Thursday, March 28, 2013

Hope you're not afraid of heights..

This was from my plane ride last fall - see the Courthouse in the center?
From my Sunday night walk a few weeks back.
The County will be starting a construction project up here in a few weeks. The cement in the ceiling here is starting to fall apart. :S When the crews are up here taking care of that, they'll also tuck-point the entire belltower, inside and out.
Once this project is complete, they will have renovated every area of the building. VERY cool!
The E. Howard Clock Co.
Boston - New York - Chicago
1905
Excuse the bird netting - this area was full of 100 years worth of crap prior to this :)
I'm in that open "arch" area just under the clock, facing north.
Our Post Office (brick building, gray roof, white door - just left of the center of the image) has some historical significance, too. In the lobby, there's a massive mural painted by the WPA during the Depression.
Northeast.
Southeast. You can see the 3M and Hormel plants in the upper left, here.
The white building with blue across the top was the home of my house-family's business for nearly 100 years. Under the metal siding, there are several really pretty brick buildings downtown.
South. The black and pale green building right in the center of the block is our 1922 movie theater/opera house that will be undergoing a HUGE restoration soon. I hope to write about that, too!
Grand Theater
Behind the theater is our Carnegie Library (clay tile roof, yellow/orange brick) and the Dixie Gebhardt House (red tin roof). Dixie was the designer of the Iowa Flag. Both of those properties are undergoing some renovation as well!
Southwest - you can actually see my house in this picture :)
West.
Northwest, toward the Knoxville Raceway and VA Hospital in the distance.
Knoxville Raceway
And back to north, again!
After climbing another loooong ladder, I ended up in the very tippy top of the Courthouse..
...next to these. VERY cool! :)
An article from the Knoxville Journal in 1905, talking about the purchase and installation of the clock and bell..several years after the Courthouse was originally constructed.


No comments:

Post a Comment