Midnight Pub

past, present, and towns

~tffb

I live in Farmington, Missouri. I grew up in St Louis, also Jefferson County (between the two), N St Louis, etc. I know the area fairly well. No hesitation saying that.

Farmington is nice. Incredibly nice.

Where am I going to go with this? I don't know.

I thought of St Louis (it's once booming commercial districts, crowded streets, full parking lots) and Jefferson County (less businesses, more rural (like Farmington present day), but peaceful. And how now, St Louis (South County, North County) are storefronts, lease signs in the window. The city, less crime than in the 80s/90s, more businesses, but highs and lows throughout.

And then Farmington. I've been in this town for 1.5 years. I have yet to see an empty storefront. Of MANY storefronts. Much denser than South County or Northern Jefferson County. Difference being small "lawns" (or even fields) alongside storefronts. Spacious.

The big box stores were always the canary in the coal mine in STL. In fact, they were the boards on the mine entrance. Those go, most businesses smaller do. JC Penny was the marker for that. The last of the big box outlets to have a presence in STL.

In Farmington, one can hardly get through the JC Penny parking lot without dodging cars. "Holdouts" in town, too - A&W Root Beer, Steak n' Shake, businesses that once had large chains in STL, which I thought (and in many ways did) go out of business, still have a presence in Farmington.

There are reasons (for Farmington, I won't touch STL politics/economy) and I think it is two things:

A) if someone in ALL of St Francois County wants to go to a restaurant, a store, whatever, they pretty much have to come to Farmington. The other towns are much smaller, very much so. So the entire "chunk" of SE Missouri comes to/goes from a dense town (Farmington)

B) when going down Highway 67, looking at a data coverage map, the highway and few towns alongside have great coverage. The rest of the county has near no coverage. And is mostly protected national forests, anyway. So less online shopping in those area. They can come into town and hop on wifi, or just go to the store and buy the item there.

It's a lovely town. I am happy here. Just a lurvletter for it :)


inquiry

You word paint a nice picture!

FWIW, I see I-55 and I-57 run down that way, and it just so happens I was on *both* - albeit much farther north - for a while yesterday. :-)

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tffb

ty :)

55 goes through STL. I lived off it in Pevely for years (Weir Road, adjacent).

I am on 67, which runs down through SE Missouri, and into Arkansas.

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inquiry

Interesting. Never heard of US-67 before.

I occasionally get into reading about US highways and interstates, especially their terminuses. Yeah, rather arbitrary stuff, but I'm somehow drawn to it.

Somewhat related is I also get a real kick out of what I call "the last house", which is a situation along a road/highway where it's one house after another, and then suddenly a confluence of roads/highways. A "last house" borders on such. And since we're generally talking places of significant traffic, I often wonder what it's like to live in such.

We owned a "last house" of sorts several years ago that we AirBNB'd. It didn't start out that way, but changes to a railway situation in that town led to the house/property becoming isolated except by way of an alley. <Deity>, I'll never forget when the train company people rode some of their huge equipment through our yard, creating significant yard divots.. and then also put up some kind of non-trivial electronic board right on the border of our lot. Much taking of photos, angry email and phone calls. It led only to minimal repair, and we couldn't see "lawyering up" leading to much more than ongoing frustration.

We managed to sell for a small profit, so apparently others still saw value where we saw "writing on the wall".

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tffb

a friend, Bo, worked for MoDot/IllDot for years (Dept of Transportation) and it was wild the shortcuts and small roads we went through on treks to backpacking locations, SE Missouri, SW Illinois.

I get the last house scenario. Like the last shreds of civilization before looking out to vast expansion. Pevely had that. Looking over 55 and fields forever. It was previous a KOA location.

Farmington is less "last house" expansiveness, and more hub/holdout in a dense, vast forrested area. Hundreds of miles of protected forest surround Farmington.

I envy those in the trapper cabins of N Alaska. The remote, isolation of it all. Albeit. With skills and knowledge to get theres and get FROM there, in time. But unparalleled solitude - not a thing to take for granted.

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inquiry

Bo knows shortcuts?

(couldn't resist)

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