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Guest wefly66@earthlink.net

While not on a blue highway, the new 10 lane Veterans' Bridges opened

 

Sunday. Bridges, new and old alike, are sort of fascinating and

 

we'll probably be driving across them today after morning rush hour

 

is over. I'm pasting the Journal story below and apologize for its

 

length....Bliss

 

 

 

 

 

Page Avenue extension opens

 

Steve Pokin

 

Of the Suburban Journals Chesterfield Journal

 

, Press Journal

 

updated: 12/16/2003 05:50 PM

 

 

 

 

 

It seemed appropriate the Page Avenue extension grand opening would

 

face one more obstacle.

 

 

 

"It's fitting that as the project would come to its culmination that

 

we would have one last moment of adversity," said Joe Ortwerth, St.

 

Charles County executive.

 

 

 

Sloppy road conditions delayed the opening from Dec. 13 until the

 

following morning.

 

 

 

The $350 million extension, which includes the Veterans Memorial

 

Bridge, had been anxiously and wearily anticipated. It was an idea

 

first broached in 1969 and a project with which Ortwerth has been

 

intimately involved, starting years ago when he was a state

 

representative.

 

 

 

"My son's first two words were 'mommy' and 'daddy,'" Ortwerth

 

said. "His third word was 'bridge.'"

 

 

 

That son is now in college.

 

 

 

"As governor and as a senator, I've been working on this thing for

 

about 30 years," said U.S. Sen. Christopher "Kit" Bond, R-Mo. "That's

 

not too bad for government work."

 

 

 

On a cold, snowy day, the Parkway North High School marching band

 

played and dozens of veterans groups trekked across the bridge.

 

 

 

Sundry politicians, including Gov. Bob Holden, a Democrat, took seats

 

on a platform, but not without first having those seats cleared of

 

snow by workers with blowers.

 

 

 

Holden recalled the vital role played by George R. "Buzz" Westfall,

 

the former St. Louis County executive, in getting the bridge built.

 

Westfall died in October.

 

 

 

Several speakers lauded the cooperation between the two counties, as

 

well as the bipartisan spirit of politicians who worked together to

 

bring to fruition the most expensive bridge-and-road project in the

 

history of Missouri.

 

 

 

All that was missing in those brief speeches was the love.

 

 

 

Fortunately, that was provided by Gary Grier and Barbara Guignon,

 

both 51.

 

 

 

Grier maneuvered Guignon to the center of the bridge the afternoon of

 

Dec. 13 and proposed marriage. She said yes — proving that a St.

 

Louis County man and a St. Charles County woman can indeed overcome

 

the barriers that divide the two counties.

 

 

 

Guignon proudly displayed her ring — its three diamonds symbolizing

 

past, present and future.

 

 

 

The couple dated in high school — when her name was Leach — some 33

 

years and two marriages (apiece) ago.

 

 

 

"Third time's the charm!" Guignon said.

 

 

 

"I'll have pleasant thoughts whenever I drive across this bridge,"

 

Grier said.

 

 

 

The Zimmers — Earl, 64, and Mary Lou, 59 — sat in their car, in the

 

lead position of several classic cars waiting to cross the bridge.

 

 

 

The Zimmers are members of the Fabulous Fifties car club and, when it

 

comes to exploring new bridges, are a regular Lewis and Clark — if

 

the famed duo had had a '57 Chevy convertible.

 

 

 

In 1992, the Zimmers were the first to cross the Discovery Bridge,

 

which takes Highway 370 over the Missouri River, when that bridge

 

opened.

 

 

 

After Saturday's speeches and ribbon-cutting, the Zimmers drove the

 

span with a special passenger: the governor.

 

 

 

William Knowles, a Kirkwood resident who owns property in St. Charles

 

County, hiked across the bridge, walking stick in hand.

 

 

 

"We fought this bridge for many years," Knowles said. He passed

 

petitions in opposition. "We were trying to resist suburban sprawl."

 

 

 

Knowles was one of several hundred people at the Dec. 13 dedication.

 

Earlier in the day, runners had taken advantage of the rare

 

opportunity to claim universal right-of-way as they jogged the new

 

roadway and bridges. A second bridge spans Creve Coeur Lake.

 

 

 

Wayne Hoffman of St. Charles journeyed onto Veterans Memorial Bridge

 

to catch a slice of history as well as the scenery.

 

 

 

"How often am I going to be able to stand out here like this and take

 

in the view?" he asked.

 

 

 

He then considered a different scenario.

 

 

 

"If I'm stopped in traffic up here, I'm in trouble," he said.

 

 

 

The 10-lane (five lanes in each direction), eight-mile connection

 

between St. Charles and St. Louis counties is expected to relieve

 

traffic congestion on Interstate 70 at the Blanchette Memorial

 

Bridge, Highway 370 at the Discovery Bridge and Highway 40-61 at the

 

Daniel Boone Bridge.

 

 

 

About 350,000 drivers cross the three bridges on weekdays. The

 

Missouri Department of Transportation expects 60,000 of them to use

 

the new bridge.

 

 

 

The improvements make Page Avenue a 10-lane roadway from Bennington

 

Place in St. Louis County to just west of Jungs Station Road in St.

 

Charles County.

 

 

 

The Page Avenue extension was "dedicated" on Saturday and "opened" on

 

Sunday, said Linda Wilson, MoDOT spokeswoman.

 

 

 

MoDOT decided in the interest of safety to delay the opening until

 

Sunday.

 

 

 

"It would be dark and snowing and people would be driving on a road

 

they were unfamiliar with," Wilson said.

 

 

 

The official time of the opening Sunday was 10:20 a.m.

 

 

 

Traffic flowed smoothly Monday morning along the extension, Wilson

 

said. The only trouble spot, she said, was a backup where Page Avenue

 

hits Schuetz Road in St. Louis County. The intersection is about a

 

mile east of Interstate 270 and is the first traffic light eastbound

 

drivers encounter on Page.

 

 

 

MoDOT expects a major traffic snarl weekday afternoons as drivers

 

attempt to exit Interstate 270 onto westbound Page Avenue.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest wefly66@earthlink.net

Pat and Jennifer, why did my entire email address appear on

 

the "Messages" page with my "New Bridge" post of today? It will also

 

probably appear with this post. Can you please correct this?

 

Thanks....Bliss

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Guest WALTER HACKNEY

Factoid number 2 - Central Denver Lodging 1962

 

 

 

To a Route 40 traveler west across Kansas into Colorado, Denver must have

 

seemed like a huge oasis after 600 miles of prairie. A large

 

concentration of motels offering sanctuary to the weary traveler is

 

located on what was the eastern edge of metro Denver, actually the suburb

 

of Aurora. As you travel west into the center city there are

 

accommodations for businessmen and tourists alike, with Route 40 passing

 

in front of the state capitol and Denver mint among other attractions and

 

night life as the route passes through the heart of downtown Denver.

 

Continuing west, with a magnificent view of the Rocky Mountains straight

 

ahead you pass into the western suburb of Lakewood, then into Golden as

 

you reach the foothills of the Rockies. The west side has a concentration

 

of motels that serves as a base for vacationers exploring the Front Range

 

of the mountains without (as much of) the inflated tourist prices of

 

mountain lodging. I have used this geographic breakdown to separate the

 

20 plus miles of Colfax Ave. into manageable bites. I will post motel,

 

restaurant and gas station information from time to time if there seems

 

to be any interest. Please contact me directly with any comments, if you

 

would like any additional information or if you are interested in Denver.

 

 

 

 

 

Central Denver Lodging 1962 From East ot West:

 

 

 

8828 East Colfax Ave. ~ LaRue Motel ~ FL 5-1681

 

8800 East Colfax Ave. ~ Hitching Post Motor Lodge ~ EA 2-9770

 

8787 East Colfax Ave. ~ Lazy-C Motor Lodge ~ DE 3-4201

 

8701 East Colfax Ave. ~ Palomino Motor Lodge ~ DU 8-3638

 

8675 East Colfax Ave. ~ Compass Motor Lodge ~ DU 8-4231

 

8607 East Colfax Ave. ~ A Bar G Motor Lodge ~ FL 5-6002

 

8600 East Colfax Ave. ~ Brandin Iron Motor Lodge ~ FL 5-1613

 

8595 East Colfax Ave. ~ Silver Spur Motel ~ 355-7349

 

8501 East Colfax Ave. ~ San Luis Motor Court ~ FR 7-0902

 

8500 East Colfax Ave. ~ Ahwahnee Motel & Lodge ~ FL 5-7311

 

8415 East Colfax Ave. ~ Sand & Sage Motel ~ EA 2-7715

 

8405 East Colfax Ave. ~ Westerner Motel ~ FL 5-8026

 

8400 East Colfax Ave. ~ ElPatio Motel ~ DE 3-5486

 

8339 East Colfax Ave. ~ Airway Motel ~ DU 8-4139

 

8300 East Colfax Ave. ~ Chateau Motor Lodge ~ DE 3-1507

 

8282 East Colfax Ave. ~ Regiss Motor Inn ~ DU 8-1685

 

6701 East Colfax Ave. ~ Niagara House Motel ~ DE 3-1788

 

6030 East Colfax Ave. ~ Paragon Motel ~ DE 3-9970

 

5500 East Colfax Ave. ~ LaVista Motel ~ DE 3-5424

 

5226 East Colfax Ave. ~ Glencoe Tourist Rooms ~ DE 3-7672

 

3015 East Colfax Ave. ~ Fountain Inn Motel ~ DU 8-4811

 

1820 East Colfax Ave. ~ Holiday Chalet Motel ~ EA 2-9975

 

1209 East Colfax Ave. ~ West Vernon Hotel ~ KE 4-9259

 

1150 East Colfax Ave. ~ Heart O' Denver Hotel ~ CH 4-9221

 

813 East Colfax Ave. ~ Clarko Hotel ~ MA 3-9925

 

233 East Colfax Ave. ~ Hotel Argonaut ~ MA 3-3101

 

437 West Colfax Ave. ~ New Haven Housekeeping Rooms ~ MA 3-1976

 

650 West Colfax Ave. ~ Motel DeVille ~ MA 3-7071

 

4600 West Colfax Ave. ~ Four Winds Motor Hotel ~ 244-8001

 

4823 West Colfax Ave. ~ Eddie Bohn's Pig'N Whistle Motel ~

 

5035 West Colfax Ave. ~ Western Hills Motel ~ KE 4-5286

 

 

 

 

 

Walt Hackney

 

Gyrfal@Juno.com

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  • 3 weeks later...

Yo Slim!

 

 

 

Yep. Saw the show. Quite a unique quilt with various Route 66 type

 

scenes familiar on many postcards. Wish I had one! The quilt didn't

 

quite look to be commercially made. Had that human touch look. Each

 

piece of fabric and in the various colors for each of the Route 66

 

scenes appeared to me as handmade. Although, they could be massed

 

produced with pre-cut fabric pieces sewn together. Having been to a

 

quilt shop before, I believe that Route 66 quilt would still command

 

a high price. $500 - $1500 maybe. Not $10,000 though!

 

 

 

God Bless and Happy Trails.

 

 

 

the landrunner

 

 

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "ypsislim" <Ypsi-slim@j...>

 

wrote:

 

> I just caught the tail end of a new Antiques Roadshow episode from

 

> Chicago. The appraisor, who I haven't seen before, was appraising

 

> a small Route 66 quilt from the '50s - '60s. The quilt, that was

 

> bought at a flea market for $75, apparently caused quite a stir

 

among

 

> the AR Folks, and was appraised at $5,000 - $10,000!!

 

>

 

> The appraisor didn't seem to know that the quilt design appeared to

 

be

 

> an exact copy of a common "generic" type Rt. 66 postcard, that still

 

> may be "in-print" today. That leads me to wonder if the quilt

 

itself was

 

> commercially made..? Anyone see this??

 

>

 

> ypsi-slim

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Guest roadmaven

Kip,

 

Jennifer thought that sign was cool too. She's got it as part of

 

her road trip to 66 and 40 last fall:

 

http://roadtripmemories.com/trips/mo_il2003.htm

 

 

 

Pat

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "Rudyard Welborn"

 

<r.Welborn@w...> wrote:

 

> Greeun is a pretty cool town...also outside of Effingham is a

 

restaurant

 

> called (I think) the Green Lantern which is a cool place and

 

possesses one

 

> of the coolest signs on any road in america! Tsingtao, Kip

 

> ----- Original Message -----

 

> From: <jjgrant@w...>

 

> To: <AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com>

 

> Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 7:28 PM

 

> Subject: Re: [AMERICAN_ROAD] Digest Number 292

 

>

 

>

 

> > My wife just bought an '04 Neon two weeks ago. Over 1,000 miles

 

on it

 

> > already. So far, so good.

 

> >

 

> > US 40 thru Indiana is a nice scenic drive. Several old towns and

 

west

 

> > of Indy you can still drive parts of the old alignment. From

 

Terre

 

> > Haute to Effingham, Il, is also an enjoyable drive, although it's

 

only 2

 

> > lane. Greenup, Il has a "new" covered bridge built on the old

 

> > alignment west of town, pretty neat to see.

 

> >

 

> >

 

> > Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

> >

 

> > To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-

 

5434

 

> WITH YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

> > Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA

 

> 98046-3168

 

> > SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

 

> > 1 year (4 issues) for $15.95

 

> > (save $3.85 off the newsstand price!)

 

> > 2 years (8 issues) for $27.95

 

> > (save $11.65 off the newsstand price!)

 

> >

 

> >

 

> > For questions about the list, contact: AMERICAN_ROAD-

 

owner@yahoogroups.com

 

> >

 

> > To SUBSCRIBE to this group, send an email to:

 

> AMERICAN_ROAD-subscribe@y... POST a message via e-mail, send it

 

> to: AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com

 

> >

 

> >

 

> >

 

> >

 

> > Yahoo! Groups Links

 

> >

 

> > To visit your group on the web, go to:

 

> > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AMERICAN_ROAD/

 

> >

 

> > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:

 

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> >

 

> > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:

 

> > http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

 

> >

 

> >

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Guest Rudyard Welborn

Greeun is a pretty cool town...also outside of Effingham is a restaurant

 

called (I think) the Green Lantern which is a cool place and possesses one

 

of the coolest signs on any road in america! Tsingtao, Kip

 

----- Original Message -----

 

From: <jjgrant@webtv.net>

 

To: <AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com>

 

Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 7:28 PM

 

Subject: Re: [AMERICAN_ROAD] Digest Number 292

 

 

 

 

 

> My wife just bought an '04 Neon two weeks ago. Over 1,000 miles on it

 

> already. So far, so good.

 

>

 

> US 40 thru Indiana is a nice scenic drive. Several old towns and west

 

> of Indy you can still drive parts of the old alignment. From Terre

 

> Haute to Effingham, Il, is also an enjoyable drive, although it's only 2

 

> lane. Greenup, Il has a "new" covered bridge built on the old

 

> alignment west of town, pretty neat to see.

 

>

 

>

 

> Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

>

 

> To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-5434

 

WITH YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

> Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA

 

98046-3168

 

> SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

 

> 1 year (4 issues) for $15.95

 

> (save $3.85 off the newsstand price!)

 

> 2 years (8 issues) for $27.95

 

> (save $11.65 off the newsstand price!)

 

>

 

>

 

> For questions about the list, contact: AMERICAN_ROAD-owner@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

> To SUBSCRIBE to this group, send an email to:

 

AMERICAN_ROAD-subscribe@yahoogroups.comTo POST a message via e-mail, send it

 

to: AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Yahoo! Groups Links

 

>

 

> To visit your group on the web, go to:

 

> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AMERICAN_ROAD/

 

>

 

> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:

 

> AMERICAN_ROAD-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:

 

> http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

 

>

 

>

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Guest Rudyard Welborn

I will say any part of Route 60 from West Virginia to Sikeston, MO is most

 

excellent...alas, a lot of 60 in MO is 4 lane but goes through some

 

beautiful country...others can tell ya about west 60...Tsingato, Kip

 

----- Original Message -----

 

From: "Jim Ross" <pathfinder66@earthlink.net>

 

To: "American Road" <AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com>

 

Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 8:21 PM

 

Subject: [AMERICAN_ROAD] Cars

 

 

 

 

 

> Greetings All,

 

>

 

> No doubt everyone has numerous "car" stories. Here are a couple of mine. I

 

have pretty much been a Chevy man all my life, however in 1978 (when

 

Chrysler was on the brink of collapse), I purchased a new Dodge Ramcharger

 

SUV. Sometime later, after Lee Iacocca put humpty together again, I received

 

a letter from Chrysler that included a certificate for $500 off the purchase

 

of any their new vehicles. It was their way of thanking those who took a

 

chance and bought a Chrysler product during that very shaky government

 

bailout. I never used the coupon, but I thought it was a classy thing for

 

them to do. Currently I own my first foreign car, a 2001 Honda Accord with

 

V-6 engine that I bought new. I don't need to tell anyone what a great

 

vehicle it is. But I would like to tell you about my 1989 Chevy S-10 Blazer.

 

It was a used one-owner with 60K miles when I bought it in 1992. By my

 

reckoning, I am just about 2 months away from rolling over a 1/4 million

 

miles. The digital odometer is sitting on 248,000 plus change as we speak.

 

And in spite of being up and down La Bajada Hill 4 times over the years

 

along with many other off-road adventures, no internal engine work has ever

 

been done and it still doesn't use oil.

 

>

 

> Finally, Pat mentioned the scenery along US 60 in the Texas Panhandle.

 

Another nice drive in the Panhandle is TX 70 south from I-40 Exit 124

 

(Jericho) to Turkey (home of Western Swing legend Bob Wills).

 

>

 

> Jim R.

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

>

 

> To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-5434

 

WITH YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

> Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA

 

98046-3168

 

> SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

 

> 1 year (4 issues) for $15.95

 

> (save $3.85 off the newsstand price!)

 

> 2 years (8 issues) for $27.95

 

> (save $11.65 off the newsstand price!)

 

>

 

>

 

> For questions about the list, contact: AMERICAN_ROAD-owner@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

> To SUBSCRIBE to this group, send an email to:

 

AMERICAN_ROAD-subscribe@yahoogroups.comTo POST a message via e-mail, send it

 

to: AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Yahoo! Groups Links

 

>

 

> To visit your group on the web, go to:

 

> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AMERICAN_ROAD/

 

>

 

> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:

 

> AMERICAN_ROAD-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:

 

> http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

 

>

 

>

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Guest David G. Clark

American Roadies, what are you doing June 6-7-8? The Illinois Route

 

66 Motor Tour starts in my back yard this year. If anyone from the

 

list is going to be participating in the tour, try to get into

 

Chicago by Noon or so on Friday, because I plan to make myself

 

available for walking tours of the 66 alignments in Chicago's Loop.

 

 

 

Some of the highlights will include--

 

 

 

The tallest building on Route 66

 

The tallest building in the world with weight-bearing walls

 

Stunning architecture by Meis van der Rohe, Daniel Burnham, John

 

Root, and many more!

 

A stop at a restaurant on 66 that has been doing business

 

continuously since the 1890s. (Great food, brewing their own beer

 

long before the term "micro-brewery" was invented, real draft root

 

beer, private label bourbon).

 

The site of the world's first skyscraper

 

The site where Standard Time was adopted.

 

The Art Insitute

 

The Sante Fe Railway Building

 

 

 

Anyone interested in taking part in this urban adventure should

 

email me at dave@windycityroadwarrior.com The exact time and

 

itinerary of our walk will be up to the people who respond.

 

Depending on the number of people, I could do two groups—one around

 

noon, another around 2 p.m. The evening events occur in the

 

Lyons/McCook area, and start somewhere around 5 or 6 p.m. So that's

 

why these tours are going to have to be in the earlier afternoon.

 

 

 

My head is bursting with useless trivia about 66 in Chicago (and a

 

few other great American Roads, such as Lake Shore Drive, US 41, and

 

the Grand Boulevards), so anyone willing to listen to me rattle on

 

and on about the Mother (or another) Road and the Windy City is

 

invited to come along. There's no cost for this adventure, besides

 

the attack on your ear drums, but I won't turn down a Beer at the

 

Berghoff should anyone want to shut me up by sticking a stein in

 

front of me!

 

 

 

I'll post this up again periodically between now and the tour.

 

Here's all my contact info:

 

 

 

Dave Clark

 

Windy City Road Warrior

 

dave@windycityroadwarrior.com

 

http://www.windycityroadwarrior.com

 

312-432-1284

 

843 W. Adams Street #312

 

Chicago, IL 60607-3017

 

 

 

See you in Chi-Town in June!

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Guest brownwho63

When Jane heard that we had bought a new car she called to inquire

 

whether or not it was a classic Neon like hers. "Nope," I said. Not

 

even the turbo PT Cruiser that we actually looked at and talked about

 

at one time. Could not bring ourselves to cruise anything but Chevy,

 

even though we know there are other excellent rides on the market.

 

The supercharged V6 is a whole different concept from the rear driver

 

Chevy V8's we're used to (still have two) but it's road and driver

 

friendly and I foresee us going many blue highway miles together.

 

 

 

About road trips: I personally find lodging next to railroad tracks

 

to be soothing, but then what's an old two laner without a train?

 

 

 

Old U.S. 40 across IL (especially) and IN is extremely cool. It's so

 

much like '66 that it's sometimes difficult for us to decide which

 

one to take. Very well marked with Historic National Road signs and

 

well maintained. (The Green Lantern is just east of Effingham and

 

immediately west of Teutopolis, an IL basketball power with a very

 

cool main drag.)....Bliss

 

 

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "Rudyard Welborn"

 

<r.Welborn@w...> wrote:

 

(no offense Jane, as I

 

> KNOW you drive the coolest car in the world) my PT looks a heck of

 

a lot

 

> cooler than my old neon...whatever youre driving, happy and safe

 

travels

 

> this new year...Kip

 

> ----- Original Message -----

 

> >

 

> > To visit your group on the web, go to:

 

> > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AMERICAN_ROAD/

 

> >

 

> > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:

 

> > AMERICAN_ROAD-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

 

> >

 

> > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:

 

> > http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

 

> >

 

> >

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Guest Butko, Brian A.

The video is A PROGRAM ABOUT UNUSUAL BUILDINGS AND OTHER ROADSIDE STUFF by

 

Rick Sebak, PBS producer of shows such as Amusement Parks, Ice Cream, Flea

 

Markets, Shore Things, etc. If all goes according to plan, it will air on

 

PBS in Summer 2004.

 

 

 

We were interviewed at the wigwams talking about "Roadside Giants," the

 

first book my wife Sarah and I have written together. It's a

 

glove-compartment guide to larger-than-life attractions such as coffee pot

 

cafes, muffler men, etc. There are lots of great web sites and a couple big

 

books but we wanted something to inspire people (and kids) to hit the road

 

and actually visit them. It will be out Fall 2005 so we have a few months to

 

add and update in case anyone has a favorite they'd like to tell us and this

 

group about.

 

 

 

Brian

 

http://www.brianbutko.com

 

 

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "Butko, Brian A." wrote:

 

> When I visited 10 years ago, it became my favorite roadside attraction. I

 

> hoped if we ever had kids to take em there. We did just that this past

 

> summer with three; they loved it too, both the rooms and playing with other

 

> kids in the sunken playground. And it reaffirmed my feelings of it being the

 

> #1 attraction. We also did some filming for a PBS special that will air next

 

> summer that I hope will drive even more customers Ivan's way.

 

>

 

> Your pictures are fabulous - what kind of camera? Digital?

 

>

 

> Brian Butko

 

 

 

 

 

Thank you for the compliments, Brian! Yes, the pictures were taken

 

with my digital camera - a Sony Mavica CD500. I took these at 3.14

 

megapixels and resized them down for web viewing.

 

 

 

Coincidentally, when we were talking to Ivan, he mentioned a filming

 

crew being there for PBS and we were very curious about it, wanting

 

to know the details, so we wouldn't miss it when it airs!

 

 

 

I definitely hope your show drives more customers there. Ivan does a

 

great job and he has such a wonderful attitude about respecting and

 

preserving historic properties.

 

 

 

Jennifer

 

http://www.roadtripmemories.com

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Guest laurelrk66@aol.com

I'm not quite sure how to describe my emotions about this Buffalo Ranch

 

thing, since the last thing in the world I wanted to see was it being

 

destroyed, and it's definitely going down... all three remaining

 

buildings.... and soon, within days. R. I. P. Buffalo

 

Ranch. So sad.

 

 

 

But....... things could be much worse. Thinking back to my first trip to

 

Buffalo

 

Ranch as an adult (only about 6 years ago, just after all but Dairy Ranch had

 

 

 

closed), I remember seeing that incredible, huge sign out in front ("BUFFALO

 

 

 

RANCH -- Visitors Welcome") and thinking that if I was called upon to make a

 

list of ten things on Route 66 that I'd like to own and preserve, that sign

 

would be one of them! Well, folks..... now I own it!!! Yes, it's mine,

 

and now it is up to me to make sure that it will be displayed in a safe place

 

 

 

where others, particularly those who cherish memories of Buffalo Ranch from

 

their childhood, can still come and see it and remember.

 

 

 

A couple of years ago the big yellow and black sign was knocked over by a

 

truck, and from what I understand was stored away and virtually forgotten.

 

This morning David, Ron, and I headed for Buffalo Ranch to pick up the signs

 

promised to me by the new owner. I was thinking I'd get the big "banner"

 

signs across the tops of the buildings, but it turns out they're made of

 

fabric permanently epoxied to the buildings and can't possibly be saved

 

before the wrecking crew comes. The owner said, however, that there was a

 

"pile of signs" in one of the old outbuildings behind the Trading Post, so

 

off we went to look. And..... what should we find but the ORIGINAL

 

streetside sign!!!!!! It's huge, painted on 8 separate 4x6 pieces of

 

plywood which put back-to-back create a double-sided sign! My breath was

 

taken away! The owner said sure, I could have them, no problem. Was I

 

dreaming? Heck, I think I'm STILL dreaming!

 

 

 

Ron and David loaded the big boards into the pickup truck and then the owner

 

said we could poke around the other outbuildings and take whatever we wanted.

 

 

 

With flashlight in hand, we managed to find some ancient (but still in

 

perfect condition) Buffalo Ranch bumper stickers, some nice display racks, a

 

bizarre "Make Your Own Lamp" display (never saw one of those before!), what

 

we think was the hat worn by Larue Olson, the buffalo trainer who appears in

 

that wonderful series of real photo postcards (more about that later), a few

 

other odds and ends, and..... the original condom machine from the Buffalo

 

Ranch men's room! Yeah, really!!! The lock is rusted shut, but we could

 

still hear money in it when we shook it!

 

 

 

After this treasure hunt, we learned from the owner that he plans to have a

 

Buffalo Ranch commemorative wall in his travel center, and is working with

 

the State right now to get the permits necessary to keep a pen of peacocks

 

and about a half dozen head of buffalo on the site. He even ceded a portion

 

of the parking lot to an Indian tribe (forgot which one) in order for them to

 

 

 

have a place to present Native American heritage shows, similar to those at

 

the old Buffalo Ranch. He gave each of us a cap upon which he's already had

 

his "Buffalo Ranch Travel Center" logo embroidered. So, my take on this

 

whole thing is that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

 

Buffalo Ranch will survive as a "tourist trap" not unlike the original, but

 

with a decidedly modern twist. Trucks will be provided with diesel fuel and

 

the souvenir stand will compete with all the junk found at modern-day

 

convenience marts, and yet there will still be that special touch that only a

 

 

 

roadside enterpreneur/showman/huckster knows how to provide. Thanks to it

 

being bought by someone with that spirit, Buffalo Ranch isn't exactly

 

dying..... it's just changing.

 

 

 

Ron McCoy has made another of his wonderful website with all the pictures of

 

Buffalo Ranch in demolition mode, as well as a postcard from my collection

 

showing the original sign in its original location. The hat worn by the

 

buffalo trainer in the picture (who, incidentally, was eventually killed by

 

his own buffalo) looks VERY much like the one we found discarded in a back

 

room this morning. Most of the other pictures are self-explanatory, I

 

think. Go to: <A

 

HREF="http://collectingbuzz.com/buffaloranch/buffaloranch.htm">Buffalo Ranch</A>

 

to see pics of our adventure.

 

 

 

One other thing.... items from the Dairy Ranch portion of Buffalo Ranch are

 

going to Betty Wheatley, who leased it for over 40 years and retired two

 

years ago. That's a perfect place for them. However, I have reason to

 

believe I might be fortunate

 

enough get a few of those items too, for display at Afton Station with the

 

rest of my acquisitions.

 

 

 

P.S. Of course, the very best story of Buffalo Ranch can be found right in

 

Mock Turtle Press's "The Empires of Amusement", by Thomas Repp. To learn the

 

wonderful

 

history of this disappearing landmark, check out the story in Thomas' book.

 

 

 

Laurel

 

Afton Station

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Guest David G. Clark

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "Laurel Kane

 

<laurelrk66@a...>" <laurelrk66@a...> wrote:

 

> I'm thinking now about devoting a good part of Afton Station

 

> to Buffalo Ranch and all the goodies I've collected from it.

 

>

 

> So, although it seems we can't always completely stop the wheels

 

of

 

> progress, I guess we can slow them a little, and, if nothing else,

 

we

 

> can do our best to preserve the nostalgia. I'm tryin'!

 

>

 

> Laurel

 

> Afton Station

 

 

 

Laurel:

 

 

 

You're doing more that "tryin'," Laurel, you're succeeding! This IS

 

great news. Keep us posted on developments!

 

 

 

Dave Clark

 

Windy City Road Warrior

 

http://www.windycityroadwarrior.com

 

dave@windycityroadwarrior.com

 

312-432-1284

 

843 W. Adams Street #312

 

Chicago, IL 60607-3017

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Guest drivewdave@aol.com

okay folks time for another rant so buckle up...

 

 

 

In a message dated 2/16/03 6:37:05 PM, r.welborn@worldnet.att.net writes:

 

 

 

<< I drove over to Buffalo Ranch (what's left of it) this morning and

 

talked to the new owner, a very nice gentleman. The bad news is that

 

it's definitely been bought and will be razed. The new structure on

 

the property will be a "travel center", according to the owner, which

 

I presume means truck stop/gas station complex. The owner said that

 

he grew up spending time at Buffalo Ranch and considers it a bit of

 

nostalgia for himself as well as others, so he'll be keeping

 

the "feel" of the place, calling it Buffalo Ranch, and (would you

 

believe) even bringing back a herd of buffalos for tourists to see!

 

 

 

And, this is the VERY good news (for me, at least).... I asked him

 

what was going to happen to the old signs on the property, and he

 

asked if I wanted them! I said "YES, OF COURSE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!",

 

with my heart racing in my chest. "Fine", he said. "They're yours,

 

if you'll display them in your gas station, and if you can haul them

 

away". Oh my gosh!!! The signs are mine! He said he wants to

 

keep some of the signs to put up in the new building, but I can have

 

the rest.

 

 

 

Well there you go, he supposedly wants to keep the 'feel' of the place

 

but is extremely cavalier about the signs, it doesn't add up. About

 

the only thing developers feel is usually their wallet next to their

 

fat rear end. This is only partly an exaggeration, the 'bottom' line

 

almost always has the last word. They are too short sighted to

 

see that preserving the past can also be profitable.

 

 

 

Those who have been to Keelers Korner on 99 north of Lynnwood

 

(mock turtle land) were proabably delighted to see the vintage

 

signs still in place. The rest of the story is how Jerry Shinn

 

found them in the bushes behind the place when he bought it

 

in the early 70s. Putting them back up was the obvious way

 

to preserve the 'feel' of the place.

 

 

 

If anybody wants to cop a 'feel' of some Texaco signs there may

 

be several thousand recently available, their fate unknown to me.

 

Shell put up temp vinyl signs a few weeks ago and the permanent

 

signs are up now and The Star of the American Road is no longer.

 

I suppose it could return but I doubt. But here in WA a few years

 

back all the Union 76 stations turned into BP and then about a

 

year ago they turned back into 76. There is still a station in the

 

Magnolia district of Seattle with the large orange ball 76 sign

 

from the sixties. The deal is 76 did not get entirely absorbed

 

as did Texaco.

 

 

 

All this had me wondering the fate of the Texaco Metropolitan Opera

 

radio broadcast sponsorship, the longest in national broadcast history.

 

When they started in 1940 the culture was still in the earlier stages

 

of its chronic dumbing down process and more of the general public

 

were still hip enought to tune in to the met, also there was a large

 

european-born population for whom opera was popular music.

 

So I tuned in last Saturday and was reminded that it is now the

 

ChevronTexaco Metropolitan Opera broadcast. I remember hearing

 

that name before and forget when they made the change. The robots

 

who run Shell missed the bus in this regard. Seems like the

 

heartbeat of America is now rock and roll. It's everywhere

 

nowdays with the amped up guitars and the heavy backbeat.

 

Nowdays they only drag out the string quartets when they

 

want to give the impression of posh snobbery to sell designer

 

cat food and such.

 

 

 

So anyways the Saturday matinee 'live from the Met' was Mozarts

 

immortal Don Giovanni, considered by some as the best opera ever.

 

Pretty hard to disagree with that although Alban Bergs 'Lulu' is a

 

real earopener. Mozarts Le Nozze de Figaro is right up there too.

 

So I sat down for a few hours with the Don and the new New Yorker,

 

the anniversary issue. John McPhee, long one of my fave writers was

 

back with a profile on an owner/operator long haul hazmat trucker.

 

Those who like to read might find a few insights into the view from

 

the cab of a Pete and a few new words such as ullage and seiche.

 

McPhee turned the noun seiche into a verb, seiching, not sure if I

 

go along with the verbification, two dictionaries don't Anyways

 

McPhee is right up there with George R. Stewart when it comes

 

to the telling details and getting beneath the surface of things.

 

Turns out when food tankers are washed out sometimes there

 

is a rabbi supervising to keep it kosher. The WD in WD-40 stands

 

for water displacement. There are descriptions of truckstop

 

culture, landscape and highway descriptions, truckdriving

 

observations and so on, McPhee is in his usual tiptop form.

 

Mozart and McPhee are a tough combo to top, among other things

 

I learned that runaway truck drivers who use the gravel escape

 

ramps on steep hills are charged a grooming fee in Oregon.

 

Also OR is the only state with weight-based speed limits.

 

This from a description of Cabbage Hill on I-70 E of Pendleton,

 

also known as Emigrant Hill. The median here is as wide as

 

a mile and a half, eastbound and westbound are on entirely

 

separate alignments, my friend the late Jack Carpentier once

 

referred to those loops as 'spectacular' and he should know.

 

 

 

Jack was so deep into the Lincoln Highway that he drove a

 

Lincoln and one time in Wyoming he spotted what looked

 

like the bottom end of an original LH milepost sticking

 

out of the ground upside down as a fencepost. He located

 

the rancher whose land it was on, hired a backhoe to dig it up,

 

had a custom crate built and shipped it back to Seattle where

 

he kept it in storage all at a cost of several thousand dollars.

 

He told me he was a bit embarassed to admit to all of this

 

to most people but I trust we can understand the why of it.

 

 

 

okay, on with the rant, is it just me (and Andy Rooney) or was

 

no one paying any attention to the demise of Texaco, for me

 

this was no small deal. All I heard was one small radio spot a

 

few months back, no TV, no print notice. I am glad I was able

 

to buy the old stock ERTL diecast souvenir Texaco tank truck

 

while I could a few months back from a retailer near Olympia.

 

There are lots of them on Ebay but it was more fun to get it

 

direct from the Texaco dealer.

 

 

 

The volume of words on this site has slowed down a bit lately

 

which probably means that people have other things to do besides

 

sit and write about our roads. The lack of response gives me the

 

idea that when I write a large piece it is like a wreck on the freeway,

 

everybody slows down to get a look at it and then speeds up again

 

to go on their merry way with nary a thought for it. It could be

 

worse, the Highway99 Yahoos have not posted for weeks.

 

meanwhile, happy motoring, keep a tiger in your tank...dave

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Guest laurelrk66@aol.com

In a message dated 2/18/2003 4:22:51 PM Central Standard Time,

 

americanroad@mockturtlepress.com writes:

 

 

 

 

 

> And Laurel: Is there some way you can contact Betty and make sure she

 

> is getting the pieces of the Ranch she believes she is getting before

 

> the wrecking ball hits? I don't know how many people she has on hand to

 

> help her tote things, and I want to make sure this demolition doesn't

 

> cause her any more grief.

 

>

 

 

 

Thomas,

 

 

 

That's all been taken care of. First of all, Betty happens to be a longtime

 

friend of the new owner, and he admires and cares very much for her. I have

 

NO doubt that she'll be able to keep everything she wants from Dairy Ranch

 

with no interference from him whatsoever. He told me a number of times how

 

happy he is to be able to give the items to Betty. Secondly, my ex-husband

 

and Betty's son Stacey are planning to help Betty get the big signs off the

 

roof within the next day or two (maybe even today... I'm not sure). I'll run

 

by there tomorrow and see what's happening at the site.

 

 

 

Wow, isn't that the truth about the limeade? That was the best liquid

 

refreshment on the Route, hands down, at least in my opinion.

 

 

 

Thanks, Thomas, for being so supportive of those of us who must watch this

 

transition between the old and the new at close range. As a relative

 

newcomer to Afton, the demolition isn't going to be as emotional for me as it

 

will be for Betty. She's a true Route 66 icon and a wonderful lady. She

 

thinks the world of you, too.

 

 

 

We'll keep you posted!

 

 

 

Laurel

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Guest Jill Livingston

>

 

>The volume of words on this site has slowed down a bit lately

 

>which probably means that people have other things to do besides

 

>sit and write about our roads. The lack of response gives me the

 

>idea that when I write a large piece it is like a wreck on the freeway,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I enjoy your postings immensely. Keep it up!

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Guest Jim Ross

I need email addresses for the following road warriors. If you guys see this, or

 

if anybody knows their addresses, kindly send them to me at:

 

jross@mockturtlepress.com

 

 

 

 

 

Mike Frankovich

 

Alex Burr

 

 

 

Thanks.

 

Jim R.

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Guest Peter Harpin

Alex is hesternec@yahoo.com.

 

 

 

Pete

 

 

 

Jim Ross wrote:

 

 

 

> I need email addresses for the following road warriors. If you guys

 

> see this, or if anybody knows their addresses, kindly send them to me

 

> at:

 

> jross@mockturtlepress.com

 

>

 

>

 

> Mike Frankovich

 

> Alex Burr

 

>

 

> Thanks.

 

> Jim R.

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor

 

ADVERTISEMENT

 

 

 

 

 

>

 

> Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

>

 

> To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-5434

 

> WITH YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

> Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA

 

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Guest jim conkle

And Mike's is mfrankovich@yahoo.com

 

 

 

James M. Conkle, Executive Director

 

California Route 66 Preservation Foundation

 

P O Box 290066

 

Phelan, CA 92329-0066

 

760-868-3320

 

760-617-3991 cell

 

760-868-8614 fax

 

jim@cart66pf.org

 

www.cart66pf.org

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----

 

From: Peter Harpin [mailto:phls@earthlink.net]

 

Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2003 11:05 AM

 

To: AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com

 

Subject: Re: [AMERICAN_ROAD] Addresses

 

 

 

 

 

Alex is hesternec@yahoo.com.

 

 

 

Pete

 

 

 

Jim Ross wrote:

 

 

 

> I need email addresses for the following road warriors. If you guys

 

> see this, or if anybody knows their addresses, kindly send them to me

 

> at:

 

> jross@mockturtlepress.com

 

>

 

>

 

> Mike Frankovich

 

> Alex Burr

 

>

 

> Thanks.

 

> Jim R.

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor

 

ADVERTISEMENT

 

 

 

 

 

>

 

> Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

>

 

> To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-5434

 

> WITH YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

> Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA

 

> 98046-3168

 

> SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

 

> 1 year (4 issues) for $15.95

 

> (save $3.85 off the newsstand price!)

 

> 2 years (8 issues) for $27.95

 

> (save $11.65 off the newsstand price!)

 

>

 

>

 

> For questions about the list, contact:

 

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>

 

> To SUBSCRIBE to this group, send an email to:

 

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>

 

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>

 

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>

 

>

 

>

 

> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yahoo! Groups Sponsor

 

ADVERTISEMENT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

 

 

To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-5434

 

WITH YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA

 

98046-3168

 

SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

 

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(save $3.85 off the newsstand price!)

 

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For questions about the list, contact: AMERICAN_ROAD-owner@yahoogroups.com

 

 

 

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Guest Fred M. Cain

What Highway was this on? I know that Bonnie & Clyde met their fate

 

on U.S. 80 in Louisiana. Was this bridge on a U.S. Route too?

 

 

 

-Fred M. Cain

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, Bob Worley <bwcobra15@y...>

 

wrote:

 

>

 

> From today's Dallas Morning News:

 

>

 

> History buffs look to save bridge that almost doomed Bonnie and

 

Clyde

 

>

 

> 08:08 PM CST on Thursday, February 5, 2004

 

> By BRIAN ANDERSON / Dallas Web Staff

 

>

 

> It's the Texas bridge that almost did what dozens of lawmen

 

couldn't – end the crime spree of Bonnie and Clyde.

 

>

 

> Now, the historic truss bridge spanning the Salt Fork of the Red

 

River is on the Texas Department of Transportation's most-wanted

 

list.

 

>

 

> "That bridge means a lot to the people of Collingsworth County,"

 

said Darwin Lankford, a bridge engineer with the transportation

 

department's Childress office. "It means a lot to us, but it's a

 

liability to us, too."

 

>

 

> State officials say the Panhandle bridge must undergo extensive –

 

and expensive – repairs or it faces demolition. However, residents

 

are forming their own posse to chase down the dollars needed to save

 

the historic span.

 

> Read the entire article here:

 

>

 

> http://tinyurl.com/389fh

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> .

 

>

 

>

 

> ---------------------------------

 

> Do you Yahoo!?

 

> Yahoo! Finance: Get your refund fast by filing online

 

>

 

>

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Guest mockturtlepress <americanroad@mo

Greetings to All:

 

 

 

Laurel is doing a fine job of keeping us all abreast of the last dance

 

at Buffalo Ranch. Bravo, Laurel! Thank you for caring so much.

 

 

 

I received the following from Betty Wheatley yesterday morning. I meant

 

to post it then, but somehow all of the day's distractions got in the

 

way. I'm posting it now. Although it does not really include much new

 

information, I do think it's good that we hear from Betty, too. She is

 

such a wonderful highway gal.

 

 

 

"Hi: I went out to the Buffalo Ranch yesterday, I now feel better.It is

 

going to be nice.They will keep the name and will have a corner

 

dedicated to the ranch. He wanted to know if I have any pictures they

 

could have copies of. I will help them out any way I can. I asked if I

 

could have the windows. He said I could. Also the signs on top of the

 

Bldg. Isn't that cool? I will keep you up on every thing, right or

 

wrong."

 

 

 

Now, if only this new "service center" would figure out a way to bring

 

back Betty's classic lime-aid. . . .

 

 

 

And Laurel: Is there some way you can contact Betty and make sure she

 

is getting the pieces of the Ranch she believes she is getting before

 

the wrecking ball hits? I don't know how many people she has on hand to

 

help her tote things, and I want to make sure this demolition doesn't

 

cause her any more grief.

 

 

 

Thomas

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Guest Chris

Just in . . . Yahoo! Picks for April 4, 2004

 

 

 

Bodie.com

 

 

 

"Unlike the experience young buckaroos have at Disney's

 

Frontier Land, the real Wild West was far from the happiest place

 

on Earth. Life was rough and no town exhibited the era's mixture

 

of violence and optimism quite like Bodie, California. Once a

 

bustling boomtown caught up in the fever of America's Gold

 

Rush, Bodie now lies in a state of "arrested decay," an

 

honest-to-goodness ghost town. Gauchos with the guts to make

 

the trek will find the remaining buildings in tip-top shape, thanks

 

to Bodie's designation as a State Historic Park in 1962. Of

 

course, the locals realize not all folks (tenderfoots, mostly) can

 

stomach an actual trip to a place of such ill-repute. This virtual

 

tour should satisfy the greenhorns amongst y'all, but a word of

 

warning: Lest you feel like staying a while, avoid the graveyard.

 

Evidently, the undertaker was a busy man."

 

 

 

http://www.bodie.com/

 

 

 

 

 

Nice Photo gallery! Added it to my Ghost Towns folder in "Links".

 

http://finance.groups.yahoo.com/group/AMERICAN_ROAD/links

 

. . . Chris

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Guest hester_nec

I was sitting here today looking at a 1930's road map of

 

Kentucky/Tennessee and I thought of my Uncle Prescot. I hadn't

 

thought about my mothers brother, Uncle Prescott, in a long, long

 

time - to busy with todays hustle and bustle, I suppose. Now, I know

 

this isn't really a "road" story - but the open highway is in here,

 

along with everything else. So, if you want to travel with me a

 

little way, read on - if memories bore you, then stop here.

 

 

 

But it was Uncle Prescott who instilled in me the urge to find out,

 

in a manner of speaking, what was over the hill and far away. He was

 

a traveling salesman from sometime in the 1930's to the early 60's -

 

when the interstate system started building he had the foresight to

 

realize, quite vocally, this new system would turn road trips into a

 

mindless rush to nowhere.

 

 

 

I remember when I was, oh, 10, 11, maybe even 9, Uncle Prescott

 

came by - during the summer months he brought his wares - I don't

 

recall now just what it was he sold, but I think it was beads and

 

baubles - probably what today would be called Junque (note the

 

spelling)or maybe antique - to Maine and New England. This one trip

 

he brought me what can only be called a "Magic" box - a box filled

 

with road maps of the 1930's and 1940's - this would have been right

 

after WWII. How he plied his trade during the war years I do not

 

know. But I do know he did arrive in Maine every year around the 1st

 

part of June - even during the war years.

 

 

 

It was Uncle Prescott who, much to my mothers dismay, planted the

 

idea of THE TRIP to California that my friend and I, at the age of 15

 

(don't try this today, kids) made. I remember also another time not

 

long after the magic box he brought another - with several albums

 

filled to bursting with post cards. I know for a time he operated

 

out of St. Louis, so he must have had a western route, because there

 

were road maps clear out to CA and the post card albums also had

 

cards from those states in addition to those in the east.

 

 

 

As an aside I also had quite a collection of aircraft recognition

 

cards from the war years I got from one of my relatives. Yes, Uncle

 

Prescott turned me into a pack rat - that is one thing I've retained.

 

 

 

It was easier for kids back then - we had what kids today seem to

 

have lost. A sense of imagination. I could sit and listen to Uncle

 

Prescotts stories of his travels and I could see the sun setting on

 

distant hills with an old highway winding thru them. With this thing

 

called imagination I could put together a few pieces of wood, and

 

sail it in a nearby pond - and I had the clipper ships ARIEL or CUTTY

 

SARK, maybe Donald McKay's LIGHTENING - whatever we wanted.

 

 

 

So what happened to my marvelous collection - I left home in

 

October 1955 after joining the Navy. I came home on boot leave 3

 

months later to find mother had put away my "childish" things - in

 

the nearest trash can. A very familiar situation. All was gone - my

 

aircraft recognition cards, my magic boxes that took me to so many

 

places and gave me a sense of wanderlust, many things I had

 

accumulated during my childhood years. Well, Mother, the joke is on

 

you - I've got some of it back thru a medium called "ebay!!!!!"

 

 

 

So, in a sense, this long winded post is a thank you to my Uncle

 

Prescott who taught me that you can dare to be adventurous. Let's

 

see, if alive today he'd be around 105, 106 or so. I last saw him at

 

the age of 80 at his apartment in Philadelphia. Sad to say he and

 

Aunt Isabelle, who had patiently put up with his wanderings for years

 

(Uncle Prescott would have been, in the 1950's, called a beatnick -

 

he was a little ahead of his time), were living in a rather rundown

 

neighborhood and quite literally afraid to leave their home unless it

 

was necessary. Sad turn of affairs.

 

 

 

Thanks Uncle, for everything I probably shouldn't be, but are glad I

 

am!!!

 

 

 

Hudsonly,

 

Alex B

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Guest Rudyard Welborn

There is a show on the Travel Channel called "Road Trip" at 9:00 p.m....I think

 

it is a continuing thing...tonight it is from Orlando to Key West--got no more

 

details than that...Tsingtao, Kip

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Guest Denny Gibson

That American Road page numbers appear inside road sign shields seems

 

natural. Maybe even to be expected. But what about the number of

 

pages when the leadoff feature (following letters & staff intros) is

 

an interview with David Knudson. Coincidence?

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