Yesterday I visited Marceline, Missouri (Where Walt grew up). They had recently built a little museum in the Santa Fe Depot (the one that Main Street Station is modeled after). One of the voulenteer workers in the museum had MET WALT DISNEY! Actually the story was that in the 50's when Walt was coming back to dedicate the pool in the town, this lady's house was the only one that had air conditioning, so the town asked if him and his wife could stay there! Her husband and Walt became close friends! She had LOTS of very interesting stories about Walt!
Also in the town, there was the Walt Disney Post Office which is the only federal building named after Walt. In the museum there was one of the cars that used to be in "Midget Autopia". Walt gave Marceline all 10 cars (1 is in the museum, 1 is bronzed and is a statue in the Disneyland autopia, and the other 8 were used to ride in the town) and it is the only Disney ride to ever be brought and run outside of Disney.
There was also the "Dreaming Tree" (as Walt called it) where Walt used to sit under most of the day and sketch whatever he saw- usually field mice. The tree was struck by lightning recently and may rot soon. So Walt's grandchild went and planted a tree near by.
The town renamed the street that Main Street was modeled after "Main Street" on a Mickey Sign.
One thing that REALLY interested me was that in the town, the train depot was in the front, the "Main Street" was right behind it, his farm was to the north, and the water/ pond was to the west. If you think about it, this is how Disney is designed (Frontierland to the north, Jungle Cruise/ Water ride to the West).
They also said something about how Walt was going to have a "Marceline Project" so that there would be a reason to put his hometown that he loved so much on a map. However, he died soon after and Roy was too busy with Disney World that he couldn't Finish it. I'm very interested to know what would have been in this "Marceline Project", however when I look online, I can not find ANYTHING about it!
Kudos to the town for giving their all to keep the Disney history alive!

