New York and Niagara

I want to talk about vacations in New York State, but I’m going to cheat a little.

How?

Well, we’ll be in upstate New York, so I’m just going to duck over the border into Canada.  Niagara Falls, that is.

Okay.

Good.  Well, here we are in Cooperstown, New York.    That’s the site of Major League Baseball’s Hall of Fame and Museum.

HOF

Naturally, the portion devoted to the Dodgers was my favorite.  They’ve got a large wraparound photo of Ebbets Field, where the team played.  It has a three-dimensional feel to it.

E Field

I guess it would be impressive.

Right.  And a nearby display holds uniforms and bats from three players.

uniforms

Roy Campanella is 39 and Duke Snider is number 4.  Do you know who 42 is>

Jackie Robinson.  I remember the movie of that number.

Right.

One other photo.  A couple of blocks from the museum is a small ballfield named after Abner Doubleday, who is generally credited with inventing the game of baseball.

D Field

It’s used mostly for exhibition games.  Not for any one team.  They figure the field belongs to all of baseball.

Okay.

Now here’s where we step over the border into Niagara Falls, Canada.  From our hotel we could see both the American and Canadian waterfalls.

falls

We took a bus side trip along the Niagara River.

river

That’s me, of course.  There’s a boat called The Maid of the Mist that cruises past the foot of the falls.

maid

And we suited up to take the cruise.

raincoat

Before ending our visit we stopped really close to the falls.

C falls

That is close.

Okay.  Now we’re back on U.S. soil.  In New York City, to be exact.  Around Central Park South, we found horse-drawn carriages.

SP South

Of course, we visited Times Square.

Times

And why go to New York without seeing a show?

chorus

And in what other city could you find souvenirs of a team that left the area three decades ago?

BD shirt

That’s the same shirt I’m wearing in a group photo at an AARP meeting.

When did the Dodgers leave Brooklyn?

Their  last season in Brooklyn was 1957.  Then the owner moved the team to Los Angeles and I lost interest in them.

A lot of fans were disappointed?

I’ll say.  And, as you can see from the shop selling this shirt, they haven’t given up their devotion to the team, even after all these years.  You could say I’m still a Brooklyn Dodgers fan.

 

Anyway, another evening we saw another show.  It was at the Imperial theater, and we saw Jerome Robbins’ Broadway.

nyc robbins

What was that about?

nyc playbill

It was a review.  Robbins had choreographed many musicals and directed a few.  This show was a series of numbers from his shows.

Like?

Like West Side Story.  He was choreographer and director for that one.  You may remember the creative dances from that one.  By the Jets, for instance.

nyc wsstory

I remember they did that on TV when the show first opened.

Right.

And the next day we took a tour of the city.  It included a cruise around the harbor on this ferry.  That’s our tour guide in pink.

nyc ferry

We cruised around the harbor.

nyc harbor

And we made a stop at the Statue of Liberty.

nyc liberty

Always impressive.

Sure is.

And we had some free time to walk around.  Like, on Broadway, we came across these folks playing chess.

nyc chess

I see a bunch of kibitzers.  Including a policeman.

Yeah.  There was a chummy atmosphere to the place.  Of course, there were some raunchier places, such as this scene. on 7th  Avenue.

nyc 7th ave

Did you take in the nudie show?

Hah!   No, we passed on that one.  I photographed it just to capture the flavor of the area.

Then we went on to Times Square.

nyc times

A lot of people there.

Yeah.  And a lot of pigeons.

nyc pigeons

I’ll say.

And, are you familiar with George M. Cohan?

I’ve heard of him.  Didn’t Jimmy Cagney play him in a movie?

nyc cagney

Right.  Yankee Doodle Dandy.  Well, Cohan also wrote the song, “Give My Regards to Broadway.”

nyc regards

So, to honor him — and Broadway — they put up this statue in Times Square.

nyc cohan

Fortunately, the pigeons left him alone.  At least on the day we were there.

Well, that wraps up our New York visit.

Thanks for the ride.