Abandoned Jacksonville: Jones Chambliss Meat Packers
(http://photos.metrojacksonville.com/photos/3549835565_JvzJZ8M-M.jpg)
When traveling on the forgotten side streets of Jacksonville's older neighborhoods, one can't help but have a bit of "factory nostalgia" due to the eerily quiet ruins of industrial sites that once buzzed with activity. Here's a story of the rise and fall of a slaughterhouse just north of Riverside and west of Brooklyn: Jones-Chambliss Meat Packers.
Read More: http://www.metrojacksonville.com/article/2014-oct-abandoned-jacksonville-jones-chambliss-meat-packers
Another great, nostalgic article. I will need to ride by that area and check it out.
This type of writing is what attracted me to this forum a couple of years ago. Much appreciated, thanks.
^Thanks, expect more. I'm making a concentrated effort to add more hyperlocal historical, investigative, neighborhood, planning, and development oriented content to the site.
True Lake, I think we've crawled under, climbed up, stomped through, waded in, or searched for, every old building in North Florida, not to mention a few in Philadelphia, Detroit, Denver, OKC and South Dakota! Much more coming soon.
Price controls imposed by government are always an economic disaster. It creates shortages because, as the gentleman said, who's going to pay more and more for the product coming in when you can't pass the price increases on to the customer? Nixon was not economically smart, but then again, most Presidents aren't. Nixon also released the last connection of gold to the U.S. dollar. That has been a disaster as well.