Showing posts with label 1900's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1900's. Show all posts
Monday, April 13, 2020
A Brief History of Politics in Crawford County
Labels:
1810's,
1860's,
1900's,
1910's,
Little Known Facts,
Local Historical Figures,
Political History
Location:
Meadville, PA 16335, USA
Saturday, December 9, 2017
The Amazing Story of the Exposition Park Fire of 1908
The morning after - charred remains of the fire's path. The Hotel Conneaut stands untouched in the background. |
As the morning darkness of December 2, 1908, dissolved into daylight, a scene of utter destruction revealed itself along the shores of Conneaut Lake. Wisps of smoke twisted feebly from the charred debris of Exposition Park. The sight of such amusement for so many just months earlier now offered only sooty outlines and blackened, smoldering heaps made all the more pronounced by thin, ragged patches of snow.
Exhausted firemen and volunteers shuffled along gathering their buckets and hoses in preparation for the return to their stations. They had just battled what, for some, would be the biggest blaze they would ever witness, and certainly the most destructive in the park’s history. Had the fire occurred during the height of the summer season, the disaster would likely have been catastrophic. Instead, despite the loss of over forty structures, thankfully no one perished.
Labels:
1900's,
Conneaut Lake,
Exposition Park,
Little Known Facts
Sunday, April 16, 2017
The World War 1 Artwork of Clarence Underwood
Clarence F. Underwood - 1905 |
Training
Clarence attended both the public schools as well as Allegheny College, but art was his ticket to the larger world. Leaving Meadville he received formal training at the Art Students League in New York, then London, and later at the Julian Academy in Paris as a pupil of Jean-Paul Laurens, Benjamin Constant and William Bouguereau, in 1896. Soon after leaving the Academy, Clarence would choose for himself a career as an illustrator.
Labels:
1900's,
1910's,
Allegheny College,
Little Known Facts,
Local Historical Figures,
Meadville,
The Great War
Location:
Meadville, PA 16335, USA
Sunday, March 12, 2017
John Heisman - Football Legend from Titusville
Coach John Heisman (center) with his 1909 Georgia Tech team. |
Labels:
1880's,
1890's,
1900's,
1910's,
Little Known Facts,
Local Historical Figures,
Sports History,
The Oil Boom,
Titusville
Location:
Titusville, PA 16354, USA
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Healing and Luxury: A History of the Saegertown Inn
Front view of the Saegertown Inn with French Creek along left side. |
With the overwhelming interest in photographs of the Saegertown Inn recently posted on the Crawford County Historical Society's social media pages, what better time to "get away from it all" for a while and discuss the history of this grand hotel and vacation venue.
Labels:
1880's,
1890's,
1900's,
1910's,
1920's,
1930's,
Hotels,
Little Known Facts,
Local Historical Figures,
Local Industry,
Saegertown
Location:
Saegertown, PA 16433, USA
Sunday, July 10, 2016
7 Peculiar Tales from Conneaut Lake
From a 1907 postcard, Conneaut Lake's main thoroughfare (Water Street) facing west. |
Over such a span of time, it should be of no surprise, then, that the lake would be the setting for an infinite number of stories across cultures, eras, and generations, the vast majority of which are never recorded. Those that have, however, then serve as the mechanism that provides context to our past. And while that context can be captured in many ways, there’s more than a handful that speaker to the quirky and peculiar moments of an era.
Here are seven from the early days of Conneaut Lake.
Labels:
1840's,
1860's,
1890's,
1900's,
1910's,
Conneaut Lake,
Exposition Park,
Little Known Facts
Location:
Conneaut Lake, PA 16316, USA
Sunday, July 3, 2016
Revisiting Oakwood Park
Oakwood Park, Meadville PA |
Labels:
1890's,
1900's,
1910's,
1920's,
Exposition Park,
Local Industry,
Meadville
Location:
Meadville, PA 16335, USA
Sunday, May 1, 2016
Mapping History: How Chasing Sanborn's Show What Once Existed
The Sanborn Map Company |
Those interested in the past often obsess over the "when" of things. The first person settled in 1822. The first brick home was built in 1845. The first train arrived in 1888. Columbus sailed the ocean blue in…
But the "where" is important, too, because things exist in both time, and space. There's a reason your home, your town, or the road you travel is where it is. Hardly anything, in fact maybe nothing, ends up where it is purely by chance.
Labels:
1880's,
1890's,
1900's,
1910's,
1920's,
Cambridge Springs,
Conneaut Lake
Location:
Cambridge Springs, PA 16403, USA
Sunday, March 20, 2016
How the Trolley Arrived at Conneaut Lake Park
Allegheny students wait at the Exposition Park trolley station - 1913 |
On May 30, 1906, the Meadville and Conneaut Lake Traction (M&CLT) Company formed with a goal of bringing trolley service to Exposition Park (Conneaut Lake Park today). A suitable route was agreed upon that would continue from where the tracks left off in Fredricksburg and then follow the general course of the Cussewago Road to Harmonsburg (vicinity of Routes 102 and 3016) before turning south, crossing the lake’s inlet, and entering the park along Comstock Street. 100 immigrant laborers, primarily Italians, along with two freight cars full of work horses were assembled and brought in later that summer to begin the arduous task of grading an earthen avenue, laying the 85 pound rails, and stringing the overhead electric wire.
Labels:
1900's,
1910's,
1920's,
Conneaut Lake,
Exposition Park,
Harmonsburg,
Local Industry
Location:
Conneaut Lakeshore, PA 16316, USA
Sunday, February 7, 2016
How Crawford County Forever Changed Women's Undergarments
Lady Mary Crawley's corset in an early episode |
Change stands prominent as the obvious theme depicted in TV’s historical drama, Downton Abbey. The show begins famously with news of the Titanic’s sinking in 1912 and spans to 1925 where it will close out its sixth and final season. Most familiar with this period recognize the breadth of change that took place between those years and the lasting impact yet to come in the decades that followed. While there are almost innumerable aspects of this that could be analyzed through the story of the Crawley family and their house staff, the increasing freedom for women is consistently at the forefront of a larger majority of plot lines.
The topic of women’s growing independence could alone be scrutinized through varied contexts, and in fact, has already been visited in an earlier Crawford Messenger post dealing with women’s right to vote and to hold public office. Another representation of change for women can be seen, quite literally, in the evolving fashions highlighted throughout each season. Fashion offers one of the clearest expressions of women's growing freedom, and no item of apparel better represents this than the corset.
Labels:
1900's,
1910's,
1920's,
Cambridge Springs,
Downton Abbey Years,
Local Historical Figures,
Local Industry,
Meadville
Location:
Meadville, PA 16335, USA
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
Ida Tarbell's Influence on National Geographic Magazine
On January 27, 1888, the National GeographicSociety was founded in Washington, D.C., for “the increase and diffusion of geographical knowledge.” What many may not realize is that the publication of the society’s famous periodical, National Geographic Magazine, might not have gained notoriety without the help of Ida Tarbell, the forerunner of modern investigative journalism from Titusville, Pennsylvania.
Tarbell’s fame is often associated with her 1902 McClure’s serial expose of J.D. Rockefeller, which heavily influenced the demise of Standard Oil as a monopoly. Prior to this, however, Tarbell’s career began following her graduation fromAllegheny College in 1880 where she studied biology and was the only woman in her graduating class. After a brief stint as a teacher in Ohio, Tarbell returned to Crawford County where she met Theodore L. Flood, editor of The Chautauquan, which was published in Meadville. In time, Tarbell’s talents and work ethic would, in time, lead to a position as the managing editor of the publication.
Labels:
1890's,
1900's,
Local Historical Figures,
Meadville,
Titusville
Location:
Titusville, PA 16354, USA
Saturday, January 23, 2016
Don't Fence Me In: A.C. Huidekoper's Government Tangle Over Public Lands
A.C. early ranching days |
Friction between ranchers and the federal government over the use of public lands recently witnessed in the news is nothing new in our history. Prominent Meadville businessman and Civil War veteran, Arthur Clarke (A. C.) Huidekoper had a running feud with the government over the fencing of public lands near his cattle and horse ranches in the badlands of North Dakota. A. C., who built in Holland Hall along Terrace Street, first visited North Dakota during a trip to Bismarck in the fall of 1879.
The untamed beauty and wildness of the territory captivated A. C. who returned in 1881 to hunt buffalo near the small outpost town of Medora. Recognizing the area’s potential, A. C. purchased land in southern Billings County from the Northern Pacific Railway Company the following year to establish the Custer Trail Ranch. Among his ranching neighbors was an adventurous French nobleman and cavalry officer by the name of Marquisde Mores, and a young, energetic, politician from New York City who was part owner of the Maltese Cross Ranch, Theodore Roosevelt.
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