a very late night of work at the University Hospital. In the morning as we walked through the drizzle toward the parking lot we were parked in, I had to stop and take this picture of a garage that just wasn’t big enough for the family SUV. I may have gotten a little bit wet while stopping to take the picture, but it was an interesting reminder of how precious space is in some areas of Japan.

Now for a different type of garage.

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This is a garage that is just for bikes. This one is in Kyoto and is just behind one of the main retail streets. During the day the garage runs a brisk business with workers and customers, and then the residents in the area use it at night. A good use of space, and I assume that it is a good moneymaking business as well.

Steven

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Claiming California

Do you know when California became part of the United States?

California became part of the United States during the Mexican-American War.

On July 7,1847 the American Navy landed at Monterey. It was known as the Battle of Monterey, but the city was taken without any opposition.

battle of Monterey, John Drake Sloat, CaliforniaThe US Flag was raised by John Drake Sloat to claim California for the United States.

Sloat became the first military governor of California, but he served less than a month before turning control over to Robert Stockton. Sloat had been the commander of the Pacific fleet and returned home after Stockton took over. Stockton later appointed John C. Fremont as governor. There were a total of seven military governors in just a few years.

sloat monument, monterey,There is a monument to Sloat in Monterey that I would like to visit someday. There are also places in California named after Sloat.

Now for a personal connection to Sloat.

Last week I wrote a post, Helping Build West Point, about my 4th great-grandfather Adolphus Van Duzer.

van duzer, sloat, genealolgy, cousinsAdolphus was the half-first cousin of John Sloat, the father of John Drake Sloat. His father and Sloat’s mother were half-siblings.

Sloat House, Sloatsburg, New York, Van DuzerJohn Drake Sloat was born in the Sloat house in Sloatsburg, New York. He was born after the death of his father who was accidentally shot by a sentry. The land where the Sloat house was built had been given as a wedding gift to Marritje Van Duzer by her father Isaac Van Duersen who had moved further north to Cornwall, New York.

Sloat House, Sloatsburg, New York, Van DuzerThe kitchen wing of the house may date back to the 1730’s and been the original house of Isaac Van Duersen who was one of the earliest European settlers in the area.

The house was also used a couple times during the Revolutionary War as headquarters for General Washington.

It is always interesting to find connections to historical events while researching your family history.

Steven

The first two images in the post are from Wikipedia and are public domain.

The images of the Sloat Memorial and the Sloat House are from Google Street View.

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