Old Gasoline Filling Station
Old Gasoline Filling Station
This is one of the last gasoline filling stations still standing in this part of the country. No one knows for sure, but it is thought to have been built in the late teens or early twenties. It had two pumps, one for regular gas and one for ethyl, which was a little higher octane. Oil was dispensed from a 50 gallon drum, which was laid down on its side on a wooden frame. A spigot was put in the end of the drum, under which you put a quart can, then taken to your car and put in the motor.
Seeing there was no electricity out here at the time, most homes and buildings were lightened by kerosene lamps or lanterns. Kerosene was dispensed the same way oil was from a metal drum, but in your container and taken home.
Cold soda pop was sold only on days when the ice man made it by. The pop was put in a large metal box with chipped ice over it. Hard candy was sold most of the time, chocolate was sold only in the winter, because in the summer it would melt -- since there were no refrigerators.
Back then, times where very hard and it was difficult to make a living. One day about the time Al Capone was terrorizing the City of Chicago, a so-called salesman came by the station, offering to sell the owners a way to make a lot of money, literally, for he had a set of plates for counterfeit ten-dollar bill. The story goes that the people yielded to temptation with the thought of being able to get rich quick.
A small room was constructed on the back of the old station for the purpose of hiding the printing materials and place to work. The only entrance was through the window you see on the back wall of the station. The window had a solid wooden door, which was kept closed most of the time. People didn't even know that there was a room back there.
The way the counterfeiting was done was that they would press one of the plates on a piece of paper with the green ink on it, then let that side dry for 24 hours, and print the back side of the bill the next day. Things went along just find for a time, but while passing one of the fake ten-dollar bills, one of the persons was arrested, and with the identification on him where he lived, he was traced to the old station. While searching the building, the counterfeit plates were found. So ended this crime spree, like so many others. The person being taken to jail was overheard to say, "It wasn't worth it!"
The old station was closed, never to open again. Many years later, which had nothing to do with the counterfeiting, a murder victim was found in the old abandoned building. Police were unable to determine whether he was killed here or the body just dumped. The victim was never identified for he had no identification on him and no one seemed to know him.
Please be careful entering this fragile old building
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Rock of Ages Farm
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