Glover Street runs from Atlanta Street to Fairground Street. At one time it was low income residential section
with some family with outhouses and odd shaped houses (add ons). Now, there is only one residential house. Most of the houses on this street had a
profound influence on me. I lived on
Manget Street, a street perpendicular to Glover Street and the western Border
of Larry Bell Park.
As soon as you enter Glover Street from Atlanta Street on
the left is a fine little restaurant that was one a small house . It has a BBQ leaning with a wide
variety.
Texaco Distributor. I
am not sure what kind of petroleum distributor it is now, it was a Texaco
Distributor. We used to sit on the
bench in front of Miss Julie’s Store and with our flips (slingshots) shoot at
the petroleum tanks in the yard of the Texaco place. We would shoot and a few seconds we heard a
“clank!” of rock hitting metal.
Glover Machine Works.
Behind the Texaco Distributor was a patch of woods, then there was a
long brick wall. On the other side of
the brick wall was Glover Machine Works, which was on Butler Street (which
would be Atlanta Street). My father
worked there before he became a policemen and his father worked there until he
retired.
One of the things they manufactured was train engines. There
was one behind the brick wall behind their building that I used to play on by
myself on Sundays when it was closed.
That engine is now on display across the tracks from the Marietta
Welcome Center and Marietta History Museum. When I played on it, it was burnt orange (rust)
Glover Street post to be continued-
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