英语资讯
News

常速英语:Presidential Architecture Showcased in Virginia

Source: VOA    2012-07-24   English BBS   Favorite  

The next time you run into an American and have a moment to talk, ask him or her two quick questions. But first, set the scene:

You want that American to picture the green Virginia countryside, near the university town of Charlottesville. And there, to picture what was once the lovely home of one of the nation’s greatest presidents, a brilliant thinker and prolific writer who penned a large portion of one of the greatest documents in American history.

He was a gentleman farmer and slave-owner, and secretary of state before becoming president.

Presidential Architecture Showcased in Virginia

And he paid great attention to his fabulous mansion, whose name begins with the letters M-O-N-T.

Now here are the two questions:

What’s the name of that mansion? And who was that president?

We’re pretty sure your friend will answer “Monticello” and Thomas Jefferson. And that would not be wrong.

But this is the story of his dear friend, James Madison, who had his own beautiful home, Montpelier, not too far from Monticello.

Madison was overshadowed by Jefferson all his life. Yet it was Madison, not Jefferson or some other better-known patriot, who wrote most of our nation’s Constitution, as well as many of its first 10 amendments known as the Bill of Rights.

Whereas Jefferson was outgoing and daring and quite a self-promoter, Madison, an aloof intellectual, was so private a person that he burned some of his own papers to keep historians from prying into them.

Madison also happened to be the shortest U.S. president, standing 163 centimeters (5 feet, four inches) tall.

Madison created a stunningly beautiful, peach-colored Georgian mansion with lush green grounds, overlooking Virginia’s Blue Ridge Mountains.

Outside is a stately structure that looks like an ancient Greek temple. It has become Montpelier’s symbol. It’s actually a fancy cover for a brick-lined ice house.

Archaeologists have had fun exploring there and around the ruins of Madison’s blacksmith shop and slave cabins on the grounds.

Madison’s estate passed through several hands over the years. For a long time, it was owned by a member of the wealthy DuPont family of Delaware.

It is now owned by the noNPRofit National Trust for Historic Preservation, which has restored Madison’s Montpelier and led the research into its colorful past.


将本页收藏到:
上一篇:常速英语:New Book Blames Colonization for Spread of AIDS in Africa
下一篇:常速英语:South Africa Studying Proposal to Legalize Rhino Trade

最新更新
论坛精彩内容
网站地图 - 学习交流 - 恒星英语论坛 - 关于我们 - 广告服务 - 帮助中心 - 联系我们
Copyright ©2006-2007 www.Hxen.com All Rights Reserved