There were once private homes on Mill Street. This abandoned early 20th century cottage is at 1112 N. Mill Street.
1154 Mill is a lounge with residence above.
1326 Mill Street is an abandoned supermarket. I do not know where residents of the nearby streets shop.
Clear water was bubbling out of the ground on the lot next to the supermarket. I have noted before that Jackson must lose a tremendous amount of its drinking water to pipe breaks and leaks.
The Magic Spot Sports Bar II is at 1836 North Mill. It has an ambitious mural on the north wall.
Jackson Generator and Starter Service occupies this 1927-vintage factory building. I was glad to see that it was a going concern.
Respect for the customer was molded in the concrete about the door. I wish more companies today followed this golden rule.
A warehouse with a former spur line is at the corner of Lorenz and North Mill. It was locked but clearly unused.
Neglected 18-wheeler trailers were in the muddy field north of the warehouse.
More clean water was gushing from a break in the hydrant.
This is a Tri-X film photograph of the recycle facility.
Drive west on West Mitchell Ave., and at the corner of Commerce Park Drive, an empty pink warehouse once housed the Traderhorn Discount Store.
The aerial photograph from Google Maps shows the railroad turntable. Tracks fan out to where there would have once been a roundhouse. One day I will try to get permission to take some photographs of the turntable (Update: not allowed).
This has been a rather gloomy view of west Jackson. This area was once a vibrant commercial and manufacturing district, but now many buildings are empty, the roads are crumbling, and the buried infrastructure decaying. I just don't have any answers.
I took these photographs with a Fuji X-E1 digital camera and various Fuji lenses.
2 comments:
I was a little disappointed to see that this hopeless article was written in Sept 2016. There was a multi-million dollar grant that allowed for the demolition and reconstruction of most of the abandoned, dilapidated homes. Most of the roads have been repaved (except Mill Street, ugh). Midtown Partners has done a lot of work to revitalize the area. There is an art district and many thriving businesses in the Midtown area including Lucky Town Brewing Company, d+p Design Build, Pearl River Glass Studio, OffBeat, Reclaimed Miles, The Hatch, MS Cold Drip Coffee, NUTS, Soul Wired Cafe, etc. There is still a lot of work that needs to be done in the area, but it is hardly doom and gloom. Several families have gutted, rebuilt, and moved into the 1930s homes. It is moving in the right direction.
I hope the revitalization continues. North Mill Street near the Woodrow Wilson overpass is still pretty grim as of 2022.
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