The Association for Clinical Pastoral Education, Inc.

2008 Annual Conference - October 22-25 - Richmond, VA

Educational Excursions and Tours

Saturday tours will depart at 11:00am and return to the hotel by 4:30pm. Tickets required.
Afterwards, gather from 5:00pm to 6:00pm for a Dialogue Session: Reflecting on our Richmond Excursions.

Scroll down to learn about a special Sunday excursion to Colonial Williamsburg!

 

Richmond Historic Tour

Fee:   $55.

 

A guided tour of Richmond's 400 year history will introduce you to both famous and not so famous residents of Richmond. Areas of the city that will be covered are the old warehouse districts of Shockoe Slip and Shockoe Bottom. You will visit the James River and Canal areas, Church Hill and St. John's Church (1741) where Patrick Henry made his plea for “liberty or death” and Capitol Square and Thomas Jefferson's Virginia Capitol Building (1788). The tour also includes a ride up stately Monument Avenue, the only street that is listed in the National registry and has been termed as “the most beautiful boulevard in America.” Box lunches will be served on the bus.

 


Short Pump Town Center Mall

Fee:   $15. (transportation only)

A historical landmark that offers an array of modern and world-class shopping. According to legend, the Nineteenth-century stage coach drivers hailed each other just beyond the fork where Broad Street now crosses Three Chopt Road, there stood a tavern. Its rambling frame structure became a beacon along the well-traveled road. At one time the Short Pump well stood out in the tavern yard, but when a new shade porch was built over it a mistake was made and the pump's long handle had to be cut off to work under the new roof. In the days when the tavern was a stagecoach stop between Richmond and Charlottesville, drivers would often say, “See you at the Short Pump.” For a small fee ACPE is providing transportation to your shopping excursion. More information about the Short Pump Town Center Mall can be found at www.shortpumpmall.com.


 

Lewis Ginter Botanical Gardens

Fee:   $15. (transportation only)
Additional addmission fee must be paid at entrance.

 

Located in historic Richmond, VA, Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden offers year-round beauty with more than 40 acres of spectacular gardens and the mid-Atlantic's only classically styled Conservatory open to the public. Great shopping and dining plus a new Children's Garden with a Tree House make the Garden a fun place to visit anytime. Come see why Lewis Ginter is the place where plants-and people-grow! For a small fee ACPE is providing transportation. Additional admission fees must be paid at the Botanical Gardens. Please visit the botanical garden website ( www.lewisginter.org ) for further information.

 


SPECIAL! Sunday Excursion to Colonial Williamsburg

Fee:   $125.

Enjoy a day in historic Williamsburg, the colonial capital. It will surround you with atmosphere. You will become part of the colonial period. You can visit the governor's palace, the capital, College of William and Mary and Bruton Parish Church. From one end of Duke of Gloucester Street to the other there are houses, gardens, varieties of livestock, taverns, stores, characters in conversation, and horse drawn transportation. There is plenty of room to walk at your pace without pressure, demands or issues. The sights, sounds and style of the colonial period are all there. It is accommodating, informative and a pleasant place. To be in Richmond for the ACPE conference and to stay for a visit to Williamsburg just makes sense.

Read more about historic Williamsburg below:

The Richmond Times-Dispatch grants permission for the cited article (below) to be reprinted for the reason stated. If possible, handouts should include the credit line "Copyright Richmond Times-Dispatch, used with permission."

An Emphasis on Diversity

An actor-interpreter offers tourists a look at Virginia 's black history

Friday, Nov 16, 2007 - 12:01 AM

By ROBIN FARMER, TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER

As an interpreter in Colonial Williamsburg, James Ingram's job provides him an astounding perk. "It's a honor for an African-American to tell these stories, because you're giving voice to people who did not have a voice," said Ingram, minutes after he finished his portrayal of Gowan Pamphlet, a tavern slave who became a preacher and founded the first Baptist church in Williamsburg . "This is the highlight of my life," said Ingram, dressed in the breeches, leggings, waistcoat, buckled shoes and round hat befitting a Baptist preacher in 1781. "I hope Gowan Pamphlet is pleased." As Pamphlet, he talks about his hopes for the future when all citizens are equal

and there is no official state religion.. . .

Ingram is among 45 actor-interpreters who enliven the Revolutionary City

program, a largely outdoor program that creates a real-time feel of Williamsburg during the years of the American Revolution. "We want to provoke our visitors. We don't just want to entertain," Ingram said.

"We're talking about subject matters people don't like to talk about" such as

politics, bigotry and race. "They sweep it under the rug, we bring it out in the open," said Ingram, who researches and helps write what he says.

For 14 years, the Portsmouth native has interpreted history as a full-time

employee with the Historic Area Division of the Colonial Williamsburg

Foundation. Ingram has depicted 25 roles ranging from Pamphlet to a freed slave named Matthew Ashby, who purchased his wife.. . .

So how did an ordained minister who holds a graduate degree from the Samuel

DeWitt Proctor School of Theology at Virginia Union University come to portray a minister from another century? The zenith of his working life happened by chance. Ingram said he came to Williamsburg for a respite. On his way home he saw a "Job Fair" sign on the Colonial Parkway . "I asked myself, 'How do you get a job at Colonial Williamsburg?'" He went to the fair where folks were dressed in costumes and to his surprise saw

an African American Interpretations and Presentations sign. "I never thought Colonial Williamsburg had a focus on African-American history," Ingram said.

He started working that summer, and "here I am 14 years later," he chuckled.. . .

The banner year for attracting black tourists was in 1999 during the "Enslaving Virginia" yearlong program that cast costumed actors as slave leaders and slave owners. Larry Earl Jr., manager of African American Initiatives for the foundation, estimated that 12 percent of the tourists in 1999 were black. Today he estimated about 2 percent of the 750,000 visitors are black. Ingram said he would like to see more black re-enactors as well as tourists. He often chats with visitors who pepper him with questions after his performance. Sometimes he has to dispel the myths about slavery. One common misperception: Slaves sang in the fields because they were happy.

"No, they sang to keep the timing of the field hoe, to control the pace of the work. And they were passing on secret codes" to those in trouble or planning to escape, he said. Ingram can be seen depicting Pamphlet several afternoons a week as part of the Nation Builders Program. For more information visit www.history.org/visit/planYourVisit/revcity/days.cfm. or www.colonialwilliamsburg.com


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