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Anyway: as modern as tomorrow! If tomorrow was 1955. That's why I love it. Even the streetlights are old.
Empty as yesterday, though.
Go on, Google it.
You're thinking - his brother?
No, not his brother.
Hope they never change the facade. If someone tried, someone would remind them why they oughtn't. Another remarkably . . . big modern facade. The building next door suggests what it covered up. While I don't like losing the old facades, there's something about these that give a downtown merit as well; it's a reminder of a time and a style.
I suspect the chain was founded by a fellow name Brown, who probably brushed aside concerns that he would alienate the people who wanted a black pair. Oh, the money in this one: All that terracotta.
The label-scar at the bottom tells the tale of downtown. It's the Wilson Building:
As is the case - if a town's lucky - it's being redeveloped as apartments now.
Er - okay. Old rich man with a punk girlfriend in 1977.-
It seems as if they're trying quite hard to make the streets attractive. But you can't do anything about some of the buildings. BTW, here's the tourist-info site on the bank: "In 1932 a bank robbery there shook the town of Clinton when it occurred in their community. The case was quickly solved and the robbers sent to prison. This building is the crown jewel in a wonderful and successful downtown." Okay. As I often say: I love these structures. Modernism on the cheap, but they often brough a broad swath of color to moribund places.
You suspect it was something other than a pawnshop. Insurance, perhaps. I'd bet it was insurance. It was always insurance. Armstrong and his sons. All of them?
Was there ever a son who left down and had no time for the old man and his kin, only to come back to town a decade later, stare up at what they'd built, see "SONS" on the cornice and ball his fists in fury because he knew he wasn't included? Clinton tourism website:
Only one? I love it, but it doesn't work.
The horizontal lines are perfectly proportioned. The ornamentation is brillant. But together? Hmm. They're still lucky to have it.
Now, the surprise:
Enough about Wright, for heaven's sake. Sullivan deserves to be mentioned without that yoked around his neck. Anyway, it was a department store, and unlike Wright's work, it got built and it didn't leak. Wikipedia:
After that, what can compare? An old classic sign:
With a metal facade and 50s brick AND the lighted sign underneath the overhang. The downtown middle-aged people remember dimly from trips downtown for church shows when they were five.
You might have a suspicion about this one's original purpose:
It was the Royal, then the Strand. Cinema Treasures comment:
Local capitalist! Finally, a ghost.
Any guesses? |
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