We left our camp and drove all the way to Des Moines, Iowa, arriving in time to join the last tour of the Capital Building for the day. The Capital felt familiar since it was designed by the same architect who designed the Illinois Capital and they were both constructed in the 1880s. But Iowa decided their building needed to be grander, so the main dome is bigger and they added four smaller domes on the four corners of the legislative wings. It has the usual statuary and symbolic artwork, including a great mural of Venetian mosaic tiles. The Law Library is splendid with multiple level bookcases -- 5 levels connected with two circular staircases. The Supreme Court room is now a hearing room, with a fine hand-carved mahogany panel still in place in front of the Justices' chairs/bench.
- The cities and even the small towns are planned on a grid structure with very wide streets and not much imagination in the naming conventions: Numbered Avenues go one direction and Numbered Streets go across them.
- Red brick is the common construction material; buildings more than 100 years old have nice ornamental details. The residential areas are similar to old New England or Northeastern factory towns.
- Big churches, often with elaborate architecture, are typical.
- We saw some very attractive small cities/large towns with 4 to 6 block main commercial zones of attached brick or stone buildings often with local merchants. On the outskirts we found the usual million-dollar mile strip malls of standard American brands. Every town and village seemed to have a Dollar Store or a Dollar General store (or both).
- The countryside is not absolutely flat, there are rolling hills, but the roads can be very straight. Watertowers are a key element on the horizon.
- The farmhouses are often very handsome and prosperous-looking; if there are corporate farms in this area we aren't seeing them.
- Michigan has orchards and berry farms. Indiana, Illinois and Iowa have miles of corn and soybean fields fringed by oak, beech and maple woods. There is little sign of anything other than these monocultures, not much in the way of produce gardens. When we got into western Illinois, we began to see some cattle and Iowa has many enclosed pig/pork operations (like how chickens are raised).
- The people seem to be friendly and the wait staff have been warm and cheerful.
- American cars are the majority although there are some Toyotas and Hondas; Subarus are almost unknown. The Ford and General Motors dealerships are huge.
- In this Year of the Rabbit - we have seen rabbits. Almost every time we walked through a neighborhood, we would encounter at least one cottontail bunny. Surprisingly, they seem to be solitary critters.
Love the law library. What a marvelous space. In fact, the capital building is all quite grand.
ReplyDeleteSorry to hear about the apartment hassle. That would be supremely annoying and disappointing.
The Iowa capital building looks impressive. ET
ReplyDeleteReally fancy capital... love the architectural details! Your Midwest observations sound about right (from my Midwest roots)... there can also be TONS of tacky billboards along the interstates... which I hate.
ReplyDeleteI’m surprised to see such beautiful buildings in Iowa of all places. Nice observations.
ReplyDelete-Steph
Living in Ohio for 37 years and often driving back and forth to Oregon, your description is apt. Mary
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