Anonymous wrote:I lived near Woodson HS in the 70s and 80s and there was a house 2 blocks away where they had a horse in a small pasture. This was right off of Little River Turnpike. We used to feed it apples.
Tyson’s mall was surrounded by fields and a few strip malls.
It was very white until I’d say the early 80s when Vietnamese started moving in and then Koreans. I remember when I66 was new and it had no traffic.
Restaurants were few and far between. Like Bobs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No bypass around Leesburg. Nothing on Route 7 between Leesburg and Sterling. When you got to the double decker McDonalds you knew you were about halfway to Tysons. There used to be big bird cages with live birds in the Tysons Corner mall.
I remember the bird cages. That was when Tysons first opened. They also had tropical plants around the cages (if I remember correctly).
In the 90s there was a restaurant that had parrots, I think in the vicinity where RH is today. You'd go in and they had thunder and lightning inside the restaurant. Special and horrifying both.
Anonymous wrote:My cousins moved to Greenbriar in Fairfax when it opened in the late 60s. We would drive from Alexandria to visit. We took the Beltway to Route 50 because there was no I-66. There was NOTHING on Route 50 outside the Beltway - a couple of churches, a rural vet, and some farms maybe.. Felt as if we were driving to the middle of nowhere when we went to visit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fairfax County was mostly farms at one time. Crazy.
I mean, so was DC proper itself too.
Anonymous wrote:Fairfax County was mostly farms at one time. Crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Clarendon and Ballston were sketchy AF, low rent districts.
Anonymous wrote:There was no beltway, no 66, no dulles toll road, no metro, no malls. Prostitutes walked on 14th st, lots of boarded up store front, kids could drink at 18, Georgetown clubs were packed on weekends, you could get in line and go into the Whitehouse at Christmas time, you could go walk around inside the capitol blg.. low security compared to now.
Anonymous wrote:There was no beltway, no 66, no dulles toll road, no metro, no malls. Prostitutes walked on 14th st, lots of boarded up store front, kids could drink at 18, Georgetown clubs were packed on weekends, you could get in line and go into the Whitehouse at Christmas time, you could go walk around inside the capitol blg.. low security compared to now.
Anonymous wrote:There was no beltway, no 66, no dulles toll road, no metro, no malls. Prostitutes walked on 14th st, lots of boarded up store front, kids could drink at 18, Georgetown clubs were packed on weekends, you could get in line and go into the Whitehouse at Christmas time, you could go walk around inside the capitol blg.. low security compared to now.