Monday, March 16, 2020

Bridgeville in 1920 . January 17, 2020


Copyright © 2020                               John F. Oyler

January 17, 2020

Bridgeville in 1920

As we enter a new decade it is appropriate for us to roll the calendar back a century and examine Bridgeville one hundred years ago. According to the 1920 Census its population that year was 3,092, still significantly smaller than its neighbors, Carnegie and Canonsburg, but enough bigger than the mine patch towns in the nearby townships to be an important commercial center, filled with small businesses.

Evidence of the proliferation of these businesses is an advertisement in the January 21, 1920, Canonsburg “Daily Notes” for Franco-American Coffee, “Begin Tomorrow with a Smile”, that lists area dealers where it can be purchased. Included in the list are nine different Bridgeville stores – Ruben Abramovitz, R. Peterson, Harmuth Bros., O. Pinazzi, A Wagoner & Sons, Durgain Thomas, Mary Lavendosky, Albert Sam, and Jos. Saperstein. Apparently this is before the arrival of the supermarkets.

Another interesting advertisement, in the January 4, 1920, Pittsburgh Press is for the Firestone Tire and Rubber Ship-by-Truck Bureau. Located on Baum Boulevard in East Liberty, it advertised shipping anywhere in the metropolitan area. Bridgeville was included on Route 7, along with Ingram, Crafton, Carnegie, Walker’s Mills, Oakdale, Noblestown, Sturgeon, and McDonald.

Business was booming in the Kirwan Heights industrial complex. C. P. Mayer had shifted his interest from the brick yard to the new airfield he had just constructed – the first commercial airfield west of the Alleghenies. General Electric had taken over the J. B. Higbee facility and converted it into “the Glass House”.

The January 17, 1920, Pittsburgh Daily Post ran an advertisement for Universal Steel offering liberal wages for a “man to run Davis Bournondeille radiograph for cutting tops of steel ingots”. A series of similar ads later in the year attest to the continuing expansion of the Universal facility.

The Colussy family’s venture into selling automobiles was in its second year; one wonders if they had any idea that it would be Chevrolet’s oldest continuous franchise a century later.

On January 27, 1920, McMullen Bros., Russell’s Garage, Bridgeville put an advertisement in the Pittsburgh Press offering to sell three different pieces of tire-retreading machinery, “total value $293” for $150, and sweetened the deal by offering “to teach you the business”.

An advertisement in the Pittsburgh Press on January 30, 1920, reported the availability of a new bungalow, five rooms and a bath, to be “sold at a bargain”. Contact F. E. Hanna. The only other area real estate offering in local newspapers was a new four room house on a one acre lot near Boyce Station for $2,200. M. Magie placed that advertisement in the Pittsburgh Press on January 18, 1920.

A few other newspaper articles mentioned Bridgeville people. According to the Monongahela Daily Republican, January 28, 1920, Rev. Murray C. Reiter gave the keynote address at a conference of Washington County Sunday School Association workers. The January 7, 1920, Canonsburg Daily Notes reported that nurse Ruth Fremlin has returned to her home in Bridgeville after caring for a young boy with pneumonia, in Canonsburg.

On January 20, 1920, the Daily Notes reported that Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Russell had spent the weekend visiting friends in Canonsburg and now returned to their Bridgeville home. The January 6, 1920, Brookville American reported a similar visit by Bridgevillers Mrs. Lucy Shaw and her two children to Brookville. Trivial as these articles seem today, it is pleasant to imagine a day when newspapers found such information newsworthy.

The Post-Gazette reported, on January 13, 1920, that Susan Hatz, of Bridgeville, had filed for a marriage license with Michael Roche of Pittsburgh. I am sure that was as significant to them as was the Daily Notes January 10, 1920, article recording the marriage of Sara Elinor Donaldson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ulysses Donaldson, in Palm Beach, Florida, to Orvis Alexander McDonald.

Buried in a list of movie advertisements in the January 22, 1920, Pittsburgh Daily Post is one for the Star theater in Bridgeville. The Star was showing “The Call of the Soul”, starring Gladys Brockwell. Ms. Brockwell was a prolific silent films star – this film was one of seven she made in 1919. She successfully made the transition to talkies before dying in an automobile accident in 1929.

The movie, fifty minutes long, was a classic soap opera love triangle involving a nurse, a doctor, and a polar explorer. I wonder where the Star Theater was located. Perhaps it was the one the Delphus family ran on Railroad Street (page 67 in the Bridgeville Area Historical Society book “Bridgeville”).

In 1920 Washington School housed all twelve grades. There were thirteen students in the graduating class that year -- Gladys Allen, Lester Allen, Mary Campbell, Cecelia Dargis, Mike Kissel, Emma Hoffman, Charles McIlvaine, Logan Meise, Walter Patton, Denie Rovesti, Wilmer Schneider, Elizabeth Warensford, and Elnora Weise.

Bridgeville made the society page of the Pittsburgh Press on January 10, 1920, with a report of a meeting of the Bridgeville Women’s Club the previously Monday at the home of Mrs. Albert B. Murray. The Murray family and their handsome Washington Avenue residence are featured on pages 42 and 43 of “Bridgeville”.

Mrs. S. A. McFarland read a paper on “Albert, King of Belgium”; Mrs. F. A. Cummins, one on “Cities of Belgium”; Mrs. M. L. Maxwell, one on “The Shakespeare of Belgium”; and Mrs. G. P. Murray, one on “The Invasion of Belgium”. Mrs. T. D. Lesnett broke the spell with a reading of “The Shepherd Dog of the Pyrenees”.

Miss Alberta (?) then sang, accompanied by Miss (?) Patton. One wonders if these were children. The February meeting was scheduled for the home of Mrs. D. M. Bennett, with Mrs. Maxwell as leader. In addition, “the dramatic members of the club will give a play in the near future, entitled “A Day and a Night”. Great to realize there was so much culture in Bridgeville that long ago.

There was great interest in sports in Bridgeville in 1920, especially in soccer. Bridgeville had a team in the Central Division of the Press Soccer League. Early in the month they played a scoreless tie with Cecil, primarily because of the work of goalkeeper Darkus. Unfortunately they lost the next game to Sturgeon Aerie, 4 to 2, despite early goals by Mochus and Dubroskey.

The rest of the team included Texter, Ziegler, Cimarolli, Ferry, Easterday, Zaney, Federoff, and Dalzuffo. In one newspaper article the team is referred to as “the Panhandlers”. Perhaps they were sponsored by the Panhandle Division of the Pennsylvania Railroad.

Another active team was a basketball team called the “Bridgeville Odds”. One suspects that they were sponsored by the Odd Fellows, before that fraternal club changed its name to the Owls Club. It is described as a junior team; its starters were Silhol (Captain), Jones, Kasputis, Hattner, and Cooper. We assume “Jones” was Burkey Jones – he was captain of the Bridgeville High School basketball team a year later.

I’m not sure how valid a picture of life in Bridgeville a century ago we can imagine from a pile of newspaper clippings, but at least they are a good beginning. It certainly appears to have been a time less stressful than most of the decades that followed.


New Year Musings . January 10, 2020


Copyright © 2020                               John F. Oyler

January 10, 2020

New Year Musings

Although it is still 2019 as I write this, it will be a brand-new year by the time it is published. In addition, we will be deep into a new decade, the tenth one which I will enjoy. Even more impressive is the fact that my nonagenarian friends will be celebrating their eleventh decade – that is impressive!

Like any other year, 2019 was full of ups and downs. We lost half a dozen “best friends”, each of whom had lived long, productive lives. This makes our continued contact with current friends and with family members even more precious.

Rather than focus on my New Year’s resolutions, which seldom come to fruition, this column will discuss our wish list for the new year and for the new decade which it begins.  A good place to start is with the sorry state in which we find the world today.

Younger folks keep asking us octogenarians if times have ever been as bad as they are today. Certainly the Depression, World War II, the Vietnam discord, and the shock of 9/11 were worse than today’s world-wide unrest. Nonetheless the continuous conflicts everywhere are frightening, and one must hope that they can be resolved sooner rather than later.

It appears that no part of the world is immune to this disease. There are protests and/or open rebellions in Hong Kong, Syria, Libya, Venezuela, Afghanistan, and a dozen other hot spots. Catalonians want to secede from Spain; Great Britain wants to leave the European Union; and the Muslims in India want autonomy.

It seems impossible to reverse the trend toward the splintering of multicultural nations into individual ethnic-centric countries. Yugoslavia was invented following World War I as a diverse Balkan country made up of a variety of ethnic groups; today it has been dissolved into seven different countries.

My New Year’s wish is that we find a way to reconcile the desire for ethnic independence with the necessity for different societies to cooperate for the common good. We thought this was working with the European Union; Brexit is a blow to our optimism.

It is our opinion that extremism is the foundation for much of this problem, and that that is as evident in our own country as it is elsewhere. The experiment that is the United States has evolved through a sequence of extremist eras punctuated by eras of compromise. One hopes that the lessons we learned in our Civil War are sufficient to encourage moderation between today’s extremists in both parties.

My New Year’s wish for our country is that the moderates in both parties flex their muscles and work together for the common good. Let’s quit stalemating on controversial unresolvable issues and concentrate on things like infrastructure, public transportation, the budget deficit, etc. – things that everyone believes can be resolved rationally.

My wish for the Pittsburgh metropolitan area is that its economy continues to diversify in a fashion that provides meaningful, adequately reimbursed employment for all levels of society. I hope they can find a way to support our major cultural institutions as well as they do our professional sports teams. Of course it would be nice if the Pirates’ management could provide us with a consistently competitive team. We sports fans are fortunate for the continued success of the Steelers and Penguins.

Closer to home I have a number of wishes for our local communities. They have managed to survive the transition from their coal mining/heavy industrial beginnings to today’s emphasis on high technology, health care, and education as well as most of their Allegheny County neighbors, and much better than some others. I hope they continue to focus on providing the amenities that make them the kind of home towns we all want to live in.

The Andrew Carnegie Free Library and Music Hall is a perfect example of such an amenity. Their prolific schedule of musical, educational, and historical programs is a remarkable asset to this area., as is the Chamber Music series at Old Saint Luke’s Church.

Regular readers of this column are aware of my obsession with local history. We are fortunate to have Woodville Plantation in the heart of our region. Their year-round program of events is an equally valuable amenity. Last summer’s “Market Faire” was particularly impressive. We hope they will be able to expand their already impressive program/event schedule even further.

We also hope to see the Bridgeville Area Historical Society continue to grow and prosper in the New Year, and we hope the informal cooperative effort by the Collier Historical Society and Pioneers West, the caretakers of the Walker-Ewing Log House, can exploit its unique potential.

We are impressed with the resurrection of Carnegie’s business district and the old time “Main Street” feel that has returned. Bridgeville’s problems are dominated by McLaughlin Run flooding and the consequent deterioration of the Baldwin Street neighborhood. Although recent funding will help reduce the problem, the solution lies in the communities upstream which do not control storm water runoff. Perhaps a “new decade” wish for me would be a change in their attitude.

As far as I personally am concerned, I am selfish enough to hope for continued good health for myself and for improved health for several members of our extended family currently having difficulties. I’d like to be able to spend lots of time with my family and with my friends, especially the Octogenarian Brunch Club. Throw in a bunch of Pittsburgh Symphony concerts, a handful of Operas, and continued informal involvement with the Civil Engineers at Pitt, if I may be greedy.

As for our readers, my wish is that Trib Total Media continues to allow us to produce this column each week and that it provides enjoyment to you.





Notable Bridgeville Residents January 3, 2020


Copyright © 2020                               John F. Oyler

January 3, 2020

Notable Bridgeville Residents

In today’s world Wikipedia has replaced the Britannica as a basic reference for significant, as well as trivial, information.
Wikipedia follows a simple format for similar subjects. For small communities they always include a topic entitled “Notable People”. The Bridgeville entry in this category includes seven persons – five athletes and two writers.

The criterion for being included in this list is unknown to us. Synonyms for “Notable” include “worthy of note”, “remarkable”, “distinguished”, “prominent”, “outstanding”, “eminent”, and “prestigious”. That would appear to be a good context for considering candidates for this designation.

As a point of reference, Wikipedia credits Carnegie with Honus Wagner and Governor James Duff; Canonsburg with Perry Como and Marty Schottenheimer; and Mt. Lebanon with Mark Cuban and Orrin Hatch as notable persons.

The Bridgeville sports figures include two soccer players – Paul Danilo and Nick Diorio; two NFL football players – Eric Kush and Ron Sams; and one NBA Basketball player – T. J. McConnell. We have no quarrel with any of these choices although we certainly would expand the list with a few of our personal favorites.

Aldo “Buff” Donelli deserves to be added. He was an outstanding soccer player, a fine football player, and a highly successful football coach. He has the distinction of being the only man to coach a Division I college (Duquesne) football team and an NFL (Pittsburgh Steelers) football team concurrently (1942).

Vic Vidoni played in the NFL in 1935 and 1936 for the Steelers (known in those days as the Pirates). Bob “Huck” O’Neil was a Steeler in 1956 and 1957, a Calgary Stampeder (Canadian Football League) from 1958 through 1960, and a New York Titan (American Football League) in 1961. They should be considered as additional entries.

Frank Burkhart “Burkey” Jones was a good enough soccer player to play for the United States team in the 1924 Olympics. Unlike Danilo, Diorio, and Donelli he has not been elected to the National Soccer Hall of Fame, but none of them were Olympians.

Although the sports figures were familiar to me, I had never heard of either of the two writers -- C. J. Henderson and Harold Stephens. Mr. Henderson is reported to have been born in Bridgeville in 1951, to have attended California University of Pennsylvania, and then become a prolific writer of detective novels, short stories, and graphic novels. Shame on me for being unfamiliar with him.

The other “notable” writer claiming Bridgeville as his home is Harold Stephens. He is reported to have been born in Bridgeville in 1926 and to have grown up on a nearby farm. After serving in the Marines in World War II, he attended Georgetown University, and began a career of travel and writing travel books and magazine articles. I am currently reading his “Take China: the Last of the China Marines” and am impressed with his writing.

My list of Bridgeville notable persons would begin with Casper Philip (“C. P.”) Mayer. His accomplishments as a business man and entrepreneur – the C. P. Mayer Brick Company and Mayer Air Field – were impressive, as was his development of the industrial park in Kirwan Heights.

Another personal hero of mine is Dr. William Shadish. His efforts ministering to fellow prisoners of war for over one thousand days during the Korean War are unprecedented. They are documented in his book “When Hell Froze Over”. I consider him “notable”.

Other possible candidates for designation as Bridgeville notable persons are successful businessmen Frank Salizzoni, Dan Colussy, Bob McMillen, and Bill Novelli. We would be interested in input from any of our readers regarding folks whom they think should be considered.

A good New Year’s resolution for me would be to contact Wikipedia and suggest additional names for their Bridgeville list.