Although this blog has been downsizing our political staff, and concentrating on our history bureau, a current story is too ironic to ignore.
Jan 13, 2022
The Language Police Never Sleep
Although this blog has been downsizing our political staff, and concentrating on our history bureau, a current story is too ironic to ignore.
Jan 12, 2022
Moving Allentown's Freight
The Lehigh Valley Transit, in addition to moving people on the trolleys, also moved freight. In Allentown, the freight house was behind Front Street, near the former A&B meat plant. The Kutztown and Reading Trolley Company also had a freight house in west Allentown, which would decades later become the home of former mayor Joe Daddona, at Union Terrace.
UPDATE: Forty five years later, in 1951, we're back at the freighthouse. Notice that a window has been added on the building's side, with only the memory of the earlier sign still present. In another year, both passenger and freight service are gone, with the end of the trolley era.
reprinted from December of 2013
Jan 11, 2022
Temporary Inconvenience

Urban renewal projects are nothing new to Allentown. Every couple decades some Mayor thinks he has a brighter idea. In a previous post, I showed the historic Lehigh and Union Street neighborhood, totally destroyed by city planners. Today, an under used Bank calling center sits awkwardly alone on that Lehigh Street hill. The picture above shows another hill of merchants and residents, fed to a mayor's bulldozer. The picture is from 1953, and shows Hamilton Street, from Penn Street down toward the railroad stations. At that time we still had two stations, The Lehigh Valley Railroad and The New Jersey Central. The current closed bar and restaurant occupies the Jersey Central. Everything on Hamilton Street, west of the bridge over the Jordan creek, with the exception of the Post Office, was demolished up to Fifth Street. Government Center would be built on the north side of the street, and a new hotel on the south, to accommodate the many anticipated visitors.
Unannounced plans are underway for a new hotel to service anticipated visitors to Pawlowski's Palace of Sports. It will be up to some future blogger to document how that hotel becomes a rooming house.
reprinted from July of 2011
Jan 10, 2022
Allentown Or Zombietown?
Promise Neighborhoods of the Lehigh Valley is a Black-led, anti-racist, liberation-based grassroots organization focused on healing and wellness through leadership development, violence prevention and reentry, racial justice and health equity and community capacity building.
Jan 7, 2022
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 6, 2022
Jenni Molovinsky Still Teaching Me History
Many years ago my advocacy for Fairview Cemetery resulted from a search for the grave of a young Jewish woman who died in 1913. During the search I learned about Mt. Sinai, the small Jewish portion of Fairview. The search ended on Fountain Hill, where I inadvertently also found the grave of my great grandmother, Jenni Molovinsky, buried at Agudas Achim's cemetery.
Mt. Sinai predated the synagogues in Allentown, and the men's society which founded it was a precursor to the current Kenneth Israel Congregation, which now has its cemetery on Walbert Ave.
Another Jewish Fraternal organization, the Emil Zola I.O.B.A. of Allentown, also established a cemetery on Fountain Hill. Zola was a French writer who championed Alfred Dreyfus, a Jew falsely accused of treason in 1894. The lodge established a burial ground on Fountain Hill in 1898, near the other Jewish cemetery where Jenni Molovinsky was buried in 1913.
photocredit: J. Nasta
