Texas White House

Fort Worth, Texas

Posts Tagged ‘Amon Carter Museum’

Blue Star Museums in Fort Worth

July 8th, 2010 by Grover McMains

Blue Star Flag

In cooperation with Blue Star Families and the National Endowment for the Arts, over 600 museums across the country are allowing active duty military and their families free admission through Labor Day of this year.  In Fort Worth the Kimbell Art Museum, the Amon Carter and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth are all participants in this program.

Have you seen a blue star on a rectangular red and white background on a car or in the window of a house?  In case you don’t know its significance, it means that a family member is serving in the United States armed forces.  It may have begun earlier, but it was a very prominent feature in homes during World War II, and if the person died serving in the military, a gold star was displayed.  During WWII The Texas White House, home to the James Newkirk family at the time, proudly displayed four blue stars.  To honor those four young men, our bed and breakfast has offered discounts to military personnel since September 11, 2001.

If you’re active duty military or know someone who is, please let them know about the Blue Star Museum program.  You can find all participating museums online at Blue Star Families.  And when you call that family, be sure to say, “thanks for your service to our country.”

Ansel Adams Exhibit at the Amon Carter Museum

May 31st, 2010 by Grover McMains

Amon Carter close to our Fort Worth bed and breakfast.

Going on from now through November 7, Fort Worth’s Amon Carter Museum is presenting Ansel Adams: Eloquent Light, a display of 40 famous and lesser-known works by the man who invented several photographic techniques in wide use today.  For those of you who don’t know of him, Ansel Adams lived from 1902 to 1984 and was best known for his black and white photography of the American West.  This exhibit fits in well at the Amon Carter since it is known for its Remington and Russell collections of both artists’ Western paintings and sculptures.  As are all the major Fort Worth museums, the Amon Carter is only a short, five minute drive from our bed and breakfast.  Remember, too, if you’re planning a trip to see this attraction, the Amon Carter is closed on Mondays.

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