THE HOGGATTEER REVOLUTION
  • Homeroom
  • Orientation
    • Meet the Teacher
    • Place in the World
    • Teacher File Cabinet
  • Positivity
    • Insightful Poetry
    • Inspirational Prose
    • Meaningful Quotes
    • Positive Behavior Conversations
    • Scripture Studies
  • Exploration
    • Celebrate Good Times (Come On)
    • Cerebral Cinema >
      • Hoggatt-Made Videos
      • Mood Music
      • Music Appreciation
      • Positive Behavior Conversations
    • Coursework >
      • Cultivating America
      • Focus on Science
      • Let's Communicate
      • M4+HEM4+1C5
      • Missouri, USA
      • Recess Bell
      • Scripture Studies

Misspellings XV

9/15/2022

0 Comments

 
What we have here is a
failure to communicate!

Find the misspelled word(s) in each
of these pictures.  Write and correct each word on your paper.
Picture
Picture
Picture

Find more on the Misspellings page.
0 Comments

CWTI:  Walking from the HIstorical District

9/14/2022

0 Comments

 
The Visitors' Center at Colonial Williamsburg is walking distance from the Woodlands Hotel.  For that matter, just about everything is walking distance - that is, if you like walking long distances.  Our Teachers Institute group were transported to designated locations on dedicated busses, and we could easily catch one of the shuttles back to the hotel when our programming was complete each day.
Picture
I knew, however, that there was a way to walk.  Utilizing the Colonial Williamsburg app on my phone, I was able to find the scenic route - past a school, and a couple of fantastic bridges that crisscrossed the highway.
This trail goes past the Great Hopes Plantation, an area depicting rural farm life in the 18th Century.  It is one more area that I did not get to enjoy due to it being after hours.

Soon, however, I found myself on the bridge to the Visitors Center.  I had seen this bridge in a video prior to my visit, so I felt some bit of familiarity to the area.  I will present the photos below in their proper order. Traveling from the Visitors Center to the historic area, the first embedded marker is the one below.  Its display sets up the remaining markers.
Picture
From the Visitors Center and walking toward the historic blocks, the plaques display Walking Back in Time.  When a person walks as I did, in reverse, the plaques highlight History Makers.  See both sets below.

No longer do most people walk this bridge.  Most of us ride the convenient shuttles rather than take the long walk to some point along the Duke of Gloucester.  I realize that these embedded markers don't have historical value, but I was pleased to at least have the​opportunity to enjoy them.  I enjoyed reading each of them and considering the messages displayed on their faces.
Picture
0 Comments

Apply the Word:  Runt of the Litter

9/13/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
An acquaintance of mine toyed with the idea of visiting a beach in the Caribbean, perhaps during Spring Break.  He relished the idea that he could relax, have a few drinks, do so dancing and bar hopping, and take in the sights – not so much the sight of the blue waters or the landscape, but the sights of the undressed college coeds.  He indicated that it would be fun to watch the uninhibited MTV-type bar games and challenges for a few days.  He would take pictures and bring them back to show his friends and family.

I asked him why.  Why would you want to do something like that?  His answer was, it’s nice and warm down there.  I said, It’s warm in Hell, too, but I don’t want to go there.

Another friend overheard our conversation and put in her thoughts.  She said, Yeah, but I just want to dip in my toes.

I relate this story because both of these individuals claim to have good relationships with God.  Yet the image they project is one of hypocrisy.  The people around them believe they are Christians – that it’s acceptable to worship God on Sunday morning and indulge in lusty behaviors the rest of the week.

I guess that’s where my pet peeve comes in.  You see, I can’t stand it when these people undermine the efforts of the church.  I tell my students at school that when they misbehave, they make me look bad.  I make sure they know that I take it personally when they go messin’ with my reputation.  That’s exactly what these Sunday morning Christians do to us every time they engage in these worldly activities.

It’s not just the drinking and carousing that I’m talking about.  I’ve heard, first-hand, as people forsake the assembly because, they claim, that the people in that church are hypocrites.  The people in the world may be blind to many things, but they hold us under a microscope.  They study us to see if we practice what we preach, and when we don’t, they label us – deservingly so – as hypocrites.

One week, a Christian visited a farmer and invited him to come to worship.  The farmer answered the Christian, saying, I don’t want to go to that church.  I know brother and sister so-and-so, and they’re no better than I am.  With all that I’ve seen them do and heard them say, I’m just as saved as they are.  The Christian, toppled by the farmer’s response, excused himself from the farm, but returned a couple of weeks later.

On the return visit, the Christian asked the farmer if he had any pigs for sale.  The farmer told him a litter of little pigs had just been weaned and that he could have his pick of the litter.  The Christian looked over the litter carefully and finally settled on the runt, the smallest, puniest, sickliest piglet of the bunch.  Holding the pathetic animal in his arms, he told the farmer he would be sure to tell everyone he met that he had gotten the pig from the farmer.  The farmer pleaded with the Christian to take a different piglet.  Please take one of the others, he begged.  I don’t want everyone to think that the only pigs I have are in such terrible shape.  That pig doesn’t represent the level of quality my farm has.  The Christian moved in closer.  He leaned toward the farmer’s ear, and he whispered, If it’s good enough for the church, it should be good enough for your farm.

Ralph Waldo Emerson, the 1800’s writer and philosopher, said, What you are speaks so loud that I can not hear what you say.

0 Comments

CWTI:  First Baptist Church Archaeological Dig

9/12/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
It was a quick visit after hours, but I did find the archaeological dig that is currently taking place at the First Baptist Church location in Colonial Williamsburg. This is not only an important place for the history of the Baptist Church in American history, but also has deep ties to Black history.  in another location, I found the historical marker that honors Gowan Pamphlet (left).

There wasn't much to see as, on this very hot day in July, all of the scientists had already tarped the dig site, parked their wheel barrows upside down, and clocked out.  Perhaps the next time I visit, the actual building, which had been moved to the College of William and Mary, will be repositioned in its historical location.
0 Comments

Accuracy and Impact of the Bible:  Jamestowne

9/11/2022

0 Comments

 
The following is the first lesson in a historical and faithful study
beginning at 7:00 pm on Wednesday evenings.
at the church of Christ in Carthage, Missouri, south of the Ford dealership
PLEASE JOIN US!

Introduction and Purpose

Does God intend for us to read His Words and accept them at face value?  Or does He build in proofs that His Word is His Word?  How could we possibly know that the Bible is inspired, that It is correct, and that It is complete?  This study takes us there, guiding us into the knowledge that our faith does not have to be blind.
Dr. Gary Crossland has put together the video below, and it happens to fit the purpose of introducing our study about the accuracy of the Bible.

Art Appreciation

Analyze the two paintings (below).  Look for the details.
  • What do you notice?
  • What do you think is happening?
  • What caused the scene in the painting?
  • What might happen after the scene shown?
  • What does this piece make you wonder?
Picture
Picture
Picture

What's in a Name?

Jamestowne was named after the same King James who "authorized" the King James Version of the Bible. The video here (right) is a humorous presentation of the naming of new colony.  The influence of a king in everyday life and in religion is an interesting topic to consider when studying the origins of our English Bible.
Picture

Jamestowne History, Archaeology, and Christianity in the New World

One's first vision of the Jamestowne church building does not show the original structure, but if you should venture around to the rear, the original church tower still stands.  It is the only 17th Century structure still standing in Jamestowne today.
That is not, however, intended to say that this was the original religious center of the first successful American colony.  Realizing that the colony was established in 1607 and this standing structure was built some time between 1660 and 1690, how might you think the colony felt about Christianity?

Actually, just to the right of the church tower, with a closer proximity to the James River, is the site of the first church structure, built in 1608.  Incidentally, this was the location of the wedding between John Rolfe and Pocahontas.
In fact, the Christian religion (the English, or Anglican, church) was well known and promoted around the area much earlier than the construction of the church tower. One of the men buried in the Chancel was Robert Hunt, listed as a "reverend" and known to be the first Anglican minister to Jamestown.  Another, Captain Gabriel Archer, must have also been a devout adherent to the faith as he was buried with a reliquary (See video, below), a silver box containing human bone fragments and a small container of liquid (thought to be oil, holy water, or the blood of a saint).
Outside of Jametowne Fort, a short way up today's modern road, is a location known as Glebe Land (above) - 100 acres of land along the river set aside for the use of the church and minister.  Why do you suppose that land was reserved for this purpose?

If your answer has something to do with spreading the faith to the Indians in the area, you're on the right track. This was Indian hunting ground, and if there was any chance of getting the Indians to live peaceably with the white settlers, perhaps Christianity would be key.
​It would be difficult to keep the many Indians, the working laboring class, and the gentry all in line through lean and desperate times.  In fact, the famous (or infamous) Captain John Smith, governor of Virginia (1608), is known to have locked up food supplies and required men of every class to work to earn it or else starve.  The political slogan, "He who does not worke shall not eate," was taken was 2 Thessalonians 3:10 (which would also make for a great refrigerator magnet in any household containing a preteen boy).

One point to be made is, Christianity was important to our nation, even 169 years before our independence from Britain.
Picture

Enter, the Christian Bible

While other printed Bibles were in use, at Jamestowne and elsewhere, perhaps the most well-known date of a Bible translation is from  1611.  The Bible adopted for use by the new colonists would quickly become the one endorsed by the king as the leader of the English church.  In this case, it was King James, which should sound familiar to most Christians today.  Sometimes called the Authorized version, the King James has definitely established itself with grit.

Many will not accept anything else in worship or study.  They often cite that it is the only "authorized" version, but I wonder if they really understand who authorized it and for what purpose.  Let's discuss this in person.
Picture

Begin with the Familiar

Picture
As we begin this ongoing study of How We Got the Bible, we will use the book by the same title, written by the late Neil Lightfoot.  We begin in the final three chapters of the book:  "The English Bible to 1611", "Recent Translations of the English Bible", and "'My Words Will Not Pass Away'".  We start here rather than in the first chapters because we want to start with something more familiar.  While Lightfoot kept his text approachable and readable, we would like to begin with some solid ground upon which most of us have some knowledge.

Until the next lesson, which will include information from Lightfoot's book, here are some questions to consider to establish our personal levels of understanding for this subject.  Perhaps you don't know all of the answers to these questions.  In fact, unless you are a scholar specializing in the subject of Biblical origins and manuscripts, you may not have accurate answers to very many of these questions at all.  That's all right.  In fact, that's why we enter this study.


​The Big Questions
Our focus for this study hinges on answering these two big questions.  The goal is to get closer to the answers each week in our class.
How did we we get the Bible?
Is the Bible accurate and dependable?

Introductory, Guiding Questions
Let's start with what we know.  Write down everything you know about the Bible (not specific accounts or figures, but the Bible itself).
  • From where did it originate?
  • When was it written
  • Who wrote it?
  • How was it written?
  • On what was it written?
  • With what was it written?
  • Where was it written?
  • To whom was it written?
  • Why was it written?
  • What is its purpose?
  • In what languages was it composed?
  • How has it changed through the millennia?

Application Question
​How important is it?
Is it important to you that the Bible comes from reliable sources, or is it just a collection of wise sayings and advice for living?  Many atheists agree that there is wisdom in the teachings of Jesus Christ, but they do not believe that Jesus is a Messiah, that He performed miracles, that He walked out of His own grave, or that He prepares a place where His faithful disciples will be rewarded for eternity.
We contend that the Bible and everything it contains is supported by:
  • textual claims
  • origins of the text
  • extrabiblical history
  • the faith of martyrs
  • ​logic
  • archeology
  • geography
  • geology
  • astronomy
  • biology
  • chemistry
  • physics
  • mathematics
  • and more
So how important is it to you that the Bible can be proven true?  Do you believe there is irrefutable evidence to its validity?  Is proof something that strengthens your personal faith in the existence of God?

Should faith alone be enough to drive you to drive you to your knees?  Is "blind" faith a stronger kind of faith?  If so, then why did God provide so much evidence?
Go forward with us - or in this case, back to the beginning - as we continue our study next time.
0 Comments

CWTI:  Art Museums of Colonial Williamsburg

9/10/2022

0 Comments

 
I quickly took a walk away from the historical area of Colonial Williamsburg to find the Art Museums.  I arrived with very little time remaining before closing. Checking in at the front desk, I was asked to put the things I carried into a locker before proceeding to the museum.

I knew I would not be able to see both sides of the museum, so I selected the folk art side.  Some of the contents on this side were purchased in the early days for the historical district, but they were inauthentic additions.  That doesn't mean they lost their historic value; it just means they needed to be taken in a more authentic context.
The displays here are beautiful and eye-catching, but I really had to run and snap pictures to look at later.  I could, for sure, spend a day in these galleries, finding treasures in every nook and cranny.  That said, I did not even get a chance to enter the more practical side of the museum.
In the restroom, the instructions for washing hands were appropriate to the setting:  "Wash your hands to the tune of Yankee Doodle Dandy!"

​Afterward, there was a concert on the lawn by a Jimmy Buffet tribute band.  I spent a little time there, but Buffet is not my musician (with literally every song being about drinking alcohol), and I needed to eventually get back to the hotel to cool off before another interesting evening activity.
Picture
Picture
Picture
0 Comments

History in Residence

9/9/2022

0 Comments

 

Introduction

Students in America’s public schools are desperately deficient in the area of our nation’s history.  This is apparent in daily news reports and behaviors.  Appreciation for where we’ve been, the stumbles made along the way, and how we got to this point must be taught in order to establish a more qualified citizenry.  History in Residence is a unique opportunity to approach those needs.

Program Explanation

Picture
With History in Residence, schools tap into the unique expertise of a professional, certified educator who is especially knowledgeable in the field of history.  The program  is unique in that the presenter leads students but also trains the teachers in the process.  An initial meeting will be established for the teachers to meet with the master teacher, Dale Hoggatt.

Hoggatt brings his experience into classrooms for a week (approximately one hour per classroom per day).  During this time, students learn history through the use of artwork, primary documents, classroom discussion, and engaging presentations.  For the first two days, Mr. Hoggatt engages the class.  For two more days, the classroom teacher will be called upon to “team teach” with Mr. Hoggatt.  On the final day, the classroom teacher will lead and Mr. Hoggatt will observe. Mr. Hoggatt even leaves an additional set of lessons for the teacher to utilize after the residency concludes.

Not only does the class benefit, but the teacher also receives direct experiential training - not only as a demonstration, but through supervised practice and feedback in hopes that history, as a subject, does not continue to be marginalized or avoided altogether.

Units of Study

Possible units of study include First Colonies, Prelude to Revolution, Independence, Expansion, or National Parks.  Others could be tailored to a school’s request.

Important Note:  Materials and presentations during History in Residence address state standards and do not support a political movement or ideology.  The focus is placed on artifact analysis, primary sources, and empathy and does not promote or deny modern, hot-button topics.

Experience

Picture
Dale Hoggatt invested 32 years as a classroom teacher in America’s public schools.  He was recognized with:
  • The Chamber of Commerce’s Golden Apple Award
  • The School district’s Teacher of the Year
  • The State’s History Teacher of the Year

He has been trained on site at:
  • George Washington’s Mount Vernon Virginia
  • Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia
  • Fort Ticonderoga in upstate New York

He serves as a master teacher for the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History in New York City and recently wrote curriculum for the Lincoln Presidential Foundation in Illinois.  He currently supervises student-teachers for Pittsburg State University in Kansas.

In addition, Hoggatt is Disney-trained as one of only 50 teachers honored at Disney World’s 50 Teachers Celebration in 2022, even grand marshaling the Fantasy Festival Parade at Magic Kingdom.

Logistics and Details

History in Residence utilizes engaging classroom discussion and academic rigor.  All students are invited to enter the conversation in a non-threatening process, followed by hands-on creative response, which may even cross into other areas of the curriculum.
​

Mr. Hoggatt accommodates multiple classrooms in one school, ideally for five consecutive days.  Charges for this professional development and engaging classroom program vary and are dependent upon number of classrooms, materials, distance and mode of  travel, and other expenses.  All charges include the pre-residency meeting and post-residency lessons.  Hit the button below to get in touch with Mr. Hoggatt for a quote!
Contact Mr. Hoggatt
0 Comments

CWTI:  18th Century Educational Materials

9/8/2022

0 Comments

 
In one of our sessions at Colonial Williamsburg Teachers Institute, I had the chance to investigate some educational materials.  Culturally, the language and stories of the 1700s is quite a bit different, but it would be interesting to try to teach from these types of materials.
In the final picture below, you can see an alphabet doll. There are cards to go with the doll to show the doll in positions to emulate the letters of the alphabet.  I've seen these dolls and the cards before, but I didn't realize how they could be used to teach the letters.  It is an interesting concept and could still be used today in much the same manner.
0 Comments

Inspirational Speaker & Professional Developer

9/7/2022

0 Comments

 
The teacher is now leading adults and groups outside of the classroom.
Picture
Book Mr. Hoggatt securely for your event through GigSalad.
0 Comments

CWTI:  In the Vicinity of the Governor's Palace

9/6/2022

0 Comments

 
There are nooks and crannies within Colonial Williamsburg that I have yet to explore.  While the tourism emphasis seems to be upon Duke of Gloucester Street, less centralized areas offer more history.  In the area, one might locate the Thomas Everard house.  Everard was not a rich man by any means, but appears to have been in the midst of much of the political action in the Virginia Colony, even taking part in selecting the men to represent the colony for the Continental Congress.
Picture
Picture
Picture
If you look at the main entrance to the Governor's Palace and then allow your gaze to drift to the left, your eyes might land upon the George Wythe house.  This house served as headquarters for the more well-known George - Washington, that is.  This latter-mentioned George used the former's house as headquarters before the decisive Yorktown Battle.

But George Wythe (pronounced like with) is more than the placard on the outside of his house describes.  Not only was he a signer of the Declaration of Independence, but he also:
  • tutored Thomas Jefferson
  • was the first professor of law at William and Mary
  • was the second professor of law in the English-speaking world
  • introduced judicial review
  • was the only founder to free his slaves during his lifetime

We can't appreciate this man enough for his contributions to society and to this nation.  Later in the week, we were introduced to Wythe, interpreted and portrayed by Robert Weathers.  Pictured here, Weathers presents Wythe with a distinct and intricate vocabulary, tinged with political commentary that touches on both the large events of the 18th Century, as well as everyday life in the colonial capital.  Much of his presentation speaks to our own current events and could be debated just as easily on talk radio, today.
Look to the right from the Governor's Palace, and you may notice the lovely wooden house pictured below.  That is the Peyton Randolph house.  Cousin to Thomas Jefferson, Peyton Randolph served as the first and third president of the Continental Congress.  He was also the last speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses.  I returned to the backyard of this house, one evening, during a special "ghost tour" and heard some "chilling" tales of events that are said to have occurred in and around this house.
Picture
Picture
Speaking of chilling, if you're ever near the Governor's Palace in Colonial Williamsburg, keep your eyes peeled for this little guy.  Don't let his small stature deceive you.  This little demon squirrel has to the potential to eat your face!  He came at me and wouldn't leave me alone for a few minutes, often approaching me on hind legs, ready to pounce at any second.  I physically had to walk backwards and verbally instruct him to grant me my personal space.  This Loyalist, tax-gathering squirrel wanted to put his hand in my pocket and abscond with my own hard-earned income.  No doubt there were others, hiding in the trees, ready to massacre anyone they suspected of being Patriots against the king.  All I say is beware...and be careful whom you trust.
Picture
0 Comments

CWTI:  Governor's Palace (Dining & Entertaining)

9/5/2022

0 Comments

 
The ornate décor of the Governor's Palace is probably most obvious in the places guests would frequent.  That, logic would tell us, is the massive dining and congregating areas.  Here are the places of dancing and feasting in all of their proper splendor.
​Music would have been front and center, as well as all of the fancy china, fine crystal, and silver service.  As you enter this room, you may be drawn to the molding around the doors and windows, as well as that marking the chair rail and outlining the ceiling.  The candle holder in that fourth picture below, by the way, was originally used by the British sympathizer, Lord Dunmore.
0 Comments

CWTI:  Governor's Palace (Interior)

9/4/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
The Governor's Palace at Colonial Williamsburg may be described, quite frankly, as shock-and-awe.  While the original structure has long since burned down, finding the foundation and digging with archaeological eyes were a priority in the effort of rebuilding.  The items inside are mostly authentic to the period, but not to the location.

The entry room is especially a show of force with crisscrossed swords and overlapping muskets in every direction of the eye.  The room takes on an artistic flare as weaponry makes patterns awaken in the mind's eye.
In the dig efforts, some items were recovered and included in the rebuild.  Among them was an ornately-carved mantlepiece in the room on the right.
There are things to see and soak in from all directions as one imagines the governor's family living in this setting.  It rivals and perhaps surpasses many modern governors' mansions in appearance, but in history, there would be few to rise to the occasion of this one.
Of course, it would difficult to discuss the Governor's Palace without mentioning Lord Dunmore.  Dunmore was appointed to the role of governor on behalf of King George III, and he was as loyal to the Mother Country as one could get.

The problem may come in that for many, Dunmore is a hero.  After all, isn't he the progressive man who offered to set some of the enslaved population free?  Well, actually there is more to the story:

First, Dunmore only offered to set free the men owned by Patriots.  He did not promise the slaves of Loyalists to be freed, and thus, the British did not have slaves running away to fight.

Second, he only freed the men, leaving the rest of the enslaved family behind.

And that's not to mention that when the British lost, many of the enslaved men who had cut the deal with Lord Dunmore were returned to their masters anyway.
Dunmore was forced to leave the Palace, running away from factions stronger than his own British resolve.  He left some items in the Palace that are true to Dunmore's family, including the candle holders on the dining table (See tomorrow's report for photos).
0 Comments

CWTI:  Governor's Palace (Exterior)

9/3/2022

0 Comments

 
There comes a time when we must visit the governor. One such governor would have been Lord Dunmore, infamous for his attempt to manipulate the Revolution in favor of the British.  He did so by recruiting the slaves of Patriots to serve in the British military, promising them freedom if they did.  Notice, he did not recruit the slaves of Loyalists.
There came a time when Dunmore had to skip town, abandoned the Governor's Palace.  The original building, like so many, burned, but in the ashes and ruins, archaeology has discovered some interesting things - including human remains.
Picture
The Colonial brick building has been rebuilt and refurnished at great expense and in intricate detail.

Our group had a scheduled tour of the Governor's Palace, in which we were directed into the various rooms on two stories.  We'll see interior in future articles, which include some of Lord Dunmore's possessions.

The Governor's Palace sits in stark contrast to some of the other lifestyles in the area.
Picture
0 Comments

Artemis I

9/2/2022

0 Comments

 
If all goes as planned, Artemis I, NASA's human-rated rocket to beyond the moon, will launch before noon, today.  The first video (below left) gives an understandable explanation of the mission and its many parts.  The second video tells lots of overwhelming numbers to explain more of the details.

One of the mission stats is that this vehicle contains parts from each of the 50 states.  In our own area, batteries are engineered and manufactured at Eagle Picher Technologies.  Historically speaking it was the creative use of Eagle Picher batteries that saved Apollo 13.

Our prayers are with all of the folks at NASA in hopes that the launch and the mission are successful and that our scientists and engineers will learn from everything that happens.
One of my best friends from high school is the Thermal Lead for the Solid Rocket Booster.  In layman's terms, he ensures the exterior of the Booster stays within its temperature limits during ascent.  Now, I'm not actually sure what one does if the thing gets too hot, especially since those solid boosters are only active for a couple of minutes.  It's going to take somebody more qualified than I am, and I guess that's why Darrell is on the job.  He has been with NASA for several years, and he is one of the smartest people I know.

Just to think that he graduated with me.  That his birthday is just three days after mine.  That he comes from the same small-town (population:  7348).  And that he successfully climbed the engineering ladder in his dream job

From the Archives (May 18, 1982)

This is truly momentous as Darrell and another peer, Jimmy Campbell, appeared on page one of the very first issue of the small-town newspaper, the Tuttlelite.  I launched (Pardon the pun.) and operated the newspaper during the summer before our senior year at Tuttle High School.  Produced before computers would assist in the typesetting and layout, the newspaper was typed on a typewriter and glued down to large pieces of paper with light blue lines before being delivered to the printing press in nearby El Reno, Oklahoma (And yes, there were typographical errors:  one glaring one can be seen in the caption below the photo.).

How cool is it, though, that my paper was the first to document Darrell's experience with NASA, only to see his work showcased, today, in the international news story of Artemis I and the United States' reentry into moon exploration (and beyond).
Picture
0 Comments

CWTI:  This Mighty Oak

9/1/2022

0 Comments

 
as an ook cometh of a litel spyr
In other words, "Mighty oaks from little acorns grow."  It's one of the things you may think about when you come across this Compton Oak at Colonial Williamsburg.  It is the largest known Compton Oak in the United States of America, and you just know that something historic must have happened beneath its limbs.

The Colonial Williamsburg website gives the stats:  it is 70 feet tall and nearly 100 feet wide, with a trunk circumference of 14 feet.  It must have been there forever, right?  Well, apparently this tree is misleading.  Again, from the CW website:
C. Justus Brouwers, the first landscape superintendent for The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, is said to have found the tree during a walk in the Pungo woods near Virginia Beach, Virginia. According to local legend, Brouwers transplanted the young tree to Williamsburg, probably sometime between 1932 and 1936, around the time of the Colonial capital’s restoration. A study of photographs taken before the Restoration found no Compton oak on Market Square.
Picture
Still, the tree is crazy big.

When I stood under it, my mind took me to Sherwood Forest.  There is a tree there - a Major Oak - that is 800 to 1,000 years old.  It is a tree so large that its long branches are braced to prevent them from breaking and damaging the entire tree.  It is the location of the legendary Robin Hood and his merry men.  It could be the rumored trysting place of Robin and his betrothed Maid Marian.  Nearby is St. Mary's church where the two were supposedly married.

The Compton Oak at Williamsburg could have similar stories attached.  People get engaged in its shadow. Couples are married inside its umbrella.
Stand tall, oh mighty oak, for all the world to see.
Your strength and undying beauty forever amazes me.
Though storm clouds hover above you,
Your branches span the sky
In search of the radiant sunlight you
Count on to survive.
When the winds are high and restless and
You lose a limb or two,
It only makes you stronger.
We could learn so much from you.
Though generations have come and gone
And brought about such change,
Quietly you've watched them all,
Yet still remained the same.
I only pray God gives to me
The strength he's given you
To face each day with hope,
Whether skies are black or blue.
Life on earth is truly a gift.
Every moment we must treasure.
It's the simple things we take for granted
That become our ultimate pleasures.
​
​© Kathy J. Parenteau
Picture
Picture
Those limbs extend so far that they scrape the ground, enveloping everything that sits near the tree's trunk.
Historic?  Moderately.  Scientific?  Apparently.  Special?  Definitely.
Picture
0 Comments
Forward>>

    Anthem

    The Hoggatteer Revolution
    is
    an extensive,
    award-winning, 
    inimitable,
    digital platform
    for Encouraging
    ​and Developing
    ​the Arts, Sciences, and honest Christianity

    in the beautiful, friendly

    LAND OF THE FREE
    AND THE HOME
    ​OF THE BRAVE
    This site is described as
    "a fantastic site... chockablock full of interesting ideas,
    hilarious ane
    cdotes,
    and useful resources."
    Picture
    Picture
    ...to like, bookmark, pin,
    ​tweet, and share

    about the site...
    and check in regularly
    for new material,
    ​posted
    often before 
    ​DAWN'S EARLY LIGHT!

    Picture

    Passing Notes

    EMAIL MR. HOGGATT
    Picture

    History in Residence

    Elementary Schools:
    ​Bring Mr. Hoggatt
    into your classroom
    for a week
    of engaging
    ​
    and rigorous

    ​history programming
    ​with your students.

    ​LEARN MORE
    Picture

    Intercom

    GigSalad Member Since 2022
    Book Mr. Hoggatt Securely
    ​for Your Event
    ​at GigSalad.com.

    Picture

    Trophy Case

    Picture
    Preacher, starting 2025
    Picture
    Project TRAILS, starting 2025
    Picture
    Student Teacher Supervisor, since 2022
    Picture
    Master Teacher, since 2021
    Picture
    Recruited Lincoln Presidential Foundation Curriculum Writer, 2022
    Picture
    Retiree, 32 years serving Joplin and Oklahoma City Schools, 2022
    Picture
    Selected Participant for 2020-2022
    Picture
    Selected Honoree/Celebrant, 2022
    Picture
    Outstanding Achievement, 2022
    Picture
    Classroom Grant, 2018-2022
    Picture
    2021 Missouri History Teacher of the Year and National History Teacher of the Year Nominee
    Picture
    Recognized in Joplin Globe, February 2021
    Picture
    Teacher Institute Participant, 2019
    Picture
    Summer Residency Participant, 2018
    Picture
    "The Bus Stops Here" Grant, November 2018
    Picture
    Summer Residency, 2018
    Picture
    Recognized 2017
    Since 2017
    Picture
    MSTA Media Award, KOAM-TV's "Manners Matter", Featuring Our Class, May 2017
    Picture
    Third Place, 2016 Film Festival
    Picture
    Recognized 2016
    Picture
    Slide Certified, 2012
    Picture
    2009 Outstanding Class Website
    Picture
    2005 Nominee
    Picture
    2005 Joplin Teacher of the Year and Missouri Teacher of the Year nominee
    Picture
    2004 Recipient
    Picture
    2002 Excellent Education Program
    Picture
    2001 Nominee
    Picture
    1996 Outstanding Classroom Video
    Picture
    Grant Recipient, 1993

    Picture

    Fireside Chats

    Picture
    Choose Your Platform:
    Anchor
    ​Apple Podcasts (iTunes)
    Breaker
    Google Podcasts
    ​
    Overcast
    Pocket Casts
    RadioPublic
    Spotify
    Stitcher
    Picture

    Archives

    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012

    Picture

    Checks & Balances

    Links to external sites
    on the internet are for convenience only.

    No endorsement or approval of any content, products, or services is intended.

    Opinions on sites are not necessarily shared
    by Mr. Hoggatt
    (In fact, sometimes
    Mr. Hoggatt doesn't agree with anyone.)
    Picture
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.

Picture