joann
Key Bridge is arguably the most beautiful of the bridges that connect Washington, D.C. and Virginia. This is a view of Key Bridge from the old Aqueduct Bridge Abutment in Georgetown. The Aqueduct Bridge was built to transport cargo-carrying boats on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal in Georgetown across the Potomac River to the Alexandria Canal. The Aqueduct Bridge closed in 1923 after Key Bridge was constructed, and it was demolished in 1933. It is a little scary walking out to the edge of what remains of the old bridge where there’s an alarming drop off, but I’ll do almost anything to take a picture.
The birthplace of early 20th century writer Willa Cather, this broken-down house still stands along the main highway near Gore, Virginia. The Cathers moved to a finer brick house when their daughter was still a baby. When she was nine, they moved to Nebraska, and the Great Plains was the setting for several of her novels. Some sources say the Cathers moved to the plains for better farming opportunities and to escape a tuberculous outbreak rampant in Virginia at the time. But there was a lot of bad feeling in the Gore area after the Civil War. Some families had supported the south while others sided with the north. There is speculation the Cathers left after their barn was burned.