Old Texaco gas pumps in Randolph County, North Carolina.
(Photographs copyright 2012 by Dan Routh)
Commercial, Advertising and Editorial Photography. Greensboro, North Carolina
If you walk around in the woods in Grays Chapel, North Carolina, especially in the winter, it’s amazing how much evidence of the history of the area you can see. These images are of an old stone dam on Bush Creek some 300 feet long and 20 feet in height. A lot of the stonework is intact but the center of the dam was breached by a long ago hurricane and the creek now flows freely through. For some people, it probably just looks like a pile of rocks, but the rock work is beautiful and it is very special and significant to me on a personal level. My great-great-grandfather Isaac Routh built this dam in the late nineteenth century and it held back a five acre pond which powered a grist mill. Isaac and his son Wes ran that mill until it burned in the 1940’s (replaced by a nearby engine powered mill) and the pond remained until a hurricane caused a breach in the 1950’s. Wes’s brother, my great-grandfather John T. Routh, learned his profession as a miller here before he moved on to his own mill business in Bonlee in Chatham County.
(Photographs copyright 2012 by Dan Routh)
(Photographs copyright 2011 by Dan Routh)
Shiloh Church in Troy, North Carolina was decorated in natural Christmas decorations, greenery and candles Saturday afternoon for their annual Christmas Tea. Tea and cookies were served to chamber music and the bagpipes.
Shiloh Church (Methodist), built around 1883 in a grove of oaks near Troy in Montgomery County, North Carolina. The pews date back to an earlier 1836 log church. There are two doors in the front, one for men to enter and the other for the women. The building also served double duty as a school.
There is a website at http://www.shilohchurchtroy.com/.
(Photographs copyright 2011 by Dan Routh)