Skip the State Capitals—Head to the County Seat Nobody's Heard Of
You know the type of town I mean. Population 8,000 to 15,000. There's a courthouse with actual character. A main street that hasn't been completely murdered by a strip mall. A diner where the waitress remembers what you ordered last time even though you've never been there before.
These are county seats. And they're the most underrated weekend escape in America.
Most people drive straight through them on the way to somewhere else. They're not "destinations." There's no Instagram-famous brewery or artisanal pickle shop or whatever. That's exactly why they're perfect.
Here's what you do: Pick a county seat within three hours of where you live. Google "county seat [your state]" if you need a list. Look for one with a historic downtown core—search street view on Google Maps and actually look at the main drag. You want to see a mix of old brick buildings, not boarded-up storefronts, and ideally at least one building that looks like it was built before 1920.
Drive there Friday evening. Park on the main street—there's always free parking, always. Walk into whatever looks open. A family restaurant, a tavern, a cafe. Order the special. Eat something made that day by someone who has a vested interest in you coming back because they're going to see you at the grocery store next Tuesday.
Saturday morning: Coffee at the local spot—not a chain, the actual local coffee place (ask your waitress from dinner). Walk the downtown. Pop into the antique mall. There's always an antique mall. Pop into the used bookstore. There's usually one. Browse the courthouse if it's open—these buildings are absurd in the best way, all marble and brass and architectural decisions nobody would make now.
Eat lunch at the place that's been there since 1987 and hasn't changed anything. The carpeting is from 1987. The specials board is handwritten. The portion sizes are insane. This is not a bug.
Here's what will surprise you: How many genuinely talented artists live there. You'll find a pottery studio, a gallery, a weaver working in a storefront. These are people who chose to stay or came back. They're not trying to get discovered. They're just making things in a place where rent doesn't cost your entire paycheck.
Drive home Sunday. You'll have spent maybe $100 total. You won't have fought a crowd. You'll have actually talked to people. You'll have eaten better food than you expected. And next Friday, when you're overwhelmed, you'll think about that town and remember that most of America isn't fighting for tourists.
It's just living.
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