Monday, June 24, 2013

Adjacent Religious Histories

Angie and I finally took advantage of a nice, open Saturday to drop by the Joseph Smith Birthplace Memorial in South Royalton, VT. Only 90 minutes away, it's a really beautiful area and the grounds there are spectacularly well-maintained. There is a visitor's center with some interesting info and friendly senior missionaries on hand to do their best to answer whatever questions you might have. We had a good time wandering the trails and seeing the old foundations of Smith/Mack family homes including the one in which Joseph was born which, according to the nice senior missionary from Mesa, AZ, has only been marked since last year.

Afterwards we took a moment to locate an "ancient Celtic temple" stone chamber that was rumored to be near the JSM. Since our little visit to America's Stonehenge in North Salem, NH I have been doing a lot of research on these kinds of sites with growing interest. I had read a lot about this particular stone chamber, but (as is the case with all these sites) nobody ever publishes their exact locations for fear of vandalism, etc. Well, after easily 8 hours of careful searching beforehand, I did find one 20-30 year-old source that provided written directions for finding the chamber in South Royalton. We followed the directions that afternoon and with a little creative interpretation of the author's somewhat lacking instructions, there it was!

Even Angie thought it was pretty darn cool. It looks like a hobbit hole-in-the-ground. You can only access it by crawling nearly prone through the birth-canal of an entryway, but it opens up into a circular room that you can stand up in with stone walls maybe 10 feet apart. There are some grooved markings in the stones that experts claim to have been able to translate as a dedication of the chamber to the sun god, "Bel". It didn't take long before we realized that the chamber contained copious amounts of enormous black, shiny spiders and we got out of there.