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Monday, December 20, 2010
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Canonsburg Voted Unanimously Monday night
Council brings back creche
Canonsburg allows display on borough, but with conditions
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
By Moriah Balingit, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The Canonsburg borough council voted unanimously Monday night to allow a creche back on borough property after a resident's complaint prompted the borough manager to move the display down the street.
But the decision comes with a catch: If the borough is going to make room for the three kings and baby Jesus, it has to make room for candy canes, snowflakes, Santa Claus, Mrs. Claus and other secular holiday symbols for it to be considered "an acceptable holiday display," since past court cases have allowed creches in the presence of other holiday symbols.
About 30 residents attended the meeting and responded with ecstatic applause following the vote. All who spoke supported moving the creche back on the borough building's front lawn. When council President Joe Milioto asked if anyone in the audience disagreed, nobody responded.
"We didn't have any room for Jesus 2,000 years ago," said Councilman George Coleman Jr. "We do now in the people's yard."
Terry Hazlett, the borough manager, said he asked the Knights of Columbus to move the display off public property after resident Megan Hartley wrote a letter to the borough complaining the display was "disrespectful" to the community's non-Christian believers. Mr. Hazlett consulted with borough solicitor Pat Derrico, who advised that the display could prompt a lawsuit that the borough would likely lose.
The scenario has precedence locally. In 1989, in the case of County of Allegheny v. ACLU, the Supreme Court ruled that a nativity scene on the steps of the County Courthouse violated the First Amendment.
Mr. Derrico said the decision to allow the creche as long as there were secular holiday symbols would give the borough a line of defense in case there was a lawsuit filed.
The borough also would allow other groups to petition to display on the lawn, as long as the displays were "within reason" and did not desecrate any symbol on the lawn.
Residents and former residents who spoke during Monday night's meeting urged the borough to reinstate the creche, even if it brought a lawsuit.
"You can't have fear and God," said Victoria Scoumis, a Canonsburg native who lives in North Strabane. She said the borough should be willing to take on the challenge if its sued.
She said the borough should keep the creche in a tribute to the Christians who helped build the community. "Are you going to worry about money or are you going to think about the blessings of Canonsburg?"
Bradley Tupi, a Pittsburgh attorney who volunteers with the Alliance Defense Fund, said municipalities end up impinging on religious expression out of fear of lawsuits.
"What many municipal officials find themselves doing is squelching religious expression because they're afraid ...," he said. "You gotta fight."
But the decision comes with a catch: If the borough is going to make room for the three kings and baby Jesus, it has to make room for candy canes, snowflakes, Santa Claus, Mrs. Claus and other secular holiday symbols for it to be considered "an acceptable holiday display," since past court cases have allowed creches in the presence of other holiday symbols.
About 30 residents attended the meeting and responded with ecstatic applause following the vote. All who spoke supported moving the creche back on the borough building's front lawn. When council President Joe Milioto asked if anyone in the audience disagreed, nobody responded.
"We didn't have any room for Jesus 2,000 years ago," said Councilman George Coleman Jr. "We do now in the people's yard."
Terry Hazlett, the borough manager, said he asked the Knights of Columbus to move the display off public property after resident Megan Hartley wrote a letter to the borough complaining the display was "disrespectful" to the community's non-Christian believers. Mr. Hazlett consulted with borough solicitor Pat Derrico, who advised that the display could prompt a lawsuit that the borough would likely lose.
The scenario has precedence locally. In 1989, in the case of County of Allegheny v. ACLU, the Supreme Court ruled that a nativity scene on the steps of the County Courthouse violated the First Amendment.
Mr. Derrico said the decision to allow the creche as long as there were secular holiday symbols would give the borough a line of defense in case there was a lawsuit filed.
The borough also would allow other groups to petition to display on the lawn, as long as the displays were "within reason" and did not desecrate any symbol on the lawn.
Residents and former residents who spoke during Monday night's meeting urged the borough to reinstate the creche, even if it brought a lawsuit.
"You can't have fear and God," said Victoria Scoumis, a Canonsburg native who lives in North Strabane. She said the borough should be willing to take on the challenge if its sued.
She said the borough should keep the creche in a tribute to the Christians who helped build the community. "Are you going to worry about money or are you going to think about the blessings of Canonsburg?"
Bradley Tupi, a Pittsburgh attorney who volunteers with the Alliance Defense Fund, said municipalities end up impinging on religious expression out of fear of lawsuits.
"What many municipal officials find themselves doing is squelching religious expression because they're afraid ...," he said. "You gotta fight."
Moriah Balingit: mbalingit@post-gazette.com or 412-263-2533.
First published on December 14, 2010 at 12:00 am
Monday, December 13, 2010
High Wheelers - The First Machines to be called 'Bicycles"
Penny-farthing, high wheel, high wheeler, and ordinary are all terms used to describe a type of bicycle with a large front wheel and a much smaller rear wheel that was popular after the boneshaker, until the development of the safety bicycle, in the 1880s.[1] They were the first machines to be called 'bicycles'.[2]
Boneshaker (or "bone-shaker"), a name used from about 1869 was used to refer to this first type of high wheel bicycle with pedals. "Boneshaker" refers to the extremely uncomfortable ride, which was caused by the stiff wrought-iron frame and wooden wheels surrounded by tires made of iron.
High Wheeler Safety Bike |
Although they are now most commonly known as 'penny-farthings', this term was probably not used until they were nearly outdated; the first recorded print reference is 1891 in Bicycling News.[3] It comes from the British penny and farthing coins, one much larger than the other, so that the side view resembles a penny leading a farthing.[4] For most of their reign they were simply known as "bicycles". In the late 1890s theretronym 'ordinary' began to be used, to distinguish them from the emerging safety bicycles, [5] and this term or Hi-wheel (and variants) is preferred by many modern enthusiasts.[6][7]
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Illustration from Caldwell's Atlas of Washington County, 1876
This illustration is of a view near the NE corner of Pike Street and Central Avenue.
It shows a train going toward Pittsburgh. The large building is the milling company, located where the Law and Finance Building now stands.
1876 Illustration. from Caldwell's Atlas of Wash. Co., |
The following email dialog relates to the illustration.
From: Dick Garboski
To: Jim Herron
Sent: Dec. 09, 2010
Jim, a few questions:
In this illustration, would the train be crossing Central Ave, heading East? Yes
What, where, was the the Law and Finance Building? The mill was where the Law and Finance Building is, on the corner of Central and West Water Street. The Milling Company in our time was south of this building, where a grain elevator was built along the railroad, which came through nearly a century after the mill was built.
Would the dapper Gent leaning again the rail be located on Pike Street near what was the "Richie Diamond" area?
I believe so. The hotel that was on the southwest corner of Pike and Central (replaced by the Citizens Trust Building) doesn't show. The hitching post would have been on the north side of Pike Street, if it existed at all. It may have been artistic license. The building that preceded the Morgan Building doesn't show, probably because it interfered with the view of the mill and the railroad. The covered bridge actually was a lot bigger.
From some past reading, I seem to recall that around the same time of this illustration there existed an Inn/Saloon facing the hitching posts and our standing gentleman. Any recollection?
The timing of the inn where the Morgan Building stands (if there was one) is hazy. I'll work on the chronology when I do that side of Pike Street next year. The problem is location in the time before street numbers. Newspaper references in the 1800s usually don't give locations because everybody knew where things were.
There was an inn (Emery's, then Irons') that was a stagecoach stop on the Pittsburgh-Washington Turnpike that would have been behind the gent. I'll be working on its chronology in the next few months. The brick building was still there until it was torn down to build the Mellon (now Citizens') Bank.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Canonsburg - with 115 Trains a Day - Definitely needed a Watchman!
The watchman at the Central Avenue railroad crossing, Ernest Smith, reported that 115 trains—"passenger, coal and shifting trains"—had crossed on a Thursday in April 1902.
And what a grand view... looking North up Central Avenue toward Pike Street and of the beautiful tree lined Avenue climbing above Pike Street.
And what a grand time... it must have been, nary an automobile to be seen, only horse drawn buggies, wagons and of course bicycles.
Also note, although faint... the worn serpentine wagon path(to lessen the grade) going up the hill above Pike Street. (April 1902).
Monday, December 6, 2010
Harold J. Cypher - Friend and CHS Classmate Passes
Harold J. Cypher
"And the hunter home from the hill"
"And the hunter home from the hill"
Harold J. (Hal) Cypher, 70, of North Strabane Township, went to be with his Lord and Savior Saturday, December 4, 2010, following a two-year fight with cancer.
He was a dedicated Christian and a faithful member of Peters Creek Presbyterian Church.
Mr. Cypher was born October 31, 1940, in Canonsburg, a son of John McAnallen and Dorothy Guthrie Cypher.
Surviving are his beloved wife of 51 years, Patricia Ann Kereki Cypher; a daughter, Suzanne Cypher of North Strabane Township; a son, Harold John Cypher Jr. of Canonsburg; granddaughters Cheri Cypher and Kristin Cypher; and grandsons Brandon Cypher and Logan Cypher.
He was a graduate of Canonsburg High School and of Washington & Jefferson College.
Mr. Cypher was retired from Cooper Power Systems and was self-employed as a tax accountant for more than 20 years, until 2006. At the time of his death, he was serving as a full-time staff member at Peters Creek Presbyterian Church.
He served as a petty officer second class in the U.S. Navy amphibious forces, first aboard the USS Krishna and later the USS Plymouth Rock. In addition to being deployed during the 1961 Berlin Crisis and the Cuban Crisis, his ship served as a tracking and capsule recovery vessel for the Project Mercury phase of the space program and also was assigned as the security vessel for first lady Jacqueline Kennedy during her Mediterranean tour.
Mr. Cypher was active in local veteran organizations and was a past commander of American Legion Post 902 and financial officer of AMVETS Post 911. He was especially proud of having a role in restoring and maintaining the Civil War veterans’ section at Oak Spring Cemetery, the establishment of the veterans memorial in North Strabane Township, renovation of the World War I “doughboy” monument in Canonsburg and establishment of the Washington County Veterans website.
He also was a founding member of The Greater Canonsburg Heritage Society, where he served as the society treasurer for many years and was honored to have been a part of the committee that planned and established the Perry Como memorial and statue in downtown Canonsburg.
Mr. Cypher was an avid outdoorsman who enjoyed hunting and fishing. These were pursuits he shared with his son and grandsons, as well as the old companions of his youth. A member of Canonsburg Sportsmen Association, he also was a past financial officer. He treasured the hours spent along streams, afield or in the forest, and his was a lifelong love of nature, wildlife and woodcraft. His home was always graced by an assortment of dogs and cats, and he will be especially missed by his big tabby cat, Lil Bit, who was his faithful and constant companion and friend during his illness. A student of local and colonial American history, he was a member of The Colonial Williamsburg Society and Bushy Run Battlefield Association, an original member of Trent’s Virginia Provincial Company of French and Indian War reenactors, Jefferson College Historical Society, Washington County Historical Society and The Company of Military Historians. He loved building and using the flintlock firearms and accoutrements of the 18th century. His interest in colonial history also was reflected in the happy hours spent in his garden, where he loved experimenting with colonial-era plants and vegetables, in his cluttered workshop, where he reproduced all sorts of colonial period items, and in his equally cluttered study, from which he had authored and published numerous articles on historical subjects.
A favorite quote, by Robert Louis Stevenson: “Home is the sailor, home from the sea/And the hunter home from the hill.”
Friends will be received from 2 to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday in Beinhauer-Bogan Funeral Home, 164 West Pike Street, Canonsburg, 724-745-5810. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, December 8, in Peters Creek United Presbyterian Church, 250 Brookwood Road, Venetia, with the Rev. Jeff Such officiating. At the request of the family, interment will be private.
At the request of the deceased, in lieu of flowers, donations be made to Hillman Cancer Center, 5115 Centre Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15232, or Peters Creek Presbyterian Church, Harold Cypher Memorial Fund, 250 Brookwood Road, Venetia, PA 15367.
Please add tributes at www.beinhauer.com.
***
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Pittsburgh, At Night - 50 Years Ago - 1960
Pittsburgh 50 Years Ago - 1960
Light Up Night, as seen 50 years ago in 1960. Then-17-year-old Thomas M. Delegram took the 1960 photograph of Pittsburgh's inaugural Light Up Night from "Elliott Bluff," which is now known as the West End Elliott Overlook
Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/#ixzz15q0yciaV
Light Up Night, as seen 50 years ago in 1960. Then-17-year-old Thomas M. Delegram took the 1960 photograph of Pittsburgh's inaugural Light Up Night from "Elliott Bluff," which is now known as the West End Elliott Overlook
Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/#ixzz15q0yciaV
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Lost in The Fifties
Dear CHS Classmates.
Play this through and remember our time at Canonsburg High School.
Going to George's for lunch, marching in the band at foot ball games, attending the wrestling matches at the old gym, and so much more. The best was the dances at the Armory. 'the song that is played below will make you want to search your record collection and put it on the 'Victrola' ....... do you think any kids today know what that is?
Enjoy!
Norma Jean
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Canonsburg's Railway Days
Above, looking back to when Rail Cars like the West Penn 832, built in 1930 carried passengers to and from Canonsburg over the Richfol trestle.
And below, that same West Penn 832 as one of Three Rail Cars memorialized in James Sulkowski's painting"Three for the Show - Canonsburg 1954 ".
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/04256/376341-58.stm#ixzz14WVl07Ra
Nuns reap $220,000 from rare Honus Wagner card
Nuns reap $220,000 from rare Honus Wagner card
Saturday, November 06, 2010
By Diana Nelson Jones, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
This Honus Wagner card sold for $262,000.
Even though it was beat-up, cropped and laminated, it was a Honus Wagner baseball card, and it scored big for the School Sisters of Notre Dame of the Atlantic-Midwest Province.The card that the Baltimore-based sisters put up for auction was rare enough to reap them $220,000. The card was sold for $262,000 at Heritage Auctions in Dallas Thursday night.
The buyer is reported to be Doug Walton, of Knoxville, Tenn., managing partner of Walton Sports & Collectibles LLC. Neither he nor representatives of Heritage Auctions in Dallas could be reached for comment.
The card was a bequest to the order by the brother of a former member.
The Pirates' Hall of Fame shortstop, nicknamed "the Flying Dutchman," played from 1897 to 1917.
Only 50 to 60 Wagner cards from the series printed in 1909 to 1911 are believed to exist.
"We were told that the card was valuable because there were so few of them," said Phyllis Brill, communications rector for the order of nuns.
The money "will go a long way toward supporting our educational ministries as well as our sisters in Latin America and Africa," said Sister Kathleen Cornell, the provincial leader of the order.
The sisters are not disclosing the identity of the man who owned the card. Ms. Brill said he and his sister "were very close, and he had no children. As he got older, he moved closer so he could visit her." Subsequently, she said, he became close to the community of nuns there. His sister died in 1999.
The sisters had not heard of Honus Wagner, said Ms. Brill. "It was a surprise to learn the value of the card. It was in poor condition but it had value because there were so few of them."
The total sale price includes a 19.5 percent buyer's premium.
A near-mint-condition Wagner card sold for $2.35 million at auction three years ago.
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
CanonsburgFriend - Bob Stuck - On This Date -1957
Date: Tue, Nov 2, 2010 at 5:56 PM
Subject: Sports Page "ON THIS DATE" - 1957
Regards, Bob Stuck
Subject: Sports Page "ON THIS DATE" - 1957
Dear Garbo:
This appeared in todays edition of the Observer - Reporter.
Thought you may want to post on "Canonsburg Friends" in the sports feature area you often put regarding Canonsburg athletes.
The article and picture was taken 2 days after the race in Oil City, PA by the Derrick Newspaper.
The article and picture was taken 2 days after the race in Oil City, PA by the Derrick Newspaper.
Regards, Bob Stuck
Click on article to enlarge
Monday, November 1, 2010
The Sound Of Music - 45th Anniversary
I hope you were able to see the reunion on Oprah today of the cast of The Sound of Music. Arguably the best movie ever... it is certainly mine.
The moment was heralded with a single blast of a whistle with which Christopher Plummer used to call the children, just as he did in the film 45 years ago.
And with it Plummer, Julie Andrews, and the seven von Trapp children were reunited for the first time since the premier of the world's most successful big screen musical
Sound of Music | Central Station Antwerp (Belgium)
Also enjoyable is this promotion stunt by a Belgian television program, More than 200 dancers performing their version of "Do Re Mi", in the Central Station of Antwerp with just 2 rehearsals they created this amazing stunt!
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Canonsburg Friends - Popular World Wide
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Thursday, October 28, 2010
BFF - Kennywood Park 1957
Canonsburg Friends Forever
Loretta Politano Yount & Noreen Lesniakowski Hamilton
CHS59
Canonsburg Community Picnic
Kennywood Park - July 24, 1957
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