Pat,

I understand about the "Three Horseshoes" pub, but 560 years is still older 
than anything we have here in North America.  I live in the so called 'midwest' 
near Chicago, 1000 miles from the cities on the Atlantic coast (and 2000 
miles from the Pacific coast).  Isn't it 1000 miles from Moscow to London?  

Point is, in 1831 we had Indian wars when Chief Blackhawk lead an uprising in 
Illinois.  Abraham Lincoln was a Captain in the militia during the war.  We 
were the frontier here only 200 years ago.  Folks here were clearing land for 
subsistence farming.  Construction was primitive.  There is very little worth 
saving.

And then Chicago had a fire in the 1871.  In many ways, this was similar to 
London's great fire of 1666, but 200 years later.  

Regards,  Bob S.

>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm not completely innumerate.  The 560-year figure referred to the "Three 
Horseshoes" pub that Malcolm Smith mentioned.  I agree that not every old 
building ought to be preserved.  However, while growing up in Quebec City, it was a 
pleasure to see and go into the many buildings dating from the 1700s and 1800s 
that are still in daily use.

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