ALABAMA: DYING Rural Towns - Far Off The Interstate

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  • Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
  • I toured a rural area of Alabama, far off the Interstate.
    Alabama towns visited:
    Jackson
    Millry
    Silas
    Coffeeville
    Thomasville
    Grove Hill

Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @Michael-ep7lx
    @Michael-ep7lx Год назад +558

    The downtowns of many of our small towns have been killed by Walmart. Back in the day, people used to go downtown for clothes, shoes, medicine, haircuts, and many other things that you can now get at Walmart. In my hometown, my doctor's office was there. The optometrist was there. The bank. The hardware store. Now, almost all of those things are in Walmart. Those families that ran those small businesses lost their livelihoods. The buildings lost their value. So, much of the wealth of the town - income and property values - was transferred from local families ... to Walmart. That's why all across rural America most downtowns are practically ghost towns.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +49

      You're right.

    • @davidledford3522
      @davidledford3522 Год назад +40

      Same shit here in tennesee

    • @xoxoxoxoxo7997
      @xoxoxoxoxo7997 Год назад +38

      Totally. Sad really

    • @jj-eo7bj
      @jj-eo7bj Год назад +32

      They are ripe for redevelopment for someone with vision

    • @moonfall8972
      @moonfall8972 Год назад +41

      @@jj-eo7bj I wouldn't say they're "ripe" for redevelopment. It may be too late. Small and diminishing populations can't pay back investments by developers. It would need to revert to a tourist town and success of that is extraordinarily expensive--and unlikely, at least on a ubiquitous scale.

  • @ZachJ6
    @ZachJ6 Год назад +151

    I live in a small town in Alabama and this is how a lot of towns look like here. Most of the smalls towns have some of the best people you will ever meet.

    • @OfftoShambala
      @OfftoShambala Год назад +12

      I want to move to Alabama. I hear that a lot. I just want to grow food and be around nice people. Sounds like a dream.

    • @celenacasciani8500
      @celenacasciani8500 Год назад +9

      I love the looks of these small towns. As lonely as some of them seem it beats overcrowded city like towns with a lot of not too many genuinely nice people. The older I get the more I want to live the simple life in a small Midwest or Southern town

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 Год назад +2

      It’s all good. Your belly is full

    • @dominickjustave3558
      @dominickjustave3558 Год назад

      As long as you're white

    • @johncole2469
      @johncole2469 Год назад +5

      Most of these dying towns are self-inflicted and full of good ole boy cliques. I fled that mess and will not go back.

  • @austinbumpers3373
    @austinbumpers3373 Год назад +28

    I was born in 1973 in Grove Hill and was raised in Coffeeville. Back in the late 70’s/early 80’s it was a happening little town. I had a great childhood here. It was safe, had lots of friends and a loving community. Things have changed so much and not for the better……Walmart, and the “big city life” is what has killed our little town. There are few jobs unless it deals with the timber industry so people move away to have a “better” life. I work for a paper mill north of Thomasville and drive an hour one way to work. I’ve made my home here in Coffeeville because it’s where I choose to live…..it is HOME!!!
    This place is special to me and thousands of others who were raised here!

    • @Idkkkkk746
      @Idkkkkk746 Год назад +1

      I live kinda close idk if u heard of it but I live in silas al

    • @alblack3425
      @alblack3425 Год назад

      Dang on progress...

    • @portiamatthews9654
      @portiamatthews9654 Месяц назад

      Was your father or family member was a coach/driver Ed teacher at CCHS in 1980's ?

  • @debbymiller8828
    @debbymiller8828 Год назад +38

    I’m an AL native. There are many, many rural communities filled with people who love their small town. Thanks for sharing.

    • @markrichards6863
      @markrichards6863 Год назад +2

      If it's home, and you're from there, you'll naturally have an affinity fir it, but you can't blame young people for wanting to move away. I thought the little town I lived in in Connecticut was sad, but it's not so bad compared to some of these places.

    • @sapphirelane1714
      @sapphirelane1714 Год назад +2

      Also filled with people who love…to gossip about you!😉

    • @markrichards6863
      @markrichards6863 Год назад +1

      @@sapphirelane1714 I say if people want to gossip about you give them something to talk about. We were in my fiancee home tome in rural Virginia a couple of years ago. About dinner time every day, a late middle age bald guy rides a bike in women's clothes, playing Connie Francis on a boom box, oddly enough not "Where The Boys Are". I suggested spreading a rumor that they couldn't afford a town dunk, so they got a self furnished drag queen. But it turned out the town drunk was a barber, who drowned in a puddle many years earlier. That's was my Fiancees brother and father used to drive into Richmond to get their hair cut. Any how the guy in drag on the bike, was actually a really cool guy, happily married to a woman, just a little eccentric. All I can say is, thank God for a few interesting people in small towns. Otherwise people out there would die of boredom. I think people who engage in vicious gossip are usually either jealous, or have shame about their own situation.

    • @michaelnoble5921
      @michaelnoble5921 Год назад

      Hello Debby Miller how are you doing today and your family?

  • @nancysummitt4779
    @nancysummitt4779 Год назад +139

    My 6th great grandmother from the 1830's is buried in Clarke County. All my dad's family is from there. My dad was born in 1935, and when he was a teenager the family got electricity. He went to college and got a PhD in Veterinary medicine. We still have land of what was the "family farm" . Dad felt that if there was ever a depression we could go back and at least have food. Dad instilled the value of family, education and hard work to me and my sisters.

    • @steveklaber3423
      @steveklaber3423 Год назад +4

      Lessclose all everyone wal mart in the world

    • @Georgie1660
      @Georgie1660 Год назад +11

      Lots of children divide up the family farm all for the $$$$$ and developers usually end up buying it and destroy the ranch and farm land.
      Once the farm and ranch land is developed, you’ve lost valuable resources.

    • @TeezyT_Sunrise
      @TeezyT_Sunrise Год назад +1

      I'm thinking about taking a trip to Alabama. RUclips Teezy T Phoenix. Song is insane

    • @mrs.228
      @mrs.228 Год назад

      Do you know any Wilson or Alldredge families?

    • @cliffordparmeter6940
      @cliffordparmeter6940 Год назад

      Very interesting

  • @jmunnyrulz6175
    @jmunnyrulz6175 Год назад +15

    I bet the folks that still live there love it. Seems so peaceful.

  • @i-35vagabond56
    @i-35vagabond56 Год назад +51

    Very nice homes and 30% poverty sounds like there's a wide economic gap in Jackson, Alabama. It's probably one of those towns where nearly everybody leaves for greener pastures soon after high school except for the people who have lots of money and the people who do not have enough money to leave.

    • @tommiepernell5530
      @tommiepernell5530 Год назад +4

      You are on point for I am one of those who moved out.

    • @frigglebiscuit7484
      @frigglebiscuit7484 Год назад +1

      i can tell you why the poverty gap is the way it is. the high earners are mill workers that have a special last name or connection to the mill managers, so they get in. the rest are either on food stamps and welfare, or work crap jobs like dollar general, etc.

  • @ask_why000
    @ask_why000 Год назад +36

    With Remote Working becoming a thing people can move to these areas to revive and thrive.
    Tiny houses.
    Local (organic) farms.
    A local orchards.
    Buying local first and grocery or big box stores last.
    A small church.
    A local library.
    A small hospital and wellness center.
    Local doctors who make home visits.
    A campus of single room school houses.
    Parks and wide open spaces.
    ... all far off the Interstate of possibilities...

    • @elvangulley3210
      @elvangulley3210 Год назад +2

      That's terrible nobody wants that

    • @wendywehner2320
      @wendywehner2320 Год назад +3

      @@elvangulley3210 Why is it terrible?

    • @derfunkhaus
      @derfunkhaus Год назад

      Physicians making house calls is cool but it's not really feasible, especially when there is a shortage of primary care doctors. When you have a shortage of physicians, that means that the ones who are in practice in a given town (or the next town over) are very busy and seeing many patients back to back all day long. If they were driving from house to house throughout a whole county then all that drive time in between patients would detract from available patient care time. i.e. They could see far fewer patients per day.

    • @itskayceemae234
      @itskayceemae234 Год назад +4

      It’s not as realistic as you make it seem. I used to live in a rural town in alabama and I don’t miss it at all except for all the land we had around the house. Just having access to broadband was limited. We barely could get 1 mbps for Internet. Older family members still had to travel hours to a bigger city if they needed to see a certain health specialist. The local places were at risk of closing before bigger supply chains too over. These towns dying out is inevitable at this point.

    • @williammosley8026
      @williammosley8026 5 месяцев назад

      I'm from Tuskegee . It's the same all over . Mindset . Most are just waiting around to ☠️ they don't want to go outside and really just don't care about life and nature . The fading color

  • @andstuff152
    @andstuff152 Год назад +133

    Another thing you might not know about Jackson, at 2:15 into this video, that little coffee shop you passed on the right used to be a jail. The Allman brothers band was actually booked there after being busted for drugs at a nearby restaurant, shortly before they became famous. Some of the members had carved their names into the cell walls, that cell is still there in the coffee shop today.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +14

      That is so cool.

    • @missesmew
      @missesmew Год назад +8

      I wonder if any of the band members ever went back to jail after that?
      You never write your name on any jail wall, it means that you’ll be back. Old superstitions, lol

    • @MRosati5000
      @MRosati5000 Год назад +6

      Tied to the whippin post..

    • @SuperNoncents
      @SuperNoncents Год назад +4

      Wonderful history!

    • @aimee-lynndonovan6077
      @aimee-lynndonovan6077 Год назад +3

      😵‍💫🙄like the Allman Brothers ‘ music. The things you find out!🤓

  • @joanstearns2457
    @joanstearns2457 Год назад +21

    Veterans could again live in vacant homes in dying towns.....and help build up those towns.🇺🇸 The Millry Veterans Memorial was very nice❣️🇺🇸

  • @charlesjordan4933
    @charlesjordan4933 Год назад +16

    I live in scottsboro, Alabama & 2020 census said our population was 15,578 that year ! 💝 I love my small town. I've actually never lived anywhere with a larger population !! (I'm 44) I've lived on mountains with gravel roads that still to this day aren't paved & don't yet have running water !! You still go to sleep to the whippoorwill & cicadas singing in unison with the frogs ! So loudly some nights it's hard to sleep. I wouldn't trade it for the 🌎

    • @EmpathyUe
      @EmpathyUe Год назад +2

      I'm from Fort Payne just down the road!!

    • @shawnknoblauch6338
      @shawnknoblauch6338 Год назад +1

      I live 10 miles north of Scottsboro with a scottsboro address. Jackson county is paradise!

    • @jenniferbrooks2682
      @jenniferbrooks2682 29 дней назад

      You still hrar whiporwheel? I havent heard one in years! I need to drive 1 hoir over to your area to hear yhis

  • @kyledouglas7961
    @kyledouglas7961 Год назад +8

    So many good towns and people in the old parts of Alabama. I've lived in Alabama 42 years and ain't seen half of this state

  • @gatorgogo2742
    @gatorgogo2742 Год назад +61

    Sad to see so many small towns dying. People have to leave to find employment. I feel the real estate prices are inflated. Thanks for the ride.

    • @spaceghost8995
      @spaceghost8995 Год назад +4

      They are inflated. If you offered someone even $10,000 they would probably sell a house to you.

    • @OfftoShambala
      @OfftoShambala Год назад +4

      I want to escape employment and live ‘ in poverty ‘ off the land.

    • @davisholman8149
      @davisholman8149 Год назад +7

      @@OfftoShambala What all of the USA needs to do is commit to bringing back these wonderful small towns. There are so many jobs now that we can do using a laptop. People could live a very nice life reasonably and most importantly - not live under so much STRESS, trying to get ahead. Just sayin’…..✌🏽😎☀

    • @frigglebiscuit7484
      @frigglebiscuit7484 Год назад

      it 100% is. in jackson, people are always relisting, because no one is paying what they want.

    • @jenniferbrooks2682
      @jenniferbrooks2682 29 дней назад

      Homestead is way to go

  • @tacticalmattfoley
    @tacticalmattfoley Год назад +6

    If you want to see towns on the decline in Alabama, find any town that had a textile mill of some kind. There are a lot of small towns built up around a sock mill or a denim finishing facility that are drying up or are dried up. Many places didn't find other businesses to replace the mill when jobs were moved offshore. Avondale Mills was a company that employed 100s of thousands of people. Several small towns were dependent on Avondale and actually had mill villages to house workers.

    • @lisawilson9981
      @lisawilson9981 Год назад +1

      I live in Tallassee Alabama. The old Mount Vernon Mills was the heart and soul of our town. It fed and clothed my family for a lot of years. Other industries have come in, but the closing of the mill took something away. When it burned a few years ago it was the saddest thing.

  • @naftalichepkoit5069
    @naftalichepkoit5069 Год назад +15

    Thank u for giving us a wonderful tour of the beautiful South. Born and raised in Kenya and have lived in Maryland for 25 years and look forward to visiting the American south.

  • @TroyFutureExpat
    @TroyFutureExpat Год назад +10

    God bless that town of Millry. That town lost a lot of native sons judging by all those names on that Memorial. Nice video, thanks for sharing.

  • @littlebrookreader949
    @littlebrookreader949 Год назад +15

    Showing us our towns and cities through your eyes, small towns included, the good and the bad over the whole country is a real service to America. You have a great channel, and I appreciate it so much!

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +2

      Thank you!

    • @tangodman
      @tangodman Год назад +2

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip I have always dream of visiting country side US. Being in India, I knew I can never travel so deeply in US and see myself. But through your eyes and camera, I can now see all of that. Thank you for these videos.

  • @DesertMav
    @DesertMav Год назад +37

    I read a really cool article on the Lustron homes. There were a small handful of them left and one was to be torn down and instead of demolishing the house, they carefully deconstructed it and moved it to another location. It was a really cool idea at the time.

    • @redriveral2764
      @redriveral2764 Год назад +5

      There are two in Oak Park Michigan, south of Nine Mile Rd. east of Wyoming, I think it is.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +2

      Great idea.

    • @frigglebiscuit7484
      @frigglebiscuit7484 Год назад +1

      that lustron home was built as a demo along with another in the town in 1957.

  • @Darci3333
    @Darci3333 Год назад +14

    It always breaks my heart when I see abandoned houses that could be fixed up into a home. A home is so important....

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +5

      I agree.

    • @tbetyf7047
      @tbetyf7047 Год назад +5

      They should fix them and give them to homeless veterans

    • @AlanDavidDoane
      @AlanDavidDoane 11 месяцев назад

      @@tbetyf7047 If we had a fair tax on millionaires and especially billionaires, we could house every homeless person in America and solve most of the other issues we see in these videos as well.

  • @TBSHAW4321
    @TBSHAW4321 Год назад +35

    I'm from Jackson Ala. I was born at Jackson hospital, right off hwy 43. I attended Coffeville elementary and high-school. The river that you visited in Coffeeville, that river is called the Tombigbee river. It runs all the way to Mississippi. It's part of the Mobile river. It my mother was born in Grove Hill Alabama so we're both of my aunts and my uncle. Majority of my immediate family still lives in Clarke County in Jackson Thomasville Grove Hill and Coffeeville. When you went to Grove Hill you forgot to go by the Clark County Museum which is also historical. When you Rode down Robinson Street in the middle of Grove Hill. You passed by my grandmother and my great grandmother's house. It was so exciting to see your documentary.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +6

      Wow, I toured almost all of your stomping grounds! :)

    • @darrylginwright
      @darrylginwright Год назад +4

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip I live in Jackson! Hope you got to eat at B's Burger or Ed's Drive In. Did you see where the old WW2 German POW Camp was? It's not there now, just an Historical Marker. Did you see the City Swimming Pool......It is 438ft x 108ft.....It's Awesome! Let us know if you come back to Jackson!

    • @nolanwilliford8881
      @nolanwilliford8881 Год назад +1

      I used to work at the Boise plant in Jackson and now work at the IP in Camden.

    • @acwashingtonsr
      @acwashingtonsr Год назад +1

      My cousin use to be the principal in Coffeville. Mr. Hytower

    • @maryjemison1101
      @maryjemison1101 Год назад +2

      Born on the Beautiful Gulf Coast Alabama 40 miles From Mobile Alabama but I now live in Mobile wishing I was on the Coast.

  • @danvanleeuwen1974
    @danvanleeuwen1974 Год назад +8

    That driveway at 5:17 led to my grandparents house. The White House out of view on your left looking at the driveway was my great-grandparents at one point. My understanding is the house was originally either a church or school and built on the other side of the road you’re driving on. It was moved across the street sometime thereafter on logs in the late 1800s or early 1900s.

  • @TheNewMode
    @TheNewMode Год назад +6

    I’m from Mobile and played Millry, Jackson, Coffeeville, and Grove hill during middle/high school. Always loved getting out of the city and visiting those small towns. Always ate at a good local homecooking restaurant for our pregame meal. Lovely ppl all around

  • @crystal.ann.b7347
    @crystal.ann.b7347 Год назад +6

    I grew up in this area (Fulton)and went to Thomasville High School. It’s not a bad place to live and there are a lot more nicer areas that you didn’t see in this short video. Very interesting to see these places spotlighted here on YT. 😊

    • @thegoldenke
      @thegoldenke 8 месяцев назад

      I agree! The lake wood area is crazy beautiful and we also have some rough areas but I think his gps mainly took him on the downtown side of the highway

  • @karl9828
    @karl9828 Год назад +64

    Jackson, Al. has a lot of industry you didn't see. There is a Bosie Cascade papermill there, 3 lumber mills, a new pellet mill being built. There are several multi millionaires there and many large land owners also. Clarke county is one of the top timber producing counties in the country and the rich folks like it just the way it is!

    • @oldrustycars
      @oldrustycars Год назад +16

      Are the employees being paid a living wage and decent benefits? Probably not, the rich folks like that just the way it is as well.

    • @bluelava4282
      @bluelava4282 Год назад +4

      @@oldrustycars 🏆 post

    • @leskobrandon8998
      @leskobrandon8998 Год назад +4

      Not in my part of AL

    • @leskobrandon8998
      @leskobrandon8998 Год назад +2

      @Blue, fool

    • @spaceghost8995
      @spaceghost8995 Год назад

      @@oldrustycars He was being sarcastic . Relax.

  • @slainlawless2035
    @slainlawless2035 Год назад +27

    I was born in Grove Hill in 1978 at the memorial hospital. Dr Neal delivered me at 3 a.m., butt first, no caesarean, in a small town. I'll forever be grateful to him and the place that produced me. Grove Hill will always be home no matter where I go in the world. Thanks for this video, I'll visit very soon because of it.

    • @gilbertgildersleeve1581
      @gilbertgildersleeve1581 Год назад +4

      I am from Grove Hill and Dr Neal was our family doctor too. I don't live there anymore but wish daily I could move back.

    • @portiamatthews9654
      @portiamatthews9654 Год назад +2

      Dr. Neal was my family's doctor as well. Grove Hill is a small town and the population has diminished significantly. Since the 1980's. Back in the day a lot of the businesses were locally owned. The main resource for Clarke County, Alabama was pulp wood. Many of the people did move away for better opportunities. I wish he had driven to Grove Hill and Thomasville Alabama. Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this video.

    • @portiamatthews9654
      @portiamatthews9654 Год назад +1

      @@gilbertgildersleeve1581 , your last name sounds familiar to me, do you have family from Indian Ridge, Suggsville, or Morning Star area? I remember a young lady by the name of Beverly Gildersleeves who graduated in 1981 from CCHS home of the Bulldogs.

    • @gilbertgildersleeve1581
      @gilbertgildersleeve1581 Год назад +2

      @@portiamatthews9654 We grew up in Orange Hill on Asbury Road and I do have a cousin Beverly. We actually lived right down the road from Coach Horn.

    • @portiamatthews9654
      @portiamatthews9654 Год назад +1

      @@gilbertgildersleeve1581 I know that area very well because I got married at that church. I remember coach Earl Horn from way back ago. He was funny. One of my sister's married Terry Pugh and they used to live on Orange Hill Rd in single mobile home on the right side of the road.

  • @seaserenity5971
    @seaserenity5971 Год назад +25

    I live in these areas, so I know them well. Grove Hill is the county seat and tend to look the most busy.
    Jackson & Thomasville is actually a lot bigger & nicer than shown here, but the video only shows the more rural parts & downtown parts, which are historic & traditional-looking parts.
    However, this video is still a very accurate representation of these rural towns😂 These best time to visit rural Alabama is football/tailgating season, barbecue season, & Christmas season; that’s when everything really become lively, trimmed, and decorated.

    • @TheBlackScatPack
      @TheBlackScatPack Год назад

      And when the economy is normal, places like Jackson and Thomasville keep me busy with all the lumber mills. My brother has an ex girlfriend that is from Whatley.

    • @2720Crypto
      @2720Crypto Год назад

      Or the first of the month…

    • @frigglebiscuit7484
      @frigglebiscuit7484 Год назад

      @@TheBlackScatPack too bad you dont get in unless you got that special last name.

  • @johnrogers7846
    @johnrogers7846 Год назад +67

    I watched your Biloxi and Gulfport videos and now these in rural Alabama. I live somewhere between the two near Mobile. I guess its relative, but it seems to me these old towns are not really dying, they just had a lot of people that wanted to be somewhere else. I bet those that still live there would not want to be anywhere else. Was in Denver last year and stepping over people passed out, hypodermic needles, and poop. Denver was very much alive, but like I said, its all relative. Your videos are excellent. I love the format and commentary.

    • @njeanhunter9100
      @njeanhunter9100 Год назад +6

      Oh no! I did not know this had happened to Denver! It was a nice place when I was there, but that WAS fifty years ago. Sad to hear that. John Deutschendorf would be too.

    • @yeshuaischrist9951
      @yeshuaischrist9951 Год назад +9

      FUNNY IM IN MOBILE , AL
      . MIDTOWN TO BE EXACT. I WORKED IN CHICAGO FOR 20 YEARS AND NOW BACK IN MOBILE. SO MUCH LESS STRESS HERE.

    • @Rikrik1138
      @Rikrik1138 Год назад +3

      I live in West Mobile. I work a job where I transport rail and tugboat crews, so I’m in all of these towns quite a lot. I actually made a TikTok of the Veteran’s Memorial in Millry.

    • @johnrogers7846
      @johnrogers7846 Год назад +3

      @@Rikrik1138 Millry High School came to play our basketball team here in southeast MS years ago. I had a feeling it was way out there. I wish he had done a close up of the names on the memorial so we could pause it and look at the names.

    • @apocyldoomer
      @apocyldoomer Год назад +8

      Yep, Denver is a dump, mile HIGH city alright, it sure is!! Doper Heaven !

  • @janetalexander4476
    @janetalexander4476 Год назад +13

    Interesting ... I live in a small Alabama town ... you need to check out our neighboring town of Hodges ... once thriving ... still filled with small active churches and large cemeteries... what has time erased? I always wondered when I delivered the mail there to the four-hundred families determined to stay ... my challenge on route at times were cows in the road ... or people on horseback ... beautiful bluffs and landscape ...

  • @jacobbutler4017
    @jacobbutler4017 Год назад +6

    The big thing that happened was we got a Walmart and you didnt have to drive all the way to Thomasville. Coffeeville was where alot of people went to hunt.

  • @brendaz9222
    @brendaz9222 Год назад +12

    New to your channel and love it! Many of the old small towns have no jobs, no health facilities, few store choices etc. The people who stay are elderly, poor or can't afford to live elsewhere.
    Small towns are nice if you grew up there and know everyone. But not many jobs to raise a family on.

  • @liamgray9644
    @liamgray9644 Год назад +2

    I love this channel , I can honestly say I'm addicted. I am a over the road truck driver , many of the towns in your videos I have been through , but driving a semi , I don't get to see everything in these videos. Thank you for the work you do.

  • @judylord4875
    @judylord4875 Год назад +15

    I grew up in Mobile and have known of these towns all my life. It was very interesting to see what’s going on with them now.

  • @alexandralovesgoats3360
    @alexandralovesgoats3360 Год назад +15

    Loved learning about these rural Alabama towns. The homes on the National Registry are very cool. The Veterans Memorial is beautiful! I’d love to know the story behind the 7-up truck and RR car! Thank you for a great video!

  • @denisesmith2745
    @denisesmith2745 Год назад +6

    Loved it, loved it!!! You travel just like my family always has. Driving through the neighborhoods, seeing downtown. I so appreciate your information on median incomes, real estate values, etc. I commented on your video of Dodge City and mentioned I am originally from Kansas. There is and was a lustron house there. As a child, I was fascinated with it. All the towns near my hometown look just like these. It was a wonderful place for childhood. I am in Kennedale Texas now but love going on your car trips and also with my son. Thank you so much!!

  • @raymnsmith
    @raymnsmith Год назад +10

    Really enjoyed your video my friend. Thanks for posting. I grew up in Grove Hill Alabama. Things have not changed much since I was there in 1983. Has always been a real lack of opportunity in that region. I live in an Atlanta Georgia suburb right now. But, nice to walk back through some of those very familiar spaces through watching your video. I truly enjoyed it. ❤❤❤❤

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +2

      Wow, glad I could do that for you, Raymond. Little Grove Hill packs a lot of history!

  • @spaceghost8995
    @spaceghost8995 Год назад +9

    I have been a truck driver for the last twenty years and I have really learned about all the places in this country. Of course, I am usually on the interstates but whenever I can I get off onto some smaller routes and see some of the towns. A lot of dead towns too.

  • @lowyieldforeffort6996
    @lowyieldforeffort6996 Год назад +10

    Cute little town. Not really that small next to some. I'm glad to see that people keep it up and take pride in it. Thank you for sharing!
    (Incidentally, if you want to feature more Lustron homes, we have quite a few here in rural and quasi-rural Northern Illinois. I've seen them in pink, yellow, and blue, in addition to the tan you featured here. I've heard that they're hot in the summer, so it surprised me to see one still standing in Alabama.)

  • @stargasm1000
    @stargasm1000 Год назад +8

    I guess these houses missed out on the economic changes that the interstate system caused. I find it difficult to fathom the idea of these quaint little towns and villages dying and wonder what could ever be done to prevent it. I also wonder how attractive such a small town would be to an economic driver such as a major employer. If one ever set up shop within a reasonable commuting distance of a small dying town like one of these, I can imagine the town would come right back to life. The cost of living could be a major advantage of such small towns. With remote work, people could live in towns like this for cheap and still have an income.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +2

      I agree.

    • @billwilson3609
      @billwilson3609 Год назад +2

      There's been manufacturers from the Northern States and California building new plants in Alabama and Mississippi for quite some time due to half of the customers being located in the Deep South. There's an area in east central Mississippi called The Golden Triangle that's been growing by leaps and bounds. Northern Mississippi and Alabama also have been growing economically.

    • @entermachine6531
      @entermachine6531 Год назад +1

      Not until the education systems massively improve and better internet access gets rolled out to rural areas like this.

  • @Skyduke
    @Skyduke Год назад +1

    I love seeing rural America! Thank you for this. Cheers from Belgium.

  • @dr.leonardhofstadtersavage6413
    @dr.leonardhofstadtersavage6413 Год назад +7

    Love your content, I love seeing old houses and buildings. Reminds me of the days I lived in Port Arthur Texas in 1989, so much of that type of abandoned houses and buildings, I really miss them days.

  • @melodyhart1331
    @melodyhart1331 Год назад +6

    We moved to a small city in NE Alabama,and it is growing and thriving. As the cities become more dangerious,people are moving out to small towns for a better life.

  • @brandoncaldwell9415
    @brandoncaldwell9415 Год назад +4

    Out of all the rural areas of Alabama I’m shocked you stumbled across my little slice of the world. Growing up I’ve traveled throughout every town in this video more times than I can count. They’re not much, but it’s home to me. Us young folks keep moving away from these areas but there’s just something about these small towns that brings you back.

  • @mariesheppard3750
    @mariesheppard3750 Год назад +2

    To bad a lot of senior don t move to places like this it s quiet and afforded , and lots to see
    I m in Canada on the West Coast of B C, Been loving your video ,

  • @jennywilson9731
    @jennywilson9731 Год назад +3

    Thanks for sharing those small towns an the life being lived there...beautiful country side all around, too bad that a lot of those little house get let go..." Safe travels "🌼

  • @mikelasarge7090
    @mikelasarge7090 Год назад +5

    I was pretty heartbroken to not see the house I helped my dad fix up in Jackson, AL...it was an old 1890's historical with a Spire in the front, built by one of the first preachers there, right next to the middle school...you took a left before the middle school instead of going straight out of downtown...heartbreaking to not see the old house. Love your channel bro, it takes me back to long drives for work through small towns, but this time I have someone driving for me spouting facts, love it.

    • @frigglebiscuit7484
      @frigglebiscuit7484 Год назад +2

      if it makes you feel any better, the current owner has been fixing it up, completely painted it, and even has chickens and turkeys running around. he also has a christmas story leg lamp in the top spire room window LOL.

    • @dopeMike_
      @dopeMike_ 11 месяцев назад

      @@frigglebiscuit7484 Approved Christmas Story leg lamp.

    • @nunyabizness4306
      @nunyabizness4306 4 месяца назад

      It's still there passed by it the other day

  • @veegee3291
    @veegee3291 Год назад +8

    I enjoy your videos! A recent transplant from Southern CA to Austin, TX seeking quality professional opportunities and better quality of life. Touring middle America through your eyes reminds me that living in CA is almost UNREAL. I was paying $900 per month for a tiny bedroom in a mid century hillside Ojai, CA home w/ a gorgeous view of the Valley and some of it's finest citrus orchards from the kitchen window, sharing a tiny bathroom w/ one additional housemate and visitors and parking my car on the street. I was frustrated because I couldn't grow my salary beyond $60k with my wealth of professional experience while meanwhile here $40k was mid-range for the average homeowner! I'm grateful for everything I have but I look forward to living within my means starting here in TX and ending somewhere in/near MN. Quality of life is EVERYTHING. 💛

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +1

      Excellent comment. Thank you for posting it, Vee Gee.

    • @annkupke4263
      @annkupke4263 Год назад +2

      I live in Georgetown Texas. Pay is better but rent is expensive

    • @veegee3291
      @veegee3291 Год назад +1

      @@annkupke4263 You're justv15 mins. away in a beautiful city I visit often! 😊

    • @JohnJacobGarza
      @JohnJacobGarza 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@annkupke4263you get what you pay for

  • @terrysmitherman584
    @terrysmitherman584 Год назад +8

    I hope you enjoyed your visit to Alabama! Its been my home all my life :)

  • @ameliarhodes5000
    @ameliarhodes5000 Год назад +10

    You're quickly becoming one of my Top Three RUclipsrs for experiencing towns and cities. To be honest, for financial reasons I assume, one of my Top Three is stuck in Michigan. Love his stuff. Wish he were in a position to cover the rest of the U.S. Subscribed.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the great compliment, Amelia. I'm glad you're here!!

    • @peggydearmon2738
      @peggydearmon2738 Год назад +2

      If you found a local to guide you. You would give a more accurate picture of the place. I grew up in Mobile and have traveled all these roads for almost 6 decades when I married a guy born and raised in Millry . You are missing the most awesome part of these places.

    • @peggydearmon2738
      @peggydearmon2738 Год назад +1

      I have been in these towns many times and for the most part. You are not seeing the true representation of these towns.

  • @fatpugg3507
    @fatpugg3507 Год назад +3

    You are living my dream, I love traveling seeing small towns, I used too drive otr,, you will be amazed of the small towns, that aren't even on any database, I don't miss driving trucks, but I miss the traveling and seeing sites that time / people have forgotten about 👍👍💯

  • @surinfarmwest6645
    @surinfarmwest6645 Год назад +10

    Evening from Isan and that was interesting, some rather isolated places out in the sticks. The houses built from sheet steel are different, never heard of those before, certainly learn something new each day. Looking at the history Grove Hill was nearly wiped out by Yellow fever in 1853. Good job you have the NRHP to ensure a lot of these structures are preserved. Thank you for the jaunt around the countryside.

  • @mr1pearl
    @mr1pearl Год назад +7

    Some really nice affordable towns in this one nice to see there are some left ! You guys should do a live I got a ton of questions . Thanks for including temperature that was one of the questions I had ! Have a good day !

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +1

      Thank you, Bill. And I will continue with the weather - it was a great idea. :)

  • @omw9965
    @omw9965 Год назад +1

    Found this channel by accident, but I'm glad I did, loved the way you show the towns how they are, was very glad to see you have more videos, I'm going to get some coffee and see the rest, thanks for your time to show the world your videos. Subscribed.

  • @miss.g-shun-w
    @miss.g-shun-w Год назад +2

    A fellow Dallasite! This is the 2nd straight video I've watched from your library lol.
    You are so funny and pleasant to watch and I love your little town facts! Just wonderful all around. 👏🏾👏🏿

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +2

      Thank you for the kind words!! :)

    • @miss.g-shun-w
      @miss.g-shun-w Год назад +2

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip Sure! I forgot to subscribe to you when I originally watched your videos and when I got back home I couldn't remember your channel name. Happy that I finally found it again!

  • @daviddecelles8714
    @daviddecelles8714 Год назад +3

    There were four mailboxes outside the building advertising catfish for sale. Sign also saying it was open. Pretty good bet the fish were caught from the nearby river. Given the mailboxes, it seems likely that all four of those secluded and ramshackle structures were occupied. A special glimpse of rural America, thanks to you.

  • @nunyabizness4306
    @nunyabizness4306 4 месяца назад +1

    Im from jackson, thanks for showing all our local communities. The good and the bad, it will always be home to me. Saw a few people i knew driving by in your video😂

  • @brklynz_finest6383
    @brklynz_finest6383 Год назад +4

    I like how genuinely nice these two people are ☺️. Wish I could go on a road trip with them 🙂

  • @tylerminix2028
    @tylerminix2028 Год назад +5

    loss of manufacturing has hit our rural towns hard all over the south-east. lots of textile mills around my area in mid-GA that were booming in the 60s-70s that are mostly abandoned now except for a dollar general and post office.

    • @jerrycoaker4655
      @jerrycoaker4655 Год назад

      NAFTA was designed to decimate the South as it did by sending our jobs to china.

  • @ThickMadame80
    @ThickMadame80 Год назад +5

    Liked this a lot. I’m originally from Montgomery but currently in Indiana. Miss home.

  • @newbutt
    @newbutt Год назад +1

    Loved it! Though I live in DFW area, I have family in Jackson & my mom was born about 6 miles out of Coffeeville, headed toward Jackson, in my Great Grandfather's house on his homestead, along with her 5 siblings. I am the 4th generation owner of a parcel of land, where my Great Grandfather's house is still standing. I spend 2 to 6 weeks there almost every year. The only town on the video I haven't spent time in is Millry. When you turned into Coffeeville "downtown", right as you past the post office, the little white lean-to on the side of the tire place was my grandfather's barbershop. Coffeeville was a cool little town when I was a child & have many fond memories of spending time there in the summer. Thanks for sharing, I'll be headed that way end of April.

  • @jennylynn82173
    @jennylynn82173 Год назад +1

    This is such an interesting leg of your journey! The Lustron homes are really neat to see! Thank you! 😊

  • @jdbsw6756
    @jdbsw6756 Год назад +3

    Wow, it's so cool to see you visiting places around where I grew up. I grew up in Sweet Water about 15 to 20 minutes away from Thomasville. It is much smaller. Maybe around 200 for the population in the city limits on a good day. We all had to drive to Thomasville to shop. Funny enough, some of the best high school football teams in the state are in that area as well.

  • @erin8808
    @erin8808 Год назад +3

    I was born in Jackson, AL. My mom moved us before I was old enough to remember anything. Thanks for this sneak peek into my city of birth

  • @edholohan
    @edholohan Год назад +1

    I love your channel! Thank you so much! As a New Yorker now living in California, these are parts of our country I would probably not otherwise see. Very interesting...

  • @victorcontreras9138
    @victorcontreras9138 Год назад +3

    Nice video! When I traveled from West Texas to visit Delaware, I took all the side roads and not the freeway just to see this sort of scenery! You can bet I took a lot of fotos too. My favorites were OLD houses and barns.

  • @kimmcdaniel1495
    @kimmcdaniel1495 Год назад +10

    I was born and raised in Thomasville and I now live in Montgomery. I am proud of my hometown, especially the downtown accomplishments. Thomasville is in Clarke County and Grovehill is the County seat. That is the reason for most of the activity in Grovehill. The pulpwood industry is responsible for a good percentage of jobs in Clarke County and surrounding areas. I'm sure the Mountain Dew truck was parked there during the driver's off road period and the flashing vehicle was probably the truck driver's ride. Lol

    • @jamesnash6101
      @jamesnash6101 Год назад

      The problem with the South is this. You don't know how to relax so I'm going to share some tips and how to achieve a zen-like state.
      *increasing your daily intake of fibre by including plenty of high-fibre foods in your diet, such as fruit, vegetables and wholegrains
      avoiding dehydration by drinking plenty of water
      *trying to get more exercise - for example, by going for a daily walk or run
      *working out a place and time of day when you can comfortably spend time on the toilet
      *not delaying going to the toilet when you feel the urge
      *if you use wet wipes, avoiding products that contain fragrance or alcohol as this could lead to discomfort or itching - if you use toilet paper, use a soft brand and avoid wiping too hard
      *soaking your bottom in a warm bath several times a day, particularly after having a poo, to relax the muscles in your anus

  • @davidmotes2171
    @davidmotes2171 Год назад +10

    I went to high school in the Jackson area in the 80s. I still have a lot of relatives living there but I haven't been back since. Its depressing to see how bad the area looks now. I thought about returning there many times over the years. After watching this video, I don't know if I ever will. I would imagine the friends I had there are gone. Not enough progress in the area for jobs to increase the population. Sad.

  • @VOOODOOO37
    @VOOODOOO37 Год назад +4

    great honest review with historical data and current data. I live near the AL border, and some of the town look abandoned. very disconcerting to see empty downtowns.

  • @1gr8lpta
    @1gr8lpta Год назад +1

    Wow, you are doing a great service. Thank you so very much

  • @toddfr9781
    @toddfr9781 Год назад +4

    l love how you often bring up historical information in your videos!

  • @josephwalker132
    @josephwalker132 Год назад +3

    I’ve been working in Jackson for few weeks it’s nice and quaint
    It amazing work you are doing here

  • @robertyu4313
    @robertyu4313 Год назад +2

    These towns remind of the rural towns outside of Troy where I lived as a youth (13-18 yo) during the early 1970s. I remember that our prom night finished with a drive seeing the beautiful homes in Troy’s historic district and having a soft drink at one of the two drive-ins that existed during that time. A lot has changed but it appears that some things have not. It’s both interesting and difficult for me to watch this video as I don’t have fond memories of my experiences during that period of my life.

  • @bthomson
    @bthomson Год назад +3

    What I call your musings (with contemplative hums?) are just so endearing! Sad that so much of this country is just slowly slipping away!

  • @tinaricketts1526
    @tinaricketts1526 Год назад +3

    I absolutely love this video. I enjoyed every second of it. It's awesome to see how others live and how a town changes over the years. I was being raised in Pittsburgh Pa and when I turned 13 we moved to a small coal mining town. It was quite the change for me but till this day I love the laid back way.

  • @rosseganjr9402
    @rosseganjr9402 Год назад +3

    thanks for the exciting trip ! I don't get to travel much but I really enjoy your trips!

  • @masonhoward8487
    @masonhoward8487 Год назад +1

    Very neat video thank you for your care in older Alabama towns.

  • @theknowitall4090
    @theknowitall4090 Год назад +3

    I live in Birmingham and once decided I was gonna take old US 11 from B'ham to Slidell. It was amazing how many towns, businesses and homes just died that weren't on the interstate. Not the towns on 11 but the ones on the county and state roads.

  • @nancyparker9986
    @nancyparker9986 Год назад +5

    So interesting! I am on the west coast….love seeing all these places u visit ….. I would never get to see them otherwise !

  • @deetrvl4life875
    @deetrvl4life875 Год назад +2

    I like your presentation and descriptions of the properties. All viewed from a positive viewpoint, it seems. Thank you! It all was or will be history in some way. ;)

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад

      Thank you for the kind words. You can probably tell I'm having a good time on these drives. :)

  • @smartmouth1577
    @smartmouth1577 Год назад

    No doubt about it, watching your video's has made my lazy bones begin to stir. Thank you much.

  • @hoopty.
    @hoopty. Год назад +5

    A lot of people that lives in these small cities commute to other cities to work, that is why some of them have nice looking homes, with such low income.

  • @aimee-lynndonovan6077
    @aimee-lynndonovan6077 Год назад +3

    Wow look at that porch, car port, nice yard. Jackson , town very neat, but empty. Assuming everybody s at work or schools. 🧐 God help our rural America .

  • @liliancheboi7641
    @liliancheboi7641 Год назад +2

    I love your videos from rural southern states especially Alabama 😍 ❤ watching from kenya Africa

  • @jlohmann13
    @jlohmann13 Год назад +1

    I really enjoyed your journey and have just subscribed to your channel. I like the way that you state the townships statistics and always try to show their good or at least interesting points. Roll on.

  • @edneuzamorais6655
    @edneuzamorais6655 Год назад +4

    Amoooo.esses vidieos mostrando as cidades pequenas ,amo ver as casas nas zonas rurais,tenho muita vontade de um dia ir ai conhecer essas cidades gostaria muito .

  • @RichardFelstead1949
    @RichardFelstead1949 Год назад +4

    Greetings from Australia. These "Smalltown USA" videos are very interesting.I enjoy them very much.

  • @WhereShallWeGoToday
    @WhereShallWeGoToday Год назад +1

    I am really liking your appreciation for the beauty you find in these places. I do believe I'll subscribe. 😉

  • @T3flonPro
    @T3flonPro Год назад +1

    My family is from another rural town right near Thomasville called Dixons Mills. Remember going out to eat there and being surprised that they even had the places and stores they did for how rural the entire area is. So interesting to see these places getting attention

  • @tacticalbondsh
    @tacticalbondsh Год назад +4

    I love seeing these rural small towns

  • @fatbald938
    @fatbald938 Год назад +15

    It's funny, I had a lot of family that grew up in the area of millry, silas, coffeeville. To see it show up here like this, was just so unexpected. I guess I always remembered it as so Lively and friendly. I really wish you had showed the Millry drive-in, it was just past the Millry telephone company on the right. I always remember getting good food there when I was younger. How the years have gone by.

  • @CityCinderella
    @CityCinderella Год назад +1

    I always drovedown I-65 straight to the end - hit water / Fairhope AL
    Love this thank you
    I reallly adore Alabama

  • @amac9085
    @amac9085 Год назад +2

    THANK YOU THAT WAS A NICE DRIVE AND SOME NEAT PLACES MIGHT FIND A GOOD DEAL THERE thank you for sharing

  • @mannfan12
    @mannfan12 Год назад +16

    My family has deep roots in Alabama and I love to go back and visit. Sister and I did a Delorme Map Geocaching challenge a few years ago that took us literally to every corner of the state. We travelled thru many small towns. One of my favorites is Repton - not far from Jackson. Even though I live in Texas now, I love Alabama. It's one of the most beautiful and underrated states in the union. It is also the state with the most miles of fresh water lakes, creeks, and rivers of any state - by far. Thanks for traipsing thru the back roads of this beautiful state.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +1

      I agree.

    • @hoppes9658
      @hoppes9658 Год назад +3

      Michigan has 64,980 lakes and ponds. Don’t think Alabama has that many. You got us beat by lumber production though.

    • @annkupke4263
      @annkupke4263 Год назад +1

      @@hoppes9658 Texas also

    • @juliehughes1258
      @juliehughes1258 Год назад +2

      Same with Minnesota. The land of 10,000 lakes actually has closer to 15,000. I was born and raised there and it’s the first thing you notice when you fly into MSP airport; the sun reflecting off all the lakes. The winters really stink though.

    • @mannfan12
      @mannfan12 Год назад +1

      @@hoppes9658 I wasn't talking about number of lakes. I was talking about the number of *miles* of rivers, creeks, and lakes. Alabama has the most on that statistic. 77,000 miles

  • @richardsanty9063
    @richardsanty9063 Год назад +7

    Of all these small towns, Jackson was my favorite.

  • @paraleeculbert9704
    @paraleeculbert9704 Год назад +2

    Hello I really love watching your Travel adventures💯 seems like I'm right with you but wish you would tour some of the historical Places you drive by just be careful my mom was born in Parkins Arkansas 1906 hope you go explore there one day really good history there oh check out the little old school house 🏠 there. ok back to your show safe travel.your senior citizen Person👌👌Oh I use to hear my mother talk about some of the towns you've been to she knew a lot.mis her so much so Please take us back in time on one of your travels one day.✌️👌🌞🌞🌞

  • @PCBill0622
    @PCBill0622 Год назад +11

    Near Coffeeville, you crossed the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway. Better known as Ten-Tom, it was built by the Army Corps of Engineers to connect the Tennessee River to the Tombigbee River and provide a direct water route from the navigable Tennessee River and the Gulf of Mexico. Although it has been an economic boost for some areas of Alabama, many consider Tenn-Tom a classic example of pork barrel politics.

    • @slackjawedyokel1
      @slackjawedyokel1 Год назад +5

      one thing to consider is when many of these waterways were built like the Tombigbee -(early 70s ) -a lot of our manufacturing had not been outsourced overseas so the mindset was that there was still a need to move large heavy materials . Sadly that is not the case now

    • @PCBill0622
      @PCBill0622 Год назад +2

      @@slackjawedyokel1 yup

    • @annkupke4263
      @annkupke4263 Год назад +1

      @@slackjawedyokel1 they use railway to move industry or military in state. They also use seaport we have a huge port in my hometown. Oil, petroleum. Steel mill, also they have military. I moved recently and they have a lake And a river

    • @joerowland7350
      @joerowland7350 Год назад +1

      I live a few miles from the tenn-tom
      I fish a lot but prefer the Branahachy
      I get crusher run for live stock pads
      Off the barges I like small town mississippi life

    • @frigglebiscuit7484
      @frigglebiscuit7484 Год назад

      it should have never been built. muddied the HELL out of the tombigbee.

  • @renayvance-moser9434
    @renayvance-moser9434 Год назад +8

    Kudzu envelopes anything. In Summerdale there is or was a house that was ordered through the Sears roebuck catalog in the late 30's. Couple more Sears houses in New Mexico. You're vlogs are fascinating.

  • @neverjethot
    @neverjethot Год назад +9

    My uncle and aunt lived in Dothan. He was chief of police, she worked for the paper. Once a week we would get the Dothan Eagle- Often a front page would feature a young man making Eagle Scout. It would be nice to live in a peaceful little town like that.

    • @spaceghost8995
      @spaceghost8995 Год назад +2

      Dothan is a much bigger town and it is not exactly peaceful.

    • @neverjethot
      @neverjethot Год назад

      @@spaceghost8995 This was back in the late 60's, early 70's. Sounds like they need a man like Uncle Smith again.

  • @papacheeto05
    @papacheeto05 Год назад

    Love your tours.. I think you need a shirt that says "Wow, well how 'bout that!".. that would be fun, funny, and cute... its definitely your calling card.😀

  • @Journeyman.71
    @Journeyman.71 Год назад +1

    23:54 In 2011, the Thomasville theater was showing SOUL SURFER (@ 7p), and SCREAM 4 (@ 9P). There was also a coming-soon poster for MADEA'S BIG HAPPY FMILY. It looks like the place was only open on Fri, Sat, & Sun.
    24:25 The little pale green shed building, that was a trash dumpster enclosure in 2011!
    24:59 The "General Tire" store, at the Rail Road Crossing, does seem to have been closed in 2011, but, not so very long, perhaps. The windows were not boarded up on the outside, the building still had signs saying "McGRIFF TIRE," and the marquee still had Bridgestone and Firestone signs. Plus, the small-paned windows and roll-up doors were still intact. Sad to think that the building has sat vacant for over decade!

  • @donnawentz2221
    @donnawentz2221 Год назад +4

    I googled Thomasville and there was some good articles about why it’s “Successful Town.” There’s a regional airport in the area so that’s probably one of the draws to that town. I really enjoyed the video today, seeing new things.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words, Donna!

    • @MrJdavi3
      @MrJdavi3 Год назад +2

      The regional airport is actually a touchy subject around thomasville. We were promised this airport for years and it never came. The real success from thomasville came from the paper mills and great schools. There are around 4 paper mills in a 30ish mile radius. With thomasville city schools being the best school choice around. This has since changed and is why you are seeing a decline in thomasville and growth in grove hill

    • @frigglebiscuit7484
      @frigglebiscuit7484 Год назад

      thomasville is getting really good. the mayor is actually getting stuff in, unlike jackson. i say that not because hes my cousin(never met him), but because hes good. they just added a water park and laser tag area.

    • @frigglebiscuit7484
      @frigglebiscuit7484 Год назад +1

      @@MrJdavi3 damn, thomasville is going down now? it was doing ok a few years ago.