Jun 18, 2021
Images Of Allentown Past
Tillie's Bakery, on the narrow 900 block of Liberty Street, was actually a family factory outlet store. Behind the house, whose living room served as the store, facing an alley called Fountain Street, was Long's Bakery. Long's produced small plastic wrapped shoefly pies and breakfast cakes, which were distributed in local grocery stores throughout Allentown. Tillie Long would open the bakery store several hours each day, and the small selection of wrapped bake goods would quickly be snatched up by knowledgeable neighbors. Peter and Tillie operated the factory and bakery front for the better part of a century. Afterwards, the business was operated by their son, William. The bakery building on Fountain Street is now apartments.
reprinted from May of 2013
Jun 17, 2021
How You Were Cheated
click on documents to enlarge


Jun 16, 2021
J. Molovinsky, Part 3, Wenz Company
My grandfather came to Allentown as a young man in 1893. 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.
Jun 15, 2021
What The Morning Call Could Learn From Allentown
I chuckled the other day when I read Bill White's column about what developers could learn from Levittown. White was referring to the planned neighborhood development in the early 1950's with its own school. What he didn't realize was that south Allentown's Little Lehigh Manor, from the early 1940's, was one of first in the country complete with its own school. It was followed in a couple of years by Midway Manor on the east side.
Allentown and the Lehigh Valley led the way during post war era with its heavy industry, commerce and technology. More so, we had a locally owned paper familiar with both the history and local doings of the time. The publisher then was a founder and partner in Park & Shop, a cornerstone of the booming Hamilton Street in Allentown.
The Morning Call changed from local ownership to national newspaper chains. Although only a few blocks from city hall, they were clueless about a mayor rigging contracts for over a decade. Whistle blowers such as myself were branded naysayers and blocked from the letters page.
Now I still learn from the paper...There are good reporters covering local government and events. However, it is up to readers and local commentators like myself to point out patterns and possible abuses.... The Morning Call has no motivation to take on the establishment in any way.
photo shows Mayday at Parkway Elementary School, one of the first planned neighborhood schools in the country
Jun 14, 2021
Fairview Cemetery, An Allentown Dilemma
The condition of Fairview Cemetery has been in decline for decades. It first caught my attention in 1997, when I began hunting for the grave of a young woman who died in 1918.
By 1900, Fairview was Lehigh Valley's most prestigious cemetery. It would become the final resting place of Allentown's most prominent citizens, including Harry Trexler, John Leh, Jack Mack and numerous others. Despite my status as a dissident chronicler of local government and a critic of the local press, my postings caught the attention of a previous editor at the Morning Call, whose own grandmother is buried at Fairview. While the paper did a story on my efforts in 2008, and I did manage to coordinate a meeting between management and some concerned citizens, any benefit to the cemetery's condition was short lived.
Internet search engines have long arms. In the following years I would receive messages from various people upset about conditions at the cemetery. A few years ago, Tyler Fatzinger became interested in the cemetery, and took it upon himself to start cleaning up certain areas. I suggested to Taylor that he start a facebook page, so that concerned citizens and distressed relatives might connect. Once again the situation caught the paper's attention, and another story appeared in 2019. Tyler Fatzinger was recently informed by the cemetery operator that he was trespassing, and must cease from his efforts to improve the cemetery.
Why would both the cemetery and city establishments reject help, and discourage shining a light on this situation? Orphan cemeteries are a problem across the country. An orphan cemetery is an old cemetery no longer affiliated with an active congregation or a funded organization. These cemeteries are often large, with no concerned descendants or remaining funds. While perpetual care may have been paid by family decades earlier, those funds in current dollars are woefully short.
In Fairview's case, the current management operates a crematorium and also conducts new burials on the grounds. Funds from the previous management were supposedly not passed forward. While the Trexler Trust maintains Harry Trexler's grave, and a few other plots are privately maintained, there understandably is no desire to take responsibility for the entire sixty acre cemetery. The current operator provides minimal care to the cemetery, with even less for those sections toward the back. While the cemetery grass may only be cut twice a season, that's still more care than a true "orphan cemetery" would receive. Some of the new burials appear to be on old plots, owned by other families, but unused for many, many decades, and on former areas designated as pathways between those plots. There seems to be no regulatory oversight. Recently, both state senator Pat Browne and the Orloski Law firm have acted in behalf of the cemetery operator.
While family members may be exasperated by the neglect, local government does not seem eager to adopt either the problem or the expense of Fairview Cemetery.
Jun 11, 2021
A Family Story
As a boy growing up in Little 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



