markers


21
Apr 16

Riding for markers

I’m working on wrapping up a project I’ve been undertaking, more off than on, for several years. I’ve been riding my bike all over the county to photograph the markers and the places they document. The ones I’m showing you today are all from the same place. So important is this location, there are three markers within view of one another.

Three signs in all, six sides of information, generations of families and leaders and history. Interesting how cemeteries are both the beginning and end of history.

You can see the other sides to these signs, and the sacred grounds they mark, here.


14
Apr 16

Back to the markers

I have to finish this project up and, so, for the next several weeks I’ll be sneaking in a few posts that will shoot you over to my historic marker page. The concept there is pretty straightforward. I’ve been riding my bike all over the county to photograph the markers and the places they document. This has been an on-again-off-again project for years. Time to wrap it up. Here are two that will get us a bit closer to doing just that.

This is a superlative sign. It is the most difficult one in the county to get to. It was one of the hardest ones to find. Being from 1954 it is perhaps the oldest of the bunch. It has perhaps the widest ranging actual historical significance. And there’s less at this physical location than any other marker in the county. There’s absolutely nothing there:

You can see the other side, and the locale.

After France, late in the Colonial period gave all of this region to Britain surveyors marked the boundaries including this one in south Smiths Station. This line goes all the way across at least two states. I wonder if there are other signs elsewhere on this line.

Also, 18th century surveyor still sounds like an impossibly difficult job.

I had a professor once who explained that the railway switch that was located just down from this sign is why all of this is here. And then he’d walk you through a few decades of railway history and it made sense. And now the town which grew beside the railroad became a city and then a blue collar town and then it dried up and now it is making a comeback. And that’s about 100 years of history.

Click here to see the other side of the sign and a lot of the locale.


20
Nov 14

The historic marker series

We return once more to documenting the county’s historic markers, where I pedal my bicycle all over the county looking for the markers. This makes the 32nd you’ve seen in this series so far:

Cullars

This field had corn in it in this picture, but the plot allows agronomists to study fertilization on a 3-year rotation of cotton, corn, wheat and soybean. The researchers would tell you there are few places in the country where you can see the effect of such dramatic deficiencies of plant nutrients. The experiment continues now into its second century. You can read about it on the markers page. And you check out the full run of markers here. (Click through the pins on the map on that page’s banner to explore some of the other local historic locations.)

Enjoy, happy pedaling and happy reading!


13
Nov 14

The historic marker series

We return once more to documenting the county’s historic markers. (Two weeks in a row! Almost a trend!) If you are unfamiliar, I pedaled my bicycle all over the county looking for the markers. This makes the 31th you’ve seen in this series so far:

OldRotation

The field was fallow when I took this picture, but don’t let that fool you. This is an important strip of land. You can read about it on the markers page. And you check out the full run of markers here. (Click through the pins on the map on that page’s banner to explore some of the other local historic locations.)

Enjoy, happy pedaling and happy reading!


6
Nov 14

The historic marker series

After an unreasonably long layoff of more than a year, we return once more to documenting the county’s historic markers. These have been sitting on my computer all this time just waiting to be uploaded. No excuse.

If you are unfamiliar, I pedaled my bicycle all over the county looking for the markers. This makes the 30th you’ve seen in this series so far:

CaryHall

What do you suppose goes on inside there? That’s a building on campus. I had two classes there in my years of undergrad, the first one was in my first quarter in school. I have exactly two stories that I still tell from time to time from spending all of that time in there. You can find the historical angle here. And you check out the full run of markers here. (Click through the pins on the map on that page’s banner to explore some of the other local historic locations.)

Enjoy, happy pedaling and happy reading!