An interlude
While doing that, I wanted to show how Willow Creek and its surrounding area has changed. When we started Willow Creek was very much a small town, with large wild areas of land still unexplored. Its school was a small one-classroom country school and while there was a church and a park, there was little else.
Willow Creek in the year 1890:

Now, ten years later, a lot has happened. The school is no longer a small country school, but that building has been replaced by a larger brownstone, hosting both younger and older students. The rest of Courtyard Lane is now inhabited and the neighborhood also boasts the town's local museum.
Foundry cove, is still rural, but developed. There is the Heydale-farm, and the new Latour stables, but also the typical shotgun-style houses of Louisiana and a slightly larger Victorian home.
Several new houses has been built both in Sage estates and on the strip, and only one lot of land is still undeveloped.
Willow Creek in 1900:
As Willow Creek grew, so did the surrounding areas. Newcrest is now starting to look more like a bustling outskirts of a real town, with apartment buildings, townhouses, the Newcrest Athletics Club and Newcrest Observatory. The Newcrest Church is built in brick and definitely bigger than the small wooden church in Willow Creek. Frank and Emily, being the modern generations, has settled on this for their wedding rather than the church back home.
Newcrest in the early 1900s:

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