Brokeback Mountain: Our Community's Common Bond > The Lighter Side

ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game

<< < (265/282) > >>

nova20194:

Vilna, AB

Vilna is a historic village in central Alberta, Canada.

Vilna is located in Smoky Lake County, on highway 28, 150 km northeast of the city of Edmonton. Bonnie Lake Provincial Recreation Area is located 6 km north of the community, on the shores of Bonne Lake.

Vilna was founded in 1907, mostly by central european settlers, and started to develop in 1919, when the railroad reached this area. It was named in 1920, after the city of Vilna (modern Vilnius in Lithuania). The settlement was incorporated as a village on June 13, 1923. In 2006, Vilna had a population of 274.

It claims to be home to the world's largest mushroom: a metal sculpture.


MaineWriter:
Afton, TX

(NB: Afton, WY has already been played, but there is also an Afton in Texas)

First known as Patton Springs (after a hunter who had camped at the springs) prior to the 1890s, a post office was granted under the name of Beckton (after the first postmaster). The post office soon closed and the community started using the name Cottonwood. When the time came to open a new post office, the name was already in use by another post office and so Patton Springs/Beckton/Cottonwood was in a quandary. Enter citizen and romantic Myra Kelly who suggested the name from the English song "Flow Gently, Sweet Afton." The new post office opened in 1900 when the town was populated by Myna Kelly and nine of her friends. The town was so poor that the grocer (Afton's sole business) operated out of a tent. Other businesses opened and by the time the 20s had arrived people were (perhaps facetiously) calling Afton "Little Fort Worth."

Afton kept an estimated population of 100 for the 1970 and 1990 censuses, but by 2000 there were only 15 people remaining.

A former gas station in Afton:



L

belbbmfan:
Neji, Mexico


Meryl:
Iowa Colony, TX

From the Brazosport News, the Official Weblog for the Petrochemical Underarm of Texas, March 5, 2005:



Iowa Colony, the tiny farm-oriented burg in the middle of Brazoria County, is gonna be gettin' flush toilets, which should greatly upgrade its reputation in the land where Texas began.

It wasn't that long ago that Iowa Colony was nothing but a speed trap on Texas 288. That got cleaned up about 9 years ago.

Now, word comes from Austin that Iowa Colony Sterling Lakes, Ltd. has filed a petition for creation of Brazoria County Municipal Utility District No. 31 with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. First, speed traps, now the outhouses. A way of life, gone forever.


(XYZ rule applies)

MaineWriter:
Quail, TX

The first settlers were the Atkinson brothers (W. I. and T. S.), who established their families in dugout homes in1890 and planted cotton.

A post office was established in 1902 and a school, store and cotton gin all began operations in 1904. A telephone wire strung on a barbed wire fence connected Quail with Wellington. In 1910 the Quail Feather was first published. A new school was built in 1927 and the town's population peaked in 1930 with 300 people.

L

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page

Go to full version