Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't need to go too far to find "depressing towns". The Bailey's Crossroads area is one, Springfield, Wheaton, Aspen Hill. Truly ugly and very depressing.
Aspen Hill is a neighborhood, not a town
Anonymous wrote:LYNCHBURG, VA!
Anonymous wrote:You don't need to go too far to find "depressing towns". The Bailey's Crossroads area is one, Springfield, Wheaton, Aspen Hill. Truly ugly and very depressing.
Anonymous wrote:Cumberland, MD - both of my parents grew up there. It was a beautiful little town once, but it became depressed once railroads became less vital to the economy. It is so sad to visit now - I believe it may be ranked the poorest town in MD - lots of drugs and all boarded up. I sometimes wonder if it will ever have a renaissance like Ashevillle - such a pretty location and charming old buildings. I hope it revitalizes one day.
Anonymous wrote:You don't need to go too far to find "depressing towns". The Bailey's Crossroads area is one, Springfield, Wheaton, Aspen Hill. Truly ugly and very depressing.
Anonymous wrote:Gary, Indiana
Anonymous wrote:Wichita, KS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only place more depressing and third world IME is Cairo, Illinois. Lots of racism too.
Charleston, SC
I couldn't get over the racism there. Plus everything was grimy and dirty. Beautiful old buildings in rotten decay. I don't get how people like it there. I felt like the historical racism made the air thick.... and I'm white.
Wow I don’t see that at all. What parts of town did you go? I have only been once but I learned so much about the history of that region and how the black culture in and around the city evolved. It does have a terrible racist history but I feel like they own it and acknowledge it in a way a lot of other places paper over. For instance, this was years ago, but it was a historical site near Charleston that I first went on a tour that was centered on the enslaved people who built it and cultivated the land, rather than the slave owners. This is now more common in the South, but it was very uncommon then.
Also, the food in Charleston is phenomenal. And you can be at the beach in a half hour.
I can’t imagine calling it depressing in the way people are talking about here. It’s diverse, economically vibrant, culturally rich.
Anonymous wrote:I am not enjoying the upstate NY responses on this thread. Both Troy and Albany have some dismal parts (so I understand), but they are also quite vibrant and have beautiful parts (and relatively easy access to nature). Scenes for The Gilded Age are shot in Troy; Washington Park in Albany is one of my favorite small city parks (with free plays in the summer). Albany has the economic lift of being the seat of NYS government. There are a lot of colleges in the capital district as well which makes an area less depressing to me. I am sure someone loves every town in the US.