Walter Eisworth, M.D.

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Life on Byron St.

November 2, 2015 by Elizabeth Eisworth

Memories of life on Byron St. in North Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Byron St. House where Walter Eisworth's wife grew up.
The house on Byron St. in the 1960’s

The House on Byron Street

William Tennyson Arnold (W.T.) and Marcia Broome Guice Arnold lived in a quaint little brick house on Byron St. in Baton Rouge, LA.

The house was directly behind W.T.’s store on Plank Road.

Stoop kids - Cousins on the steps of Grandma's Byron St. House
Stoop kids – Cousins on the steps of Grandma’s Byron St. House in 1971

Walter Eisworth married W.T. and Marcia’s daughter in 1965 and spent a good amount of time in their home on Byron St. (pictured) throughout the 1960’s.

This video is a compilation of several Byron St. home movies from that era.

See the house as it is now on Google Maps »

Arnold’s Toy Store

Life on Byron St. - Baton Rouge, LA
Arnold’s Toy Store and Hinson Hardware & Garden Supply – 1960’s
ad-for-arnolds-toys
An advertisement for Arnold’s Toys from the October 17, 1959 newspaper lists the weekly specials.

In the 1960’s, W.T.’s store on Plank Rd. was Arnold’s Toy Store (pictured). Before that, it was a Plee-zing Food Store. In addition to groceries, he sold general store type items and “Esso” gasoline out front (Esso stood for S.O. – Standard Oil, which later became Exxon). [Courtesy: Tales in the Tree)

An advertisement for his store from the October 17, 1959 newspaper lists the weekly specials.

Walter’s brother-in-law, Ray Hinson, owned an adjacent hardware and garden supply store named “Hinson’s Hardware and Garden Supply” (pictured).

Walter’s niece, Melinda Hinson Holloway, writes about W.T.’s and her father’s store in her blog post, A Tale of Two Stores.

Walter Eisworth and Ray Hinson - 4770 Plank Rd. Baton Rouge, LA
Walter Eisworth and Ray Hinson in front of Hinson’s Hardware & Garden Supply – 4770 Plank Rd. Baton Rouge, LA – 1960’s

More Family Stories About Life on Byron St. from Tales in the Tree by Melinda Hinson Holloway:

  • Life on Byron Street: Christmastime – 1960’s Style
  • Life on Byron Street: Grandma’s House
  • Life on Byron Street: The Fruit Stand
  • Life on Byron Street: A Tale of Two Stores
  • Life on Byron Street

Filed Under: North Baton Rouge, Videos

1979 Eisworth Trip to Vermont: The Trip From Hell

June 18, 1979 by Elizabeth Eisworth

The Van and Mom's Roses
A little bit of The Van can be seen in this pic and also Mom's lovely roses. 🙂

In the summer of 1979, the Eisworths embarked on a 3-week-long 'vacation' (referred to by my Dad as The Trip from Hell). The final destination was a medical conference in Warren, VT. I think my parents optimistically thought this would be an ideal opportunity to show us all the historical landmarks between Zachary, LA and Vermont. Dad always loved history, and so on this trip he tried to hit every Civil War battlefield he could.

We made the trip in a green and white 1977 or 1978 Dodge Van which you can see in the pic. Todd later became renowned in high school for driving this same green van with the windshield wiper fluid jets pointed outward (for assault purposes :P)

Pimping Our Ride

Grandma Arnold accompanied us on the trip, so there were 7 of us in the van for 3 weeks. In an effort to cut down on bathroom stops, my parents purchased and installed a portable camper toilet that went in the back of the van. It was green so it matched the van....always riding in style.

The second row bench seat was removed and Dad built a wooden L-shaped bench in the back of the van to replace the missing seating. The new bench provided space underneath for storing suitcases and where little brothers could hide and play. There were no seatbelts...it was the 70's. At the lower end of the L in the rear of the van, there was a hinged portion that could be lifted to reveal the toilet.

Mom made green gingham-covered foam cushions for the bench and put matching curtains on the windows of the van. There was a "modesty" curtain the occupant of the toilet could pull around themselves. I remember the toilet made an awful suctioning sound when it flushed...it wasn't really a flush even...it was just a series of disgusting slurps.

The "modesty curtain" wasn't really designed to stay in place when negotiating the twists and turns of the Blue Ridge Parkway at speed. Grandma didn't get the privacy we all would have preferred....

As an adult with kids of my own, I cannot even imagine making a trip like this!

Gas Rationing

It was the year of the Iranian revolution, and that disrupted gas supplies in the US. We were in Pennsylvania when gas rationing went into effect, and the crazy gas situation was why we stayed away from NYC and Philadelphia.

Walter Eisworth and family in Washington D.C. - Todd is the cameraman. (Grandma Arnold, Liz, Asher, Marcia, Seth and Dad)
June 18, 1979 - Walter Eisworth and family in Washington D.C. - Todd is the cameraman. (Grandma Arnold, Liz, Asher, Marcia, Seth and Dad)

The Trip from Hell: Washington D.C. Leg

One of the stops on the 3 week long Eisworth Family "Trip from Hell" to Vermont was Washington D.C.

The Presidential Gardens

Mom had planned the trip out and arranged for us to stay in a refurbished apartment building she found called "The Presidential Gardens Motor Hotel" in Alexandria, VA. When we arrived, it was really shabby (compared to what was expected) and in a sketchy part of town. She said it felt a bit like the low-income housing projects in which she and Dad had lived in New Orleans while he was in medical school. I believe the exact terminology was "Glorified Projects".

Todd remembers that Mom and Dad had the brochure for the place and complained to the owners about false advertisement! Each suite was named after a President, and Dad joked that they should name them after the "bad presidents".

These should be named after Fillmore or Harding instead of Washington and Lincoln!

The Presidential Gardens in Alexandria, VA
Liz, Mom, Asher, Todd and Seth at The Presidential Gardens in Alexandria, VA in June 1979

The place had a kitchen where Grandma Arnold made dinner, and they made the best of it because it would have been too expensive to move to a hotel and still be able to feed everyone. Mom can't remember how she found the place, and I have no idea how you found places to stay before the internet...I guess a travel agent or travel magazine - ?

The picture of the place doesn't look that bad to me, but I think a lot may have had to do with the sketchy neighborhood feeling since we had to walk a couple of blocks from public transportation back to the apartment.

The Presidential Gardens is still there and now called the Presidential Greens Apartments.

Presidential Gardens Motor Hotel is a delightfully unique place to stay when visiting the nation’s capitol. Over 225 deluxe family suites, fully furnished to the last teacup, secluded from the annoyances of the city and highways, yet so convenient to everything.
Presidential Gardens Motor Hotel is a delightfully unique place to stay when visiting the nation’s capitol. Over 225 deluxe family suites, fully furnished to the last teacup, secluded from the annoyances of the city and highways, yet so convenient to everything.

Visiting Representative Henson Moore

Mom arranged with Representative Henson Moore's office to visit him while we were in Washington, D.C. In the picture below, Asher and Seth are doodling on the Panama Canal Treaty document in Representative Moore's office.

Walter Eisworth: Visiting Henson Moore's Office

Todd, Liz and Seth in front of the condominium at The Bridges in Warren, VT
Todd, Liz and Asher (and Seth in the bushes) in front of the condominium at The Bridges in Warren, VT

Final Destination: Warren, VT

In Warren, VT, we stayed in a condominium at "The Bridges" which is still there today. In the picture you can see what looks like some ski slopes in the distance.

I have a memory of us kids wandering down the side of the mountain and finding a large rock outcropping overlooking a valley. As a kid from the very flat state of Louisiana, the drop-off seemed scary, and I remember worrying that Asher and Seth might fall off.

Other Memories from this Trip

  • My lips were chapped really badly 90% of the time! I carried a tube of zinc oxide around. I am surprised my lips aren't slathered in it in any of these pictures.
  • We fought a lot over taking pictures with the Polaroid camera. If only we knew how expensive each blurry, botched pic was.
  • Asher, who was 5, took two of the most picturesque photos from the trip (see gallery below)
  • Seth walked off with a piece of the Appomattox Courthouse...some bit of crumbled masonry from an exterior wall. We didn't know about it until he mentioned it a couple of days later.
  • Todd was an aggravator and the van was tight quarters even for the most close-knit family. We were regularly yelling his name to stop doing whatever annoying thing he had decided to inflict upon us. At one point in the drive, my parents threatened "Todd, if we hear your name one more time....[some empty threat]!". Todd slumped back in his seat in compliance. Of course, never missing an opportunity to indict an innocent sibling, there was about 1 second of silence before Seth, Asher and I yelled "TODD!" simultaneously.
  • We also saw one of the last living Shaker communities, Monticello, Battlefield Park, Colonial Williamsburg, Mt. Vernon, The Sunken Road and Valley Forge.

More Pictures from this Trip

Presidential Gardens Motor Hotel is a delightfully unique place to stay when visiting the nation’s capitol. Over 225 deluxe family suites, fully furnished to the last teacup, secluded from the annoyances of the city and highways, yet so convenient to everything.

Washington Monument from Potomac Bridge - June 18, 1979

Washington Monument, June 18, 1979 - Asher took this one!

Todd, Seth and Asher - Sunken Road, Fredericksburg, Va

Todd, Liz, Seth and Asher - Richmond, VA Battlefield Park, June 14,1979

Todd, Liz, Seth and Asher - Richmond, VA Battlefield Park, June 14,1979

Monticello, June 29, 1979, Charlottesville, VA

Washington D.C. - June 18, 1979

Blue Ridge Pkwy, 6053 Ft. - Asher took this one!

Todd, Asher, Seth - Appomattox Courthouse - June 12, 1979

Marcia, Grandma Arnold, Todd, Asher, Seth and Liz

Todd, Liz and Seth in front of the condominium at The Bridges in Warren, VT

Todd, Liz and Seth in front of the condominium at The Bridges in Warren, VT

The Presidential Gardens in Alexandria, VA

Todd, Liz, Seth and Asher at The Presidential Gardens in Alexandria, VA in June 1979

The Van and Mom's Roses

Asher sticking his tongue out!

Final Destination - Warren, VT

Todd tracked the trip in the atlas

Todd tracked the trip in the atlas

Todd tracked the trip in the atlas

Walter Eisworth and familly in Washington D.C.
Walter Eisworth: Visiting Henson Moore's Office

Filed Under: Alexandria VA, Eisworth Family Vacations, Washington D.C.