2LaneCruzer
Super Member
I remember my Grand Dad buying 160 acres of land on Grand Lake in Eastern Oklahoma when the lake was being built (about late 1930's early 1940's) for $1.00 per acre. That's right; one dollar per acre. My Dad was in that part of the country scouting for limestone deposits that could be quarried for material for roads and air fields, when he found the land for sale. They called it "dead Indian land".
He built a house and three cabins that he rented out; they didn't have electricity for several years; they used Coleman lanterns for light, drew water from a well with one of those long, tubular well buckets, cooked on a kerosene stove and heated with a fireplace. They had a Servel Refrigerator, that ran on kerosene. I spent many a Summer there (until I discovered girls); the house was only 100 yards to the lake.
He built a house and three cabins that he rented out; they didn't have electricity for several years; they used Coleman lanterns for light, drew water from a well with one of those long, tubular well buckets, cooked on a kerosene stove and heated with a fireplace. They had a Servel Refrigerator, that ran on kerosene. I spent many a Summer there (until I discovered girls); the house was only 100 yards to the lake.