May 4, 2021
Trolley To Dorney Park
When the Allentown-Kutztown Traction (Trolley) Company purchased Dorney Park in 1901, trolley companies were buying or building amusement parks all across the country. Perhaps the most famous was Coney Island. Usually located between two cities serviced by the company, it was a plan to increase weekend rider-ship. Passengers could spend a day at the park, swimming, picnicking, and partaking of the rides and amusements. Through merger, the trolley would become the Allentown-Reading Traction Company, whose line began just south of Hamilton, on 7th Street. The line went west on Walnut Street, and then followed the Cedar Creek to the park. The roller coaster was built over the tracks in 1923, the year that the Allentown-Reading sold the park to the Plarr family. Trolley service would continue to 1934.
reprinted from 2013
May 2, 2021
Morning Call Endorses Problems In South Whitehall
I refer to the article as long awaited, because weeks ago I furnished the reporter with documents showing that the township allowed ex-parte communication between the Wildlands Conservancy and the state DEP against Wehr's Dam. The relationship between Tori Morgan and The Wildlands Conservancy remains an unreported scandal by the newspaper.
In an attempt to increase readership, the Sunday Morning Call article I refer to is only visible as an exclusive to current subscribers. How that will increase readership is a mystery. At any rate, both Tori Morgan and Joe Setton should send the reporter a thank you card.
photocredit: Gregg Obst
* In fairness to both the reporter and newspaper, my term concerned could also be labeled focused. Since 2014, I have been a steadfast advocate for preserving Wehr's Dam. The article in the paper is a comprehensive report on development and politics in three townships.
Apr 30, 2021
Neglect Has Its Reward
The City of Allentown, through the Redevelopment Authority*, purchased the property it demonized last year with its first Landlord of Shame. We paid $93,500.00 for 343 N. 9th Street, described last year as following:
"The properties have a lengthy list of code violations and have been delinquent in the payment of taxes and fees. There are numerous interior and exterior code violations at 343 and 345 N. 9th St. The units lack fire separation/protection between units and hard wired smoke detectors with battery back-up. There are numerous electrical violations throughout the buildings, including exposed wiring. The homes are missing plumbing fixtures. Windows need to be replaced."The owner, Adam Thor, had paid $110,000 at the height of the market in October of 2005. In that time frame I met Mr. Thor. He was in an acquisition mode, obsessed with purchasing property with no down money and owner financing, unconcerned with the asking price of the property. That property was not worth $110,000 then, it wasn't even worth $93,500, and that was before it became distressed. I have not asked the City or Redevelopment Authority for an explanation, and in return I have been told nothing I can't believe. I do believe the City should not be in real estate business, nor have they ever been particularly good at it. Paying too much for this property may be the lessor of two evils. I know from prior statements the City aspired to acquire and deconvert houses in that block; I would hope Mr. Thor's induction into the Landlord Hall of Shame was not a strategy for that purpose.
Apr 29, 2021
An Allentown School Primer
While Morning Call readers learned yesterday that Allentown School superintendent Russ Mayo would not be seeking another contract, molovinsky readers already knew that since early last week. However, today's post is a lesson in recent history. Before Mayo, the superintendent was John Zahorchak. The board that hired him thought very highly of themselves for that choice. Zahorchak was former Secretary of Education under Rendell. What the board didn't realize was that while the Rendell administration was a case study in cronyism, it was not concerned with expertise. Zahorchak came to town and turned the school system inside out, and upside down. He instituted every new concept ever written in the education magazines. Among one bad move after another, he transfered Allen High's very effective principal to desk job on Penn Street. In wake of the mess, the board was then glad to hire Mayo, who was familiar with the system before the chaotic changes.
Allentown School System has been suffering from the same problems which affect all urban systems with high poverty rates. Why the board thinks that a new superintendent will change the parameters of that reality escapes me. The district just announced that there will be another year with no tax increase, which would be considered welcome news in most communities.
Now some older history; Shown above is Dorothy Taliaferro, as pictured in the 1920 Allentown High School yearbook. Dorothy was a vocal supporter for woman suffrage, and hoped to become a doctor. She was the first black girl to graduate from Allentown. Although Dorothy did not fulfill that career ambition, she had two younger brothers who did become physicians. The family lived at 450 Union Street, which was later demolished in one of Allentown's misguided urban renew projects.
Thanks to Dan Doyle, for loan of the 1920 Comus.
UPDATE JUNE 9, 2020: This post is a reprint from 2016, which now seems like the good old days. Under the current superintendent, Thomas Parker, the district is in a financial hole so deep that no tax increase is no longer an option. Unfortunately, the Covid-19 pandemic has caused another difficulty, not seen since Dorothy Talisferro attended Allentown High in 1918.
Apr 27, 2021
Attention O'Connell, Gerlach, Tuerk and Guridy
Apr 26, 2021
The Fairview Cemetery Situation
In 1997, I began looking for the grave of a young Jewish woman who died in 1918. In the course of that search I became interested in the small old Jewish section of Fairview Cemetery on Lehigh Street.
In the late 1800's and early 1900's, Fairview was the most prestigious cemetery in Allentown. Among those buried there included General Harry Trexler, John Leh and Jack Mack. The sprawling cemetery overlooks center city, and contains numerous obelisks and other impressive grave markers. Several unique mausoleums were built, including one for Max Hess senior. Allentown's most successful families purchased large plots, which were separated by low railings. As the decades passed, the available plots were sold.
As time passed a new cemetery, Grandview, was developed northwest of town, along Walbert Avenue. Fairview fell out of favor among the elite. Move ahead a few decades, and supposedly, the director of the then Fairview Cemetery Association embezzled funds. Currently, the association consists of a funeral director and his immediate family. Back in 1997, this new director claimed that the poor ground maintenance resulted from lack of funds. The low railings between the family plots were removed to make mowing easier and cheaper.
I was able to cast a little publicity on the situation. Although it took another decade, in 2008, the Morning Call did a story on the cemetery. Move ahead yet another decade, Tyler Fatzinger became interested, and now there is a dedicated facebook page. The paper did another story in 2019.
In the best of situations, Fairview would become a park of serenity, like the cemeteries in Paris. In the worst of situations, it will become totally abandoned and overgrown. Chances are the status quo will continue... a for profit operator and a periodic series of concerned citizens.




