] Around Columbia: Columbia Missouri
Showing posts with label Columbia Missouri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Columbia Missouri. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Jack's Gourmet Restaurant Turns 40


As part of a family celebration we revived an old family tradition of going to Jack's Gourmet Restaurant which has been part of the local landscape now for forty years.  The service and the food were excellent, and in my opinion among the top three here in Columbia. Our meal was three hours long as we enjoyed each others company, the food, and the ambiance.  The way it should be.  One of the dishes we were served was salmon, and I do not think that it could have been prepared any better.  Our waiter has been working there for 20 years, and his expertise was very apparent.  Jack's is not just about fancy dining, but also a lounge with a generous happy hour with good food, and drink, specials.

We arrived around six p.m.

 

Around Columbia, I think Jack's is one of those places you do not want to miss for great food and atmosphere.


There is an extensive menu with lots of price options.  Take your time going over it, and ask questions.  You can get a three course meal which has an average price of about twenty dollars.  It comes with soup and salad.  I suggest the french onion.


Our Baked Alaska - complimentary if there is a birthday person in the party.


Jack's signature mint (I always take a few extra)!

It was a bit after 9 p.m. when we left.


Located on the north east side of town.  Here is a map:



View Larger Map

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Flat Branch Park

This story is dedicated to James T. Scott.  I will explain his story at the end of this one.



Flat Branch Park is Columbia's best kept secret and the most underutilized park in the city.  It is fabulous. Located in the heart of downtown in "The District" it has much potential and shows what can happen when a community starts to uncover streams and use them as a resource, such as a green space, and develop the area properly.



 The Flat Branch park has much potential - especially for future establishments which are built purposefully to adjoin it.  We could have our own mini River Walk. It  has lots of parking, a small water park for kids, and free wifi.

I started in the middle and walked north.









Kind of a nice mix between the urban industrial and the pastoral.


This is the spray park although it is off for now as we leave the summer season.








The MKT trail branches off into the park.













It gets a little seedy here at the north end where I turned around.  Lots of graffiti and a homeless hangout.  You can see here where Flat Branch Creek disappears under Broadway






I walked back from around this point heading south ending up to the connection under Providence Road to the MKT trail.







Heavy rain Saturday caused the small creek to rise over the trails on the underpasses.  




From this point I am going back through where I started now heading toward the Mizzou campus.



Going in.


Going out.








At this point the trail parallels Providence road on the right and the Mizzou campus on the left.



That is providence road directly above my head here.





Starting to turn around and head north back to the main park area.





Old railroad that must have been part of a bridge or some other structure.


Back at the parking lot where I started.


This is a beautiful area.  Like all urban areas I would stay away from the seedy parts or visit them only when accompanied by others during the day.  Otherwise stay in the areas, which is most of the park, that is visible and usually crowded.  This facility is close to the Mizzou campus and the downtown area including lots of great places to eat or visit with friends, with great shopping just a little bit further away.  Our local mosque is right there too.  Columbia needs, and is developing, more space like this.  It is a wonderful thing.

In Memoriam

I promised I would explain at the end of this story the story of James T. Scott. 

Years ago my Grandfather Mordica (Americanized version of Mordecai) used to tell me the story of this lynching but I was never 100% sure that it was true.  I certainly did not want it to be true.  But, when I was writing this I decided to do a search and see what I could find out and I found a story written just days ago that was published in the Missourian.   

Mr. Scott, born 1887 was an African American man who was lynched in this area in 1923 by a mob of about 1000 people who broke him out of the county jail and hung him on the railroad bridge at Stewart road.  He was 36 years of age. The railroad used to run parallel to Providence road and there was this underpass to the railroad that you drove down and under.  That is where the lynching occurred.  Mr. Scott is buried in the Columbia Cemetery within yards of George Barkwell who is the man who was tried and acquitted of the lynching.  Death makes bedfellows of us all.

Grandpa I believed you but I just  hoped the story you told me somehow wasn't really true.

I think we owe Mr. Scott a nicer headstone and I am going to see what I can do about that.

For more information:

An outstanding story by the Columbia Business Times written when the development of the area was just starting to gather momentum:  http://www.columbiabusinesstimes.com/723/2007/11/03/flat-branch-creek-of-dreams/


More history of the Flat Branch area from a doctoral thesis:  http://www.columbiaheartbeat.com/2008/10/bottomlands-geography-of-inequality-in.html










Thursday, August 19, 2010

A Trip to New Franklin

I took my parents down to New Franklin early this summer to pick up a boxed meat package from Jennings Meat Packing and Processing.   We did a bit of sight seeing and had lunch at the senior center. About a half hour from Columbia it is a nice day trip and I highly recommend it.

Entering downtown New Franklin




Hometown of Sara Evans




The following two pictures were taken from the same location showing both sides of the downtown street.




The Silver Liners Senior Center









Jennings Meat Packing and processing





Christian Church of New Franklin








The Katy Trail in New Franklin









Street Scene



Small towns in Missouri offer a unique experience and certainly a change of pace.  Go explore and meet people instead of staying at home watching Fox television.