Skoontz
01-13-2008, 10:32 AM
OK. I'm going to begin this thing all over again. Ron said he felt the encyclopedia title would best fit the topic, as most of it talks of my family. My dad had very limited stock racing experiences, in Wisconsin and Illinois, other than that, Grandpa owned the boathouse. Myself, well, I was just a crazy wild eyed river racer who was very rambunctious, to say the least. I'll be posting limited numbers of pictures, and telling stories of my youth, with the hope that anyone reading will be able to enjoy and visualize how it was.
The West Side Boathouse was on a 150' wide by 1,400' long piece of riverfront ground about a block north of Rt. 64, (North Avenue) on US Rt. 31 in St. Charles, Illinois, right on the Fox River. The dam and fish ladder are just under the Rt. 64 bridge, and I lived to respect the orange warnign barrels that said Danger Dam 500 feet.
My wife and I were very blessed to have grown up in such a small hometown USA setting, which niethr of us recognise when we go home to visit.
Today, the boathouse is comemorated by a seawall, stairs and concrete landing which were built in the 1930's by the work force of the CCC, as a result of the "New Deal" by president Roosevelt. On the far north end, there sits Salerno's on the Fox, a pizza joint built by Tony Salerno in the early
1970's.
So, here is the start, and my motivaion to post, at least once per week, the history of this part of my youth. Enjoy, post, and ask away as you will.
More soon to follow, right after the honey-do list is done today......
The West Side Boathouse was on a 150' wide by 1,400' long piece of riverfront ground about a block north of Rt. 64, (North Avenue) on US Rt. 31 in St. Charles, Illinois, right on the Fox River. The dam and fish ladder are just under the Rt. 64 bridge, and I lived to respect the orange warnign barrels that said Danger Dam 500 feet.
My wife and I were very blessed to have grown up in such a small hometown USA setting, which niethr of us recognise when we go home to visit.
Today, the boathouse is comemorated by a seawall, stairs and concrete landing which were built in the 1930's by the work force of the CCC, as a result of the "New Deal" by president Roosevelt. On the far north end, there sits Salerno's on the Fox, a pizza joint built by Tony Salerno in the early
1970's.
So, here is the start, and my motivaion to post, at least once per week, the history of this part of my youth. Enjoy, post, and ask away as you will.
More soon to follow, right after the honey-do list is done today......