Thursday, April 30, 2015
The "Bloggin' A Story" Story
It was an ordinary day. Talking with a friend who reads my blog and he asked where I get my stories to write every day and how long does it take to write them. Told him it's kind of like the one episode on the Seifeld show when Jerry says, "What'd you do today," and when the reply was, 'I got up and went to work,' Jerry replied, "That's a story." Kinda like what I do. Head to the Chesapeake Bay for lunch and ...... well, that's a story. Take a day excursion with one of my grandkids, that's another story. Well, first of all I enjoy typing stories more than I enjoy watching TV, except when the Phillies or Dancing With The Stars is on. Some days I type a few stories and keep them 'on ice' until I need one on a day I don't feel like typing. As far as how long it takes to type one, it all depends on what I am typing. When I get items from friends as emails that are interesting and entertaining, I sometimes just turn them right around and use them for a story. They may take a half hour to complete. Then there are some stories that I may take a few days to write. Couple of years ago I did a story on baseball in the Dominican Republic. Took some time to research articles and stats online for that one. Then the one I wrote on Oyster Pond Yacht Club in Sint Maarten a few years ago took several weeks to complete. I made numerous phone calls, sent numerous emails and even wrote a few snail mail letters to people who had some first hand knowledge about the place and had no email address. When our family gets together for a picnic or a party, I usually have my camera ready and take notes when the stories start to fly about ...."do you remember when we did ...". Then I have to go through boxes of old photos to see if I have any that would help tell the story better. I once had someone tell me that they like my blog stories so much better when I put photos in them. I now have a story 'on ice' that I wrote in March of 2011. At the time I was running out of ideas and wrote a farewell story to end the blog. Luckily didn't have to use it yet. As of this moment, I have maybe two dozen stories typed with photos 'on ice', ready for publication. So I could go on vacation for close to a month and not have to do any typing except for adding a new "old" story daily. I do have to make sure that the stories that have a specific date for them are published in a timely manner, or they make no sense at all. So, if I question you from time to time in person about .... "do you remember when" .... I'm probably going to write a story about that, so watch what you say! I also bought a small digital tape recorder that fits in my pocket so I don't have to take notes or try to remember what people mention to me. So, hang on, since I haven't run out of ideas and stories yet! It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy. PS - this story took 12 minutes to write, and I have no photos to put with it. Sorry!
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
The "Real Garage Sale Find" Story
It was an ordinary day. Just finished posting Ansel Adams photos to a story which more than likely you have already read. While looking for photos to post to my Pinterest page on Ansel Adams, I came across a very unusual story about this really great garage sale find. Seems this antique hunting fellow from California was rummaging through cardboard boxes at a garage sale in 2000 when he came across a box of 65 glass negatives that had been carefully wrapped in newspaper pages that were dated from 1942 and 1943. Talked the seller down from $70 to $45 and took them home with him. Found out pretty quick that the glass negatives were from no other than Ansel Adams and were the negatives that were allegedly lost in a darkroom fire in 1937. It had been assumed that about 5,000 glass negatives had perished. Well, the guy hired a lawyer and a group of experts to examine the glass negatives and after six months of investigating, they claimed they were the real thing and perhaps worth $200 million. What a bummer for the guy who sold them to him. The way I read the stories I found online, he began to sell prints of the negatives, but then Adam's own grandson became skeptical. Matthew Adams, president of the Ansel Adams Gallery in Yosemite National Park, California, said that the writing on the sleeves of the negatives, which is supposed to be Ansel's wife's writing, is inconsistent with other samples of her handwriting and contains a number of misspellings of places in Yosemite that she knew how to spell. Also, the edges of the negatives have marks on them that don't seem to match what marks should be on them if they were taken with Ansel's camera which he used during that time period. Each side now has lawyers who will eventually eat up so much money that it may not be worth it on either side. Matthew also said that you can't print from them since anything you make would have to say it is an interpretation of something that may be Ansel's. Ansel Adams died in 1984 at the age of 82. The Ansel Adam's Gallery is still producing prints made by a printer who was trained by Adams before he died. The two original prints that I have were purchased for me by my wife from the gallery. So now the guy who bought the negatives says he will no longer use Ansel Adams name or trademark in anything he sells. But, wait! Another new twist was added when Marion Walton, niece of Earl Brooks, said the photos produced from the garage sale negatives are from her uncle Earl.
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
The "Ansel Adams" Story
It was an ordinary day. Just finished hanging up my Ansel Adams prints in the family room. When Carol decorated for Christmas she removed the two Ansel Adams prints and replaced them with needlepoint work that she had done that reflected the holiday season, but now that Christmas has long passed and the decorations are once again stored safely in plastic tubs, the Adams prints are once again hanging for all to see. Back in 2011 I wrote about Ansel Adams and how Carol had purchased two prints from a special reprint of Ansel Adams works.
Love both of them, but my favorite Adams print is one called Moonrise taken in Hernandez, New Mexico. It is Adams most popular single image and a copy of it sold in 1981 for a record $71,500. Guess you understand why I don't own one of those prints. Over the years that I taught high school photography I grew to understand and appreciate Ansel Adams and what he did for the art of black and white photography. He is perhaps my most favorite photographer. For those who have never heard of Ansel Adams, or may have had a brief brush with the photographer, I have taken photos from my Pinterest page to share with you which will show his life through his portraitures. You will see how others pictured him throughout his life. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico taken in 1941 by Ansel Adams. |
A self portraiture taken in 1930 at the age of 28. The crook in his nose is the result of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. |
1932 photo taken by Villiard Van Dyke. |
The photographer of this photo taken in 1936 is unknown. It features Adams with his camera. |
If you thought "Selfies" are something new, here is one taken by Adams in 1936. |
A 1947 photo taken by Nancy Newhall. He is standing with his tripod so my guess is Nancy is using his camera. |
A 1950 photo show Adams with a much smaller camera. The photographer is unknown. |
1953 photo taken by Imogen Cunningham. |
This 1958 self-portraiture of his shadow was taken in Monument Valley, Colorado. |
This Arnold Newman photograph of Ansel Adams was taken outside Adam's home in Carmel, California. You can see he must have been working in his darkroom since he is wearing his apron. |
A 1975 photograph taken by John Sexton. |
A very interesting photograph taken of Ansel by Judy Dater in 1977. |
Monday, April 27, 2015
The "Thanks, Mr. Long" Story
Our granddaughter petting the llama |
Hugging the donkey! |
Entrance to Long's Park with the amphitheater in the background. |
Old postcard showing the bridge at the lake that takes you across to a small island which now houses a gazebo. |
This is what the bridge looks like today. |
The petting zoo |
A playground area |
One of many pavilions with another playground behind it |
Sunday, April 26, 2015
The "Buying Up The Block" Story
The historic Fulton Opera House in downtown Lancaster, PA. |
Saturday, April 25, 2015
The "Almshouse" Story
It was an ordinary day. Just finished taking a photo of one of the most enduring buildings in Lancaster County, Pennsyl- vania. Building was called the Lancaster County Almshouse and was built primarily for the social control of the poor in the county. I assume that most medium to large cities have houses such as the one in Lancaster, but most probably have not survived as the almshouse in Lancaster has. Matter of fact, an easement guarantees the remaining part of the original building can never be demolished and its exterior can never be altered. The building of the house began in 1799 and opened the following year.
At first delinquent and dependent children were housed in the almshouse, but records do not show if they were admitted to the house with their families due to poverty. County taxes provided the primary funds for the operation of the almshouse. The almshouse included a working farm and stone quarry as well as a manufacturing unit so that the residents of the almshouse could help reduce the amount the county would have to pay for their stay. The house was run by a steward with his wife who served as the matron of the hospital. Other workers at the almshouse included attendants, nurses and a storekeeper.
The documentation of the Lancaster County Almshouse and Hospital came about because of a gift from the Edward Hand Medical Heritage Foundation in 1989 and was carried out by the Delaware Valley Threatened Buildings Survey at the University of Delaware. At some point in history some of the building was demolished to make room for what is known as Conestoga View which is a skilled nursing facility and rehabilitation center for Lancaster County members. In 2000, what remained of the Lancaster County Almshouse and Hospital was listed as the second oldest continuously operating hospital in the nation with the Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia being the oldest.
Lancaster County Commis- sioners voted in 2005 to sell the almshouse and the neighboring Conestoga View. The sale was loudly critized by county residents who feared the almshouse may be demolished. The house was purchased by Complete HealthCare Resources and housed the county's Children & Youth Services. The county's lease with Complete HealthCare expires this year. The easement that will not allow demolition or alteration of the building may cause the building to be turned into a museum. Lancaster residents may have what they wanted in the first place. I have always admired the house and grounds and also hope that it becomes a museum in the near future. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
A post card shows what at one time this building filled the property along East King Street. Much of the building was removed to make way for Conestoga View. |
Conestoga View. |
The Almshouse which still remains. |
Friday, April 24, 2015
The "Sweet or Dill?" Story
Interior of Overlook Roller Rink in Lancaster, PA |
Returning the ball during a game of Pickleball. |
Ball and paddle used in Pickleball. |
Size and markings on a Pickleball court. |
Another four-some playing Pickleball. |
Serving is done underhand. |
Thursday, April 23, 2015
The "One of My Heroes" Story
Foreword: "My university has been the book, the newspaper, the play, the concert, the opera, the lecture, the sermon, the church, the world of nature, the world of art, the printing office, the dictionary, the cyclopedia, the poem, the restraining influence of the school, the blessed association of friends." This was penned by John Piersol McCaskey years ago. If his name is a mystery to you, it's because you are not a citizen of Lancaster, Pennsylvania. My story today will tell you about this outstanding educator, musician, song writer, politician and human being who called Lancaster home.
It was an ordinary day. Just finished making an 8"x8" print of my McCaskey High School altered Polaroid which I sell from time to time at a small store in downtown Lancaster. The John Piersol McCaskey High School was completed and dedicated on May 3, 1938 on the east side of the city of Lancaster. The high school bore the name of one of the finest citizens Lancaster has ever known. Dr. McCaskey was born October 9, 1837 to Scottish immigrants on a farm near Gordonville, PA. He attended the Zook school house where he was required to read daily from the Bible. At the age of ten he left home to study at the Oak Hill Academy in Virginia until his family moved to nearby Lancaster and he enrolled at a secondary school on Duke Street. He eventually graduated from Boys High School in 1855. He then began teaching at the high school the same year and taught the next ten years there except for one year when he studied printing at the Evening Express printing office. While teaching he met and fell in love with Ellen Chase, another teacher at the school. She then took a job at a school in Bath, NY and accepted his marriage proposal by mail. They were married in 1860 and had seven children. The same year he got married he introduced a vocal music course into the school curriculum at Boys High and soon after organized a high school orchestra.
He became principal of the high school from 1865 to 1906. He was also the co-editor of the Pennsylvania School Journal from 1866-1921 while using his printing skills he learned earlier. J.P., as he was known, was an accomplished musician, having written the famous Christmas song "Jolly Old St. Nicholas" in 1867. It is said that the "Johnny" who wanted a pair of skates was his son who died in childhood. He eventually earned a Master of Arts degree from nearby Franklin and Marshall College and was granted a Doctor of Philosophy degree from F&M in 1887. One of his remarkable feats was the introduction of Arbor Day in Lancaster County while his friend Dr. E.E. Higbee, State Superintendent of Public Instruction eventually made it a state holiday. In 1907, after leaving education, he became the 23rd Mayor of Lancaster for one four-year term. But, with all of the tremendous educational and political accomplishments he achieved, I was most impressed with the fact that he was a Vestryman for 68 (you read that right) years and a warden for 24 of those years at St. James Episcopal Church in downtown Lancaster where I am now a member. Makes the 4 years that I was a Vestryman look like nothing. Dr. John Piersol McCaskey died at the age of 97 while arrangements were being made for his 98th birthday party. In 2013 his great-great grandson, Patrick McCaskey, whose family owns the NFL Chicago Bears, had a family friend, Richard Smith of Gordonville, PA, submit a memorial story to the Lancaster Newspaper to celebrate his great-great grandfather. It was a great tribute and an interesting read. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
My Polaroid print of J.P. McCaskey HIgh School |
Dr. John Piersol McCaskey, hero |
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
The "Barons Beat the Phils" Story
It was an ordinary day. The 2015 major league baseball season has begun and my beloved Philadelphia Phillies are not picked to win the National League East Division. I realized that was a possibility since they have lost quite a few of their best players to age and trades. They have a few good prospects, but expecting them to win the division is rather unrealistic for this year. A few weeks ago there was a photo in the Sunday News in Lancaster, PA that showed a local amateur team from nearby Manheim, PA that played an exhibition game against the Phillies on a warm July evening at Stumpf Field on the Fruitville Pike in 1939. I wasn't born at the time, believe it or not, but did get to see many Lancaster Red Roses minor league games at Stumpf Field which was about a half-mile walk from my childhood home on North Queen Street.
At the time, Manheim played in what was known as the Lebanon Valley Baseball League. It was an amateur league when it began in 1931, but did start to pay players in 1935 and eventually folded at the end of the year after Manheim played the Phillies. At the time of the game it was reported that Manheim's record in league play was 13-15 while the Phillies record in the National League was 45-106. Not sure how they could have played 151 games by the end of July, but that doesn't impact the story except to show you they were probably as bad as this year's team is going to be. Well, the game saw 3,400 fans in the stadium who came to see the Phil's All-Star Morrie Arnovich who was batting .378 at the time. Manheim pitched Glenn Horst who only gave up five hits to the Phillies that night as they beat the Phillies 1-0. I hope that isn't what is going to happen this year with an amateur team being able to beat my Phillies. Time will tell, and with 162 games scheduled until they finish in September, I'll probably have many frustrating evenings in front of my TV set. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
The 1939 Manheim Barons amateur baseball team. Click on photo to enlarge. |
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
The "Going Out On A Rope" Story
It was an ordinary day. Just dropped my grandson off at home after spending a morning taking photos with him of Lancaster County, PA scenes. He lives in West Hempfield Township about 20 minutes from my house in Manheim Township. On the way home I passed through some of the most beautiful farmland in what is known throughout the country as the "Garden Spot of America." And, many of the people who live on the farms in Lancaster County are pushing the Pennsylvania State legislature to allow them to begin raising hemp. Between 1718 and 1870 there were more than 100 water-powered hemp mills in Lancaster and nearby York counties.
The farmland that supplied the mills were farmed by Scotch-Irish and German pioneers who settled in Lancaster County. Shortly after 1870 hemp farming waned, but had a resurgence in the early 1900s as hundreds of farmers grew hemp for Hanover Cordage Company. Hemp was used not only for cordage products such as rope and twine, but also for concrete, motor vehicle parts, food, clothing and environmentally friendly fuel. Legalizing the growing of hemp would bring more jobs to Lancaster County creating economic growth and agricultural sustainability. The area where my grandson lives used to be rich in hemp farms, thus the names of East and West Hempfield. In nearby Columbia, PA, pretzel baker Shawn House runs Hempzels Pretzels. He uses hemp seeds in his pretzels, but he must buy those seeds from Canada. Hemp seeds provide omega-3 fatty acid, vitamin B and proteins. The owner of the company said that he would love to buy his hemp products from nearby Lancaster. But there are some roadblocks that will have to be resolved before farmers in Lancaster will be able to grow hemp once more. Seems that hemp is a member of the cannabis species and contains extremely low levels of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive agent of the plant that gets users high. While the THC of hemp is less than 1%, it still causes people to associate it with marijuana and it's 7% to 20% THC content. For Lancaster County and all the different religions that dominate the population, getting hemp legalized will be a real task. Doesn't matter that hemp growing dates back to colonial America when Presidents Washington and Jefferson grew hemp and the fields of Lancaster were ripe with the crop. Also doesn't matter that the crop could double the income per acre of the products that are now grown. The 1937 act that forbade growing of hemp in the country is the reason that so many are up in arms against reinstating the growing of the cash crop. Many are treating hemp as if it were a drug issue. The United States is the world's largest hemp importer, so there's no reason why Lancaster County farmers shouldn't begin to grow it again and return the product to US soil. Two state Senators, Mike Folmer and Judith Schwank have introduced legislation to permit the cultivation and processing of industrial hemp in Pennsylvania.
Every year in January the state holds it's Farm Show in nearby Harrisburg, PA and Shawn House sells his hemp products at a stand in the show. One of his most popular sellers, besides his pretzels, is a wild cherry cough syrup that contains hemp. Popular Mechanics labeled hemp a "billion dollar crop" since fuel and some car parts are made with it. Law makers may be more favorable to passing a law to allow hemp to be grown if they were made aware that the Declaration of Independence was drafted on hemp paper. I believe it is only a matter of time before hemp will once again fills the fields of East and West Hempfield and gives my grandson and me another crop to photograph as they harvest it. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
Farmland in Hempfield, Lancaster County, PA |
Lancaster Newspaper photo of Shawn House selling his hemp products at the Pennsylvania Farm Show in Harrisburg,PA. |
Monday, April 20, 2015
The "The Frugal Birthday Club Members" Story
It was an ordinary day. Carol was telling me about a conversation she had with her friend Marg about the days when both our families had to lead a remarkably frugal existence due to our families having to live on a teacher's salary for quite a few years. Carol met Marg while taking a LaMaze class with her when they were both pregnant with their first child. Marg's husband, as well as myself, had been teaching for perhaps four or five years at the time and making a very basic salary while starting a family. Carol and I had just purchased a home and a new car a few years before and were both working at the time when Carol became pregnant. When our first son arrived, we made the decision that she should be a stay-at-home mother and live on my teacher's salary. Tough to do with car and house payments and a new child to support, but ....... Well, we did get to celebrate on paydays by going out to eat. After our other two children arrived we continued the same "going out to eat Friday evenings" and our children loved it. We had two places that we tended to use, one each month. One was at a Burger King located on the Manheim Pike north of Lancaster, PA, but south of East Petersburg, PA. We could treat the family to a fast-food meal, complete with dessert, for a reasonable amount of money.
I know it was fast food, but it was only one time a month! The other place we visited once a month was a place called Pappy's Pizza which was located directly off the Manheim Pike on the road that led to the Park City Shopping Center, directly across from the Fulton Bank. Pappy's Pizza had great pizza, a neat atmosphere for kids, with some arcade games to occupy a few minutes while mom and dad ate our meal and a window where we could watch the pizzas being made. Our three children loved watching the bakers hold the dough to make a circular form and then throw the dough in the air. We always requested a table so they could view the pizza being made.
And ...... we celebrated many of their early birthdays at Pappy's with straw hats and bow ties as well as a special certificate for all party-goers. Great place to take the kids and the friends of the birthday boy or girl without breaking the bank. Those memories will always be with us as well as our kids. Pappy's eventually closed and a variety of other businesses tried the spot, but with little success. As of today, the place remains at the same spot, but siting vacant. If it's any consolation to all those businesses, the bank across the street couldn't make a go it either. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
Pappy's was a chain pizza place, so if you are reading this flyer, you will see that this one was for a store in York, PA. |
Our children were birthday club members. |
Sunday, April 19, 2015
The "A Sad Happening In Lancaster County" Story
It was an ordinary day. Just found Indian Marker Road in Conestoga Township. Exactly where MapQuest said it would be. Only problem I encountered was I turned right, just as my directions said to do, when I should have turned left. A couple of hundred yards before I made my right turn I encountered the farm where the 50 or so Native Americans, Mennonites and natural gas pipeline protestors camped yesterday and last evening. They were not at the farm to protest anything, but to mourn the desecration of an area known as "Chief's Hill" which can be seen off in the distance, across the road from the farm where they are encamped. The pipeline that was supposed to go through this south-western part of Lancaster County will no longer pass through here, but the farmer who owns the land where "Chief's Hill" is located has now decided to farm the site on his farm that was covered with shrub trees for ages.
Indian Chief Carlos Whitewolf believes that the farmer is doing it out of spite since he's no longer being offered money for the rocky land since the protesters have changed the minds of the natural gas company about proceeding with the pipeline through this part of Lancaster County. The chief said that the gathering yesterday was not a protest and he believes the farmer has the right to do what he wants on his land ..... but the land that he just bulldozed to knock down all the trees was a Native American burial mound and therefore sacred ground to the Native Americans.
The group that met yesterday met to offer a sign of peace to the spirits of the dead. The farmer and his family have farmed the land around the hill for generations and allegedly never heard that the hill was a burial ground. He has never encountered any bones or other signs that the land contained human remains. About a half-mile down Indian Marker Road was an actual Indian Marker that was erected by the State and Local Historical Societies.
On it it states that this area was given to Native Americans by none other than William Penn in 1701 and that the land, primarily to the west of the marker, was the home of the Conestoga Indians. Happens to be exactly right were the mound of earth called "Chief's Hill" is located. Many in Lancaster County believe the farmer is doing irreplaceable damage to history and heritage just to grow a small area of hay or even worst, to get even. Historians claim there is pretty strong evidence that the hill was a burial mound, since records from 1714 show that Conestoga Indian Chief Togodhessah claimed that their Queen Conguegos was buried on "Chief's Hill." In 1972 archaeologists found 90 graves and the remains of three houses in the immediate area. You would think that there must be someway to legally stop the farmer and his bulldozer, but the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act shows that private land is not protected under the act. Here's hoping the farmer will stop his childish tirade and stop the desecration of the Native American gravesite. It was another extraordinary day in the life of an ordinary guy.
Piles of wood can be seen if his photo I took of the land known as "Chief's Hill" along Indian Marker Road. |
At the end of the road is a historical site plaque telling the history of this area of Lancaster County. |
A larger view. Click on it to enlarge. |
Saturday, April 18, 2015
The "A Piece of Architectural History Still Remains" Story
Color postcard of the original Lancaster Country Club |
Another view from the early 1900's of the LCC. |
How the property appears today with Mr. David Kuhn as the owner of the historic home. |
The home from the rear along Stadium Road. The garage was at one time home to R&S Glass Company and is now home to David Kuhn Painting Company. |
This photo was taken from the Lancaster Country Club website showing what the Country Club looks like today along the New Holland Pike, about a half mile from it's old location. |