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*With a Side Of JUNE 26–28,2016 TOUR* *WITH A SIDE OF Motoring with Imagination Our Mission: to celebrate the joys of vintage vehicle motoring Road Rules • We provide both emergency roadside assistance and vehicle hau ling serv- ices. Disabled vehicles should report their location via cell phone to John. No more than two vehicles should stop to provide roadside assistance. • If you encounter problems with your vehicle and must stop, pull as far off the roadway as possible. If you do not need as- sistance, please give a “Thumbs Up” signal to passing vehi- cles, so they know you are “OK”. • We try to avoid the busier highways, but that can’t always be the case. Always keep sufficient intervals between vehicles so an overtaking vehicle can blend. • In reality it is the second vehicle that bears the responsibility in passing situations. If you are holding up traffic, please pull over and give faster vehicles the right of way. • Rain, shine or worse… we continue to roll and all vehicles are expected to do the best for themselves under the circumstances. Open top vehicles may need to seek shelter. Individual judgment will be the order for the day. • Get a compass or GPS if you are not always sure of directions. • These route instructions serve as a “guide” only. You are free to deviate and learn about other parts of the territory. • We have purposely refrained from relying on mileage or time references in our directions. • Odometers will vary, so any references that do occur must be treated as approximate. For emergencies call John • 319-431-0520 Sunday, June 26 Day 1 Sunday Highlights • A short drive to Music Man Square, with its 1912 streetscape and to tour the boyhood home of Meredith Willson. Maybe a mid-afternoon stop at the Ice Cream Parlor or the Nickelodeon to view the latest Charlie Chaplain silent release. • An introduction to Prairie School Architecture via a short walking tour of the nearby Rock Glen — Rock Crest National Historic District. • Dinner at the Mason City Country Club with a guest speaker (all admissions and included in your registeration fee). A Bit About Mason City Mason City is the county seat of Cerro Gordo County, Iowa, United States. The population was 28,079 in the 2010 census. It is commonly referred to as the "River City", as the city grew up centered on the Winnebago River. The region was a sum- mer home to the Sioux and Winnebago natives. The first settlement was made at Shib- boleth in 1853 at the conflu- ence of the Winnebago River and Calmus Creek. The town had several names: Shibbo- leth, Masonic Grove, and Ma- sonville, until the name Mason City was adopted in 1855, in honor of Mason Long. In 1854, John McMillin opened the first store, and Dr. Silas Card opened the first medical practice in the area. Lizzie Thompson established the first schoolhouse in a log cabin in 1856. The United States Post Office Department started service to the town in 1857. Mason city was named as the county seat in 1858. 1 Day 1 Mason City, above all else, is known for its outstanding musical heritage, consistently pro- ducing successful performers and educators. Mason City's "favorite son" Meredith Willson grew up in Mason City, having played in the Mason City Symphonic Band as a student at Mason City High School. Willson's crowning achievement was the famous musical The Music Man, which was first a successful Broadway musical, then a popular film. Many of the characters in it were taken from people Willson knew from his childhood in Mason City. The show first opened on Broadway in 1957 and became a hit, with a three-year run at the Majestic Theatre, followed by an additional 1,375 performances at the Broadway Theatre. The Music Man garnered many awards, including 5 Tony Awards in 1958. The 1962 film version starred Robert Preston, Shirley Jones, and Buddy Hackett. It was both a critical and commercial success, being nominated for six Academy Awards (including Best Picture) and winning one (Best Musical Score). Music Man Square and Frank Lloyd Wright Tour f From the Super 8 Hotel turn left onto Hwy 18 (aka 4th St. west). Continue into town and stay on 4th to the intersection with Federal Street (by Taco John’s) h Continue on Federal Str. several blocks, it will jog to the right a little and crosses Willow Creek j Park in the large Southbridge Mall lot to the left in the designated area and cross Delaware Ave. to Music Man Square and the Meredith Willson boyhood home • The Frank Lloyd Wright walking tour will start/finish at Music Man Square 2 Day 1 Music Man Square to the Mason City Country Club f Exit the parking lot to the west and turn left onto South Washington Ave. • After crossing Willow Creek follow the long curve to the left, staying in the right lane g Exit to the right onto Federal St. and continue to 19th St. g Turn right onto 19th St. and continue 2 miles to the Country Club on the left Architecture and the Prairie School Mason City is widely known for its collection of Prairie School architecture, the largest concentration of any city in Iowa. At least 32 houses and one commercial building were built in the Prairie Style between 1908 and 1922, 17 of which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places and eight more are contributing properties to a historic district. The first two Prairie structures, the Dr. G.C. Stockman House (1908) and the Park Inn Hotel and City National Bank Buildings (1909–1910) were both designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. The hotel and bank, a mixed-use development at the corner of State and Federal Avenues, was the first to be commissioned by local attorneys James E. E. Markley and James E. Blythe. Both the Park Inn Hotel and Stockman House suffered from neglect and unsym- pathetic alterations before they were saved by community organizations. In 1989, the Stockman House was moved four blocks to prevent its demolition; it was subsequently restored and opened to the public by the River City Society for Historic Preservation. Likewise, Wright on the Park, Inc. began restoration on the Park Inn Hotel in 2005 and 3 Day 1 the former City National Bank building in 2007. The Park Inn Hotel is the last remaining of the few hotels that Wright completed during his career and is considered a prototype for Wright's Imperial Hotel. The Rock Glen and Rock Crest National Historic district is a small enclave of single-family homes situated along the banks of Willow Creek five blocks east of downtown. It is the largest collection of prairie style homes in a natural setting in the world. Five of these houses were designed by Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahony Griffin, two by Francis Barry Byrne, and others by William Drummond, Einar Broaten, and Curtis Besinger. Mason City Country Club to Super8 g From the Country Club, turn right on 19th Street f Turn left onto Taft Avenue f Turn left onto Hwy 18. The Super 8 will be on the right 4 Monday, June 27 Day 2 A Circle Tour A Spam Museum Tour and Lunch in Austin, MN with Pit Stops in St. Ansgar and Charles City Mason City to St. Ansgar g From the Super 8 Hotel turn right onto Hwy 18 (aka 4th St. west). g Turn right at the traffic light onto Eisenhower Ave. g At the T intersection turn right onto 300th St (aka B20) f At the T intersection turn left onto Hwy 65 g In Manly, turn right onto Hwy 9 for approximately 14 miles f Turn left onto T-26 (aka Foothill Ave.) toward St. Ansgar g In St. Ansgar, Foothill becomes Main St.; turn right onto 4th St. for our pitstop A Bit About St. Ansgar St. Ansgar is known as “The Garden Spot of Iowa” be- cause of the beautiful local gardens, large old trees and lush farmland around the town. To honor a man whose influence had much to do in the shaping of his own life, the Rev. C. J. Clausen gave to the town the name “Saint Ansgar” (meaning “God’s Spear”). St. Ansgar is the only town so named in this entire United States and even in the entire world. St. Ansgar is named for the patron saint of Scandi- navia, a French Benedictine monk who Christian- ized much of Denmark, Sweden, and northern Germany between 830 and 865 A.D. 5 Day 2 St. Ansgar to the Austin VFW Club g Return to Main St. and turn right heading north h Continue out of town where Main St. curves left and becomes County Rd. 105 g In a little over 3 miles and a curve to the left around the bright white barn; turn right onto Cameo (aka S70) headed north—if you cross the bridge you’ve gone too far f When Cameo ends, turn left onto 480th (a continuation of S70) In 2 blocks 480th curves right and becomes Beech Ave. Continue north on Beech ● At the IA/MN border, Beech Ave. T intersects with State Line Rd ● f/g Turn left onto State Line Rd., then quickly right onto MN Hwy 105; h Continue 12 miles on 105 into Austin; it will jog a few times, follow the 105 signs g In Austin, just before 105 turns left (overhead sign ahead of you), turn right onto 1st Ave. SW. h Continue on 1st Ave.to Main St.
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