Along the far back roads in Ohio are dozens of abandoned little town. There ae miles of reclaimed but empty strip mine land far from anything (The Wilds is a good example.) Southern West Virginia has a lot of small places along bends in the rod where the buildings sit empty and have for the last forty years . Our discussion of imperfections led me to think of this quetion:
If tomorrow someone handed you a tract of land with no power lines in sight and no major highway or flyway nearby, and if money were not a problem, what would Perfectville look like? What year would it be (or would it be frozen in time at all?) and what kind of buildings would you have in it? How big would your perfect period town be? What sympathies would it have--Union, Confederate, or both? Would you use reclaimed and restored original buildings transported to the site, or would you build new?
I'm just cuious as to what we'e all picturing when we think of the right kind of town. Because of the pictures I saw when I was growing up, my image will forever be small Hocking Valley town, white houses, big porches, tree-line streets. What about the little New England villages that had already been though one war, the Trans-Mississippi towns that had just sprung up, or the perpetual commotion of NewYork City?
If tomorrow someone handed you a tract of land with no power lines in sight and no major highway or flyway nearby, and if money were not a problem, what would Perfectville look like? What year would it be (or would it be frozen in time at all?) and what kind of buildings would you have in it? How big would your perfect period town be? What sympathies would it have--Union, Confederate, or both? Would you use reclaimed and restored original buildings transported to the site, or would you build new?
I'm just cuious as to what we'e all picturing when we think of the right kind of town. Because of the pictures I saw when I was growing up, my image will forever be small Hocking Valley town, white houses, big porches, tree-line streets. What about the little New England villages that had already been though one war, the Trans-Mississippi towns that had just sprung up, or the perpetual commotion of NewYork City?
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