[American Adventures by Julian Street]@TWC D-Link book
American Adventures

CHAPTER XXIV
5/12

Lately a considerable amount of truck has been shipped west by rail, as well.
Hundreds of acres of ground in the vicinity of the city are under glass and large crops of winter vegetables are raised.

Kale and spinach are being grown and harvested throughout the cold months; strawberries, potatoes, beans, peas, cucumbers, cabbage, lettuce and other vegetables follow through the spring and summer, running on into the fall, when the corn crop becomes important.

Corn is raised chiefly by the peanut farmer, whose peanuts grow between his corn-rows.
While the banks are "carrying" the peanut farmers, pending their fall harvest, the activities of the "truckers" are at their height, so that the money loaned to one class of agriculturist is replaced by the deposits of the other class; and by the same token, of course, the peanut farmers are depositing money in the banks when the "truckers" want to borrow.

This situation, one judges, is not found objectionable by Norfolk and Portsmouth bankers, and I have been told that, as a corollary, these banks have never been forced, even in times of dire panic, to issue clearing house certificates, but have always paid cash.
Norfolk has grown so fast and has so rapidly replaced the old with the new, that the visitor must keep his eyes open if he would not miss entirely such lovely souvenirs of an earlier and easier life, as still remain.

Who would imagine, seeing it to-day, that busy Granby Street had ever been a street of fine residences?
Yet a very few years have passed since the old Newton, Tazwell, Dickson and Taylor residences surrendered to advancing commerce and gave place to stores and office buildings--the two last mentioned having been replaced by the Dickson Building and the Taylor Building, erected less than fifteen years ago.
Freemason Street is the highway which, more than any other, tells of olden times.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books