This video was taken on October 2 during our fall vacation in the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia. Somehow the name "Shenandoah" just has such a beautiful ring to it, no wonder, since it means "beautiful daughter of the stars".
We were staying in a condo in Massanutten, a ski area and did a number of day trips. Our first trip took us to Harrisonburg, a historic Virginia town, 15 minutes west of Massanutten. I started by interviewing the travel expert at the Harrisonburg Tourism Office and then set off on a little walking tour of the town. The town features various historic homes, and one of the most impressive buildings is the court house whose roof is crowned by a statue of the goddess of justice.
After a nice lunch at an outdoor cafe we continued our exploration and drove southwards on a country road. Rolling farm country and lots of happy grazing cows surrounded us on this serene drive.
About an hour later we arrived in Staunton, a picturesque city of about 28,000 people in the southern Shenandoah Valley. Staunton has a beautiful main street (West Beverley Street) with many beautifully preserved historic buildings in different architectural styles. The most stunning one is the Masonic Building, reminiscent of a European medieval structure.
Although Staunton goes back to 1747, the town experienced its heyday between 1880 and 1920, so the majority of the architecture is Victorian. Staunton has five historic districts, one of them a right next to the rail line which features old warehouse buildings that have been converted into retail stores, galleries and cafes. Other major sights include the recently renovated Stonewall Jackson Hotel and the colonial-style Mary Baldwin College.
I also had a brief chat (and video interview) with the local tourism representative who gave me further information about this charming town. He pointed out that one of the key attractions in Staunton is the Blackfriars Playhouse, a replica of Shakespeare's Blackfriars Theatre. Staunton was well worth the drive.
I am actually a travel writer who loves to explore international destinations as well as my chosen home town of Toronto. On Youtube you will find hundreds of video clips from a wide variety of destinations. Feel free to check out some of my 700+ articles and interviews on http://www.travelandtransitions.com. Also, my travel e-books containing stories from my trips to destinations such as Sicily, Havana, Mexico City, New York City, Chicago, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Vancouver, Halifax and many others are available right now at http://www.travelandtransitions.com/e-books.htm.
@sapy52 you would be right
Thesuperspy15 6 months ago
The bank building and court house are made of limestone.
deepindebtinnc 2 years ago
LOL @ Hole in the wall!! hahaha class!
you should've got the cemetary also the methodist church little further ahead, and that place behind the bank's building right in front of the rockingham county free clinic, $ 2.50 two hot dogs and a pop. lol
st3even 2 years ago
Hole in the Wall. yes! not just porn though. they also sell incense posters, pipe screens, digi scales, rolling papers as well as other fun little things
BenJammin173 3 years ago
Jess' lunch burned in 1979. I remember seeing the little public announcements marching across the WHSV screen vividly the night it went down. All local firemen were asked to come to Harrisonburg to help fight the blaze. One fireman died in that fire, a blaze that started thanks to an arsonist.
Rhenoism 4 years ago
Yeah, you didn't say anything about Hole in the Wall.
porn shop close to court house. gg
Kyuuketsuki0 4 years ago