VOA标准英语2010-Visiting Washington This Summer?(在线收听) |
You won't need a hand fan or cool towelettes if you check out President Washington's home Ted Landphair | Washington, D.C. 12 April 2010 George Washington's plantation home lies about 20 kilometers south of Washington, on the Potomac River. But tourists have no trouble finding it. It's Spring — prime tourist season in the Washington, D.C., area. But sweltering summer weather will soon arrive along the Potomac River, and America's most famous farmhouse is ready. Mount Vernon, the home of George Washington, the nation's first president, is air-conditioned. What's so special about that? The owners of historic properties wrestle with a basic question: Should we preserve our treasure as close as possible to its condition when famous people lived or worked here? After all, we do things like scraping through layers of paint just to find and restore authentic colors from a century or two ago.
The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association — the nation's first preservationist organization that once saved Washington's estate from ruin after the U.S. Civil War — struggled mightily with this dilemma. For years many members opposed any climate-control measures, noting that George and Martha Washington certainly never flipped on an air-conditioning switch. They also worried that the installation of a/c would damage plaster and wallpaper and wood. Alexander Robertson's painting of Mount Vernon was created in London in 1800 - the very year that Congress first met in the new national capital. We don't see a window air conditioner anywhere.
So even though Mount Vernon is 211 years old, it's cool. Literally. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2010/4/98213.html |