LOCAL, STATE AND NATIONAL MUSINGS
Feb 7, 2020
Sad Sack Pennsylvania Voters
A new correspondent for the Morning Call in Harrisburg tells us that school tax reform is not on track after all, what a surprise!
In the late 1970's, when Pennsylvania legalized and took over the numbers racket with the lottery, the wide eyed were promised tax reform. When the state legalized casino gambling 30 years later, the gullible were promised tax reform.
Seniors on fixed income really do lose their homes because of taxes, I've known several. State elected officials really do promise reform, I've known many...They never deliver, nor do they actually try.
Here in Pennsylvania getting elected to Harrisburg is a job for life, unless and until such an official decides to give it up. We elect incumbents term after term, regardless of performance. There is a manual on how to stay in office, which includes sending out constituent birthday cards and other assorted nonsense to the morons in your district.
If ever there was a meaningless phrase, reform in Pennsylvania must be it.
Feb 6, 2020
Allentown's Double Parking
Yesterday, Paul Muschick of the The Morning Call speculated on the reason for all the double parking in Allentown. Being politically correct, he overlooked the oblivious answer... We have herds of Rude and Crude living in Allentown. Why has this problem persisted for so long? The Allentown Parking Authority doesn't want to deal with face to face confrontations with the offensive offenders, they prefer placing a parking ticket on an empty car and then running away. The Allentown Police consider the problem beneath their law enforcement pay grade. Muschick mentioned N. 7th Street as ground zero for the problem. Fellow activist Robert Trotner referenced Muschick's column on facebook, and a Hispanic business owner complained about the lack of parking spaces on 7th Street, for the volume of current businesses. He does have a point, but the double parking in Allentown occurs everywhere in center city, even with many empty spaces.
The city should identify parcels close to 7th Street that can be acquired for additional parking. Peter Lewnes has done an excellent job developing 7th Street into a business district, as it was in Allentown's distant past. Being as politically incorrect as I am, I cannot refrain from noting that the same merchants and clientele now on 7th Street, were deemed undesirable when they were previously on Hamilton Street. As I have written before, there was actually more commerce on Hamilton Street with the so called undesirables, than there is now. However, the NIZ wasn't really meant to increase commerce, but rather to increase the real estate portfolio of certain individuals. Another recent article in The Morning Call, on the NIZ, avoided such realities.
reprinted from June of 2018
Feb 5, 2020
The Radiation Mystery: Wetherhold&Metzer
The Shoe giant Wetherhold & Metzger started in 1908 on Hamilton street's south side. When business began to prosper, they moved across to the more prominent north side of Hamilton Street. Their store at 719 Hamilton was recently demolished, along with most of Allentown's mercantile history. It was a two story store, with the children's department on the lower level. This post originally was scheduled for sometime in the future, and was to include a Buster Brown poster. Today's Morning Call has a story on the mystery radium 226 found in the debris of the former buildings, and I thought perhaps the molovinsky on allentown historical division could help. Wetherhold & Metzer's downtown store was quite the adventure for a kid. In addition to your mother's money being transported away in a tube system like the bank drive-ups use today, you could look inside your shoes and see your feet.

Needless to say, eventually these shoe fluoroscopes were banned, but for many years one stood in the lower level of 719 Hamilton Street. Many a child, including myself, saw our foot bones in our new Buster Browns. Wetherhold & Metzger also had an uptown store in the 900 block of Hamilton Street.
reprinted from September of 2012

Needless to say, eventually these shoe fluoroscopes were banned, but for many years one stood in the lower level of 719 Hamilton Street. Many a child, including myself, saw our foot bones in our new Buster Browns. Wetherhold & Metzger also had an uptown store in the 900 block of Hamilton Street.
reprinted from September of 2012
Feb 4, 2020
Paul Muschick Might Become A Columnist
Since Muschick is already the Morning Call's columnist, this post title alone probably offends him...Offending people is never an issue for me, I do fancy myself a Lone Ranger in blogging. The Morning Call hasn't had a columnist since Paul Carpenter retired.... Bill White squandered his bully pulpit with Christmas Light Tours and chocolate cake contests. He's still judging chocolate cakes.
The reason I see hope in Muschick, is that his recent column takes Ray O'Connell to task for considering running for reelection, after he pledged not to. I don't have an opinion on that topic at this point, but appreciate that Muschick does, and that he expressed it. Muschick's new boldness goes somewhat awry criticizing the voters for reelecting an indicted mayor Pawlowski. A search of the paper's archives shows no-one at the paper writing against Pawlowski, including Muschick, at the time. Furthermore, the paper gave the indicted Pawlowski space for column after column during the election.
For a current columnist at the Morning Call the bar is very low. If I were Muschick, especially with the deteriorating corporate profile for the paper, I would be going all out against the local establishment.
Feb 3, 2020
King Of The Gypsies

According to my mother, a Gypsy king was buried in Allentown in around 1960*, she knew about such things. She was born in Galgo, Hungary, an area of Transylvania, now part of Romania, near present day Gilgau. In Galgo, the Jews and Gypsies lived on the edge of town. In the early 20's, my grandparents, along with their Gypsy neighbors, came to Bethlehem to work at the Steel. On weekends, to make extra money, my grandparents would open their house and show Hungarian movies. None of their relatives, Jew or Gypsy, save one cousin, survived the nazis... even the cemeteries were desecrated. As you can see from the document above, my grandfather earned his citizenship the hard way.
reprinted from 2008
*my research indicates that I remembered the story wrong, and that it was a prince who was buried in Allentown, after drowning in a local motel pool.
Jan 31, 2020
The Mad Men Of Allentown
Back in the day, the titans of Allentown would fill the five barberchairs of the Colonial Barbershop, 538 Hamilton Street. That was when the town had three department stores. That was when Wetherhold and Metzger had two shoe stores on Hamilton Street. That was when Harvey Farr would meet Donald Miller and John Leh at the Livingston Club for lunch, and discuss acquiring more lots for Park & Shop. By 1995 all that was gone, but Frank Gallucci, 82, would still give some old timers a trim. The Colonial Barbershop property, closed for many years, has been purchased by J.B. Reilly. It is my pleasure to present this previously unseen portrait of Gallucci, toward the end of his career.
photocredit:molovinsky
reprinted from previous years
Jan 30, 2020
Sacred Cows Safe In Allentown
When I started this blog back in 2007, the first Morning Call person I skirmished with, Mike Miorelli, is now the new Editor-In-Chief. Miorelli had removed attribution to my blog in a story about the school district, even though the reporter had included it. Since that time, several of my posts have been borrowed without attribution, but things got worse... The Morning Call has ignored two large scoops reported on this blog: Department heads of Lehigh Valley Health Network had offices above the arena, so that the state taxes on their payroll checks could be funneled to J.B. Reilly. The South Whitehall Commissioners allowed The Wildlands Conservancy to attempt to undo the voter's referendum on Wehr's Dam, by challenging the state's favorable inspection report on that structure.
In an article about the changes at the Morning Call, they credit the retiring editor, Terry Rang, with investigative journalism....In their dreams... they didn't even recognize a mayor giving out crooked contracts for 13 years.
dissident blogger Molovinsky at Wehr's Dam, photo by Michael Adams
Jan 29, 2020
Shopping Around The Corner In Allentown
Needless to say that when I was a kid downtown Allentown was bustling. There was nothing that you couldn't find or buy on Hamilton Street. The mercantile district was so vigorous that it could support stores and businesses two blocks out in either direction. Across the street from the Earl Theater on 8th Street, the Look Steak Shop did a hardy business. Also in that block was Stangl's Jewelry, Goodin's Optical and a hearing aid business.
It is a little difficult to recognize those businesses in the photograph above. While the city and newspaper was lauding the progress of the upcoming arena, I was documenting the demolition of the city's history. The buildings were not the only victims. The last group of owner operators were also roughed up by the city...I also documented that.
I apologize to those of you who are happy season ticket holders at the new arena. While you can read about the progress at numerous other sites, including the city web page, City Center Realty, and The Morning Call, this blog commenorates the past.
Jan 28, 2020
The Demolition of Allentown
In addition to three major local department stores, Allentown also sported three national chain five and dimes. Two of these emporiums stood side by side on the 700 block of Hamilton Street; F.W. Woolworth and McCrory. Those discount stores of their day sold everything, including souvenirs of Allentown and even Hamilton Street. The large buildings remained intact all these decades, still hosting national chains. Although Family Dollar and Rite Aid have other locations in Allentown, their demolition closes the chapter on Allentown's retail history. The two photographs were taken from the same location, sixty years apart. Click on images to enlarge.
Jan 27, 2020
No Damn Molovinsky Letters
Early last week I submitted the following letter to the Morning Call.
I read with great amusement South Whitehall Commissioner Tori Morgan's statement that placing an Open Space referendum on the ballot is a "fantastic idea". Ms. Morgan permitted the Wildlands Conservancy to contest the condition of Wehr's Dam with the state. That inappropriate interaction has complicated fulfilling the 2016 referendum that was meant to preserve that iconic structure. A referendum doesn't mean much if the elected officials are not sincere about following through with the voter's wishes. Michael MolovinskyThe last letter of mine published by The Morning Call was in October of 2016, prior to the Wehr's Dam referendum. At the time, it took me two weeks to persuade the paper to publish the letter. The letters' editor refused, but I went over his head to the newly appointed publisher assigned by the Tribune Corporation. While the paper solicits self serving public relations patter by our elected and appointed officials, it censures citizen protest.
Jan 24, 2020
J. Molovinsky, Part 3, Wenz Company
This past weekend there was an auction at the former Wenz Company monument factory in the 1900 block of Hamilton Street. This facility has played several parts in Allentown's history, besides having produced thousands of tombstones. Enormous blocks of granite still remain from when it was the last stop on the Quarry Barber railroad branch line. Sculptures remain from the Phil Berman era, when artists used the Wenz equipment for monumental art. lastly, there are hundreds and hundreds of old tombstones, which were replaced over the decades, in local cemeteries with replacement markers. As mentioned in Part 1 of this post series, part of an old tombstone led me to discover my great grandmother's grave on Fountain Hill. That sculpture was made at Wenz, and Jennie Molovinsky's original stone also lies at Wenz's.
My grandfather came to Allentown as a young man in 1891. After working and saving for a number of years, he brought his parents over from the Old Country. The former synagogue on 2nd. Street had just acquired their cemetery off Fullerton Avenue when his mother died. Jewish tradition dictated that a man was the first burial in a new cemetery, so she was buried in an old Jewish Cemetery, on Fountain Hill. Several years later her husband, my great grandfather, was killed while being robbed on Basin Street. He is buried on Fullerton Avenue.
reprinted from June of 2014
My grandfather came to Allentown as a young man in 1891. After working and saving for a number of years, he brought his parents over from the Old Country. The former synagogue on 2nd. Street had just acquired their cemetery off Fullerton Avenue when his mother died. Jewish tradition dictated that a man was the first burial in a new cemetery, so she was buried in an old Jewish Cemetery, on Fountain Hill. Several years later her husband, my great grandfather, was killed while being robbed on Basin Street. He is buried on Fullerton Avenue.
reprinted from June of 2014
Jan 23, 2020
Jennie Molovinsky Was A Quiet Neighbor
For nearly a hundred years the Wenz Memorial Company had a tombstone factory at 20th and Hamilton. Their parcel extended from Hamilton Street back to Walnut Street, across from the home of former mayor Joe Daddona. Years ago, large granite slabs would be delivered by railroad, using the the Barber Quarry spur route. During the Phil Berman era, the facilities were also used to produce large stone sculptures. Behind the office and production building, most of the property was used for storage of tombstones. Some of the stones were samples of their handiwork, and others were old stones that had been replaced with new ones, by family members. Such was the case with my great grandmother's first stone, which has laid at wenz's for several decades. The row houses and their front porches on S. Lafayette Street faced this portion of Wenz's, and it was very quiet, indeed.
Some readers may have noticed that Wenz's has been demolished, and the parcel will now contain a bank, Dunkin Donut, and Woody's Sport Bar. The residents of Lafayette Street, experiencing complete quietness for all these years, attended the zoning hearing as objectors. Their previous view, a dark, quiet lot, would now be replaced with a lit parking lot, with bar patrons coming and going. Although I will not comment on the zoning issues, residents were supposedly told by the zoners that the development would improve their quality of life. It's one thing to have the quality of your life degraded, it's another to have your intelligence insulted, to boot. Perhaps the zoners need some training in sensitivity.
reprinted from May of 2016
Jan 22, 2020
Mt. Sinai Cemetery
Jews have been buried in a small section of Fairview Cemetery, called Mt. Sinai, for over 138 years. Although the markings on several stones have worn away, Hannah Dreifuss was buried there in 1868. The September 10th Chronicle in 1875 reported that two members of the Jewish faith, prominent Hamilton Street merchants, Joshua Schnurman and Simon Feldman, purchased a section from Fairview Cemetery and applied for a charter for Mt. Sinai Cemetery, thus creating the first Jewish Institution in Allentown.
Fairview Cemetery itself was not formally laid-out until 1870, when the renowned architectural firm Lathan of Buffalo was hired to create the premiere resting place in the Lehigh Valley. The giants of Allentown would be buried there, among them Harry Trexler, the Lehs, and the Macks of truck fame.
The History Lehigh County, published in 1914, notes Mt. Sinai contained 29 graves. Among them was Julia Wolf, who died in 1907. Her husband Morris served with the local regiment in the Civil War, and lived to be 98 years old. Feldman and Schnurman were among the earliest Jews in Allentown, immigrants from Germany who practiced the modern "Reformed" Judaism. These gentlemen and their extended family members would go on to form the "Young Ladies and Men's Hebrew Society" in 1883, a predecessor to the Keneseth Israel Congregation organized in 1903. Mt. Sinai remained the resting place for Reformed Jews till 1928, when Keneseth Israel established its own cemetery. Burials continued at Mt. Sinai through the 1940's as spouses and passing family members joined those previously departed in family plots. Today there are 78 graves. In July of 2006, thirty years after the previous burial in 1976, Joseph Levine was laid to rest at the age of 103.
Blogger's Notes: Mt. Sinai Cemetery is not affiliated with any synagogue, and with few exceptions, has been unused for 60 years.
reprinted
Jan 21, 2020
Wave In The NIZ Tide
The Reverend Gregory Edwards contends that his appointment to the NIZ board was blocked by our Harrisburg elected officials, with threats of withholding funds to our fair city. After making the incendiary allegation, he portrays himself as a harmonizer for the city, by withdrawing his nomination. With no evidence for his extortion contention, his claim is actually corrosive to the city's harmony.
My larger purpose for this post is my amusement at the wokeness of local appointments. Years ago I rented an apartment to someone who had just purchased the former Brass Rail on Hamilton Street. Mayor Pawlowski immediately appointed him to some Hamilton Street board, although this fellow knew absolutely nothing about Hamilton Street or Allentown. Likewise, the new director of the art museum, and the president of Muhlenberg College, who were also newcomers, were appointed to the NIZ. The artsy one went so far as to say his main criterion for additional appointments was diversity.
Getting back to Edwards, among the qualifications he cited for the NIZ is being on the board of Promise Neighborhood....now that appointment did seem appropriate.
Jan 20, 2020
A Family Story
This post is unusually personal for this blog. My grandfather came to Allentown from Russian Lithuania in 1891. In the next few years he was joined by his parents, and five siblings. The family settled on 2nd Street, along with many other Jewish immigrants of that period. He worked in various jobs, including a cigar factory, until he could establish himself as a butcher, as in the old country. Because we were here for over a hundred years, I consider myself somewhat of a local historian.
As a boy growing up in Lehigh Lehigh Manor, on the ridge above Lehigh Parkway, I explored the WPA structures when they were still comparatively new. Because of that background, I was able to uncover the Boat Landing, and advocate for our traditional park system. One of my father's uncles worked for the park system, caring for Lehigh Parkway.
What brought me to this post is my great grandmother's tombstone in Fountain Hill, which I recently visited. She is buried in an old Jewish cemetery that is no longer in use. Although, her tombstone is very old, it replaced an even older one , that then laid behind the former Wentz's tombstone factory at 20th and Hamilton, for many decades. I am the last Molovinsky in Allentown.
photo taken behind Wentz's before recent demolition of that facility.
reprinted from previous years
As a boy growing up in Lehigh Lehigh Manor, on the ridge above Lehigh Parkway, I explored the WPA structures when they were still comparatively new. Because of that background, I was able to uncover the Boat Landing, and advocate for our traditional park system. One of my father's uncles worked for the park system, caring for Lehigh Parkway.
What brought me to this post is my great grandmother's tombstone in Fountain Hill, which I recently visited. She is buried in an old Jewish cemetery that is no longer in use. Although, her tombstone is very old, it replaced an even older one , that then laid behind the former Wentz's tombstone factory at 20th and Hamilton, for many decades. I am the last Molovinsky in Allentown.
photo taken behind Wentz's before recent demolition of that facility.
reprinted from previous years
Jan 17, 2020
The Corner Market
Although I doubt that there will ever be a show at the Historical Society, or brochures at the Visitors Bureau, perhaps nothing encapsulates the history of Allentown more than the corner grocery stores. Allentown proper, is mostly comprised of rowhouses built between 1870 and 1920, long before the era of automobiles and suburban supermarkets. Most of the corner markets were built as stores, and over the years many were converted into apartments. Up until the late 1940's, there may have been well over a hundred operating in Allentown. Some specialized in ethnic food. The bodega at 9th and Liberty was formally an Italian market. Live and fresh killed chickens were sold at 8th and Linden, currently H & R Block Tax Service. A kosher meat market is now a hair salon on 19th Street. The original era for these markets died with the advent of the supermarket. In the early 50's some corner stores attempted to "brand" themselves as a "chain", as shown in the Economy Store sign above. That market is at 4th and Turner, and has been continually operating since the turn of the last century. Ironically, as the social-economic level of center city has decreased, the corner stores have seen a revival. Most of these new merchants, many Hispanic and some Asian, know little of the former history of their stores, but like their predecessors, work long, hard hours.
ADDENDUM: The above post is reprinted from 2012. The sign shown above has been removed or sold. When my parents were first married they lived next door and would patronize the same store. My grandparents lived nearby on the corner of Chew and Jordan Streets.
ADDENDUM 2: the Economy Stores sign shown, apparently came from an early A&P format in 1912 when they leased small stores. If this particular store was such an A&P, or just dressed later with a reused sign, I have yet to determine.
Jan 16, 2020
The Sunday Ride

My family wasn't much for recreation. My father worked six days a week, from early morning until early evening. We did go for a long car ride on Sundays. Back then gasoline was cheap, and having no destination wasn't thought of as wasteful. Children were more content to sit in the back seat and look out the window, now they want a video screen in the vehicle.

Even children's play then involved more imagination and interaction. Howdy Doody was just a puppet on strings,who spend most of his time talking to an adult, Buffalo Bob, can you imagine?
Sitting in that back seat in the mid fifties, I might well had

my "coonskin" hat with me. Fess Parker was a genuine American hero. It mattered little if he played both Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone, both were king of the wild frontier. The ride probably lasted for two hours and then we would go to a restaurant to eat dinner. Compared to now, there were very few restaurants.

My mother would cook all the other meals that week, and we probably ate out more than most. Supermarkets were the new rage in food shopping, but the butcher, baker and candle stick maker were still going strong. If my father headed west or south, chances are we ended up at Shankweiler's Hotel, famous for chicken and waffles. They were at the intersection of Old 22 and Route 100. The building still exists and currently is a bank. The family also owned another hotel on Route 309. Both locations also operated adjoining Drive-In movies.
If my father headed north or east, we would end up at Walp's, which was on the corner of Union Blvd. and Airport Road. Walp's was a much more urban place. While Shankweiler's was an old country inn, Walp's was built as a modern restaurant. I enjoyed those rides, they were a learning experience.

reprinted from previous years
Jan 15, 2020
The Island Of Lehigh Parkway
The scene above shows part of the Boat Landing, with the island in the background. Please note the bridge leading to the island. The island, bridge and landing were created by the WPA. Although the island still remains, as does its stone piers, the bridge is long gone. The boat landing, although buried, was partially recovered in 2010 by myself and a number of volunteers. The island, as remaining, has lost its shape and has been enlarged from deposits carried by the Little Lehigh. The island was created by the WPA in the mid 1930's, by excavating a channel on its south side. It is the intention of the park department to eventually allow mother nature to fill in the channel. Park philosophy has changed from manicured to al natural. It is my hope that the excavated portion of the boatlanding will be retained.
As a boy I played on the island and especially remember the concrete benches inlaid with tile. It was indeed a special place. Although the island will never be restored, it is my mission that the remaining WPA structures be maintained. In the photo above, note the path overlooking the stream and island, with no weed wall in the way of the view.
Jan 14, 2020
Saving The Spring Pond
As a small boy growing up in the twin homes above Lehigh Parkway, I would go down the steep wooded ravine and cross the Robin Hood Bridge. The stone lined spring pond and miniature bridge was just the first in a series of wonderful WPA constructions to explore. Last year, when I organized the reclamation of the Boat Landing, my memory turned to the pond. Although overgrown with several inches of sod, I knew the treasure was still savable.
In the spring of 2010 I met Mike Gilbert of the Park Department, and pitched the idea of a partial restoration. On May 26th, I posted A Modest Proposal, which outlined my hopes for the pond. By July, Gilbert had the Park Department clear off the remaining stones, and clean up around the miniature bridge.
Park Director Greg Weitzel indicated to me that the pond features uncovered will be maintained. Any further clearing would be at the discretion of Mike Gilbert. In our conversation he also stated that there are virtually no funds available for the preservation of the WPA icons.
I will attempt to organize a group and contributions for this most worthy cause. Between the Spring Pond and The Boat Landing there was once a bridge to the island. Wouldn't it be nice if a small boy could go exploring.
above reprinted from previous posts
UPDATE August 2013Mike Gilbert has retired, and the Park Department has a new director. Although grass and sod are starting to again cover the remaining stones that surround the pond, the miniature bridge is still visible. I will make it my mission to again pitch the new personnel.
UPDATE June 18, 2014. The grass and sod has reclaimed the stones that surround the pond. Only the very top of the miniature bridge is still visible to those who know that it's there. Unless there is an immediate intervention, it's days are numbered.
HISTORY IS FRAGILE
UPDATE February 2017:In 2015, in cooperation with Friends of Allentown Parks, I supervised college volunteers to clear the new sod off the pond stones, and the new bush off the miniature bridge. Allentown is on its third park director since this post was first written, and has acquired two large parcels to create new parks. To be planning additional parks, when our existing park features are left to abandonment, is incredibility poor management.
UPDATE May 1, 2018: This past weekend the pond, miniature bridge and spring channel to the creek were once again cleared. The work was done by volunteers from Faith Church, Asbury Church, Igesia De Fe and Salem Bible Church, through Karen El-Chaar, director of Friends Of The Parks. Although the park department provided assistance in the two clean ups over the past several years, they have not provided ongoing maintenance to the site. Understand that in the past few years they have constructed the exercise area at Jordan Park, the cement disc golf pads in the parkway and other recreational features. It is long overdue that the WPA structures be returned to the regular park budget and schedule.
UPDATE JANUARY 14, 2020: Karen El-Chaar is now Director Of Parks. Hopefully she will have a soft spot for this particular WPA structure. I continue trying through this blog and facebook to keep these structures on the public agenda.
Jan 13, 2020
The Boat Landing
Getting to the Boat Landing, for six year old boys who lived above the park in 1953, was quite an adventure. There were three other wonderful WPA structures to navigate on the journey. Unfortunately, poor foresight by a previous park director has erased some of the WPA's monuments in Lehigh Parkway. As the postcard from the mid-50's above shows, the Boat Landing (my name for the structure) was a source of pride for the city and park system. It is located at the end of the park, near Regency Apartments. I use the present tense because remnants of this edifice still exist, buried under dirt and debris. Other attractions lost in that section of the park include the Spring Pond near the Robin Hood parking lot, and the bridge to the "Island", plus the mosaic inlaid benches which were on the island. ( Island halfway between parking lot and boat landing). Neither the Mayor or the Park Director knows that these centerpieces ever existed. These are irreplaceable architectural treasures well worth restoring.
UPDATE: The above post was written in May of 2009. Later that year I organized a small group of volunteers, and we unearthed a portion of the boat landing. The next year I prevailed on the Allentown Water Shed Foreman, Michael Gilbert, to expose the remaining stones around the Spring Pond and remove the growth hiding the Miniature Bridge.
Trexler Smiles, Landing Revealed
I believe that today, for the first time in decades, General Trexler had something to smile about. Most people never understood why three steps were near the lower entrance of Lehigh Parkway; they seemed to lead nowhere. This morning eight people joined a grass root effort to unveil, for the first time in decades, the structure I called the Boat Landing.
Buried under the dirt and grass were several more steps leading to a landing. Chris Casey was the first to arrive and cleared these steps and the first landing himself. A second set of steps led from the landing to the main landing on the creek. These second steps had a foot or so of ground and plants.
The quality and condition of the stonework is excellent, as was all our WPA icons. I will be polite and say only that it was a crime to have let this neglect occur. On the main landing the accumulated earth was two and half feet thick. The crew dug out the curving retaining wall several yards in each direction, and cleared off the top of the wall.
Eight people working four hours managed to reveal about one third of the landing at the bottom of the steps. It was a thrill to realize we were standing at creek's edge as the WPA architects had envisioned. I stood there often as a boy. There still remains a large portion of dirt to remove at the steps base, but you can now experience the Boat Landing.
The retaining wall and the landing continue for fifty feet or so in both directions. Unfortunately a huge tree has grown on the landing to the right, but the left appears reclaimable.
We who worked there today, hope to return and clear off the remainder of the dirt at the bottom of the steps.
Perhaps others will be motivated to clear off the remaining portion of the landing to the left. Now that might even be an idea for the City; imagine restoring an irreplaceable icon instead of buying something from a catalogue. I'm most grateful to all those who helped today, and will reveal their names with their permission.
ADDENDUM:Michael –
I just wanted to thank you for organizing today’s cleanup at the “Boat Landing” in the Lehigh Parkway. It’s not often that one gets to help unearth a treasure while barely leaving home, but that’s exactly what happened today.
It was truly impressive what big difference a small group of people can make. I can’t even estimate the amount of dirt that was moved with nothing more than a few shovels and a lot of hard work.
We can only hope that the City and the Trexler Trust will become aware of this location and start giving all the great structures in the Parkway the care they deserve.
However, the best part of the story for me came after we all left. I got home and my daughter Lucy (age 7) wanted to know how things went. We hopped in the car and soon we were walking up to the stairs leading to the landing. The sun was shining, and the sunlight trickled through the trees and onto the freshly-exposed stairway.
Lucy asked if she could go down to the landing by the water and next thing I knew we were both there at the waters edge, standing on what had been buried only a few hours earlier and marveling at the beauty of the location.
We spent a few moments there - a father and daughter both enjoying something completely “new” to us (even though the landing is over 70 years old). We talked briefly about what was – and more importantly what could be again.
Thank you for making that moment possible, and I hope many others take the opportunity to visit the landing in the near future.
Mike Schware
P.S. – After visiting the landing, Lucy and I walked further upstream and saw the remnants of the bridge to the island (near the water fountain). The remaining supports of the bridge confirmed what you had told me earlier about the island being much smaller years ago.
I organized the excavation shown above in 2009. We did return and remove the remaining dirt at the bottom of the steps.
reprinted from two separate posts combined
The above post is a reprint
Jan 10, 2020
Newspaper Still Glorifying Pawlowski
I was intending to finish the blog week with a nostalgic post about growing up in Allentown in the 1950's, a good decade for both the city, the newspaper and most residents. Instead, once again, I'm compelled to wonder about the newspaper and the mayor.
Over a month ago, the FBI agent who investigated Pawlowski's misdeeds was interviewed in Bethlehem. His revelations were covered by both WFMZ, Lehigh Valley Live and this blogger. Although the Morning Call reporter was there taking notes, no article ever appeared. However, yesterday the reporter did a feel good piece about Pawlowski, contributing to the life of his fellow prisoners while he studies for his appeal.
the Morning Call has a flattering picture of Pawlowski, I'd rather show the crook with his Philly lawyer
Over a month ago, the FBI agent who investigated Pawlowski's misdeeds was interviewed in Bethlehem. His revelations were covered by both WFMZ, Lehigh Valley Live and this blogger. Although the Morning Call reporter was there taking notes, no article ever appeared. However, yesterday the reporter did a feel good piece about Pawlowski, contributing to the life of his fellow prisoners while he studies for his appeal.
‘It’s kind of like being mayor but for a lot less money’: Ed Pawlowski reveals what he’s doing in prisonWe read about Ed teaching civics and bible, studying law, and staying productive despite his challenging circumstances. what an inspiration. The Morning Call endorsed Ed Pawlowski for mayor in 2005. Until the FBI raid in July of 2015, their support of him never waned. A newspaper was blind to a mayor cheating the public for a decade... that is what they should write about.
the Morning Call has a flattering picture of Pawlowski, I'd rather show the crook with his Philly lawyer
Jan 9, 2020
The Wagon Trail
Most of Lehigh Parkway lies in a deep ravine. The slope up to Lehigh Parkway South, across the creek from Robin Hood, is very steep, about 60 degrees. Unknown to many people, there is a diagonal trail on part of the slope, which comes out halfway up the hill behind the Stone and Log House.
We kids, who grew up in the Parkway, called it the Wagon Trail. I believe it was part of the Kemmerer Farm (Stone and Log House), which dates back to the late 1770's. In the 1950's, the foundation of a small kiln was still visible on the trail. The subsequent years had not been kind to the old trail, and it is no longer maintained by the Park Department. About halfway between it's entrance and exit on the hill, the trail has been blocked by a large fallen tree. People had dumped debris on the trail, and it remained there for years.
In April of 2010, I organized a cleanup. The park director at the time cooperated on the project. I agreed that no power tools would be used, and he arranged for the city to pick up the rubbish.
It is my hope that the new administration will realize that our parks are more than just space to cram more recreational gimmicks. They are steeped in history, and places where children can explore.
reprinted from previous years
Jan 8, 2020
Kids Of The Parkway
There were hundreds of us, we were the baby boomers. The neighborhood was built for returning GI's, and the streets were named after the planes of WW2; Liberator, Catalina, and Coronado. The twin homes were wedged between Jefferson Street and the southern ridge above Lehigh Parkway. Now called Little Lehigh Manor, we knew it simply as Lehigh Parkway, and we had our own school.
Historical Fact:
The original part of the school building contained four classrooms, a teacher's room, and a health room. It replaced the Catalina Avenue School which existed in a home near the present site. Lehigh Parkway received national publicity because it was being build as a result of the new neighborhood. Thus, the "Neighborhood School Concept" was born.

Because of the school and the park, the neighborhood was really self contained. The Lehigh SuperMarket on Lehigh Street was within walking distance. Soon, FoodFair would build their first large Supermarket, also on Lehigh Street, which was even closer. Today it has developed into The Parkway Shopping Center. We kids enjoyed our own Halloween Parade and Easter Egg hunt.

Because there were so many of us, Parkway Elementary only went through 2nd. grade. We would take the bus to Jefferson Elementary for grades 3 through 6.
Historical Fact:
Jefferson Elementary used to be a high school, and for years, it had separate girls' and boys' entrances. These entrances were turned into windows at some point, but the exterior of the building still has the two entrances marked.

These were some of my friends from 3th grade. They all lived in the Parkway. Not only were they all boys, only yesterday, 56 years later, I learned the name of the girl I'm holding hands with in the May Day picture above.
Historical Facts from Allentown School District Website
ADDENDUM: other Parkway Neighborhood Posts,
Time Capsule
Allentown On My Mind
reprinted from October of 2018
Jan 7, 2020
New City Hall, Old Blogger
From an article in today's Morning Call, one might think that there is a brand new day at Allentown City Hall, just blossoming with integrity and good intentions. Compared to Pawlowski's reign, to the new city beat reporter, it might seem that way... I know better... While there are two newer faces on council, everyone else, including the mayor, were part of the old establishment.
When Ray O'Connell was appointed mayor last term, he invited me in to his office at city hall, to hear my recommendations for the park system. Here we are two years later, and my last phone call was never returned, and he dropped me as a facebook friend. My blog posts about an east side woman being harassed by code, as a personal favor to a supervisor's friend, offended O'Connell. While O'Connell is ethically miles above the former mayor, he never dismantled the goon squad that Pawlowski spend years weaponizing.
As an old political blogger, I know everyone on council. There is nobody I haven't sat down with, or had a one on one conversation with over the years. Although I like them all as people, Allentown doesn't need another complimenter. This old blogger will continue scrutinizing city hall as always, I don't need facebook friends anyway.
Jan 6, 2020
Coasting With The Morning Call
On Friday I took Ray O'Connell to task for taking any credit for the NIZ. I deny Allentown or anybody taking credit for the Browne/Reilly arrangement, besides those two beneficiaries. Now, let me turn my good cheer once again to The Morning Call. After giving O'Connell an editorial to crow on, they then gave Easton's Sal Panto the same privilege. Sal naturally also wrote about current and future development in Easton. Next for the limelight is Hasshan Batts from Promise Neighborhoods. I predict that Hasshan will claim that with proper funding (meaning more of our tax dollars), he could put a real dent in Allentown's crime problem.
I understand bureaucrats preaching their gospel, I just find it sad that the Morning Call allocates their space in such an uninspired way. I have been denied an editorial on how the voter's referendum on Wehr's Dam is being subverted by South Whitehall Township to accommodate the Wildlands Conservancy. I strongly suspect that likewise, many letters with controversial views, or issues about protected sacred cows, are also filed by the paper in the waste can.
It appears as if the paper is doggy paddling or just coasting along, hoping that the next yellow slip from corporate America doesn't have their name on it. In recent forums on social media, the paper is being taken to task for several issues, among them delivery and content. While we dinosaurs want a very early hard copy delivery, those available for such tasks in today's world are not early risers. Our complaints go somewhere overseas, where English is a third language. For the end of this bitching session, let me say that I appreciate that we still have a paper... It is something which we can no longer take for granted in this world of fast changing media.
Jan 3, 2020
O'Connell Sells The Myth
O'Connell's editorial in the paper starts out with usual political patter. He credits himself with increasing public safety by hiring more policemen and fireman, fair enough. However, as his sermon drones on, it becomes less credible. He associates his mayorship with Reilly's construction. He concludes by completely buying into the deception that the Allentown Myth is reality.
To quote City Center President and CEO J.B Reilly from a story in this newspaper, over the past five years, no other city in the nation has “experienced this amount of development or seen this kind of transformation.”What Reilly, The Morning Call and now O'Connell don't reveal is the reason for all this development; The construction is being financed by diverted state tax dollars, in a one of a kind state program called the NIZ. It allows a developer (J.B. Reilly) to use all the state taxes generated by payroll, sales or whatever, to pay the debt service on the new buildings. With this unique arrangement, of course he continues to build.
Unfortunately for every other community in the valley and the state, all these new businesses are simply poached from surrounding communities...There has not been one actual new employer brought into this mix. With no new employers, and the taxes from the relocated ones being used for Reilly's new construction, the citizens of Pennsylvania are on the hook for the diverted taxes.
Jan 2, 2020
Pawlowski's Popularity
My recent post about the Morning Call and Ed Pawlowski, while not receiving comments here on the blog,* had a large response on facebook. Several group members expressed sympathy for the former mayor. They each thought that his sentence was too harsh, and some even believed that he was a great mayor. In each case they cited personal favors that he had done for them or their family. While they appreciated those favors, they ignored the fact that Pawlowski cheated the taxpayers by choosing vendors by their contribution to him, rather than on the merit of their bids and proposals.
When Pawlowski was reelected for the fourth time in November of 2017, after being indicted on 47 counts of corruption, I attributed his victory mostly to Hispanics, the demographic he aggressively courted during the campaign. None of the Pawlowski supporters referred to in the above paragraph are Hispanic. In 2017 I attributed his victory to low information voters. It seems he was also elected by low expectation voters. If you combine these two subgroups, Allentown's political future is discouraging.
The glitter of the new buildings, and a few concerts at the arena are apparently enough for current Allentown. The time may be approaching when molovinsky on allentown may need to find a new primary topic....Even a cynic like me needs to see some future to write about.
* most people seem to prefer commenting anonymously, an option not offered on this blog.
photocredit:The Morning Call/Pawlowski, lawyer and supporters.
Jan 1, 2020
The Barbershops of Allentown's Past
I was never a frequent patron, but one of my reoccurring photographic interests was barbershops. Although Allentown now has more barbershops than ever, mine are from a different era. Some of the shops still exist, although the name and clientele has changed. Shown above is the former K&K, on S. 6th Street.*
All photos on this blog will enlarge when clicked.
ADDENDUM: This post first appeared on this blog in 2013. With the proliferation of many local history facebook groups, including my own Allentown Chronicles, I see much subject matter I covered years ago now being repeated by others. So, even at the risk of seeming less than original, I still repost older images for the benefit of new readers. Best Wishes for the new year.
* my photograph is from 1996. The building no longer exists.
Dec 31, 2019
Myths From The Morning Call
For a few years I was a regular contributor to the Morning Call editorial page. People often tell me that they miss readings my pieces. I reply that they will only see my name now when I die, or if I get arrested. Beyond the loss to my ego, my banning from the paper has some consequence to the public knowing the full story on several topics.
The public is certainly never told about the sacred cows that the paper protects. They're not told about the Wildlands Conservancy subverting the Wehr's Dam Referendum. They're not told about the relationship between Reilly, the hospital and the NIZ. And they continue the myth that Pawlowski had something to do with the Hamilton Street revitalization.
Ed Pawlowksi’s story was, by the dictionary definition, a Greek tragedy. The essential element was there: A protagonist reaches for the heights but is undone by a fatal flaw. In the former Allentown mayor’s case, the flaw, by all accounts, was hubris. Having ruled city hall as the long-struggling city finally mounted a comeback, Pawlowski wanted to move on to bigger things — a U.S. Senate seat or the governor’s office. The necessity of paying for those ambitions led him into crooked dealings that ended with conviction on scores of corruption charges and a 15-year federal prison sentence. The Morning Call
Pawlowski had nothing, what so ever, to do with Allentown's comeback. The new construction is a result of the NIZ, a very special state law which only applied to Allentown, which allows a developer to use state taxes for his mortgage debt service. The law was crafted by local powerful state senator Pat Browne, and has benefitted his life-long friend J.B. Reilly. Pawlowski, knowing that he no involvement with the NIZ, but realizing that the paper wasn't spelling out the story, decided to ride the misconception out of Allentown, to either Harrisburg or Washington.
Reilly now owns the Morning Call building. The paper is written by a skeleton staff and printed in Jersey City. An aging blogger tells the true story to a select internet audience, hoping that his name in the paper's obituary column isn't forthcoming too soon.
Dec 30, 2019
A Supremo Christmas
While I've never shown much enthusiasm for J.B. Reilly's attempt to revitalize downtown through his high end shops, neither has the marketplace. Christmas day, I visited the new Supremo Market on 7th Street, occupying the former Levine's Fabric store. The market was attractive, large, well stocked and mobbed.
There is an old saying that there are more nickels than quarters. I suppose that it should be no surprise that in a city populated by a large percentage of low income people, a well run store geared for that demographic can prosper. What's interesting is that while the taxpayer ponied up a $Billion dollars, so far, for the NIZ, the thriving Supremo costs us nothing. While the Morning Call writes one promotion after another for Reilly's portfolio, there is nothing said about this real success story in Allentown.
Let me provide some history. Once upon a time, that was the busiest block on 7th Street. The building was built as a Sears and Roebucks in the early 1950's, using a plan duplicated in other cities. The store did well competing with the three local department stores, and was first to go suburban.
Talking of history, some may notice a new item on this blog's sidebar. It's a picture of a Mack Truck Magazine cover, which was printed each month. I have titled the new insertion, LOCAL HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE. Hopefully, the local political shenanigans will slow down, so I can devote more posts to our rich history.
stock photo from Supremo website
above post reprinted every December since 2015
Dec 27, 2019
Faith Baptist Church (Allentown)
There is a small church on the 200 block of N. 12th Street, which is served by a humble man, Pastor Robert Hargrove. Pastor Hargrove has been ministering to his flock at Faith Baptist Church for over 40 years. Years ago, when I managed buildings in the neighborhood, I had the privilege of meeting the pastor and seeing his concern for others. While his congregation was small, his outreach in the neighborhood was large. In addition to running a summer program for local kids, his church door was always open for those in distress.
While his formal congregation was mostly black, it seemed that most of his outreach helped the poorer whites in the surrounding blocks.
Over the years he kindly allowed me to conduct a few community meetings at the church, on topics such as Fairview Cemetery and the removal of bus stops.
While the large churches with the politically astute leaders get most our attention, many people in need often turn to the small neighborhood churches, such as Faith Baptist.
Dec 26, 2019
The Coptic Church Of Alexandria

The Church and Theology School in Alexandria was established by the Apostle Mark in 60AD. Most of the early converts were common Egyptians who spoke Coptic. Although Christians became the majority before the Arab invasion in 636, by the 12th century they were the minority. The concept of monasteries in Christianity was started by the Coptics in the deserts of Egypt. Currently, the Coptics are threatened by transitions in Egypt, let us pray for their safety.
photograph of St. Marks Coptic Church in Alexandria, Egypt.
reprinted from previous years
Dec 25, 2019
A Jewish Christmas Card

Many Jews experience some conflict during the Christmas Season. This is essentially a Christian nation, and to totally ignore that reality could be perceived as rude. Although Abe Simon proudly wore the Star of David on his boxing trunks in NYC, he also sent out Christmas cards to his non-Jewish associates. Simon, in 1942, was the last Jew to fight for the Heavyweight Championship of the World.
reprinted from previous years
molovinsky on allentown is produced every weekday, year-round.
Dec 24, 2019
Sledding In Allentown
The photograph shown above is from 1958. It was taken in Little Lehigh Manor, the 1940's era housing development located above Lehigh Parkway's south ridge. I had the pleasure of growing up in that neighborhood. In yesterday's post, the hill favored by the kids of that neighborhood was featured.
Other popular sledding hills were in Allentown's west end, behind Cedar Crest College, and Ott Street, between Livingston and Greenleaf Streets. Years ago, a bridge crossed the creek by the park office at 30th and Parkway Blvd., with a parking area for sledders by the Cedar Crest hill. The Ott Street hill was closed to cars by the city, as an accommodation for sledders. None of these hills are now accessible to a kid with a sled.
photo courtesy of S. Williams
molovinsky on allentown is produced every weekday, year-round.
Dec 23, 2019
A Park Protester From The Past

`Green' Curtain Blocks Sledding And The View
January 09, 1992|The Morning Call
To the Editor:
Hold your sleds girls and boys! Others, too, on the alert! With the planting of a dense cluster of 60 evergreen trees and the erection of a "No Sledding" sign, creating a veritable iron curtain, the park and watershed people have once again undertaken their repetitive effort of the past 45 years to eliminate a most popular sledding slope in Lehigh Parkway. The motive -- crass self-interest in defiance of public good. The effect -- an impassable barrier and concealment of a magnificent vista of "one of the finest valleys in Eastern Pennsylvania."
Children and adults from the 400 homes with longtime and easy access to the slope and others arriving in cars have enjoyed sledding here after school and into the night and throughout the day and night on weekends. Yet sledding is but one of the attractions of this enduring slope. In summer children and teachers from Lehigh Parkway Elementary School have enjoyed a walk down the slope and into the park for a break from book and blackboard. Birders, joggers, hikers and others on a leisurely stroll engrossed in their particular interest have found the slope irresistible.
For a host of others, this opening into the park after a long stretch of woods presents a charming vista and urge to descend. Interest is immediately evoked by the sight of a mid-19th century log house (now tenanted by a city employee whose privacy is further enhanced by the closure of the slope) and a historic wagon trail leading past the site of a lime kiln to tillable lands of earlier times.
The view takes in an expanse of meadowlands, now groomed, to the Little Lehigh River and up the western slope to Lehigh Parkway North. Indeed, a pleasant view to be esteemed and preserved for generations to come. It was distressing on New Year's Day to see a family and their guests intent upon a walk down the slope suddenly stop in amazement and shock as the closure became evident.
The cost in dollars through the years of the park peoples' fixation on destroying the Parkway slope must be staggering indeed without dwelling on other deliberate depletions. Typically, the placement of the 1991 "No Sledding" sign employed a team of four men with three vehicles -- a backhoe, a panel truck, and a super cab pickup truck, the latter furnishing radio music.
BERT A. LUCKENBACH
ALLENTOWN The Morning Call, January 9, 1992
I grew up in the same neighborhood and spent my childhood winters sledding on the same hill. Mr. Luckenbach would also be saddened that the historic Wagon Trail is now also blocked off, near it's exit halfway on the hill. I suppose children, mittens and sledding is too passive a recreation for current park department taste.
reprinted from January of 2015 and earlier
molovinsky on allentown is produced every weekday, year-round.
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