When Betty died in 1936, sir John asked a grandson and his wife (already in their fifties) to move in with him so that he would not be so lonely. When good sir John died in 1941, grandson Jim Petrovich and his wife Maria Petrovich would live on the farm until 1963 when they moved to a retirement home for the elderly. As the Petrovich couple remained childless, they gave up the farm despite the objections of other Lashawn heirs. It was handed over to the state of Lovia and made into a museum on the old days of the pioneers. It is now a well known tourist attraction, with Lovians dressed up as pioneers and settlers walking around the farm. In weekends, an actor dressed up as John Lashawn walks around the estate, and sometimes he is accompanied by an actor dressed like Athur I of Betty: visit
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| - When Betty died in 1936, sir John asked a grandson and his wife (already in their fifties) to move in with him so that he would not be so lonely. When good sir John died in 1941, grandson Jim Petrovich and his wife Maria Petrovich would live on the farm until 1963 when they moved to a retirement home for the elderly. As the Petrovich couple remained childless, they gave up the farm despite the objections of other Lashawn heirs. It was handed over to the state of Lovia and made into a museum on the old days of the pioneers. It is now a well known tourist attraction, with Lovians dressed up as pioneers and settlers walking around the farm. In weekends, an actor dressed up as John Lashawn walks around the estate, and sometimes he is accompanied by an actor dressed like Athur I of Betty: visit
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| - When Betty died in 1936, sir John asked a grandson and his wife (already in their fifties) to move in with him so that he would not be so lonely. When good sir John died in 1941, grandson Jim Petrovich and his wife Maria Petrovich would live on the farm until 1963 when they moved to a retirement home for the elderly. As the Petrovich couple remained childless, they gave up the farm despite the objections of other Lashawn heirs. It was handed over to the state of Lovia and made into a museum on the old days of the pioneers. It is now a well known tourist attraction, with Lovians dressed up as pioneers and settlers walking around the farm. In weekends, an actor dressed up as John Lashawn walks around the estate, and sometimes he is accompanied by an actor dressed like Athur I of Betty: visiters can have their pictures taken at the farm.
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