While in St. Annes we did quite a bit of travelling. We drove to Preston and Chorley to the Temple. We performed endowments while the boys did baptism's. There first baptism's were with a stake in Ireland and Scotland. Some of the names they were baptized for was for a gentleman who had prepared 300,000 names for the temple. He was in the temple that day and performed some of the confirmations. As he performed each he would tell us about that particular family member. He knew each of them as if he had known them personally. Some of them lived hundreds of years before he did. It was a great experience.
On our second visit to the Preston Temple we met the Derby Ward and the Storr family. While the youth went into do baptism's we hopped on the coach with the Derby primary and went back into Preston and Avenham Park. Avenham Park is where the first baptism's in England took place. There is a bridge that crosses the River Ribble where two, soon to be members, raced across to be the first to be baptized. So of course, the primary children got to have their own foot race and ran across the same bridge. We stopped in front of the flat that Pres. Hinkley lived in as a missionary and walked through town center where the first missionaries stood to teach the gospel.
We also drove to Chatburn and Downham where some of the first, in fact almost the entire villages were converted and baptized. Downham has been kept and preserved like it was in the 1800's so all the power lines, etc. are buried.
River Ribble
My girls, Grandma Mitchell and Grandma Buchanan with their umbrellas at the Preston Temple
Our flat in St. Annes. It's next to the beach and Ashton Garden. They have a really great playground so you can imagine where we spent a lot of our time. The boys attend young men's and have
learned to play cricket and rugby. Hannah had been invited to young women's where she made jewelry. And Abigail plays with Bob, the cat that lives next door, looks for snails and digs the
flower beds around the church for rollie pollies.
We have been to the remains of Roman Cities, the Royal Armory in Leeds, north to the Lakes District to see the house on the bridge in Ambleside, Lake Windemere where Beatrix Potter was originally from and was inspired to write Peter Rabbit, viking graves in Heysham. As we travel we can see why Potter would have been inspired to write about Peter Rabbit, how Tolkien's Middle Earth came to be and there are areas where you are thinking you walked into Hogwarts and Diagon Alley.
Celebrating Landon's 13th Birthday with a chocolate Hedge Hog cake.
We also celebrated Chuck's birthday and fathers day.
There are remnants of the Roman Empire all over England. We drove through Hadrian's Wall without realizing it. If you ask the British, they built it to keep the Scottish out. If you ask the Scottish, they built it to keep the British out. The reality is that is the northern border of the Roman Empire and pretty much sits on the Scottish, English border.
Pendel Hill sits on the edge of the Yorkshiredales. The top left peak is where Heber C. Kimball and Parley P. Pratt stood to dedicate the land opening the UK to missionary work.
Built on a bridge in Ambleside to avoid paying outrageous taxes. At one time there was a family of 6 living in it. It's now owned by the National Trust and has been turned into a gift shop. It seems that a lot of the places we have visited have had scaffolding around it. I was hoping to take a picture without all of the construction.
Kids playing at Lake Windemere.
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