Author Topic: What I do remember  (Read 11159 times)

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Offline tach18k

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What I do remember
« on: Jun 25, 09, 08:18:52 PM »
Being a weekender since the mid 1950's, I can clearly remember our place looking over Twin Lakes, when there were two lakes. The closest one had a water fountain in the middle and lots of flying lake life. Picking wild Apples in the fields off Lone Pine. Ride our sleds down Cedar till they banned that in the ealy 60's. So we moved our sled to the top of Cedar and back up the hill, then the the fence came in and we had to move back to our front yard. Learned to ski at Holiday Hill, about 1958. The rope tow of death on Table Mountain, real fish in Jackson Lake. Walking up Cedar at 10pm cause the ice was too much for the car to get to the house. Snow up to the window sills. and lots of tree's. How wonderfull a kids life was in Wrightwood.
You can't put the egg back in the chicken.

Offline SkierBob

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Re: What I do remember
« Reply #1 on: Jun 25, 09, 11:15:48 PM »
'Real fish'
  What kind of fish are in Jackson lake now?

GRAHAM_RANCH

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Re: What I do remember
« Reply #2 on: Jul 19, 09, 05:28:22 AM »





Vandalism at Wrightwood Historical Museum

The thread of "What I do remember," is interesting...wish old timers that read this would respond, just to let the newer folks realize how town was back then. The lake was the get-together spot, even after membership was needed to get inside. The west portion of Jackson was usually the spot to give your horse a good swim, specially after some excellent riding through the trails at Big Pines.

Kids were a little more respectful, if not...well, the parents heard about it soon enough, and "spareth not the rod" of punishment was pretty much the rule of the day. Believe it or not, many of us kids found plenty of things to do, and ways to keep out of trouble. We knew that most of the time we couldn't pull the wool over our parent's eyes, mainly because they wouldn't let us. They knew everything...and it wasn't until we reached our own adulthood, that we suddenly realized why they knew everything.

Another person (many times there were more than one) was the local resident deputy (remember those guys?) who kept us in line...funny thing was, even though they sometimes snitched on us to mom and dad, there was a deep respect for them by us who sometimes stepped across the line in one fashion or another. There was a time that everything click...the community hummed, folks helped out each other...and yeah, the kids were also busy helping, tossing real serious mischief to the side for most of the time.

Much have changed over the years, sort of changing the atmosphere of Wrightwood that most of us old timers knew for so long. After 11pm, juveniles roam the town...and finally around 1am or so, go back to wherever it was that they came from. Sometimes in their wake they leave evidence of vandalism, breaking and entering, and other activilty that has cast a gloom over our mountain living. "They're just having fun, letting off some steam...heck, there is noting for them to do up here...what do you expect would happen?" I heard it all. Somewhere down the line, us grown ups stopped taking a stand and demand that it stop.

It was on Thursday, sometime between 11pm and 7am Friday morning that the vandalism rose to a new level when person (s) unknown spray painted Wrightwood Historical Museum, portions of Apple Court and the total east exterior wall of the John Steinman Building on Park. As the photos above showed...in gold spray paint, the persons (at least two) applied the grafitti on the murals of the museum...murals of the La France firetrucks that once served the community so many decades ago. They were painstackingly hand painted by a local artist. Nearby, a spray painted track dumpster had the same "emsk" on top of a skateboard. Gee, whose kid skateboards around town after curfew? Nearby, on the sidewalk leading into Apple Court are the letters "EVA;" are they letters or an actual name?

A crime report was filed by the museum; we thank Deputy Dell for his response. The investigation is a work in progress that needs the community's help. The vandalism to the rear of the Steinmann Building is extensive. Thanks to Timmy and Rebecca at the Mt. Pizza, the possible hundreds of dollars in damaged was painted over, but not before photos were taken of the damage. It took several minutes to inflict the damage....hopefully, someone can step forward with some eye witness accounts. Even so, at least two possible suspects are being looked at...one lives on Robin Street.

As for the old times...do you miss what Wrightwood used to be? Well, it can become that way again...if the folks who live here take a stand and demand that incidents like this stop...and the guilty walk away with their tail between their legs.

The love for where a person lives become evident when they all take a stand to maintain its beauty and peace.

GRAHAM_RANCH

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Re: What I do remember
« Reply #3 on: Jul 19, 09, 05:30:41 AM »
The other grafitti photo of Wrightwood Historical Museum

Offline ChrisLynnet

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Re: What I do remember
« Reply #4 on: Jul 19, 09, 12:41:06 PM »
Oh no. Oh, how small of the vandals. Small and mean. I do not -- DO NOT -- understand how parents can allow their teens to stay out all hours. That sort of unsupervised time leads to exactly this.

I am sorry to report that I don't know the kids who might have done this. What I mean is I'm glad my 13-year-old and his friends  are safely home at night. But I'm disappointed that I can't turn anyone in! I'd do it in a heartbeat.

I hope and pray that the detectives make arrests in this case. In the East Canyon area years ago, vandalism stopped with a series of arrests and convictions leading to juvenile hall for some. That is what I want to see.

Offline in my dreams

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Re: What I do remember
« Reply #5 on: Jul 22, 09, 12:12:56 AM »
Oh my gosh.

I really hope they find and fully prosecute the oafs who did this. Its amazing what removing the right person can do. Funny how there's no graffiti on our street since the trigger-happy gangster next door has been locked up.