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Early pictures
of Sidney's town square show the courtyard being almost level with
the business places.
As we purpose to
celebrate the 100th birthday of the Fremont County Courthouse,
1889-1989, some questions have arisen as to when and how the road
around the square was lowered; making the courtyard elevated.
Mrs. Harold
(Elaine King) Lorimore says her father Ed King, was on the town
council when the project was undertaken in approximately 1918-19.
It was his dream to have the Sidney square paved. He and his
son Gilbert helped.
Men with "slips"
(scoops) pulled by teams of horses dug the dirt up and moved it to
build up and widen various city streets approaching the town square.
She says the Filmore Street at the northwest corner of the square,
running west to Maple Street, was a sharp drop off and much of the
dirt was placed there to build it up to a more gradual slope. She
said her father wanted very much to improve that road and pave it as
it and Maple were the main roads to the north, out of Sidney.
It was never proved. Mrs. James (Mildred Birkby) Reade remembers
when it rained (before paving) the ruts in our city square were so
deep the horses could hardly raise their feet out of the mud.
They
finally tried oiling and that helped some. Early pictures show how
the oiled streets looked.
(I wonder
if business places had trouble keeping their floors clean in those
days. I remember foot scrapers at the school
house doors.)
Mildred
says she lived on Illinois (north) Street at the time the men
started digging with the slips and she thinks that is the street
they started on.
When the
town square was paved, Illinois (north), Filmore (east) and Main
(south) were also paved. Bricks were shipped in by rail to the
Sidney depot and hauled uptown. They had to have a harder
brick than those made in this locality.
Quite a
few local residents owned cars (Fords "tin lizzies") by the time.
(Cars came into Sidney about 1909-10).
At the
completion of the paving, everyone got out for a joy ride on their
new hard-topped road.
Mildred
Read remembers that the first winter after the new paving was
finished a big ice storm came to Sidney. All the young fry got out
their ice skates and skated the town.
Thanks to
my friends Elaine and Mildred - they helped us learn of some of our
town's history. I just remember the cars buzzing by my
grandparents home on Depot Street (Filmore). I sat and watched
in awe. I started out coming to Sidney in the horse and buggy days.
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