On these two pages of my scrapbook, you find me in Spring 2000.

I have just graduated from the Canadian Tourism College in Surrey, which was located at 152nd St and 101st Ave. I was accepted to join my 6-week Work Practice on board World Explorer Cruises’ Universe Explorer in about a month. Deciding to do something new and exciting, I flew down to Nashville, Tennessee. Up to this point, the furthest south I had been was to Yellowstone National Park during one of our many family summer road trips previously.

On these pages, I am wandering around the Bicentennial Capitol Mall State Park or commonly known as Bicentennial Park. I had been told a story about how a tornado had travelled up the park and into the State Capitol a few years earlier. After a search to verify this story, there was indeed a tornado outbreak in the area between April 15th-16th, 1998 known as the 1998 Nashville Tornado Outbreak, which produced 13 touchdowns. Some of which did indeed travel through downtown Nashville and produced significant damage to the area. However, I could not verify the story of one travelling “down the center” of the Park.

Located in the shadow of the Capitol in downtown Nashville, Bicentennial Park is 11-acres located in downtown Nashville and was built to commemorate the 200th year of Tennessee Statehood on June 1st, 1996. Containing picnic tables, walking trails, a 95-Bell Carillon, a Pathway of History, the Rivers of Tennessee Fountains, and a 2000 seat outdoor amphitheatre…there are events held year-round for locals and visitors alike.

The two items in the park that stuck me the most was the 200-foot granite map of the state and the granite floating globe fountain located at the WWII Memorial.

Granite Map  Andrew Jackson  Floating Globe

Quick Fact: Tennessee Map Plaza

This Plaza contains a 200-foot-wide granite map of Tennessee. It contains depictions of the geographical region of Tennessee which includes every city, county, river, highway, and railroad in the state.

Quick Fact: Andrew Jackson Statue

Andrew Jackson as the 7th President of the United States from 1829 to 1837. He was known as the "people's president” and founded the Democratic Party. However, in modern times, his legacy has come under scrutiny due to policies he instituted that resulted in the forced migration of Native Americans. 

 

Quick Fact: Tennessee World War II Memorial

Like the rest of the park, it was built to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Tennessee. However, it was not finished and dedicated until November 11, 1997 (Veteran’s Day). The primary feature of the Memorial, which children and adults alike love playing with, is the eight-ton carved stone globe, which rests on a cushion of flowing water and can be easily pushed into different angles, though it rotates on its own due to the flowing water.

On this page of my scrapbook, you find me in late summer of 2004. I joined Grand Princess in the last month the Baltic Season. This was the second time I has worked on Grand Princess. As such, I was still familiar with the ship from the first time I was onboard. However, the itineraries could not have been different from the Caribbean a year and a half earlier. This ship has also gone through massive refurbishments and reconfigurations in the last 17 years, including the removal of the originally suspended Skywalker’s Nightclub.

As ships the size of Grand Princess dock away from the City Center, we would take a shuttle into town that would deposit us at The Esplanadi near Mannerheimintie, one of the main roads through the center of the city.

The top half of this page documents the two cathedrals viewable from The Esplanadi and near-by Senate Square.

One perk of being a crew is we could apply to “Escort” passenger tours…this basically meant that we would need to carry a First Aid Kit and count heads if the guide asked…otherwise, we could enjoy the sights of the tours like anyone else.

It was on one such tour that I visited the magnificent Sibelius Monument documents on the bottom half of this page.  

 Helsinki Cathedral1  Uspenski Cathedral1 Sibelius Monument1 
 

Quick Fact: Helsinki Cathedral 

This church was originally built from 1830–1852 as a tribute to the Grand Duke of Finland, Tsar Nicholas I of Russia. It has also been known as St Nicholas' Church in the past. It is a major landmark of the city, and possibly the most famous structure in Finland.

 

Quick Fact: Uspenski Cathedral

Consecrated in 1868, it is the main cathedral of the Orthodox Church of Finland, dedicated to the Dormition (the passing from earthly life) of the Theotokos (the Virgin Mary). Its name comes from the Old Church Slavonic word uspenie, which denotes the Dormition.

 

Quick Fact: The Sibelius Monument 

Created in 1967 by Finnish artist Eila Hiltunen, it is dedicated to the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius (1865–1957) and is located within Sibelius Park, also dedicated to the said composer. It consists of series of more than 600 hollow steel pipes welded together in a wave-like pattern, which are said to whistle when the wind blows through them…although I didn’t hear it on the occasion I was there.

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