Introduce your home town

Jefferson, MD in the late 18th century was known as "Trap town" just east of Harpers Ferry on the route from the Cumberland gap to points east and south. There were toll booths at both ends of town and a tavern in between. The town incorporated as Jefferson in the 19th century and later decided that the local government was not needed and un-incorporated.

All of the shots in my gallery (except two) were taken within a 1.5K of my home in Jefferson.
 
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I live in a small city, pop 13k or so, in the eastern 2/3 of Washington, separated from the western side by the Cascade Mountains, a more conservative culture, and a dryer climate. I moved here from Seattle 30 years ago, and a year later married my long-time best girl. She was not at all sure she wanted to be so far from the city and its shopping, but we both have come to prefer the small-town atmosphere. Here you encounter the same people in different contexts, and socially you cannot afford to be too offensive, so we practice courtesy and tolerance together. There is a culture-gap between the college and the ranching/farming communities, but this is a great place to settle down and join in.

Photographic opportunities are different than in a large city, and as with entertainment, one needs to be more self-reliant.

I grew up about 10 miles from Laurence (in message #8), near Bremerton across Puget Sound from Seattle. Our house was on the waterfront, and the extensive protected bays and channels of Puget Sound made for a very rich boating experience that I miss over here in the interior. As a teen, I was charmed by the idea that I could get in my home-made boat and theoretically have access to the Pacific Ocean, maybe make it to Alaska...

I'll attach a couple of shots: The first along the river on a winter day, the second on a misty spring morning as the audiologist turns the corner to her office in the next block. I was just snapping the ugly green place behind and shot her quickly as she appeared and I recognized her. She is screaming "Oh, you finally got me!" as she has resisted being shot before. 😀 But it's pleasantly typical of this community that we recognize many other residents and see them in different places and contexts.
 

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Joerg said:
Hi,

my hometown is a small town 50 km east of Frankfurt/Germany. Has a long history as a toll station of the major "Salt Road" from Franfurt to Leipzig. But I only lived there for half of my life. I guess it is still home.
Now I am living in Cambridge, MA which though much bigger has that small town feeling.

Ciao

Joerg
Joerg I love your German town pictures. It could only be one country and it looks idyllic. If they have a tourist office, they need your pictures!
 
I live in Belfast.

Cheers,
Seán.

PS This was taken with a Fed 1 and the collapsible 50mm f/3.5 Elmarski.
 

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lushd said:
Joerg I love your German town pictures. It could only be one country and it looks idyllic. If they have a tourist office, they need your pictures!

Donald,

thanks for the kind words.
Yes Waechtersbach is quite idyllic, a lot of forrest etc. but as a teen I sure did not appreciate...😀

Ciao

joerg
 
For the past 15 years, I've lived in Washington, DC (District of Columbia), a medium-sized U.S. city that happens to be the nation's capital. I consider it my home town because I grew up in the Maryland suburbs outside the city. DC has always existed in the shadow of larger East Coast cities like NY, Philadelphia, & even, until relatively recently, Baltimore, & for good reason. In addition to a smaller, less concentrated, population, DC has fewer tightly-knit neighborhoods, probably because many of the residents are very transient (albeit highly educated), even by U.S. standards. Also, like most (North) American cities, the majority of the population (including myself as a child) lives in the surrounding automobile-friendly suburbs, not in the city. I take most of my photographs within DC, w/an eye to depicting aspects of daily life here that aren't part of the "marble city," i.e., that aren't directly related to the workings of the federal government or the monuments that the tourists visit. To paraphrase Daniel Webster's description of Dartmouth College: Washington, DC is a small city. And, yet there are those who love it.

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After living 20+ years in Augsburg/Germany I call this my hometown. It's a medium sized town that had it's part in history being 2000+ years old, home of the Fugger and Welser, once (~14th to 16th century) the world's richest merchants who financed king's and popes, decided wars, got their own favorite elected to emperor, founded colonies in South and Middle America and traded with the most parts of the world. In this town the treaty ending the 30 years war was signed because it was the only town where protestants and catholics lived together in peace.
Today the town is kind of sleepy, looking graceful at upstarts like Munich 😀 . A lot of the town got destroyed by bombs in WWII (Messerschmidt-Fighters were developed and build here) but there are still a lot of nice places.
If anyone plans to visit southern Germany, don't miss it. I dare too say that even the beer is better than in Munich duckandcover
 
I have two hometowns. I live in St Albans now but I was born in Dublin, Ireland. Here's a picture taken with my Seagull 203 of the park in Dun Laoghaire.
 

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I am led to believe it is the original bicycle that featured in the "The Third Policeman" by Flann O' Brien now living out a peaceful retirement as a flowerbed:

The gross and net result of it is that people who spend most of their natural lives riding iron bicycles over the rocky roadsteads of this parish get their personalities mixed up with the personalities of their bicycle as a result of the interchanging of the atoms of each of them and you would be surprised at the number of people in these parts who nearly are half people and half bicycles.


See:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Third_Policeman
 
Center of town - home of the Art Fair on the Square, Cows on the Concourse, many many protest's, and of course the annual Harvest Festival (no, not corn...😛 ) my understanding is that the only dome taller is in DC - by about a foot.



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Sigh... I'm jealous!

Utterly-butterly confused about the definition of home. I've lived in (ie. at least about a year): Laren & Duivendrecht (near Amsterdam, born there), Brasschaat (just north of Antwerp), Maracay (Venezuela), London, Woodbury (outside St. Paul, MN), Oxford and Cambridge. About to move again, to London, and maybe move again in a year's time. And I'm only 31! I've liked and loathed all of them, can recommend all of them for a visit. Home? Hmmmm....... Maybe just a true European?

Doctor Zero
 
Doctor Zero, it can be tough... and I think the definition of "home" must be left to each of us. It may be where you are now, and it may be where your heart is. I lived in military barracks for a few years and I didn't really consider any of those quarters "home", though they provided shelter and a place to keep my stuff. Maybe they were home at the time... I have fonder memory of my first rental apartment, and the several places I called home subsequently, but don't now think of those places as "home." Yet I'll still take the opportunity to pass by them from time to time to see how they fare. The place I bought 30 years ago where I still live is definitely home. And perhaps my childhood home, where there's a lot of emotional nostalgic connection; I thought of that place as home, where my parents lived until recently, the place I could always return to. But no longer, and it fills me with sadness that I can no longer call it home.
 
Living in the USA.

Living in the USA.

I live in Southern Florida, usually make it to the ocean about 5 times a week. I have lived in California, Ohio, New York, Ct, Maine, but mostly Virginia. I have been all over the world. Sometimes by car, sometimes by plane, sometimes by train, sometimes by bus, but mostly by the thumb (In some countries you use the finger, no not the middle one.)😱
 

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Born in the UK (Midlands), but lived most of my life in NZ in or near Wellington. Also lived in London then Genoa in my early '20s. Spent the past 8 years living in London then Amsterdam, then just recently moved back to Wellington. Who knows how long we'll be here before heading off somewhere else?!

So, Wellington is what I'd call home. For now.

Here it is on a nice day (today, nice it is NOT!), shot with a Zeiss Ikonta 524/2

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Lived in Sydney all my life, about 30mins drive north. I`ve travelled quite a bit and am always reminded how lucky I am to live in such a nice place when I return home.
Not too many tourists see this side of Sydney as they mostly only make it as far north as Manly beach. It`s a great place to be, but soooo expensive to buy real etate, maybe thats why so many sydneysiders are moving to Queensland! A lot of my gallery pics are just down the road from my place, which means I havn`t been travelling too much lately, must be the big mortgage and full time job(doh!)
 
P C Headland said:
So, Wellington is what I'd call home. For now.
Here it is on a nice day (today, nice it is NOT!), shot with a Zeiss Ikonta 524/2

I thought bit of state highway looked familiar!

I live on the northern end of that road, Auckland. There a few photos left in my RFF gallery.
Auckland is unique as we have something in the order of 150 dormant volcanoes in the area, and if you stand on some taller ones you can see TWO different oceans/seas. Not many cities can claim that. It's also where we successfully defended the America's Cup for the first time in 100 odd years.
We also suffer from the Four Seasons in One Day curse.

Stu 🙂
 
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