I was born in 87 and grew up in gburg. My WHOLE family is from, and lives there. This was really awesome for me to see. Thank you. I love looking at my mothers pictures (she is a baker) from when she was a child and a young adult and seeing how much gburg has changed. I like to look at her child hood photos and she will tell me what road the pic was taken on, it is weird to see how much it has changed.....how much I have seen it change in my life time alone.
Would you consider some time driving out to Adams outside Greensburg but using the old road, 421, that passes by the red barn, if it is still there, just before one turns left into Adams and film it and also film some of Adams, too? One can find nothing on-line about Adams or what it looks like now. We used to play as kids in Clifty Creek, just down the road or hill from where Willard Turner once lived and had stacks of old tires piled up around his house.
What is the title of this piece of music? Great choice! Surreal, as are the two videos you have posted. I very much like the other piece of music also in Greensburg, 1937, Part 1. If you have any footage of Greensburg in 1959 please post it. But thanks for what you have done here. I remember fondly G.C. Murphy's and The Fair Store and Batterton's Drug store that used to have a small mechanical monkey in the window with a baton in its hand that tapped the window. So long ago!
An exellent choice of music in this video, as in Greensburg, 1937, Part 1. I remember Marsh's Foodliner, as it was called when I was a kid (1950s). My third grade teacher at St. Mary's was Mrs. Schiedler...so I wondered about that when I saw Schiedler's Barn in this video. I hope someday someone will post a video with Grinnel's Sundry that used to stand next to Clemen's Hardware. My father, Harry G. Campbell and his brother used to own that store and the apts above it.
I was born in 87 and grew up in gburg. My WHOLE family is from, and lives there. This was really awesome for me to see. Thank you. I love looking at my mothers pictures (she is a baker) from when she was a child and a young adult and seeing how much gburg has changed. I like to look at her child hood photos and she will tell me what road the pic was taken on, it is weird to see how much it has changed.....how much I have seen it change in my life time alone.
serialkillinj 2 weeks ago
Would you consider some time driving out to Adams outside Greensburg but using the old road, 421, that passes by the red barn, if it is still there, just before one turns left into Adams and film it and also film some of Adams, too? One can find nothing on-line about Adams or what it looks like now. We used to play as kids in Clifty Creek, just down the road or hill from where Willard Turner once lived and had stacks of old tires piled up around his house.
nickandmikec 7 months ago
@nickandmikec That road is gone...Honda is there now.
joedwenger 1 week ago
wow this is wild what part of stateroad three is that
eatsgutsandshitbitch 10 months ago
What is the title of this piece of music? Great choice! Surreal, as are the two videos you have posted. I very much like the other piece of music also in Greensburg, 1937, Part 1. If you have any footage of Greensburg in 1959 please post it. But thanks for what you have done here. I remember fondly G.C. Murphy's and The Fair Store and Batterton's Drug store that used to have a small mechanical monkey in the window with a baton in its hand that tapped the window. So long ago!
nickandmikec 2 years ago
An exellent choice of music in this video, as in Greensburg, 1937, Part 1. I remember Marsh's Foodliner, as it was called when I was a kid (1950s). My third grade teacher at St. Mary's was Mrs. Schiedler...so I wondered about that when I saw Schiedler's Barn in this video. I hope someday someone will post a video with Grinnel's Sundry that used to stand next to Clemen's Hardware. My father, Harry G. Campbell and his brother used to own that store and the apts above it.
nickandmikec 2 years ago
Thanks for posting these.I'm not from Greensburg,I'm from Columbus but I appreciate the historical value of these videos.
Down989 2 years ago