Saturday, December 29, 2018

2018

I looked back at my post about 2017, and I can see that this was not a year for big changes. On a national level, it became time to stop joking about things, and get serious about how to deal with our "problem." On a state level, politically, our formerly Democratic governor, now a Republican, appointed two raging homophobes to the West Virginia Supreme Court, as all of the justices were to be impeached. As I predicted, the Republican in a "non-partisan" election remained in office and is now the Chief Justice.

In 2017, I spoke in Charleston against overturning the "Clean Power Plan." This year, I responded to Consumer Union's request for people to speak in Pittsburgh about the EPA's plan to delete regulations requiring higher mileage, less polluting cars in the future, It's hard to say if this will have any effect.

In state elections this year, five seats in the House of Delegates changed from Red to Blue; two of those were in Monongalia County. In District 51, which includes Morgantown and most of the rest of the county, and has five delegates, five Democrats were elected. Our Democratic U.S. Senator was reelected, a mixed blessing. He was better than the Republican candidate by far, but many were put off by his vote for Brett Kavanaugh for Supreme Court, the only Democrat who voted that way.

Joe and I were able to travel together this year. In March we attended my nephew Evan's wedding in Key West. Joe officiated. My sister Robin got us tickets to Yayoi Kusama's exhibit in Cleveland, our first time there, in June. And later in the summer, we traveled to Buffalo to see Joe's cousins, then moved on to Toronto, where Ryan Wallace, a City Councilor, and his wife, Christine, a native of the city, showed us around. We were in Memphis again for Thanksgiving, and Joe's aunt's eightieth birthday. We planned a week in Maryland based at my sister's house over Christmas, but came back early due to a death in the congregation in Morgantown. I visited twelve counties, alphabetically from Charles, Maryland, to Clinton, Ohio, two in February, then one every other month. I'm writing this Saturday night, December 29. We are at the Omni Bedford Springs Resort, a grand old school hotel 104 miles from home, where Joe is performing a wedding tomorrow. We get around.

We also paid off the six-year car loan on our Suzuki, Joe's student loans from Hebrew Union College, and the two-year payments for our cell phones. I insisted that we trade in our 2001 Honda Civic, which ran fine, only I didn't like it, and it needed body work. I did lots of research, and we bought a 2015 Honda Civic SE.

Joe and I both taught at  OLLI (Osher Life-Long Learning) in 2018- two classes each. People were angry that our spring classes were at the same time, great for us, we could carpool, but many people wanted to take both classes. As it was,we both had a full roster. Joe taught "Dysfunctional Families of the Old Testament" and 'Old Testament Miracles and What They Mean."  I taught "The Great Hits of 1965," the sixth class in this series of pop music years, and "Burt Bacharach Is 90!" my favorite class ever at OLLI, covering Burt's career from the early 1950s to the present. Check out Karima and Mario Biondi with Burt, singing "Come In Ogni Ora" live for a taste. The videos for that class are organized under "Burt Bacharach is 90! Week 1" to Week 6 on YouTube. Check it out!

Healthwise, all the numbers are good. I had a sinus infection which turned into flu in January (yes, I did have a flu shot) and an ear infection in November from which I don't think I've fully recovered. My energy seems to be flagging in my last year in my sixties.

I do plan to run again for City Council from January to the end of April. I like having some say in what happens here, and I've made friends. It's frustrating when people online lie about me or call me names, and hurtful when I feel others on Council don't take my ideas seriously or try to sideline me. I plan to speak up more in my second term, should I have one, and ignore the "haters" who are out there. I did arrange a meeting with the Morgantown and WVU Police Chiefs and representatives of the Jewish organizations in town after the shootings at Tree of Life in Pittsburgh, and we were able to exchange ideas and make plans for greater security.

People in West Virginia often say that Morgantown is not the "real" West Virginia and that people like me and Joe, a same-gender Jewish couple who grew up in the Urban East Coast and spent decades in California, don't have "West Virginia values." I don't know exactly what that means. Still, we have both become aware of how we have distanced ourselves from our communities of choice, mostly in San Francisco and Los Angeles, and how few real friends we have here in Morgantown.  Tree of Life in Morgantown has many members who grew up elsewhere, and don't really "fit in" and Morgantown generally, as the big college town in the least educated state in the nation, is full of "real" West Virginians who don't fit in in their hometowns. In a way, Joe and I represent those people, the ones who choose to live here and create a community in somewhat hostile territory. Joe's contract is up in July 2019 and he and the congregation have both agreed to renew, although the details are not entirely clear. And I hope to be on City Council again, representing the people of this city.

Best wishes to my readers for 2019.

New Year's Day at the Fetty/Anderson Home, Morgantown


Sun and snow in our neighborhood, January

Former Charles County, MD Courthouse (reconstructed), Port Tobacco, February

With striking teaches in Morgantown, February


"March For Our Lives" Key West, March

My nephew Evan and his wife Kellie at their wedding, Key West, FL, March


Our friends James and Tyler at their wedding in April, with their Moms, Tree of Life, Morgantown

The cherry trees in bloom on the Monongahela River, April A planned renovation of the park including removing most of the trees. A big controversy involving City Council this year.

Interfaith Association dinner at our house, May

Interfaith rally at Church of the Brethren, Morgantown, May

Tree of Life service at Coopers Rock, west of Morgantown, May

Havdalah (end of sabbath, a little early) on Lake Erie in Buffalo, June

With City Councilor Ryan Wallace and his wife Christine in Toronto, June

At the Yoyoi Kasama exhibit in Cleveland. Joe, Robin and I are the only people in this pic.

At our "Aunt" Shirley's 95th birthday, with my sister and Shirley's three sons, my "brothers." Naples, FL, August

Looking east to the Blue Ridge Mountains, Clarke County, Virginia, August

With our friends Matthew and Sharon at their annual pre-Labor Day party, September, north of Pittsburgh

Tappuz our cat helping me learn Torah chanting before Rosh Hashana, September

Demonstration against Brett Kavanaugh, Monongalia County Courthouse, October

Vigil at Woodburn Circle, West Virginia University, after the shootings at Tree of Life, Pittsburgh, October

Arbor Day in Morgantown, November

At the outlet mall in Mississippi during our trip to Memphis, with Joe's sister Martha

Chanuka at Tree of Life, Morgantown


drainage channel near overflowing in our neighborhood during heavy rains, December

Saturday, December 15, 2018

Clinton County, Ohio

I know. I was in Ohio last month, in Clermont County just southwest of Clinton County. Both counties are considered metropolitan Cincinnati, but in the case of Clinton, it's far from the city and more small town than suburban. The big city (population 12, 500) is Wilmington.

For me, 2018 is over, and yet, there are dozens of meetings and political events this week. The Morgantown Council is meeting all day Sunday to discuss priorities for next year, and Tuesday we will meet with local state legislators to talk about our priorities. I said "No!" to all the Wednesday and Thursday meetings, and with no precipitation and slightly warmer weather predicted, I took off in our newer car, our 2015 Honda, for my next alphabetical county.

Wilmington is west of Morgantown, about 260 miles. There is a scenic route US 50 from Clarksburg, then Ohio 28 west and a fast route, on the Interstates by way of Columbus I drove in on the scenic route and back on the fast route. The scenic route, through small towns and farmland, was interesting, but the Interstate saved an hour and a half in time. Wilmington is slightly south of us as well as west, but weather.com reports that Wilmington's high temperature for December 13 is, on average, three degrees cooler than Morgantown's.

The Regular Hotel Chain, where I earned Platinum status for next year, does not have an outlet in Clinton County. I found a 1928 hotel called the General Denver, in the middle of town, with parking, breakfast and internet at a reasonable price. I took that.The first floor has a restaurant that  was mobbed when I came in. People were still waiting for tables when I came back at 8 P.M., after I walked to a chain coffee shop about a mile away for dinner.

I had looked over the National Register of Historic Places for Clinton County. There were eighteen, but two were no longer extant and several were Adena period (possibly very early in the common era) burial mounds, which are hard to find unless they are marked. I picked five places to see in Wilmington, including the original building on the campus of Wilmington College, a Quaker institution going back to the nineteenth century, and five in the countryside and other towns.

There are ten incorporated places in the County, including Wilmington, and I thought I would check out all of them. One is supposedly partly in Clinton County, but I only found the part that wasn't; another is in the next county south, but a piece of it is in Clinton. Wednesday weather ran from 36 to 46, warmer than usual. Much of the day was dark, but the sun broke through for a bit, which I appreciated.

I saw everything I intended to see between 9:40 and 5:05 P.M. Thursday. I had lunch at that chain sub place in one of the small towns and dinner at a different chain coffee shop in Wilmington. Wednesday, I stopped for lunch at Union St. Diner in Athens, along the scenic route; Friday, I had a slice of pizza and a salad at a place inside Ohio Valley Mall, across the river from Wheeling, off Interstate 70, on the way home.

Many people in Wilmington are scruffy: overweight, smoking, tattoos.  I looked pretty scruffy myself, in a flannel shirts and jeans. The people eating at the hotel, however, were dressed up, coiffed and clean. It seemed like a Reagan Republican kind of crowd to me. The women who worked at the hotel, Brynne, Tristin and Jackie, chatted me up, and walking around, people all said "Hi" even though they don't know me. Seventy-three per cent of the voters in this county voted for the current President in 2016, so I was worried.  I saw a few anti-abortion signs and some saying "I support religious freedom" (meaning "I hate gays") and someone still had a 2016 Trump campaign sign up, but that is the ugliest it got. One of the waitresses at the restaurant Thursday (not my waitress) a pretty blonde with lots of tattoos, told me she had moved to Wilmington from Columbus after a divorce. She said that people from big cities can adjust to living in small towns, but small town people panic at the thought of living in a big city. I guess that's true, although it helped me that we were in Crescent City for more than two years before moving to Morgantown. Coming directly from Los Angeles to Morgantown would have been harder.

Most of Clinton County is farmland, apparently corn, already  harvested with big grain silos scattered throughout the countryside. Although the county wasn't settled by European-Americans until around 1810, there were many beautiful brick farmhouses that looked to be from an earlier era, perhaps styles borrowed from an earlier era in Virginia or Pennsylvania. Many of the small towns had public libraries, which shows there is some interest in education, and for me, a convenient public bathroom.

I walked Thursday morning from 9:20  to 11 to all five historic sites in Wilmington, then took off, heading from the northwest part of Clinton County, to the north, the northeast, east, south and southwest areas, before heading back to the hotel by way of Cowan Lake State Park. In addition to Wilmington, I visited Harveysburg, Port William, Sabina (sab-eye-na), New Vienna, Lynchburg, Martinsville, Blanchester and Clarksville.  Most of them are rust-belt decaying towns. Blanchester, to the southwest and the closest to Cincinnati, seemed to be the largest and most happening, with a Kroger just outside town, a smaller grocery store in the middle of town, and a cinema, only open on weekends. The booming commercial area in Wilmington is at the east end of town off US 22 (the old way to Wheeling and Pittsburgh). Interstate 71 is now the "Three C" highway from Cleveland to Columbus to Cincinnati. I drove that on the way home to Columbus to I-70 to Washington, PA, then home via I-79.

Wilmington is 34 miles southeast of Dayton, 52 miles northwest of Cincinnati and 62 miles southwest of Columbus. The radio stations came from Dayton mostly; cable television was from Cincinnati.

Here are the pics. Once again, my Galaxy 7 Android phone inexplicably erased some of my pictures.
Wednesday night at the Clinton County Court House. Separation of Church and State?

The General Denver Hotel, in the heart of Wilmington, where I stayed

Main Street, Wilmington, well kept up. The apartments on the upper floors looked like they might be expensive


Clinton County Courthouse, South Street (U.S. 68), Wilmington

South South Street Historic District

South South Street

South South Street

grain elevators near downtown Wilmington

Doan House, originally 1840, remodeled after 1869

College Hall, Wilmington College, mid-19th century

Rombach Place, Wilmington, 1831, now a museum

Mural in downtown Wilmington

Bank building, downtown Wilmington

Beam and Sons Grannery, Port William

Port William, north of Wilmington

Commercial block, New Vienna, east of Wilmington

Lynchburg Covered Bridge, 1870 over the east fork of Little Miami River. The other side of the bridge is in Highland County

Downtown Blanchester, southwest of Wilmington

Pansy Methodist Church and School, near Martinsville, southwest of Wilmington

Lake Cowan State Park, near Martinsville

Martinsville Road covered bridge, 1871

Underwood Farm rural Historic District, Union Township, west of Wilmington

Sunday, December 2, 2018

Sixty-Nine and Six Weeks





It's been a strange week. Joe and I were in Memphis Wednesday to Sunday over Thanksgiving with his family. I wasn't feeling all that great, but I had no fever when we left Morgantown, so I figured it was no big deal. We flew via Pittsburgh and Atlanta. It's an eighty-five mile drive from our house to Pittsburgh airport. The weather was cold but clear, and traffic along that route is manageable. The plane rides were excruciating because my ears felt clogged, and all four landings were painful. I've been to Memphis many times with Joe, and I enjoy his family. We don't have political arguments with the relatives; all of us are on the same page.

I broke lots of rules in Memphis. I ate fried chicken, pie, pizza and ice cream. I shopped in the outlet mall in Mississippi, just outside Memphis. I try to avoid Mississippi. And it was Saturday, when I don't shop. I bought things at stores I don't like for political reasons. I like all the clothes I bought.

It was my intent to go to the gym Monday, the day after we got home, but instead I detoured to the walk-in clinic nearby. The doctor there said I had an ear infection common to children and prescribed an antibiotic. He said I would feel a lot better by Tuesday, but should take the rest of the day off. I did that, only I never felt really better. Maybe a little.

I'm on Morgantown's City Council, and we met at five Tuesday to interview applicants for city boards and commissions. It was cold out and had snowed overnight. The regular meeting started at seven, with several presentations, including one from our Municipal Utility Board, the water and sewer people, unhappy about a proposal to change things at the agency. I tuned out some of the discussion. We could have thrown out the proposal right then, but it was tabled. At eleven. Then we had speakers from the public. We left at 11:30. I was not feeling well, and it had snowed again. I went to bed as soon as I got home and stayed  in all day Wednesday.

The weather was better Thursday and I ran a few errands out of the house. I had my last lesson with an ADD coach. I like him, and he helped me, but his solutions to organizational problems are complex and I need everything to be as simple as possible. My default mode is closer to catatonic than hyperactive, and complexity, especially involving apps, confuses me. Still, he made me see how to list things that must get done, and set a time to stop doing the off-the-wall stuff that I find really interesting, in my case involving lists of cities, or pop music albums.

Joe had asked me to come with him Friday to a funeral for an elderly gentleman, an old-fashioned  haberdasher by trade, who had passed away at ninety-three in a nursing home. We hadn't seen the sun in a few days, and it was chilly and damp out. I felt I knew the man after I heard Joe's eulogy. A son-in-law also spoke about how the deceased man had years ago found him a suit in another store that was just right for him. He wore that suit to the funeral. I had noticed that it was a nice suit, somewhat out of style but not horribly so. We went to lunch with the family at a tattooed granddaughter's house, which took us about an hour to find. We got home late afternoon and still had services that night at our temple.

I again stayed in bed most of Saturday, feeling weak more than anything, still with no fever. I walked for a half hour in a cool drizzle. I'm always afraid to not exercise. My heart is weak, and I fear it will stop if I don't use it. Joe and I went out at five to a memorial for Jarred Parrot, who was involved politically in town, running a successful campaign for an outsider candidate for the state legislature. Jarred was hospitalized just before Election Day and diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor, at thirty-seven. He died the Monday before Thanksgiving. I knew him, and would have attended the funeral, but it was Friday, when we were in Memphis. This was an informal gathering of friends at a restaurant. People were invited to speak about Jarred, but few did. I don't think most people knew him well. He stayed in the political background. I didn't get a chance to greet everyone, although I know most of them. We left to  dine at another restaurant, and were home early.

 I ate too much (again) at dinner. Joe left half his enormous meal. I had to eat all of mine. The weather had warmed up some, and our cat, Tappuz, wanted to go out. We couldn't convince her to come in when we went to bed. I got up to go the bathroom at three, and by then she was waiting at the door. I brought her to our bedroom and hoped she would sleep with us, but she was awake, and wanted to play. Eventually, she jumped off the bed. I couldn't get back to sleep. Although it was cool in the room, I was sweating, probably dehydrated and overstuffed, awake because I drank iced tea at eight at the restaurant.

Saturday was also World AIDS Day, and we learned of the death of George H.W. Bush, the former president. Some praised him as a President who knew what he was doing and was faithful to his wife. Obama was all that, too, but of course, he's still alive and he's, well, Black. The counter narrative was that Bush deliberately ignored the AIDS crisis, refused to allocate money for research, and allowed anti-gay Evangelical Christians to take over much of the Republican Party.

My take-away from World AIDS Day is more personal. It's about my friends who perished: Scott Stamford, Rue Starr, Hal Wakker, Fred Shuldiner, Art Horowitz, Avram Chill, and David Fyffe. There were others who put me off when I suggested we date, hurting my feelings, until I found out a month or two later that they had died. I was in a performance art group in Santa Monica in the early 90s, and several young men in the group died. I was taken back to those times, and the heartlessness of the Republican Party, despite the kindly faces and the jokes, especially Ronald Reagan and both Bushes. I know of no one my age who is still alive and HIV+. Everyone I knew who was infected has died.

Today, Sunday December 2,  was warm and sunny. I slept late after being up much of the night. I got to the grocery store, and walked in the warm sunshine. We had to be at temple early for the five P.M. Chanukah Party, so I didn't nap, like I usually do.

Today I am sixty-nine years and six weeks old. That is, to the day, the age my father was when he died. I've been obsessing about this for a long time. I have most of the same ailments my father had, particularly a damaged and failing heart. What's different for me is the advance of medical technology. When I had a heart attack in 2003, a surgeon inserted a camera into my veins and found the blockage that caused the heart attack, placing a spring in the clogged artery to reopen it. In 2015, the cardiologist I see here in Morgantown, unhappy with my swollen ankles and some poor test results, sent me to the hospital, where three more stents went in. My father didn't have that technology.

I can still walk up steps, ride a bike, dance, drive long distances, not without a certain degree of fatigue, but I think no more than average men my age. I can't delude myself into thinking I am anywhere other than the last stage of my life, however long that may be. Rabbi Joe, my spouse, who is seven years younger than I am, asks me where we should retire to in five or ten years. I'm being realistic, not morbid, when I suggest he may have to do that with his next husband.

The Chanukah party tonight was great. I felt energized and I won the 50-50 raffle. I ate a lot of forbidden (diet-wise) foods. It took my mind off my father, my friend Jarred, my friends who died from AIDS, George H.W. Bush, and my still somewhat clogged ears.

Time to move on to the rest of my life.

Monday, November 12, 2018

Clermont County, Ohio

With my class at Life-Long Learning over Thursday, meetings and yet another medical appointment  this week, a bar mitzvah at our synagogue Saturday, and then Thanksgiving, I thought that if I were going exploring this month, it should be this weekend. There were a few problems. Our Suzuki wouldn't start Thursday morning, and we had someone come and jump start it. It works now, but it always sounds like it doesn't want to start, so we are worried. And there was a threat of snow and cold weather. Fool that I am, I booked my regular chain motel in Union Township, Clermont County. Morgantown to the county seat, Batavia, is 280 miles. Clermont County is just east of Cincinnati and runs from the suburbs south to the Ohio River and out into farmland and small towns.

It was pouring down rain most of the way, and when I got to Batavia around 4 P.M. (from 10 A.M.) it already looked dark out, although I had checked that sunset wasn't until 5:28. Although all of Ohio is in the Eastern time zone, much of the state is far enough west to be in Central. I looked around Batavia, then headed to the motel for a much-needed nap. I couldn't find the place. It's in Union Township, adjacent to Hamilton County (where Cincinnati is located) amidst a jumble of shops, a crazy interchange and three streets named "Eastgate." I finally figured it out, and a Russian-accented young woman checked me in.

I probably didn't sleep more than a few minutes. I ate at Bob Evans, a chain diner based in Ohio. I sat at the counter with a few chatty single men, and a waitress who called the men "honey." I liked her. The advantage of that place was that I only had to cross one street, then walk through a shopping center parking lot. I didn't see crosswalks or pedestrian signals anywhere.

I was back early to the room, where I plotted out where I would go Saturday. There are 28 places on the National Register, but many of them are Native American burial mounds, which, if not identified by a sign, are easy to miss. I had a brochure from the library with a map and the locations of ten branches. I figured visiting all of them would give me a view of the towns in the county, with the added bonus of a public bathroom in each one. From what I had seen near the motel, I figured the rural areas, far from Cincinnati, and especially along the Ohio River, would be more interesting than the malls and shopping centers in the more urban areas. As I went to sleep, the forecast was for cold, windy weather and snow.

It was 21 F. in the morning, but bright sunshine and no frost on the car window. My first stop was a nearby Kroger (based in Cincinnati, but with stores in Morgantown) for gas and a pair of gloves, the one thing I forgot to pack. I had mapped out the order for the libraries, and a few historic sites, plus a giant park with a reservoir used as a recreational lake. I was on the road early, but the idea that I could visit all these places in a day seemed far-fetched, especially with the car sounding like it didn't want to start.

I had looked for a synagogue in Clermont County, but apparently there never was one. Cincinnati is heavily Jewish, with the original headquarters of the Reform movement, plus many other synagogues. It also has a large African-American population. Clermont is the third county I've visited bordering Hamilton County, where Cincinnati is located. I was in Butler County to the north in May 2016, and Campbell County, Kentucky, a short walk across the Ohio river from downtown in December of that year. Both counties are nearly all white, and aside from a small Conservative congregation in the city of Hamilton in Butler County, almost free of Jews. In Baltimore and Washington, Jews and African-Americans live in large numbers outside the two cities. I was also surprised that there are 1950s-style suburbs like where I grew up in Baltimore, but not much newer building. The small towns that are relatively close-in seem untouched in fifty years.

I ended up late afternoon in Miami Township, at the library, and in the nearby city of Milford, the county's largest, and although the signs say "Historic Milford" I noted lots of big-box stores and a cinema. I made it the Cincinnati Nature Preserve near Milford just after 4:30. It closed at five, and though I offered to pay the $6.00 fee to look around for twenty minutes until closing, the man in the kiosk said "No." By five, I was at the hotel, looking for a nap. The weather had remained sunny and pretty, the temperature had gone up to 36 F.

I thought I should hit the mall near the hotel, so I was there about 7 P.M. I got a plate of teriyaki with rice and vegetables, and got to explain, in Spanish, to the worker that I wanted less rice and more vegetables. Eastgate is a pretty mall, not doing well, like most of the malls I visit. Still, their Sears looks like it will stay open, They have Penney's and Kohl, and Dillard, although that closed early. Lots of people were out shopping in the evening. I was in the room by 8, and asleep early.

Sunday was warmer, and still sunny. I had a relatively easy drive home.

Clermont County is 95.9% white according to the 2010 census, and 67.5% of the voters went for Trump in 2016. It's not generally a wealthy county. I saw lots of dollar stores and pizza parlors. Usually I see fast food Asian restaurants, but not here. I had lunch at a pizza place in Williamsburg, a pretty little town. My eight-inch pizza with mushrooms was only $5, but I had to go the grocery up the street for a 50 cent can of "pop." I chatted up the proprietress who said she avoided the Eastgate area where I was staying because it was so confusing, and in a refrain I hear often from small-town and rural people, she said "I can't imagine living in a big city. It must be terrifying, " I had told her about Morgantown and I think she considered a city of 30,000, with an additional 30,000 students, to be a big city. Yet Williamburg is only 37 miles from Cincinnati, which must seem like another world. Still, there were Mexican workers at the mall, African-Americans working in the hotel, Russians at the front desk, and when I told the manager of the hotel that I was going to West Virginia, she said "Oh! The Golden Temple!" So she knew about the Hindu temple in Moundsville. I think she is from India, as many of the hotel managers are. I suggest that change is on the way. Maybe Cincinnati isn't growing as fast as other cities, and is less of a magnet than those places, but there is an internationalism that is bound to spread. More description follows with the pictures.
Older part of the Clermont County Courthouse, Batavia


Newer (but older looking) part of Clermont County Courthouse

A collection of ceramic bells displayed at the library in Batavia

Main St., Batavia

A collection of Western figures from the library in Amelia

Ross-Gowdy House, early 19th century, New Richmond


Along the Ohio River in New Richmond

Front Street along the river, New Richmond

Birthplace of Ulysses S. Grant, Point Pleasant

Williams House, Williamsburg
Bethel  Methodist Church, after 1810, now used for community events, East Fork State Park

The lake, a reservoir, in East Fork State Park

Elk Lick Mound, a burial mound from the Adena people, from the first millennium of the common era. I felt a vibration from the mound, as if these ancient people still had a presence.

Stonelick Covered Bridge, Stonelick Township, 1878

Promont, near Milford, now a museum, 1865

The food court at Eastgate Mall, probably 1990s