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link to the photos follows the end of the article.
From New York City it is supposedly
a 3.5 hour drive; but it took us over 5 hours because of heavy traffic
at certain choke points along the way heading into a holiday weekend amid
extensive road construction on I-95 in New York and Connecticut. We left
about 4pm Thursday and arrived about 9:30pm. One hour was spent in a 2
mile stretch of merging traffic. The fog was dense as we approached Newport
via 2-lane country roads. We used Mapquest.com to get driving instructions;
it was very impressively accurate and easy to understand. Definitely one
of the great inventions in the century of the automobile. Having arrived,
most restaurants close their kitchens at 10, but we found the Red Parrot
Pub right by Thames Street and Memorial Boulevard, which is a central point.
Our late night food was topped off with a huge ice cream sundae featuring
chocolate ice cream with black cherries, raspberry and butterscotch sauce,
oreo cookies and cream. It somehow went down rather well.
We are in the brand-new annex of
the Admiral Weaver Inn at 28 Weaver Street, within good walking distance
to many of the local attractions. We parked our car in front of the inn,
never to move it again till we left. There is lots of traffic within Newport;
the town has 35,000 permanent residents and tons of tourists and vacationing
residents packing in during the summer. The inn features comfortable clean
rooms with the added bonus of being the only kosher bed and breakfast in
New England. This is very special to Orthodox Jews so I will spend the
rest of this paragraph providing details (www.kosherbedandbreakfast.com,
telephone 401.849.0051, Mary Ellen is the innkeeper). That means they serve
pancakes and omelettes for breakfast (and kosher people can eat it), and
someone knows to turn lights on and off during the sabbath so that people
can walk into a strange multi-level house without fearing a dark stairway.
We paid $125 per night on Thursday night, and $175 per night on the weekend.
The inn is full all summer long, so book in advance. The annex was just
built and we were the first ones to stay in the new rooms; they weren’t
decorated yet and it was pretty much Home Depot decor for now, and until
they put in proper window treatments, rooms facing West are much better
for those who wake up to sunlight. The ones in the main house were decorated
in Victorian style; room 6 on the third floor was our favorite of them.
It is roughly a 3 star property. People on the ground floor found it noisy,
so we recommend the second or third floors in the main house. There were
a variety of people there, but at this time all of them were religious
Jews of various stripes and it was pleasant for the sabbath to have all
the people eating their meals in the breakfast room. You can purchase meals
from the local caterer for $25 a meal (but they weren’t very good, although
this is a brand new service and they may still be figuring things out)
or bring your own food, which is what we did; all rooms come with refrigerators.
Someone brought their own chulent (beef stew) pot and made their own food
in the inn’s kitchen. Some families take over the inn for a weekend and
make nice family reunions there. The inn is a 20 minute walk from the Touro
Synagogue, which is Orthodox. This is a very good place for a religious
couple to spend the weekend, and we are told that an Eruv is to become
operational within the month (of special interest to Orthodox Jews so that
they can carry things in the street and walk with baby carriages during
the sabbath).
Newport on the whole is a nice place
for couples to take a short holiday. It is very much a walking town with
good food options.
On Friday, we started a 20 minute
walk at about 10:30 to the Breakers Mansion. Buy a $31 pass to all 5 mansions
that one should see. The pass is good for multi-day use and you cannot
do this all in one day. On Friday, we went to the Breakers, rambled along
the Cliff Walk behind the mansion to another mansion called RoseCliff,
and then a bit further to the Marble House, and then took the trolley from
the front of the mansion for the 10 minute ride back to the center of town
by about 3:30. All of the mansions are within 20 minutes walk of each other
but because 3 of the 5 have guided tours, you will spend over an hour at
each of those properties and you will walk a lot on the properties. Eat
your Wheaties before starting and take a bottle of water because there
is no food service on any of these properties and the neighborhood is strictly
residential. Car parks are available, but the streets are clogged and it
is best to walk around. It is also very pretty with lots of beautiful trees,
homes and backyards to sit in. The cliff walk that runs from the Breakers
toward RoseCliff is about 1/4 mile but it is very rugged over rocks and
one should definitely exit after that quarter mile walk because the next
exit is not for another mile or so. The cliff walk from the Breakers the
other way back toward Memorial Boulevard via the 40 Steps (roughly a mile)
is much easier and we did that later in the visit. All 5 mansions are distinct
and they are all impressive in their own way; the one mansion we felt was
not as good as the others was the Elm House, but it has a very pretty back
yard with these huge elephant-like trees that you should step under to
fully appreciate. The Marble House is very extravagant and the Breakers
is very large. They are all very nicely decorated and the RoseCliff has
quite a bit of charm. 3 of the 5 homes have guided tours, usually about
45 minutes in length; 2 of them are self-guided with audio players or you
can go without. All houses have shops in them selling more or less the
same merchandise; you can also find these shops in the major hotels and
in the center city area; don’t buy books at the first house you see because
then you have to walk around with your shopping all day. One thing we didn’t
see is Astor House, a mansion with costumed people giving a sense of historical
flavor. We are told it is very interesting, but we had quite enough with
these 5 mansions on this trip to keep us busy.
Friday late lunch at Le Bistro at
Bowen’s Wharf, right along the harbour-front. This was a real lucky find
and if the place is full during mealtimes, consider eating here at an off
hour; we liked the lunch menu more than the dinner menu and the items were
more interesting than usual. On the second floor there are pretty tables
facing the window overlooking the public areas and the harbour with the
ships at sea. I had a hot grilled salmon sandwich on rye bread with a mocha
layer cake; all excellent and very reasonably priced. When we were there,
the staff of the hotel across the street came outside to sing American
songs at 4pm on the Fourth of July. It was a local happening. We took a
5pm one hour harbour cruise with the Spirit of Newport, a covered boat.
We had enough sun by then and didn’t want to go out on a sailboat or one
of the other smaller craft that were going out that hour. That night were
fireworks by the harbour; no big deal but again a local happening and most
of the people at the inn took the 10 minute walk over to see it. Best viewing
site we scouted is to enter the alleyway and parking lot next to Percy’s
restaurant across Thames from the Red Parrot (Thames & Memorial Blvd)
and keep walking toward the edge of the docks as far as you can go.
Saturday morning we walked to Touro
Synagogue, said to be the oldest in America. It is not air conditioned,
but this usually doesn’t matter (though it did the day we were there).
Legend has it that George Washington visited there, but there is no proof
of this. He did send a letter about religious tolerance to the synagogue
which is prominently posted on its wall. Services there are living history;
the reading of the prophets that morning must have begun in 1786. After
the services there is a little food and a chance to meet other people,
not all of whom are tourists. The nearby Hotel Viking is a high-quality
traditional hotel, and the synagogue itself is close to the center of the
city. After lunch at 2pm we continued with Elm House mansion and then Chateau-Sur-Mer.
This last place was actually one of the best, because it really was decorated
in an interesting way. Now it is about 5pm and we went back on the Cliff
Walk by the Breakers heading toward the 40 steps and Memorial Boulevard,
which is the closest main street to our inn. It is an hour’s walk taken
casually, and we sat around the 40 steps area along the cliffs and the
sea and ambled back close to 7. Dinner at Puerini’s Restaurant, 24 Memorial
Boulevard, a few blocks from the hotel. Very home-style southern Italian
cooking; they don’t take reservations, there is no air conditioning and
you might have to wait for a table, but it is very good. That evening after
dinner we were rather tired and didn’t last through more than 10 minutes
of the video we borrowed from the inn’s library.
Sunday morning an early morning walk
around center city to the Washington Square and historical district area,
nothing to speak of, but it was a nice walk rounding out along the harbour-front.
We were very lucky that Friday and even Saturday the temperatures and humidity
were most pleasant, but our luck ran out about 10:30am Sunday with very
hot and sticky weather which forced us to the showers just before leaving
the inn an hour later and reaching the city’s exit by noon. It took about
4½ hours to return to New York. Avis rental car “discovered” some
car damage upon our return; we have no idea how it might have happened
since we drove straight to the inn and then straight home and never left
the car unattended anywhere except on a public street right in front of
the inn, but I took insurance and I expect that will be the end of the
matter. If it isn’t, this space will be updated with an alert. In any event,
I always advise people renting cars to take insurance and to only waive
the Collision portion if their credit card picks up that insurance and
one should check with their credit card companies before renting cars (ie:
Citibank Visa does; American Express doesn’t). The cost of the 2 day rental
from Avis with a 20% travel agent’s discount was $305, including taxes
and insurance.
To see
Photos of Newport, please click here. |