This hasn't stirred any particular emotions in me; I do feel a bit let down after seeing the condition of some places, though. I guess I want them to remain as I remember them.
My first husband and I married when we were 18 years old. Hard to believe that now, but I guess 18 was a lot older then. We both had jobs and everything! We thought we were actual grownups. Here's our first apartment; the top floor end apartment in this photo. This is in Port Arthur, TX.
S. Lincoln Street, Kent, Ohio, Street View 2013. (House is gone now) I lived on the second floor with 4 other girls for one year in 1969. One girl in the front bedroom was growing pots of marijuana. My roommate was never there because she stayed with her boyfriend 24/7. Naomi had a bedroom by herself. Moved to a very boring modern apartment complex the following year with Naomi, and 2 other girls who were almost never there. . (So much rent money wasted. lol) May, 1970. Just missed all this excitement. Only 196 feet from the front porch of the house, according to Street View.
This is downtown Wallace, about a mile and a half from the house I grew up in. Just right of center, in the lower part of the screen, is the school I attended through the 8th grade. It's some kind of a manufacturing plant now, though. I grew up a mile and a half southeast of Wallace, although the house I grew up in burned while I was in college. The house that is there now is the one my dad built after the house burned, but I never lived there, as I had left home already. It's the one with the semi-circular driveway. Street View hasn't reached that part of the country. None of the houses on the right side of the screen were there when I lived there. Our house and the one across the road were the last ones on that road.
This picture shows part of the 160 acres where my mom and dad lived when I was born, and before that, went through most of the Great Depression and WW2. The orange circle is where the old ranch house was at, where they used to live. It has been torn down for many years now, but was a magnificent old house in its earlier years, way before I was born. We were told that it was originally a stage coach stop on the way through Idaho into Canada. The yellow circle is where i put my little trailer house when I moved back up to Bonners 20+ years ago. You can see the long driveway I had to get in and out of in the winter snow. When I first moved there, I had no power or water the first couple of years. The big line through the property is where the power line goes through the property from the substation. My dad had worked for the power company for many years, and because of that , they gave me a break on the cost of putting in the electrical line to the house; and a year or so later, I was able to get water when they put in a community water company. There are stories about my life as a “pioneer” somewhere here in this section of the forum. After I married Bobby and moved away, my son put a house on the property and used the little trailer for his “radio shack”. However, he is now living here in Alabama also because of necessary job changes, and my grandson lives in the house in Idaho. .
I lived in a little town Called Melrose SA , from the age of 13 to 21 when hubby and I had to move to the City for work the population was around 300 people then, it is a very pretty popular tourist area . and I think quite a few more people live there now. https://www.melrose-mtremarkable.org.au/