Well, I'm back in lovely Chapel Hill, with a few new photographs of places I visited over break. Didn't get nearly as many as I would have liked — family and work interferred with getting out and taking pictures.
I'll start off the new year right with a trivia question — a photograph of a building that's important to first year students. What's the building, where is it, what's the course where students study it, and what is the case where it appears?
Is that Ollie's Barbecue of Katzenbach fame?
I like that suggestion, Matt — I should post a picture of Ollie's. Alas, this building is further north.
This is a wild shot in the dark. I noticed that you teach property (a course that I dropped after one semester before we got to easements). Is this, perhaps, the gas station (now with gas pumps removed)from Sanborn v. McClean (Mich. 1925)?
Bob–again, a very good suggestion. I'd love to post a photograph of the lot from McLean. Any Detroit friends want to send that along?! Following along your property theme, Bob, I'd love to have any photos you'd care to share from Euclid. (I was working on my syllabus this morning and thinking about Ambler Realty, which I teach the first week.)
Alas, this building is further east. You're right that it was a gas station; it was also — and this is a little harder to see — a restaurant and motel.
Al, is it the Heart of Atlanta Motel?
The restaurant setting for Lucy v. Zehmer, of Contracts fame, where two drunks objectively manifested their assent?
Steve–I should post a picture of Heart of Atlanta, too, at some point. I dimly recall that it's been torn down–may be wrong about this.
Alan has it! Yeah, Alan. It's "Ye Olde Virginnie Inn," of Lucy v. Zehmer fame. I learned from a terrific paper by Barak Richman and Dennis Schmelzer that the restaurant was just up the road, along route 1 in Dinwiddie County.
http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2979&context=faculty_scholarship
I often drive that stretch of route 1 when I'm traveling between Chapel Hill and Washington — somewhat slower, but much more pleasant the I-85. And so I thought, next time I'm there I'll take a picture. In case you're looking for it, it's on the west side of route 1.
Al,
You are right that the Heart of Atlanta hotel was torn down. There are pictures of it findable on the web.
I'll wait until the weather gets better so that my Euclid pictures can show off the city in its full glory, and then I'll send some along.
Bob
Sounds fabulous, Bob — good plan. And I should also say, that I'd like to hear from other folks who have building or monument trivia pictures. I'm always looking for pictures to post.
High as a Georgia pine.