Baltimore, MD
To the left is a picture of me with Elizabeth Rowan in the stands at Camden Yards in Baltimore. Elizabeth got me tickets to the three game set between the Yankees and Orioles July 3-July 5. It was so awesome seeing the Yankees sweep the series! I think Elizabeth is good luck for the Yankees! Camden Yards is a beautiful park, and Elizabeth got me great seats, especially to the first game! An extra special thanks goes to Elizabeth for getting me these tickets and for showing me around Baltimore as well!

Elizabeth-you rock! You're cool, you're awesome, you're the best, you're wonderful, and I totally dig you!
To the left is a picture of the Yankees congratulating each other after the win on July 3. To the bottom is a picture of Paul O'Neill at the plate. Below that is a picture of the Camden Yards scoreboard(the 3 crabs are a shell game-like the hat game at Yankee Stadium). To the bottom left is the Camden Yards lemonade vendor who does a little dance as he shakes the lemonade before handing it to the fan.
To the left is a statue of Babe Ruth outside Camden Yards. I had no idea Babe Ruth was born in Baltimore! Below is an Antioch mosaic which was a special display at the Baltimore Museum of Art.
To the left is a picture from the dolphin show at the National Aquarium in Baltimore. The Aquarium is an awesome place. I would have taken more pictures there but I figured that the flash would have gone right off the glass tank walls.

Offical Baltimore Aquarium Website
To the left is a view of the Baltimore Inner Harbor in late evening. The sun is slowly going down in the background. Paddleboats are still out on the harbor.
These three pictures are from Fort McHenry(a key site in the War of 1812 Battle of Baltimore and, of course, the place where our National Anthem was born).

Offical Ft. McHenry site


Above and to the left is a view of the Fort with the flag waving(not the original flag-that flag is at the Smithsonian in Washington, DC). Directly above are cannon(actually Civil War era) pointing out to sea. The US government used the fort during the Civil War to house suspected Confederate symphatizers including the grandson of Francis Scott Key.
To the left is the 1814 guardhouse where the flags were kept.

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