If you moved away, did you visit your old home town?

I'm from Santa Cruz, Ca. I went back, the last time, probably 8 years or so since I had left. I don't plan to again. Downtown had been changed drastically by the Loma Prieta earthquake.

The Cooper House was no longer there. Just a hole in the ground. It was shops and a restaurant. But it had been originally the court house. It's still standing in this picture but was torn down. I assume being brick, the building was toast.

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You know, because I never moved, it never occurred to me and yet I do go to Google Maps occasionally to look at vacation places that I was familiar with over the years.
I have moved 19 times in my life.. and I love to look back on Google Street view at all the houses all over the Uk where I lived to see the changes. Amazingly my childhood homes (aside from the foster homes)..we re all within a few miles of each other.. and very little has changed.. but the houses I lived in as a newly wed.. ( Naval married quarters ).. have all changed quite dramatically..
 
I went back frequently when my mom was alive. She died 14 years ago and since I have been back 4 times. Now I only have friends left so I haven’t been there in 5 years. It’s growing so looks different although the house I grew up in and the one I raised my kids in looks the same.
 
The nice thing is now, that we can all look at our old homes on Google street view... we don't have to go back...
When I googled two former homes, I thought they hadn’t changed too much, until I looked at the dates. It had been several years since Streetview was updated. Actually, that includes our present home. There’s a whole subdivision beside us that has been there for years and isn’t shown.
 
When I googled two former homes, I thought they hadn’t changed too much, until I looked at the dates. It had been several years since Streetview was updated. Actually, that includes our present home. There’s a whole subdivision beside us that has been there for years and isn’t shown.
Yes you have to watch for the updated dates... however all my previous homes have been updated on GSV in the last 2 years...
 
I live about 25 miles from my hometown so have been there off and on. The last time was at my brother's wild west show in July of 2021. Only one of the houses I grew up in, including in FL are still standing. Two caught on fire and burned down. One was on five city lots and that was taken down and made into a drug store. The only one I know of that was left was the 2nd house I ever lived in so I don't have many memories of it because I was still a baby.
 
Okay, I just checked with Google Earth and my house that I thought was still there is gone now. Not exactly gone, I think they built onto it and then resided it. I can see the shape of the house and it looks like the original is there. Just modernized.

Next door was an old one room schoolhouse my father bought back in 1953 or so for $1.00. It was connected to the parcel of land our house was on. He took the blackboard out and put it in our house. That is one thing I do remember. At the top of the stairs in the hallway. He remodeled the schoolhouse into a small one bedroom home and sold it to two ladies who lived there for their whole lives. He would stop and talk to them occasionally when driving by over the years. That is gone now and a huge modern house is in its place.
 
I moved to Oregon from St. Paul Minnesota when I was ten. Although I have relatives there I've never gone back.
My brother-in-law happened to be back there last summer and sent me a picture of the house I lived in when we moved.
It looks smaller than I remember.
 
Yes, I took my family to the place I was born in Germany. I was never homesick, but somehow I was always touched emotionally by the place of my earliest memories. I still remember when a family friend came with three war tanks and took us children for a ride around the block. My family had owned a business that was destroyed during WWII.

Pictures: my paternal ancestors; my mother's family; the brick I found where I had been born symbolizes my roots ; my dad with my grandma; and little me crying.

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If you moved away from your childhood town, have you gone back and visited there? If you did, what was your impressions of your old hometown?
Posted something along those lines an eon or so ago (when I first joined here)

I'm a word butcher...forgive me

Recollections

this became rather lengthy....

Ever so often, I'd drive up to the ol' place for, well, old time's sake.
I always enjoyed the rush of memories, driving the old lane, and around the corner, up the hill onto the flat where most the kid population was, and where gramma's house, my 2nd home, crowned the hill.
Our place and gramma's place was one property, adjoined by five or so acres of strawberry patch, making the patch a short cut between houses.

Not long ago I hired a new engineer, he was a whip.
Ate up everything I could hand him.
Became our I.T.
Made tedious, complex projects his fun little game.
Interfaced quite well with our clients.
We became friends, even though he was in his late 20's, and I in my mid 50's.
Come to find out, his dad lived at and owned the property out there in the hills of Scappoose.
I had to make the trip one more time.

Our little converted broom factory house was ready for razing. The doors were off, the garage my dad and grandpa built (with a hand saw and hammer) were gone.
We stopped. I boosted myself thru the doorless, and stepless porch entry, the closed in porch was our laundry room.
Wringer washer, clothes line, wicker baskets, sweet smells of Fels-Naptha, my place to take off my day's clothes and grab the tub off the wall.
Rooms, once huge, were now so tiny.

The kitchen, remodeled with the rest of the house, still had the red fire alarm above the sink.
Dad would proudly demonstrate to friends how loud it was, putting a glass of hot water up near it.
The wood cook stove was gone, but the pipe coming outta the ceiling, with the ornate metal ring, bore testament of many a meal.
Meals I learned to prepare, taking a few times to learn how to not break an egg yolk, how to get pancakes to turn out like mom's and gramma's, snacks dad showed how he ate when young, tater slices scorched on the cook top, then lightly salted. Tasted horrible, but really good, cookin' with Dad, good.
The table was gone of course. The curvy steel legged one that replaced the solid wood one, well not so solid, as we lost a meal or two due to the one wobbly leg. But that steel one with the gray Formica (?) top was up town.
There I'd sit, waiting out the meal, spreadin' my peas around to make it look like I ate some.
'If you don't at least take a bite of your peas you won't get any cake!'
Eventually, I'd be sittin' at the table alone, studying the gray swirly pattern of the table top, malnourished head propped up on my arm.
Dad, Mom, and sis would be in the living room watchin' Howdy Doody on the Hoffman, or something just as wonderful.
Eventually, I ate cake...then did the dishes.

One Sunday morning I sat at an empty table, but for a glass of milk and the One-a-Day pill bottle. Dad and Mom were exasperated... 'Your throat is this big, the pill is this big'..minutes-hours passed, shadows on the table shortened...'OK, just drink your milk'
I drained the glass between pursed lips.
The little brown pill remained at the bottom.
Nice try, parents from satan.

We had a lot of beans, navy, pinto, brown.
Beans on bread was quite regular. Got to like'n it..not much choice really.
Had chocolate cake with white icing for dessert. No dessert plates. Cake just plopped on the bean juice.
To this day, I still have a craving for cake soaked in bean juice.

The house was designed so's I could ride my trike around and around, kitchen, living, bed, bath, bed rooms.
They were my Daytona, straight away was the bed, bath and bed rooms.
We had large windows in the front corners of the house from the remodel, 'so we can look out, for godsake'.
Now we could watch log trucks barrelin' down Pisgah Home Rd, and my sis and I could have a bird's eye vantage from the kitchen when Dad backed the Bel Air outta the garage over three of the four kittens puss had had weeks earlier under the porch.
Took my sis quite awhile to get over that, as she'd just named 'em a few hours earlier. I was just enamored with the scene; romp-play-mew-look up-smat.
Dad didn't know until he got home.
Actually, it saved him an' I a trip, as when he thought we had too many cats around, we'd toss a bunch into a gunny sack and once down the road, hurl 'em out the window of our speeding chevy.
I haven't maintained the sack-o-cats legacy, but there have been times....

The living room still had the oil stove that warmed us...in the living room.
A flash of memory recalled the two end tables and lamps, aerodynamic, tables sharp, cutcha, lamps with flying saucer shapes, one had butterfly like images formed into its material, and when lit, enhanced their appearance.
A sectional couch, we were up town.
Before the sectional, we had one that kinda placed you in the middle, no matter where you started. It was my favorite, as sis and I spent many a day on it when sick.
Mom would lay out the sheets and blankets, administering doses of tea, crackers, and toast, peaches if we felt up to it.
Waste basket stationed at the tail end of that couch, since we were in such a weakened state we could never make it to the bathroom.
Mom loved it, our own personal Mother Teresa.
Yeah, we milked it for days...school work piling up.
Recovery would finally occur once bed sores emerged.
When we were actually sick, Doctor Day would visit. Fascinating, black bag, weird tools, gauzes, pill bottles, the smell of disinfectant and tobacco. Then the shot.
It was all almost worth it.

Asian flu was a bit serious, but chicken pox was horrific for me.
It was Christmas, fever, pox forming.
Presents! Guns! Six shooters!...only there was this pock right on my trigger finger. It was like free ham for a practicing orthodox Jew.


Dad, always the entrepreneur, would use the living room as the media center, inviting salesmen with projectors and actual reel to reel set ups, showing us how to become a thousandaire overnight.
Nutri-bio was one, to take the place of one-a-days I guess.
The Chinchilla movie was fascinating, and we even took a trip to a guy's garage to see how they were raised. Turns out they need an even controlled temp to get a good coat, and actually keep 'em alive.
The Geiger counter became something to show company, and become an antique.
Dad and Mom's bedroom held few memories for me except for the time Mom found a nest of baby mice in the bottom dresser drawer...and a hammer.
There was that other brief time, but seems we were all pretty shocked.
My bedroom was actually our bedroom, sis and me.
After the remodel, we got twin beds, new ones.
Recall my first migraine in my new bed, pressing my head into the pillow. Teddy no consolation, but then I didn't really give it an honest try to fix his dented plastic nose either.
Dad was the bedtime story teller, Goldie/bears, red/the wolf, pigs/wolf..pretty standard stuff....but did the job.
Had a framed picture of a collie baying over a lamb in a snow storm hanging over my bed. It hangs over my light stand table today, found in some of my mother's stuff.

The yard was not spectacular, but when sequestered from the woods, was plenty for me. I'd play in the dirt. Mom, in her no-remote-thought-of-divorce-happiest-I'll-ever-be-but-don't-know-it days, would be cleaning the house, wiping something on the windows that would become a swirly fog, then wiping that off. Cleaning the floor was sweep, mop, wax. Linoleum was the rage.
Lunch would be a great, but simple sandwich, with lettuce, and soup.

The icebox held short stemmed dessert glasses of homemade chocolate pudding, each centered with a half maraschino cherry. For the longest time I thought cherries came that way straight from the tree.
Cross over the Bridge, or Sunny Side of the Street played on the radio. Then it was a Paul Harvey segment.



Nobody close died, there were no wars I was aware of, and folks were generally at ease during that eight year era of fond memories, just fragrant recollections.


This aging cynic, years of crust giving way to a soft spot, down deep, had a hard moment of holding back visual emotion, as we drove away from the last tangible vision ever to be seen of the house of a sweet early life.
 
Too long ago and too far away. I moved out in 1959 when I got married. We moved from the northeast to Florida in 1972.

I looked up the first house we owned on Zillow and it was the same lot, but a different house.

I found my grandmother's house on Zillow, it is doing fine, built in 1878.

I ride around here and what was once an orange grove is now all houses. The groves had a very nice fragrance.
 
We moved into a new house when I was a kid in 1966. It was in a development that consisted mostly of ranch-style homes. Some moved in and added second stories, but overall the neighborhood was consistent. Our house was around 2300 square feet and was on a canal off the Gulf of Mexico. My mother kept it absolutely immaculate, so when my parents sold it in 1997 it was dated but pristine. The new owners remodeled the house.

I was living in South Florida but had the chance to go back to my home town on business in 2009. So, of course I checked out the old neighborhood. It looked pretty similar, but... our house had been torn down and a 5 bedroom, 5800 square foot two-story Mediterranean McMansion with iron balconies stood in its' place. I'll have to admit I was teary-eyed because ours was the only house that had been torn down. I created so many memories there.

You truly can't go back. Here's the before and after.

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We left Hong Kong 56 years ago when I was 14. The place is part of China now. Our old house is still there, remodeled but recognizable and much nicer.....quite posh actually and occupied by a family still. No I haven't been back there since 1967. My friends who've visited the modern city tell me it's preferable to remember the old British colony as it used to be.
 


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