So I found out from a confidential source that the Allentown Parking Authority has instated a daily quota their officers must meet every day. They must now write 100 tickets per day. Not only will this affect the officers but it will affect the residents of the city because now officers will be pushed to write more tickets. Former executive director Tamara Dolan said at a city council meeting that the APA does not have a quota or push their officers to write tickets but that they push for compliance. Well now they have a quota so don't be surprised you see more tickets being issued. I certainly have no problem believing that there is a quota, regardless of what the Parking Authority may say. In the past I have documented them being less than honest about surveys they falsely claimed to have conducted. .Julian Kern May 8, 2018
Jan 13, 2023
Allentown Parking Authority 2023
Jan 12, 2023
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.
Jan 11, 2023
Allentown's First Black Bar
In a neighborhood that no longer exists, Allentown's first legal Black liquor establishment had a short tortured run.
McLaughlin's Cafe was on the corner of Wire and Lehigh, at the bottom of the hill. Wire was the street that ran along the Wire Mill, another long forgotten part of Allentown's industrial history. By the mid 1950's, things were getting rough in the old bar. Police became a regular referee as fights and prostitution frequented the establishment. Finally the state liquor board decided to pull their license.
The neighborhood had two complexions. There were the white descendants of the factory workers, and it also was the center of Allentown's small Black population.
Hamp Webb was a popular figure in the Black community. Just outside the straight and narrow, he was courted by the white officials for his influence with his community. Hamp operated unlicensed speakeasies with some success.
In the final days of McLaughlin's, they featured black entertainers from Philadelphia, and even referred to it as the Black & White Club. As McLaughlin's license was being revoked, he negotiated a sale to Hamp Webb.
The Morning Call reported that he fought to secure a license to provide a drinking establishment for his fellow Negroes, where they could congregate without being molested. After a court hearing, he was finally given the license in 1957, and Ham Webb Bar&Grill opened.
Hamp Webb was killed the following year in an automobile accident. While operation of the bar was taken over by his sons, they apparently didn't have local connections to deflect legal citations that came with operating a rough bar in a tough neighborhood. The property and license were liquidated at a tax sale in 1960.
Jan 10, 2023
Boxing Eggs

When I was a little boy, I would work at my father's meat market, boxing eggs. The job was pretty straightforward. I would take eggs from a big box, and put them in small boxes with folding lids, each of which held a dozen. If I did a whole crate without breaking an egg, I did a good job. The real adventure was the drive to the shop. We lived just off Lehigh Street, and would take it all the way to Union Street. The many landmarks are now gone forever, only remaining in my camera of the past. Shown above in 1952, is the portion of Lehigh Street near the Acorn Hotel, which is not visible in the photograph. Before reaching the Acorn, you drove under The Reading Railroad bridge overpass, which recently has been dismantled and removed. That line served the Mack Plant on S. 10th Street. Just beyond the area pictured, the Quarry Barber railroad spur also crossed Lehigh Street, at the bridge over the Little Lehigh Creek. That line also crossed S. 10th, and served Traylor Engineering, now known as the closed Allentown Metal Works. Just last week Mitt Romney was there, to rebuke Obama's former visit to the site. Mayor Pawlowski is now rebuking Romney, but none of them really know anything about its past. A half block away, on overgrown steps built by Roosevelt's WPA, a thousand men would climb home everyday, after working at Mack and Traylor. Freight trains, on parallel tracks, from two different railroads, were needed to supply those industrial giants.
After my father rounded the second curve on Lehigh Street, we would head up the steep Lehigh Street hill. It was packed with houses and people. At the top of the hill, we would turn right on to Union Street. Going down Union Street, Grammes Metal was built on the next big curve. Grammes made a large assortment of finished decorative metal products. Beyond Grammes were numerous railroad crossings. The Lehigh Valley Railroad tracks crossed Union, as did the Jersey Central and several spurs, near Basin Street. It was not unusual to wait twenty-five minutes for the endless freight trains to pass. A two plus story tower gave the railroad men view and control of the busy crossing. A few more blocks and we were at the meat market, in time for me to break some eggs.
reprinted from July 2011
Jan 9, 2023
Stephen Colbert School Of Journalism
The marriage between news and entertainment isn't new, but it's now polygamous, with opinion and politics. With the Stephen Colberts and Jon Stewarts, pundits are comedians, and comedians are pundits. Both parties, left and right, are the brunt of the other sides' jokes.
This merging of politics, humor and ridicule did the country no good. People have become so polarized that they think that the other side deserves the derision.
I have no delusions that we will revert back to more separation between news and entertainment... That paste isn't going back into the tube. There is no longer any separation between news and opinion. On the contrary, down the road today's broadcasts might look scholarly. Instead of beautiful blondes, perhaps the news will be delivered by a dummy and ventriloquist...and we won't know the difference.
Jan 6, 2023
Zooming In On Allentown's Past
Jan 5, 2023
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
Jan 4, 2023
Newspaper Hubris
I watched a panel discussion on mainstream news, which placed the blame for George Santos on the declining size of the press. The panel did note that a small weekly paper on Long Island had investigated Santos' fabrications, but the story was never picked up by larger venues. Their premise was if the current larger papers still had larger staffs, Santos would have been exposed before the primary elections.
As a longstanding observer of the Morning Call, third largest paper in important Pennsylvania, I take issue with that panel's conclusions. I saw a corrupt mayor evade Morning Call scrutiny for over a decade. I see a very questionable development plan (NIZ) not only not scrutinized, but even promoted! The Morning Call has always ridden with the local establishment, never upsetting the local sacred cows. Just like the larger papers in New York didn't acknowledge the small weekly that reported Santos' misrepresentations, the Morning Call has no use for local bloggers and the stories we break.
While the Morning Call is much smaller than years ago, their ego remains large.
former Morning Call building shown above






