That was then (1953).
Intro to chapter 22:
U.S. 40 passes through Cambridge along Wheeling Avenue, a street that like many others in the United States, takes its name from the town to which it heads. This picture, looking west, taken at eight on a misty September morning, with the first autumn leaves fallen, displays much of the atmosphere of the smaller American town -- even to the informality of the two sitters on the curbstone.
This is now.
Google Maps
When author George R. Stewart drove through Cambridge in the early 1950s, the city's population was already in decline from its 1930 peak of 16,129. Since 1930, Cambridge's population has dropped 38%, and the city now has fewer residents than it did in the 1900s.
Source: Wikipedia
Cambridge is located 50 miles west of Wheeling and 80 miles east of Columbus.
Related post:
Chapter 1: Beginnings. (7/19/2024)
Chapter 2: Coastal Plain. (7/20/2024)
Chapter 5. Six-Lane Highway. (8/4/2024)
Chapter 6. Bush River. (8/5/2024)
Chapter 7: Baltimore rows. (8/6/2024)
Chapter 8: Ellicott City. (8/7/2024)
Chapter 9. Frederick. (8/8/2024)
Chapter 11. Horrible example. (8/16/2024)
Chapter 12. Mount Prospect. (8/17/2024)
Chapter 13: Ridge and Valley. (8/18/2024)
Chapter 14: The Narrows. (8/19/2024)
Chapter 15: From Little Savage Mountain. (8/27/2024)
Chapter 16: Mason-Dixon Line. (8/28/2024)
Chapter 17: Fort Necessity (8/29/2024)
Chapter 18: Braddock's Grave, (8/30/2024)
Chapter 19: Toll House. (9/2/2024)
Chapter 20. Coal Mine. (9/5/2024)
Chapter 21: Wheeling. (9/6/2024)
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