Its really a pleasure driving into a scene like this in the early morning. It was on to Mexico for the airport east of town (a possible site), and then to Vandalia Lake, a peaceful spot and some of the most concentrated mosquitoes I have run into.
The Vandalia post office was next with a mural by Joseph Vorst depicting the corn harvest. It seems nostalgic today, and is, but shows how the harvest was done at that time. This can still be seen in the Amish country north of Columbia, east of Clark.
From Vandalia, the road lead to Louisiana, MO, home of Stark Brothers nursery as well as former governor Stark from the 30's. The town has seen better days, but there are some beautiful old homes Victorian and earlier. I was in search of the RR Rowley Annex to the old high school and received the necessary help from 2 walkers. It was at the top of the hill on 5th street and is no longer a school, run-down at least on the inside, though the exterior seems intact with bas reliefs at the entry and a cornerstone. It is attached physically to the main old high school building. Although I'm sure there are many issues with this particular building, it is a shame to allow a building such as this to get to this point.
There was a quick trip to Clarksville to the Lock and Dam 24, retracing my steps back to Louisiana with a pic of the old treatment plant(?new deal), then on to Pittsfield across the Champ Bailey Bridge into Illinois. The Pittsfield post office has a view of the Champ Bailey bridge by William Schwartz. He was a Chicago who did several PO murals and was on that cusp between representational and abstract (particularly cubist) art. The color palette he used is typical of this time in his life. Another pic of the bridge in the present shows how little has changed.
Although I try to stay on blue highways on these trips, time necessitated that I take 36 west to Hannibal for the largest number of concentrated new deal sites. The Mark Twain museum next to his boyhood Hannibal home is a brick structure and has a wall to the north between the home and the previously surrounding homes for fire prevention. On to the most interesting stop on the road to Lover's Leap south of town off of 79. There is an abandoned park with rock work remaining and a dedication to the "People of Hannibal for clean and wholesome recreation. It was wildly overgrown, but retained at least some charm.
The old Hannibal Armory was constructed of rock quarried locally and also used to construct the walls of the adjacent baseball field that is presently used for minor league teams and the high school "Cavemen". During WWII, the baseball field was used to house German prisoners of war and the townspeople would watch them from a viaduct just to the east. A Mark Twain memorial lighthouse was constructed on Cardiff Hill and is still there, but was rebuilt after a tornado destroyed it in the 60's. The design is exactly the same as the original WPA design.
Levering Hospital was originally constructed with at least 3 additions, the 2nd being a PWA construction. Currently it is a long term facility. Hannibal High School was constructed in 1933, possibly with some new deal funds, but that requires confirmation.
I'm off for the rest of the trip in another blog.
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