Often
during the past few months, when I would exclaim over some little town far from
home that appealed to me, David would say, “Well it isn’t exactly Paris!” So when I saw Paris, Missouri, on the
map, he agreed that we couldn’t pass it by. It isn’t a big place, and it’s a
mile off the pretty little two-lane highway (U.S. 40) between Columbia and
Hannibal (not far from the birthplace of Mark Twain), but we took that side
road off the two-lane, and at left you see David clearly asking the camera,
“This is Paris? You call this Paris?” (Note: Still in shirtsleeves.)
The
Paris Hardware had a display of flowering plants out on the sidewalk. Flowers
displayed on the sidewalk? Parisian in my book!
But
in Jac’s Restaurant, David’s efforts to speak French didn’t get him very far.
Jac’s is a Mexican restaurant, housed in a building that dates from 1873, when
it was Jackson Bros. Grocery & Meat Market, specializing in local
home-killed and home-cured meat. Judging from the quality of the ham and chicken
in my big chef salad, I’d say the present owners are upholding original
standards very well. Definitely a cut above average! Pero se habla español, non
françesa.
There
are at least two other eateries in Paris, Missouri, plus old gravestones in the
historic Founders’ Cemetery, an old iron railroad bridge over the middle fork
of the Salt River, and a gorgeous courthouse that we hadn’t expected. (We saw many beautiful old courthouses across the country.) And David
could not deny that it was, after all, Paris ( -- Missouri).
Crossing
the Mississippi River at Hannibal, we continued toward Springfield, Illinois,
and a reunion with my sister, short (the reunion, not my sister) but sweet
(sister and reunion). Another Route 66 restaurant was the scene of our
rendez-vous. Get off the expressways, and nostalgia overfloweth!
Not sure what that Route 31 sign is doing behind our heads, and wherever all my Route 66 pix from this stop are, they're not where I can get at them this minute....
After
Springfield, on the way to visit my mother and the third sister in Joliet, we
took time for a short side trip off I-55 to the town of Pontiac. I lived in
Illinois from before I was three years to the age of 18 but had never been to
Pontiac before. My mother said she doesn’t think she’s ever been to Pontiac.
Well,
it’s another county seat town, on the banks of the Vermilion River, and the
downtown was lively on a sunny Saturday afternoon. Like so many other towns on
our travels this year, it leans on the Route 66 theme, but it doesn’t forget
Chief Pontiac, who gave the town its name. If I’d been on foot rather than
shooting from a car window, I’d have evidence of that to offer, along with much
more in the way of public murals, blooming trees, pretty houses, 1950s cars,
and more.
But
we were on a mission, Joliet our destination, and getting there by late
afternoon kept us right on our admittedly loose “schedule.” The next day,
Sunday, driving back to my mother’s house after church, I noticed I was once
again (sans
camera) on old Route 66. It wasn’t a planned theme for this year’s travel:
things just worked out that way.
That
was then.
On Monday, at the state line, Michigan greeted us with rain, and some
of that rain was freezing on the car windshield by Tuesday afternoon as we
worked our way north. Tuesday night we were snug in our old farmhouse as the
temperature went down below freezing. Wednesday the snow flurries were at times
quite thick.
This winter weather reprise serves one purpose for us, taking away
any doubt our minds might hold that we were anywhere but home.
3 comments:
Welcome home! I so enjoyed your travelogs this winter.
Oh my goodness! What a wonderful trip. And look! We saved some fresh snow for you! You can thank us later.
Dawn, how about I thank you now and get it over with? Thanks for the welcome, Karen. Bright sunshine today (Friday) looks awfully good!
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