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Dumpster Gates

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Old 02-06-2021, 01:29 PM
John Seymour John Seymour is offline
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Default Dumpster Gates

Is anyone familiar with the origin of the names on the dumpster gates adjacent to the Box Office in Spanish Springs?
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Old 02-06-2021, 01:50 PM
JGVillages JGVillages is offline
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Is anyone familiar with the origin of the names on the dumpster gates adjacent to the Box Office in Spanish Springs?
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Old 02-06-2021, 02:23 PM
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Old 02-06-2021, 04:29 PM
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Is anyone familiar with the origin of the names on the dumpster gates adjacent to the Box Office in Spanish Springs?
Background - the Morse family hired an architectural firm to design the town of Spanish Springs. The firm required the Morse's to write a fictitious story about how the town was settled. I purchased my house from a Villages Employee who was here in 1989. In the house I found a copy of the 13 page manuscript of that story created by the Morse's that cover settlement of Spanish Springs from 1787 to 1903. The names painted on most of the buildings in SS have a significance in that story of the settlement of fictitious Spanish Springs.

There is a very small mention to people you are asking about.

"Riding a wave of profits generated by trade with the Confederacy as well as Spanish Cuba, the Cattleman's Association of Spanish Springs, led by Adam McCall. builds its headquarters and administration center on Main Street in 1868. That same year a gentleman named H.G. Seymour is named "Cattleman Of The Year" at the association's annual South Fork Barbeque."

My assumption would be the two first names would be his children although it does not say that. FYI look above Margareta Republic at the stop sign on Main Street and you will see the building is the Cattleman's Association.

Last edited by rustyp; 02-07-2021 at 07:42 AM.
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Old 02-06-2021, 05:10 PM
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Background - the Morse family hired an architectural firm to design the town of Spanish Springs. The firm required the Morse's to write a fictitious story about how the town was settled. I purchased my house from a Villages Employee who was here in 1989. In the house I found a copy of the 13 page manuscript of that story created by the Morse's that cover settlement of Spanish Springs from 1787 to 1903. The names painted on most of the buildings in SS have a significance in that story of the settlement of fictitious Spanish Springs.

There is a very small mention to people you are asking about.

"Riding a wave of profits generated by trade with the Confederacy as well as Spanish Cuba, the Cattleman's Association of Spanish Springs, led by Adam McCall. builds its headquarters and administration center on Main Street in 1868. That same year a gentleman named H.G. Seymour is named "Cattleman Of The Year" at the association's annual South Fork Barbeque."

My assumption would be the two first names would be his children although it does not say that. FYI look above Margaretville at the stop sign on Main Street and you will see the building is the Cattleman's Association.
Cool story..
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Old 02-07-2021, 08:26 AM
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Background - the Morse family hired an architectural firm to design the town of Spanish Springs. The firm required the Morse's to write a fictitious story about how the town was settled. I purchased my house from a Villages Employee who was here in 1989. In the house I found a copy of the 13 page manuscript of that story created by the Morse's that cover settlement of Spanish Springs from 1787 to 1903. The names painted on most of the buildings in SS have a significance in that story of the settlement of fictitious Spanish Springs.

There is a very small mention to people you are asking about.

"Riding a wave of profits generated by trade with the Confederacy as well as Spanish Cuba, the Cattleman's Association of Spanish Springs, led by Adam McCall. builds its headquarters and administration center on Main Street in 1868. That same year a gentleman named H.G. Seymour is named "Cattleman Of The Year" at the association's annual South Fork Barbeque."

My assumption would be the two first names would be his children although it does not say that. FYI look above Margareta Republic at the stop sign on Main Street and you will see the building is the Cattleman's Association.
I found a couple pictures. The Cattleman's Association (1868) is above the breezeway between Margareta's and Kelwin's. On the square side of Margareta's second floor is the Citrus Exchange building (1890). Fictitious story reveals the Citrus growers feel their industry is becoming more powerful than the cattle industry in the local area. The growers president, Maclyn O'Malley has the tower added on to the second floor making their building taller than the cattleman's simply for show.


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Old 02-07-2021, 09:09 AM
Jim 9922 Jim 9922 is offline
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Back to the original question about the names; The dumpsters are being hidden behind replicated shallow "city" horse stalls and the names represent the names of the horses "quartered" there. Such stalls were common along side commercial structures in cities when "horse power" ruled the day and was used for daily travel and deliveries.
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Old 02-08-2021, 09:02 AM
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Rustyp, it would be fun to read this story. I have the capability to scan the document to PDF, if it is typed, I may still have the capability to scan into Word, not sure the program is still functional. I would be glad to try. Let me know.
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