19,605 research outputs found

    Chicago-Kent Patent Hub Launch - David Clough

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    David Clough (Class of 1993) speaks at the launch event for the Chicago-Kent Patent Hub. The Chicago-Kent Patent Hub is a pro bono program that helps qualified, low-income inventors and small businesses in Illinois obtain volunteer legal assistance from local patent agents or attorneys licensed to practice before the USPTO. The program was launched by Chicago-Kent and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.https://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/events_2015/1077/thumbnail.jp

    The Kent Historian, Kent Historical Society Newsletter, Number 111, Fall 2024

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    THE KENT HISTORIAN THE NEWSLETTER OF THE KENT HISTORICAL SOCIETY FALL 2024 VOLUME 111 Depot Celebration Will Honor Railroad History Sandy Halem President Emeritus On Sunday June 1st, 2025, Kent Historical Society will lead the community in celebrating the 150th anniversary of the opening of the Erie Depot. From 3:00 -5:00 the people of Kent are invited to a birthday party in the Depot, now home to the restaurant Over Easy. The program will include games, food, music, and an educationa l program recognizing the importance of the railroad and Marvin Kent in our town's development. Local educator and railroad historian Bruce Dzeda is working to complete an updated history of rail transportation systems in Kent. Dzeda's previously published book, Railroad Town, has been a bestseller at KHS ror years. Keep an eye out for news about his new book as we get closer to Depot 150. Also on deck for pubI ication is our very speciaI coloring book -a collaborative efforl between KHS and Stanton Middle School art teacher Mr. Knepper. The coloring pages are based on work by Knepper's s tudenls and the book wi II also include rail road­themed games to help bring both fun and local history to kids in elementary school. Depot 150 u)L , uf_---·~-J; ~OlbM J/wtteft,/ The celebration will also kick off a fundraising campaign to aid in our continued preservation of the Depot and the historic Clapp-Woodward house, home of KHS' Museum and archival space. Finally, a new railroad-themed exhibit will open at our Museum in June. The exhibit will feature custom replicas of clothing from that era and highlight Kent's early historian Charlotte Weaver. We are working with a talented costume designer lo recreate what a woman like Weaver would have worn and carried when traveling by train. If you would like to be involved in some of these events please contact KHS and we will help you get started. Haymaker Family Artifact Finds New Home at KHS Echo Malleo Collections Manager The repetition of the name throughout the area provides [n June, KHS acquired a special piece related to d family whose name is likely familiar to Kent residents. some indication of the importance of the fami ly to our Visitors to our Museum may recall our display on the city's history. Haymaker family, but if not, it is still likely that at Story continued on page 2 some point you have driven along Haymaker Parkway or attended the Haymaker Farmer's Market. Story continued from page 1 The desk complements a number of other Haymaker Family artifacts in our front exhibition rooms. Plan a visit soon to take a closer look! The Haymakers were among the first settlers in the Kent area and built the first grist mill in 1807, leading to the town's early name of Franklin Mills. Other notable firsts belonging to the Haymaker family include the first non­Indigenous child born in the area in 1807 and the first recorded death in 1810. Members of the Haymaker family have been active in the town since, participating in many clubs and even acting as part of city council over the years. Earlier this summer, KHS was contacled by a descendent of Sarah Haymaker Elgin (another notable family name) about donating a piece of furniture previously owned by Sarah. The item in question was a piano Lhat Sarah had had converted into a desk. KHS doesn'L often accept donations of furniture due to limited ability to care for and slore such special pieces. But this desk, related to two such important families to Kent history, was a welcome addition to our collections. St. Patrick's School Building Now One Century Old Tim DeFrange Contributing Writer Thirty-eight years ago, in 1986, Saint Patrick's School on Portage Street turned 100 years old. To mark that anniversary, Record Courier staff writer Elaine Schwinn wrote a sixteen-page special supplemental article about the history of the school. 2024 now marks another anniversary for Saint Patrick's school: 100 years since the 1924 construction of the "old" eight­classroom building. Plans began in 1920, after the Humility of Mary Sisters had spent 30-plus years educating the parish school children in an 1886 wooden four-classroom clapboard building. Not only was lhe building painfully overcrowded, but its wooden floor was full of holes and a coal furnace burned below. The sisters wou ld often send the boys down below the floor lo sloke the coal rurnace. Mary Armstrong Bissler remembered how some of Lhe boys would come up wilh their eyebrows singed. Eleanor McCombs recalled the fundra ising effort of selling bricks to make the new school building a reality. Children in the parish were sent out to sell lhem for the wa lls of the school. For just a dime. a donor could own a portion of a brick and a whole brick cost 5.Thecampaignsucceeded.In1924throughtheleadershiporFr.JamesNolan,thenewbrickschoolbuildingwascompletedalacostor5. The campaign succeeded. In 1924 through the leadership or Fr. James Nolan, the new brick school building was completed al a cost or 90,000. 1952 photograph showing the schoolhouse building to the right of the old Church on Portage Street. The building's construction cost of 90,000isequivalenttonearly90,000 is equivalent to nearly 1. 7 Million today. By 1928 nearly two-thirds of the cost had been paid. Unlike the old school, bathrooms were inside the building. 350 students were housed in the eight brand­new classrooms in the fall of 1924. Three decades later by 1964, twelve more classrooms had been added to the origi naI eight. The origi na I eight-classroom portion sti 11 serves, providing the school office, classrooms, computer instruction, and the library for Saint Patrick's school children in 2024. 2 Picturing the Past: The Shively House The Northwest corner of Main and Depeyster Streets has long been home to the Kent Stage, a building with its own fascinating history. But what came before it? Until 1927, on that very same plot of land stood the palatial residence of Dr. Joe Shively. Originally built for Zenas Kent himself, this house was the very first of the "mansions" of Kent. This 1874 artist's rendering shows the home in all its splendor. Keeping Pioneer Cemetery Beautiful As part of our stewardship of local historical sites. KHS hosts regular cleanup days of the Stow Street Pioneer Cemetery. We were very excited to have special volunteers at our most recent one on Saturday, November 2nd. Aicien Ziots. local prospective Eagle Scout, has been working with us since .July to organize cleanup efforts, conduct a tree inventory or the site with Davey Tree, and arrange for a new commemorative plaque at the cemetery's entrance (you'll be able to see it this coming spring!). John Burnell, stone masonry expert, has done an amazing job at headstone restoralion and taking utmost care to preserve details of th~se artifacts. Big thanks to both of them and everyone else who came to help out! Top: Before and after headstone restoration work by Burnell Bottom left: Burnell loading stones to the Cemetery Bottom right: Led by Ziots, young volunteers carry raked leaves The Mission of the Kent · · Histor«:al Soci~:t)' is to plthe primary Kent history resource and reference center, leading the co.mmunity in .the.col/ectign, · ' preservation, and~/nterpretation of Kents heritage. The Soriety offers educational programs to schools, bw.sinesses, civio . .. organizations, ·and individ'iiais. . • ~ ➔ " ., Board of 11 JadcAm rhefn:, Scott Flynn, Vice Presid Carol Strnble, Vice President Matt Metcalf, Treasurer, drey Cie[inski Kessler, Secretary Jean Booth . -, Howarcj.Boyfe Rebecca Dunlap i--,,...--...,..._~ --t-:,"t-t-Hg-cftl-1:-f.er -~:£:::"2-::'::?--.c, Tom Hatch Maggie Mc&endry ., Jim Myers Esther Thatcher Director Julie Kenworthy · · Staff Bengt George, Communication~ Echo Malleo,.. Collections· Contact us: Kent H1st6r1(ar Societt 237 East Main Street Kent, OH ·44240 (330)678~i112 KHS ~KentOhieHistory:q~g KentOhioHistory.org ~, Eacebook.com/KentHistoriaaJ Society -• t ~ ~ . . 7"?·~ . ~ ,;~,.,. Museum Hours: Fridays and Satur~ys lOAM~2PM or by appointment . Last Chance to See Liquid Crystals Exhibit Save the Date: Winter Open House On Saturday, December 7th. we will have our regular public hours wilh a feslive twist! From I0AM-IPM we wi ll have free refreshmenls and ramily-friendly crafts! As we near our seasonal close starting December 15th, we would like to encourage members to come see our most recent temporary exhibt. Modern Vision: Liquid Crystal Technology in Kent. A collaboration belween KHS. Kenl Stale Universily, and local tech company Kent Displays, this exhibit has stood out for a couple or reasons. First, with artifacts and pholos dating from the 1960s through to present day. it is our most modern exhibit ever. Second, il is our most interactive exhibit lo date. Visitors are invited to take a mood ring (which technically makes use of Liquid Crystal technology) and try a variety or Kent Displays' innovative Boogie Board products. Liquid Crystal Displays, mosl notably used today in phone and TV screens, have an importanl history in Kent. Kent State has been a major international player in the development in this technology since 1965 when Professor Glenn H. Brown founded the Liquid Crystal Institute. His colleague. .I. William Doane, would go on to author many patents and secure government funding for important work in the field. He would also found Kent Displays in 1993. The company thrives today creating affordable resuable writi ng surfaces for schools, hospitals, and lhe general public. Plan a visil soon before we inslall a new exhibil for spring! Holiday Book Sale! Have you read our bestseller Bars, Bands, and Rock 'n Roll by Chas Madonia? Interested in Bruce Dzeda's Railroad Town: Kent and the Erie Railroad? Stop by the Museum or visit KentOhioHistory.org/shop to pick up a gift for the local history lover in your lire

    Kent Roosevelt High School yearbook 1959

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    Yearbook from Kent Roosevelt High School. Digitization funded by David Dix, with the inscription: "To my wonderful classmates

    The Kent Historian, Kent Historical Society Newsletter, Number 101, Summer 2021

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    Special issue: In Memoriam Remembering Roger DiPaoloTHE KENT HISTORIAN September 2021 In Memoriam Remembering Roger Di Paolo By Sandra Halem President Emeritus KHS In June 2009, Roger and I met at the Haymaker Farmer's Market in Kent and spoke once again about putting together a book about Kent history based on his Sunday Record-Courier newspaper columns. He had taken over the local history column after Loris Troyer had retired. It was his rightful inheritance. While Loris had learned his history as a transplant from Amish country, Roger was born to it. He absorbed the stories of his hometown as well as becoming an expert on all the small towns that made up his beloved Portage County. As the Kent Historical Society Presi ent, 1 ha ma de publications a priority. We began a six-month accel­erated timeline to a Christmas publica­ tion assisted by "Team Roger," which included journalists Mary Louise Ruehr, Bob Springer, Kasha Legaza-Burton and her husband Jona, along with Roger, my husband Henry and me. We winnowed down hundreds of columns into catego­ries but couldn't decide on a title. Roger settled on Rooted in Kent. No one was more "rooted" here than Jit.ne_3, lq5b -JLLne t't, ~o)J Roger. He had been an award-winning reporter who could have taken his talents to a bigger city but leaving was unimaginable. Kent was everything Roger loved. Being editor of the Record­Courier was everything he had dreamed about. Few people can be so totally fulfilled by a job that both defined them and contributed to the betterment of their community. He loved sharing. It was his honor to be asked questions and his greatest pleasure to be able to answer them. But most of all, he left us all with a better sense of the arc of our town's life through the eyes of one of its favorite sons who never had to leave to be suc­cessful. Roger stayed out of choice and contributed out of love. His death leaves an enormous hole. We will miss all the books that will never be written, but we are grateful to have had you here with us, dear friend. Thank you for making a difference. By Wayne R. Enders Historian-in-Residence Portage County Historical Society For most of its 213 years of history, Portage County has been fortunate to have had several individuals who have had an interest in recording local history. Roger Di Paolo and I met when we were in the eighth grade because of our parents' activity in local politics and stayed in touch over a half century due to our love for local history. Through his inquisitive mind, attention to detail, and his search for truth, he was able to apply his journalistic skills to write some of the best nar-, · l, rative histories of our age. As editor of the Record-Cou­rier at 36, Di Paolo had the most powerful typewriter in the county. He never used his influence to label or divide, but to encourage and unite. Roger was a great listener. He was not one to interrupt. If asked a question concerning someone he knew or a topic that was dear to him, he could talk at great length with a wealth of informa­tion. His books on Kent and Ravenna were a reflection of his commitment to history and his desire to educate his readers. Those narratives were but the tip of the iceberg of the knowledge he had, and the unwritten ones forever lost by his untimely death. A friend of the underdog and those who were denied rights and freedoms, he chose his friends from all walks of life, His only unwrit­ten requirement was that a person be fair, honest and opened-minded. It was my honor and privilege to have been his friend and colleague. 2017, he authored Portage Pathways, a went on to careers in national media. By David Dix Former Publisher, Record-Courier weekly history column that had been Born June 3, 1955, Roger is survivedstarted by his predecessor, the late Loris by his husband, Timothy Krasselt; his Roger J. Di Paolo, my editor ofthe C. Troyer. Di Paolo's Portage Pathways son, Brian Di Paolo; and his sisters, Lin­Record-Courier from 1991 until March were compiled into two books. Rooted da Di Paolo Prezioso and Betsy Soule. 2017, died June 18, 2021, following a . in Kent was published in collaboration long battle with cancer. with the Kent Historical Society and An elegant The Ravenna Record was published to stylist and raise money to refurbish the historic grammarian Ravenna flagpole on Main Street. By Henry Halem ofprecision, I will miss Roger. He was a wonder­Volunteer, KHS an avid reader ful conversationalist and my near daily and student of Beyond a personal friendship, I had discussions with him about the day's local history, Di the pleasure ofworking with Roger on news after he became editor were never Paolo chroni­his book publishing projects for the dull. I looked forward to them and cled the news of Kent Historical Society. learned a lot. Roger held strong views. Portage County Sometimes we did not agree, but he I have many fond memories ofsit­for 40 years. He got his start at the Re­had a way ofmaking me re-examine my ting around my dining room table withcord-Courier as a reporter in 1977 when own opinions and Roger nearly always Roger and his editorial team, hashinghe reported on the protests surrounding made me laugh. He had a great capacity out which articles and photos to includethe construction ofa building on land for empathizing with those getting a in his book Rooted in Kent: 101 Taleschat intruded on the site where four ftom the Tree City. His eye forstudents were killed on May 4, 1970. detail was always present. HereA Roosevelt High School student in are a couple ofdetails Roger1970, the shootings had a formative wanted included in the bookeffect on Di Paolo's view ofthe world. that I found in notes from thoseHe had an affinity for the underdog, meetings: Include about the Silkpassed on by his father, the late Judge Mill: "... it took about one millionRoger F. Di Paolo. bricks to build which were all sup­Roger's abilities were recognized plied by the Ferry Brickyard which early. In 1978 while a student at Kent was located in town. "About the State, Di Paolo was the recipient of Clapp/Woodward House, "... the James M. Sutherland Award, cited there is a fireplace in every one of as the Most Promising Young Profes­the four rooms facing out on main sional by the Sigma Delta Chi/Society street. No two fireplaces are alike. of Professional Journalist. He was One is oak, one is cherry, and two one of60 honored by the Kent State are paintedstone. "The book was University School ofJournalism and his labor oflove. Mass Communications at the School's The years passed and Roger60th anniversary in 1997. He was was itching to get involved inthe recipient offour Ohio Associated another book. I suggested we putPress Awards including Best Editorial together a book of Kent, BradyWriter. Honors were also bestowed by Lake and Kent State Universitythe Portage County Historical Society, vintage postcards. Roger thoughtthe Portage County Chapter ofthe the book was a wonderful idea,NAACP, the Kent City Schools of and we were soon hard at workHall ofFame, the Kent Area Chamber sorting postcards. Once Rogerof Commerce, and the Ohio School raw deal in life and had no patience for made his decision, he would then writeBoard Association. He set a record as those who feel entitled. two or three lines describing each card.the featured speaker for Kent State Uni­As editor, Di Paolo oversaw a staff of But Roger soon found that for many versity's town-gown Bowman Breakfast approximately 20 full-time and part­ofthe cards he had more to say. Howon three different occasions. time employees and a budget exceed­could it be otherwise? Roger was a man Devoted to local history, Di Paolo ing $1 million annually. He enjoyed ofdetails. On many occasions I would compiled a popular weekly history fea­teaching newcomers and was proud that have to tell him to "shorten it" and ture called Yesteryears. From 2002 until some ofthe reporters he worked with began to think ofmyself as chat grumpy old editor often depicted in old black­and-white movies. He would grumble, but eventually he'd find a way to shorten it. This book, Welcome to Kent, A Postcard Portrait ofthe Tree City, was in full color, and Roger was very happy with the result. In 2020 my wife Sandy revived an idea she'd had when she was the president of the his­torical society. Roger's cancer was in remission and she hoped he could help develop a walk­ing tour ofStanding Rock Cemetery. I would design a folded two-sided piece; on one side, a full-col­or map of the cemetery with specific grave sites marked, and on the other, a brief synopsis of the person buried at each site. He couldn't wait to start on the project. Roger and Sandy insisted that the tour include those individuals who represented -our historical diversity. Once the names were decided, Roger set to work writing a brief biography ofeach individual. "A Walking Tour of Standing Rock Cemetery" is a Kent "who's who." Seventy-seven people from all walks oflife who made a difference. Sad to say, there is now one more name to add to that distinguished list. I loved working with Roger and his "Team Roger," as we were known. I loved Roger. Listening to him reflect on all things Kent was a treat. He was not a man of few words when it came to his hometown and all the families that lived and died here. When­ever a Kent question arose about a family, a person, a place or a date, "Call Roger" was the cry. Call Roger. We cannot call Roger anymore, and I can­not tell you how many times since his death I have needed to make that call. Farewell, my friend. By Doria Daniels Civic Leader Roger and I shared the same passion about the accurate history and recogni­tion of Kent's South End neighborhood. Our interaction with each other goes back over 30 years when as a journalist and later a city editor. He had a keen eye for digging deeper into stories that emanated from our neigh­borhood. He didn't gloss over stories or dismiss content as we had ex­perienced before. This is how our friendship developed. It was years later that I learned his heritage began in the south end and he was obviously not embarrassed to associate or identify with his "South End" roots. He was fully supportive of our efforts to seek his­toric recognition for the neighborhood and was an asset in providing research, especially on the Italian contributions to this community. The legacy he left to this cpmmunity will be the drive to excel and to continue to overcome the prejudice and stereotypical depictions of the neighborhood. To that end we are PREVAILING. Team Roger: I to r, Henry Halem, Bob Springer, Roger, Kasha Legeza-Burton, Sandy Halem By Charles Michel Childhood Friend Conversations with my childhood friend Roger Di Paolo, always went something like this. Me... "Roger, whatever happened to old Mrs. Kelly?" Roger... "She died on Thanksgiving Day, 3 years ago. She had been living with her daughter, Lucy (whose married name was Smith) down in Ft. Myers Fl. Lucy was the youngest of the Kelly kids. There were ten kids in all. From oldest to youngest... there was Tommy, Teddy, Theresa, Mary, Emily, Arthur, Danny, Helen, Ellen, and baby Lucy. They lived on Highland Avenue just behind St. Patrick's Church. They are all still living except for Arthur, who died in Vietnam on September 3, 1969." No one person has ever known more about or cared more about the people in his own home community than Roger. Roger was much more than the editor of a newspaper... he was the heart that held close every memory of everyone and everything. For Roger, every Kent resident, past and present, living and dead... was family. And the entire community was itself more of a family because Roger lived his entire life there. Like George Bailey in It's a Wonderful Life, Roger's life was made wonderful by making a very big difference in his very own backyard. Roger Di Paolo was indeed "the richest man in town." And the town and the state and the nation and the world will forever be a bit poorer now that Roger is no longer here to keep it rich in memories and rich in love. By Jack Amrhein President, KHS On October 24, 2017 the Kent Historical Society and Museum's Board ofTustees appointed Roger Di Paolo as historian-in-residence. The board was fortunate that Roger was available to do the job and he and his knowledge of Kent's history were well known to the community. Mr. Di Paolo wrote or co­authored as well as edited books for the Society. In his role Roger helped muse­ ~------------------------­ Roger's horse-drawn hearse on its way to Standing Rock Cemetery ~ um visitors research historic questions as well as helped them trace relatives or past businesses that were important to them. He also presented programs on our behalf to the citizens of the community. On many occasions I remember Roger sitting down with visitors, employees and members and weaving Kent's history into fascinating and interesting stories. His knowledge of Kent's long and varied history was amazing. No one had the vast knowl­edge ofour community's history as did Roger. He was an excellent addition to our Museum's team. His talents as an author, editor and historian enabled the Kent Historical Society to enrich its programs of events, publications and public programs. Roger will be deeply missed. To contribute to the Roger Di Paolo Stu­dent Scholarship Fund at Roosevelt High School please call KHS at (330) 678-2712 or email [email protected] Photo credits: Brad Bolton, Tim Krasselt, Sandra Halem, Henry Halem ~ . 1 fu,,b.,fLuc:t~v ill." Jtu~ ~ ~/},_ ~-~---, ~ ~1' And, ofcourse I am grateful for havinggrown up in Kent, a community whose diversity is part ofmy heritage

    The Author: Kent Davis

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    Kent Davis is a Montana based author of “A Riddle in Ruby” and the soon to be released sequel, “The Changer’s Key”

    Kent Historical Society, Winter Notes 2009

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    Kent Historical Society WINTER NOTES 2009 PLEASE JOIN US Roger Di Paolo will be available to autograph copies of his new book, published by KHS, which includes 101 columns from his Portage Pathways articles for the Record Courier. This amazing book also contains more than 125 photographs from libraries, archives & private collections - some not seen in 100 years. This is a MUST for your holiday shopping list. Special KHS member price 17.00 Author! Roger Di Paolo ROOTED IN KENT: 101 Tales from the Tree City Published by KHS Press New Book Launching Party & Reception Saturday, December 12th 11:30-3:30 KHS HOLIDAY SHOPPING Don't forget to stop by the museum for some special gifts! A list of items available - including special discounts for KHS members - is included in this mailing. Holiday orders must be paid for and shipped ( or picked up) by Saturday, December 19th. Books, cards, mugs, puzzles, aprons, maps! NOW ON DISPLAY 1924 Player Piano (DONATIONS of piano rolls gratefully accepted) Patchwork quilt from the collection of Evangeline Davey City of Kent Model Trains 1831 rare stampless cover from "Franklin Mills, Ohio" signed by George B. DePeyster, postmaster WINTER VACATION The Kent Historical Society will be closed from December 20th, 2009 to February 3, 2010. We will reopen on Thursday, February 4th; call for special tour or research needs. Call (330) 678-2712 for more information. Mary Ann Green, administrator 234 South Water Street. Kent, Ohio www.kentohiohistory.org (330) 678-2712 email: [email protected] Mailing Address: Kent Historical Society P.O. Box 663 Members Discount Order Form Call or Mail your order Phone: 330.678.2712 Web: www.kentohiohistory.org Kent, OH 44240 Free Kent Bicentennial T-shirt with order over 10.00 (s, m, I, xi) Quan. Title @ Price Total (New) Rooted in Kent, 101 tales from the tree city (By Roger Di Paolo) 17.00(KHSPress)1882KentPanoramicViewMap(suitableforframing)17.00 (KHS Press) 1882 Kent Panoramic View Map (suitable for framing) 30.00 Kent and the Great War, The Letters of Leo Bietz (KHS Press) 14.001924KentCongregationalChurchCookBook(KHSPress)14.00 1924 Kent Congregational Church Cook Book (KHS Press) 9.00 The Story of Kent (KHS Press) 7.00RecollectionsofanOldSettler,ChristianCackler7.00 Recollections of an Old Settler, Christian Cackler 8.00 Haunting Tales From the Tree City (KHS Press) 5.00ImagesofAmerica:Kent5.00 Images of America: Kent 19.00 The History of Kent: Historical & Biographical, Karl Grismer 15.00PoliticianExtraordinaire:MartinL.Davey15.00 Politician Extraordinaire: Martin L. Davey 39.00 Portage Pathways, Loris Troyer 19.00PortageCountyTimeline,1669200719.00 Portage CountyTimeline, 1669- 2007 14.00 Vintage Aprons (limited quantity) 5.00ChristmasTreeOrnaments,HandBlown(limitedquantity)5.00 *Christmas Tree Ornaments, Hand Blown (limited quantity) 15.00 J *KHS Coffee Mugs 5.00WoodenSquirrelJigsawPuzzle(limitedquantity)5.00 Wooden Squirrel Jigsaw Puzzle (limited quantity) 4.00 DVD - Kent, The Early Years, Historical Overview (KHS Video) 10.00 DVD - A Film by Roscoe Hahn, Kent & Brady Lake (KHS Video) 6.00 DVD - Made in Kent, The Fageol Bros. and Twin Coach (KHS Video) 10.00TaxincludedinpriceShippingandHandling10.00 Tax included in price **Shipping and Handling 3.00 Ship To: (Please Print) Total Name: _________________________ _ Address: _________________________ _ Address 2: ________________________ _ City: ____________ State: __ Zip: _________ _ Phone: Email: ____________ _ Payable by Check or Credit Card: Please charge my order to: __ Visa __ MasterCard Credit Card # _________________ Expiration ___ _ Signature: _________________________ _ * Pick-up only **Do not add shipping and handling if you're going to pick up your order at the historical society. J (234 S. Water St.) D Yes I will pick up my order at the historical society D Please ship my order r ~' s Ti me t o Ce l e b r a t e ! You're invited to spend the season with us. We have the accommodations for all of your holiday parties. Make your reservations today. The Pufferbelly's 28th Anniversary week is just around the corner. Be here for our _9lassic anniversary specials December 14·-18. On Sunday, December 20th Santa Cl a u s is corning to town early. Join us for a Brunch wi th Santa and enjoy our Sunday Brunch buffet from 11:00 - 2:30. Corne celebrate Ne w Year s Eve with us. We'll supply the noisemakers , hats and balloons . At midnight we will have a complimentary champagne toast. All you'll need to bring is your resolutions. Don't forget to make your reserv a t i ons . H~PPY HOLIDAYS FROM YOUR FRIENDS AT THE PUFFERBELLY ·i- ~ . ·!- ... ... : .--- ·- · ... ~- \~---~ !~l~ii~:0oi , -~ _1 ,,.-.... r--- --- Kent Historical Society P.O. Box 663 Kent, OH 44240 ,,,,,--.., Nonprofit Organization U.S . Postage Paid Kent, OH Permit #150 Open House The historic Marvin Kent Homestead located at the corrw-------er of Rt. 43 and W. Main St. will be open to the public on Sat rday, March 21 from 2-5. Tours will be hosted by members f the Rockton Masonic :Lodge #316 and are FREE to the public Cof-fee and cookies vv-ill also be served. ) The Kent Historical Society Speaker Series Presents '' All About Kent" Noted educator and author of the newly published book Politician Extraordinaire The Tempestuous Life and Times of Martin L. Davey Will Speak on Former businessman, Mayor of Kent, US Congressman, and Governor of Ohio Tuesday, March 31, 2009 Doors open: 6:30 p.m. - Talk at: 7:00 p.m. Where: The First Christian Church Corner of West Main & Mantua St., Kent, 0 H Light refreshments will be served History of church and tour will follow. Sponsored by the Kent Historical Society 2,34 S. Water St., Kent, OH 330.678.271

    The Kent Historian, Kent Historical Society Newsletter, Number 90, Spring 2017

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    THE KENT HISTORIAN The Newsletter of the Kent Historical Society Spring 2017 Number 90 Questions about Kent's black squirrels answered Local authors share book and activities at KHSM event By Bailey Mulholland Publications Specialist Do you know how the black squirrel came to Kent? Those who attended a Kent Historical Society & Museum event on Feb. 18 learned the history and even some biology of this spunky rodent from local authors Kathy Frazier and Deborah Walker. Frazier and Walker read their book ''And Now You Know Too! The Story of How the Black Squirrel Came to Kent" to an audience of more than 30 children and adults, afterwards engaging in discussion and overseeing a variety of activities. Attendees of all ages enjoyed munching on squirrel-shaped cookies while making bracelets, assembling pipe cleaner squirrels and coloring characters from the book. ''And Now You Know Too!" is available online and at Off the Wagon in Kent. Bonnie Garrett, passionate KHSM benefactor, passes alVay at 85 Bonnie D. (Shepherd) Garrett, 8 5, passed away Feb. 11 in Cin­cinnati, Ohio. She was born July 24, 1931, in Kent, Ohio to Norm and Vivian (Poul­ton) Shepherd. Bonnie was a 1949 graduate of Kent State University High School. Bonnie D. Garrett, a generous supporter of the historical so­ciety, at an event with family. She is sur­vived by her sister, Barbara Meeker of Kent; son, Robert (Judi) Garrett of North Rich­land Hills, Texas; daughter, Linda (Harry) Gurgol of Cincinnati; grandchildren, Chad (Melissa) Garrett of Henderson, Nev., Ali (Andy) Massingill of Little Elm, Texas, and Charles (CJ) Garrett of Atlanta, Ga., Michelle (Brian) Gurgol Spegal of Hebron, Ky. and Sara Gurgol of West Chester, Ohio; great granddaughters, Peyton Massingill of Little Elm, Texas, and twins Gabrielle and Madison Spegal of Hebron, Ky. She is pre-ceded in death by her husband, Charles (Larry) Garrett, and sister, Bette Geiger, of Raleigh, N. C. Bonnie and her husband, Larry, were employed in family businesses. As a newly married couple, they had a 300-acre Here­ford farm north of Ravenna. Then Larry and his father, Robert, built and ran the first motel in Kent; the Eastwood Motel, between Kent and Ravenna. Next, they owned Garrett Asphalt, followed by the Foster Bodman Co. in Akron. Larry was also a pilot for the Davey Compressor Co. and a volunteer sheriff for Portage County. Bonnie enjoyed her family, friends, trav­eling and life at the lake. She grew up in Twin Lakes and spent summers at Muzzy Lake when her family was young. As empty nesters, Bonnie and Larry enjoyed boating with Kent friends at Catawba Island, Lake Erie. They retired to Marco Island, FL. Bonnie was a passionate supporter of the Kent Historical Society Museum. A future gravesite service at Standing Rock Cemetery for Bonnie and Larry will be performed by the Rev. Julie Fisher of the Kent Christ Episcopal Church. Frazier and Walker share their book with local families and answer questions. TRENO RISTORANTE COMING SOON In our next newsletter, learn more about the new Italian restaurant soon to occupy our historic Erie Depot. Join the historical society at the grand opening later this year! Author and adventurer Marvin Kent Curtis One descendent of Marvin Kent honors the interesting life of another By Kasha Legaza-Burton KHS Trustee How do you tell the story of a multi­lingual World War I aviator-turned-pris­oner- of-war who went on to live a grand life as an author, illustrator, a skilled outdoorsman who mentored countless young summer campers, a yachtsman and a globetrotter who rubbed elbows with the famous in 500 words or less? You can't! It's the very reason Missouri resident Mary Jo Johnston created both a Wikipe­dia page and a blog website detailing the adventurous existence of her great-uncle, Marvin Kent Curtis - great-grandson of Marvin Kent, for whom our city is named. Johnston admits with a chuckle that re­searching the life of "Uncle Kent" has been her "passion" for the past two decades! She believes the Chicago-area native's gadabout lifestyle was a result of him being held as a prisoner of war for several months in Germany after the American 148th Aero Squadron bomber he was piloting over France was shot down on Aug. 24, 1918. His killed-in-action death at the age of 27 - a report wired to father Charles E. Curtis from the U.S. War Department (mother, Grace Kent Curtis, died in 1907) KHS Museum Hours 237 E. Main St., 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and by appointment. Contact Kent Historical Society 23 7 E. Main St. Kent, Ohio 44240 330-678-2712 Email [email protected] Website www.kentohiohistory.org Find us on Facebook www.facebook.com/ KentHistoricalSociety - made front-page news in Kent pa­pers. That provided Curtis with a Mark Twain-esque "reports of my death are greatly exaggerated" tale to tell for the next 40 years - and he did! (Record-Courier Editor Roger Di Paolo detailed this period of Curtis' life in a Feb. 1, 2015, "Portage Pathways" column entitled, "Marvin Kent's namesake lived 40 years after his obituary.") Curtis' career as a professional writer was launched in 1920 when he received a 10checkinpaymentfora750wordstorythatwaspublishedinaweeklymagazine.TwoyearslaterwhileteachingFrench,Spanishandhistoryto40boysataremoteprepschoolonCaptivaIsland,Fla.Curtiswonasecondplaceprizeof10 check in payment for a 750-word story that was published in a weekly magazine. Two years later - while teaching French, Spanish and history to 40 boys at a remote prep school on Captiva Island, Fla. - Curtis won a second-place prize of 1,000 in a national writing competition. That's the equivalent of nearly $14,500 in today's dollars! From there Curtis went on to write and illustrate five novels while continuing to author magazine essays. Four of Curtis' books are boys' adventure stories set in places he loved living: the North Woods of Minnesota and the Florida coastal islands. The fifth book, "The Tired Captains," is a historical novel based on a group of World War I pilots. Qohnston and her husband, Kelly, acquired copies of all five novels and graciously donated them to KHS last fall!) During his lifetime, Curtis crossed the Atlantic 2 5 times and the Pacific once. He lived in Paris intermittently throughout the 1920s and it was there, while pur­suing his writing career, that he became acquainted with numerous famous people. One of them, F. Scott Fitzgerald, wrote chat Curtis' "The Blushing Camel" was one of the best boys' books he'd ever read and compared it to works by Hemingway and Twain. Curtis spent more than 30 summers at Camp Mishawaka for boys in Grand Rapids, Minn., serving as a counselor, entertainment director and, eventually, a co-owner. He led 31 "Big Canadian canoe trips" for campers through the Minne­sota- Canada boundary waters and also introduced a sailing program that he ran from 1937 until his death in 1957. Johnston said that at the end of most camp seasons, Curtis would return to his winter home on Captiva Island by sailing Photo: Mary Jo Johnston Marvin Kent Curtis on his sailboat in Miami, FL circa 1934. Curtis was the great-grandson of Marvin Kent and was an accomplished outdoorsman, well-traveled author and favorite counselor at Camp Mishawaka. the Mississippi River from Minnesota to New Orleans. During the 1930s he com­peted annually in a St. Petersburg to Ha­vana sailboat race, captaining his 32-foot yawl "Marelen II" to a first-place finish in 1932 and third place the next year. Many letters inherited by the family, as well as stories gathered by Johnston, reveal that Curtis' vivacious personality made him the center of attention - whether at the yacht dub, aboard a cruise ship, at a Paris soiree or at Camp Mishawaka. A man who knew him from camp wrote, "Kent Curtis was the most unique person I've known. Multi-talented, Kent could do anything but add up a laundry slip: writer (5 books), artist, musician (he played the piano but couldn't read a note), actor, woodsman, cook, sailor, expert in canoe­ing, raconteur par excellence, but through all his talents, the humorist predominat-ed. He was idolized by more boys than anyone else. He was the life of camp and of reunions." To read more detailed stories on the fascinating life and times of Marvin Kent Curtis, visit Johnston's blog website at undekentcurtis.wordpress.com or en.wiki­pedia. org/wiki/Kent_ Curti

    The Kent Historian, Kent Historical Society Newsletter, Number 82, Winter/Spring 2014

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    THE KENT HISTORIAN The Newsletter of the Kent Historical Society Winter/Spring 2014 Number82 Town and Garden Tour returns June 7, 8 Kent is an eclectic mix of old and new, of past and present. In June, residents will have a special oppor­tunity to see this up close. 1he Kent Historical Society will host the Town and Garden Tour on June 7 & 8, with a special sponsors night party on June 6. The tour will include a variety of unique historic homes, gardens, and buildings in the down­town and the West Main Street area. It will also feature unique urban living spaces at Acorn Corner. Tickets will be 20andwillbeonsaleatvar­iouslocationsdowntownandatthehistoricalNew1nuseu1nexhibitrecallssummertimefunatlakeparksOncetoutedas"OhiosMostPerfectPlay­ground,"BradyLakeParkwasopened123yearsagoonJune11,1891,byA.G.Kent.Thelocalattractionwasonceoneofabout50amusementparksinOhioandwasapopu­larlakefrontresortduringtheheightofitssuc­cess.Butverylittleremainstodaytoremindpeopleofthefunandentertainmentitonceprovidedforsomany.TheKentHistoricalSocietyMuseumislaunchingafun,newinteractiveexhibitthisspring,"FunintheSummertime,"chatwillallowvisitorstorevelintheeraofthelakesideparksthatusedtodrawsomanytothearea.Theexhibitopeningcoincideswiththecom­pletionofDr.FredEndreslatestdocumentaryfilm,"SeancesandSlotMachines:TheStoryofBradyLakePark."EndresisaretiredprofessorintheSchoolofJournalismandMassCommu­nicationatKentStateUniversity."SeancesandSlotMachines"willbeshownonlocalPBSsta­tionsthissummer.AmusementparksbegantoappearinAmer­icainthe1870s.Theyenjoyedtheirbiggestgrowthspurtinthel890s,whenurbandwellerslookedforexcitementandanescapefromthedirtandnoiseofthecity.Attheirpeakinthe1920s,therewereabout1,800localSeeExhibit,page2societymuseum.Thetourwillbeheldfrom11a.m.to5p.m.June7andfromnoonto5p.m.June8.ProceedsfromtheeventwillsupporttheKentHistoricalSocietyseffortscorestoretheexteriorofthehistoricErieDepot.June7thisalsotheArtandWineFestivaldowntown.CarolStrobleandDawnCarpen­ter,tourcochairs,arethrilledwiththesupportthecommunityalreadyhasshownfortheevent."DawnandIaresopleasedthatwehadsuchapositiveresponsewhenweapproachedtheownerstobepartofthetour,"Stroblesaid."WearedelightedthatwehavesuchawidevaSandyHalemresignsaspresi­dentofKHSboardoftrustees.JackAmrheintappedtoleadKHSboard.Seestories,page3rietyofsites,andwechinkthepeoplewhogoonthetourwillenjoybeingabletoexplorethehistoricbuildingsofKent."Manyvolunteersfromthecommunitywillbeneededtoensurechisisasuccessfulevent,andfurtherinformationaboutvolunteeringisenclosedinthismailing.Tourbookletswillserveaseachparticipantstickettothevenuesonthetour.Thefullcolorsouvenirbookletfeaturesapictureofeachloca­tionanditshistory.AmongthesitesconfirmedforthetourareSeeTour,page5Thenew"FunintheSummertimeExhibit"attheKHSMuseumfeaturesvintagegames,memorabiliaandartifactsfromvariouslakesideamusementsparksinOhio,includingBradyLakePark.Inside...Authorsatopenhouse2FriendssaluteHalem3""4GettoknowAmrhein3Firedestroyedstorein1912.52. /;).,..".KentHistoricalSocietyTheKentHistorianisaquarterlypublicationoftheKentHistoricalsociety,anonprofitorganizationthatstrivestobetheprimaryKenthistoryresourceandreferencecen­ter,leadingthecommunityinthecollection,preservationandinterpretationofKentsheritagethroughexhibits,educationalprogramsandiqivities.Thesocietyofferseducapn1rc::r:1.1"I.vtoschools,busiorganizations,VicePresidentessler,SecretaryoothBoyleio44i40.3.,2712Facebookhtrps:I1ww.ˇfacebook.com/K ntHistoricalSocietyDirector:Fundraiser,openhouseperfectendtogreatyearByThomasHatch,KHSdirectorIn2013,forthefirsttime,KHSsponsoredacommunitywidelocalauthorbooksiginingatourDecemberHolidayOpenHouse.AuthorspresentwerePaulBauerandMarkDawidziak,DavidHassler,CharlieThomasandPatrickOConnor,RogerDiPaolo,BruceDzeda,BeerySweet,andDr.JohnJacobs.Proceedsfromtheeventwereinexcessof20 and will be on sale at var­ious locations downtown and at the historical New 1nuseu1n exhibit recalls summertime fun at lake parks Once touted as "Ohio's Most Perfect Play­ground," Brady Lake Park was opened 123 years ago on June 11, 1891, by A.G. Kent. The local attraction was once one of about 50 amusement parks in Ohio and was a popu­lar lakefront resort during the height of its suc­cess. But very little remains today to remind people of the fun and entertainment it once provided for so many. The Kent Historical Society Museum is launching a fun, new interactive exhibit this spring, "Fun in the Summertime," chat will allow visitors to revel in the era of the lakeside parks that used to draw so many to the area. The exhibit opening coincides with the com­pletion of Dr. Fred Endres' latest documentary film, "Seances and Slot Machines: The Story of Brady Lake Park." Endres is a retired professor in the School of Journalism and Mass Commu­nication at Kent State University. "Seances and Slot Machines" will be shown on local PBS sta­tions this summer. Amusement parks began to appear in Amer­ica in the 1870s. They enjoyed their biggest growth spurt in the l 890s, when urban dwellers looked for excitement and an escape from the dirt and noise of the city. At their peak in the 1920s, there were about 1,800 local See Exhibit, page 2 society museum. The tour will be held from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 7 and from noon to 5 p.m. June 8. Proceeds from the event will support the Kent Historical Society's efforts co restore the exterior of the historic Erie Depot. June 7th is also the Art and Wine Festival downtown. Carol Stroble and Dawn Carpen­ter, tour co-chairs, are thrilled with the support the community already has shown for the event. "Dawn and I are so pleased that we had such a positive response when we approached the owners to be part of the tour," Stroble said. "We are delighted that we have such a wide va- • Sandy Halem resigns as presi­dent of KHS board of trustees. • Jack Amrhein tapped to lead KHS board. See stories, page 3 riety of sites, and we chink the people who go on the tour will enjoy being able to explore the historic buildings of Kent." Many volunteers from the community will be needed to ensure chis is a successful event, and further information about volunteering is enclosed in this mailing. Tour booklets will serve as each participant's ticket to the venues on the tour. The full-color souvenir booklet features a picture of each loca­tion and its history. Among the sites confirmed for the tour are See Tour, page 5 The new "Fun in the Summertime Exhibit" at the KHS Museum features vintage games, memorabilia and artifacts from various lakeside amusements parks in Ohio, including Brady Lake Park. Inside ... Authors at open house 2 Friends salute Halem 3""4 Get to know Amrhein 3 Fire destroyed store in 1912 . · 5 2 '.~/;)-\:.,. .· · ".Kent Historical Society TheKent Historian is a quarterly publication of the Kent Historical ·society, a nonprofit organization that strives to be the primary Kent history resource and reference cen­ter, leading the community in the collection, preservation and inter- -pretation of Kent's heritage through exhibits, educational programs and 'iqivities. The society offers educa- - pn-1rc::r:1.1"I'.v to schools, busi-organizations, Vice President ·essler, Secretary' ooth Boyle io44i40 . ' 3.,2712 Facebook htrps:I 1ww\v.facebook.com/ · K~ntHistoricalSociety Director: Fund-raiser, open house perfect end to great year By Thomas Hatch, KHS director In 2013, for the first time, KHS sponsored a community-wide local author book sigining at our December Holiday Open House. Authors present were Paul Bauer and Mark Dawidziak, David Hassler, Charlie Thomas and Patrick O 'Connor, Roger Di Paolo, Bruce Dzeda, Beery Sweet, and Dr. John Jacobs. Proceeds from the event were in excess of 1 ,400 with a good portion of that going to support the mission of Kent Historical Society. KHS also raised 3,500inouryearendannualfunddrive.ThesupportthatKentiteshaveshownwillgoalongwaytohelpusexpandourreachevendeeperintothecommunity.Bigchallengesstillfaceusin2014,mostespeciallythecompletionoftheexteriorrenovationattheErieDepot.Also,lookforanexcitingnewexhibitsettoopeninMaycelebratinglocalamusementparkfun,and,inJune,theHouseandGardenTourfeaturingurbangardensanduniquelivingspacesrighthereinKent.BesuretostopbytovisityourKenthistorymuseum,rideournewelevator,andenjoythenewBonnieGarrettexhibitgallery,whereyoucanexperienceMainandWaterstreetsthroughtheages.Exhibit,frompage1parksinthecountry.ThereweredozensofcheminNorthernOhio,somesmall,somehuge.Theyofferedswimming,picnics,rides,gamesandconcessionsforthousandsoffami­liesatmodestprices.Bythe1960s,allbutafewhadgoneoutofbusiness.OriginallyBradyLakeParkfeaturedadancehall,summertheater,bathhouses,picnicareas,asteamboatandrowboats.Despitearainyopeningday,almost2,000peopleturnedout.Whenthestreetcarlinewasextendedin1901fromKenttoRavennaviaBradyLake,thousandsrodetheinterurbanfromAkronandotherSummitCountyareastothepark,accordingtohistorianLorisTroyer.ThepopularityoftheparkgrewandeventuallyattractedvisitorsfromthroughoutOhioandwesternPennsylvania.Onepicnicattracted10,000visitors.A.G.Kent,whoalsowasthefounderofGeaugaLakeAmusementPark,soldtheresorttotheSpiritualistsin1892.AfternineyearsofoperationbytheSpiritualists,Endressaid,theoperationwaslosingmoneyandwasauctionedoff.In1906,theparkwaspurchasedbyagroupfromEastLiverpool,whichoperateditfor20years.Duringthisperiodmanynewridesandattractionswereadded.RavennarealestatedeInDecember,KHSsponsoredalocalauthorbooksigning.Proceedswereinexcessof3,500 in our year-end annual fund drive. The support that Kentites have shown will go a long way to help us expand our reach even deeper into the community. Big challenges still face us in 2014, most especially the completion of the exterior renovation at the Erie Depot. Also, look for an exciting new exhibit set to open in May celebrating local amusement park fun, and, in June, the House and Garden Tour featuring urban gardens and unique living spaces right here in Kent. Be sure to stop by to visit your Kent history museum, ride our new elevator, and enjoy the new Bonnie Garrett exhibit gallery, where you can experience Main and Water streets through the ages. Exhibit, from page 1 parks in the country. There were dozens of chem in Northern Ohio, some small, some huge. They offered swimming, picnics, rides, games and concessions for thousands of fami­lies at modest prices. By the 1960s, all but a few had gone out of business. Originally Brady Lake Park featured a dance hall, summer theater, bath houses, picnic areas, a steam boat and rowboats. Despite a rainy opening day, almost 2,000 people turned out. When the streetcar line was extended in 1901 from Kent to Ravenna via Brady Lake, thousands rode the interurban from Akron and other Summit County areas to the park, according to historian Loris Troyer. The popularity of the park grew and eventually attracted visitors from throughout Ohio and western Pennsylvania. One picnic attracted 10,000 visitors. A.G. Kent, who also was the founder of Geauga Lake Amusement Park, sold the resort to the Spiritualists in 1892. After nine years of operation by the Spiritualists, Endres said, the operation was losing money and was auctioned off. In 1906, the park was purchased by a group from East Liverpool , which operated it for 20 years. During this period many new rides and attractions were added. Ravenna real estate de- In December, KHS sponsored a local author book signing. Proceeds were in excess of 1,400, which will help support the mission of Kent Historical Society. The Brady Lake Park opened in 1891 and remained in operation until the late 1940s, when it deteriorated into a gambling and nightclub resort. veloper, Don Wilson Sr., rook over the park in the late 1920s and led it during its "golden age," Endres said. The park eventually featured a figure-eight roller coaster, a carousel and a midway. Camp­sites and summer cottages were developed. Big-name bands and acts performed, includ­ing Cab Calloway and Rudy Vallee. Unusual acts were brought in to draw larger crowds in­cluding "aerial daredevils ," rodeos and horse swimming acts. Bingo was added in 1938. In 1942, the park was sold to a group of Cleve­landers, who changed the focus to gambling, which ultimately led to its closing in late 1949- 50. Winter/Spring 2014 Sandy Halem steps down as KHS president By Sandra Halem This January, I retired from the presidency and board of the Kent Historical Society. fu I look back, I remember so much of the his­tory, both institutional and personal, that has made this 40-year partnership so gratifying. I was cleaning out my files and came across an interview in the Record-Courier from May 1977 which began with the following paragraph: "Keeping Kent history alive is Sandra Halem's hobby, a hobby that is keep­ing her quite busy lately. Sandy and members of the Kent Historical Society are preparing to restore the Kent Railway Station." At that time, I was a producer and writer in the Television Services Department at Kent State University, creating programming for the newly opened PBS station Channels 45/49. Our daughter, Jessica, was three years old and my husband, Henry, was building the glass program within the Kent State Art De­partment from the ground up. His academic appointment at Kent State was the reason we had come to Kent in the summer of 1969. We were newly married and anxious to find a place to call home. Loris Troyer, then editor of the Record­Courier, had met my husband and I during a 1970 Town/Gown meeting held following the tragic events of May 4th on the Kent State campus. At that first meeting, Loris learned of my love of history and convinced Henry and I that Kent was a great place to live and raise a family. It was the beginning of a friendship that would last more than 40 years until his death in 2011. Loris submitted my name to the Kent His­torical Society Board ofTrustees in 1974. I would be replacing John Carson, who was leaving to serve as county commissioner. I was 30 years old and would serve as the first woman, still unusual for membership on boards of trustees. John Flynn also was ap­pointed at the same time, and Howard Boyle would join in 1977 as the board sought to engage younger members with skills that would help in our 10-year quest to preserve the Erie Depot. See Halem, page 6 KHS board members in the spotlight Amrhein new KHS board president Retired teacher has served on KHS trustees board since 1997 Jack Amrhein joined the Kent Historical So­ciety Board of Trustees in 1997 after being asked by then-superintendent Marc Crail to represent the school district. Amrhein began his education career in 1980, teaching at Davey Junior High, Stanton Mid­dle School and Theodore Roosevelt High School before retiring in 2013. He also serves on Kent City Council representing Ward 2. This is his second term. Amrhein moved to Kent in 1976. He gradu­ated from Kent State University in 1980 and fell in love with the city and decided to make it his home, he said. Amrhein and his wife, Claudia, who is the general manager of P ARTA, have two sons, Joshua and Matthew and a daughter-in-law, Raquel, who is married to Matthew. Amrhein said chat although he has big shoes to follow in caking the reins from Sandy, he said he has learned valuable skills from her. "Sandy has taught me to go with my gut in­stinct and she has taught me to listen to oth­ers," Amrhein said. "She has also taught me to think outside the box." Amrhein said he always had a deep interest in history and pop culture and has had the Winter/Spring 2014 "privilege and good fortune to work in the Kent Schools for some 33 years teaching those subjects." Amrhein's avid interest in pop culture helps him to better understand what Kent was like during the 1900s and how it has affected the community as we know it today. He hopes to continue to share his love of the topic by hosting pop culture presentations for the community in the near future. He said his main goal, though, is to continue on the same track char Sandy has taken, adding that education, membership and preservation are his top priorities as board president. "History is important because WE ARE the past: we are the sum of all the events - good, bad, and indifferent - chat have happened to us. This sum product guides our actions in the present," he said. Amrhein said he encourages people to get in­volved with KHS to support the mission of ed­ucation and preservation and to assist with the ongoing renovation and maintenance of KHS museum's new permanent location at 237 E. Main St. The museum has been located in the historic Kem home for nearly three years. Am­rhein wants people to learn to know and love the museum like he does. "The Kent Historical Society is the caretaker of the city's past. I love it," Amrhein said. Sandy Halem resigned in January as president of the Kent Historical Society Board of Trustees. Jack Amrhein has been selected as the new president of the board. See story, below. Friends look back at Halem's contributions Booth JEANBOOTI-1 KHS Board member I have only known Sandy well since I started volun­teering at the Kent His­torical Society a few years ago. Over the years we have spent a lot of time in basements, attics and storage rooms finding and preserving histori­cally significant Kent artifacts. With Sandy everything is fun no matter if it was a dirty project like pulling weeds; a tedious one like folding newsletters or a scary one like climbing down rickety basement stairs (at our new mu­seum) to a damp dungeon (at our old museum on Water Street.) A growing vibrant museum is Sandy's legacy to Kent Historical Society. Al­though Sandy has resigned from the board we expect that she will continue to share her en­thusiasm, sense of humor and joy in life with all of us. See Friends, page 4 3 Halem from page 3 ROGER DI PAOLO Historian, author, editor "(Sandy's) like a force of nature ... a whirlwind of energy and ideas, but al­ways with a focus. She's a great motivator. People enjoy working with her because she brings a sense of fun to whatever needs to be done. She decided it was time that I had writ- Di Paolo ten a book and she did so much to make it happen. "Rooted in Kent" would not exist without Sandy and Henry. We started talking about "doing a book" in June, she promised me that if I did what she told me to do, it would be ready by the holidays. I did, and we published it in early December 2009. We sold 500 copies by Christmas." BECKY DUNLAP KHS board member For countless years I have accompanied Longcoy's third-graders on their walking tours of the city of Kent. One of the students' fa­vorite stops was the Kent Historical Society Museum. Sandy (or Mrs. Halem to the stu­dents) would captivate and amaze her 9-year­old audiences (and the parent chaperones) with stories of Franklin Mills, early pioneers, etc., and show students some of the many interest­ing artifacts housed in the museum (including Martin L. Davey's desk from his time as gover­nor, antique wedding dresses, an early letter with a Franklin Mills postmark, Haymaker family tree quilt, etc.) She made Kent's history come alive year after year with the kind of enthusiasm a gifted teacher wishes to instill in her students. Sandy's eyes would shine and glow as she shared the gift of the Kent Historical Society Museum. Ending the tours, she would sit at the player piano, pop in a roll of music, and her feet would pedal to power the music that would have students swaying to the beat as we exited the museum. Thank you Sandy, on behalf of all the chil­dren you have helped educate on the rich and varied history of Kent, Ohio! AUDREY C. KESSLER KHS board secretary I remember the time after I first came on the KHS board and Sandy asked me to be the per­son to do the newsletter. We met about starting up the publication. I was impressed with Sandy's vast knowledge of Kent history. She knew the information in such depth and detail. She had ideas for the newsletter but was open to my suggestions as well, including content and the name of the newsletter. Her enthusi- 4 asm for the project also increased my excite­ment about the work ahead. I felt honored to be working with her and being able to tap her expertise and wisdom about Kent history and how that history could be expressed through the newsletter. SCOTT FLYNN KHS board vice president Everyone knows that Sandy was a tireless and passionate leader of KHS, but what I'll miss most is the sense of humor Sandy brought to KHS. She and Henry are a hilarious couple. You never know what will come out of Sandy's mouth next, which is Flynn part of the reason the KHS board is going to miss her so much. Sandy joined the board in '74, and left in '84. She rejoined the board in '94 and became president in '04, only to leave now in '14. I'm looking forward to her return in 2024. TOM HATCH KHS Director The entire Kent community has been fortu­nate for Sandy Halem's leadership of the Kent Historical Society and Museum over the past 10 years. Sandy's vision and articulate advocacy has brought us acclaim and growth as she ably helped us achieve our goal of collecting and telling the important story of Kent's history and keeping it accessible for future generations. KASHA LEGEZA-BURTON KHS board member I always assumed histori­cal societies were stuffy. And history? Never much cared for the subject during my school days. Then I met local-history dynamo Sandy Halem - and everything changed! In 2009 Sandy recruited my husband, Jona Burton, and me to volunteer as de- Legeza-Burton signer and editor, respectively, for our mutual friend Roger Di Paolo's book, "Rooted in Kent: 101 Tales from the Tree City." We (along with many others) worked great together as a team to get a fantastic book published on a very tight deadline. And I was hooked on local history - and the Kent His­torical Society! Not long thereafter, Sandy encouraged me to join the KHS Board of Trustees - yet another volunteer job I simply couldn't resist because of her never.:.ending examples of energy, enthusi­asm and a heartfelt commitment to the preser-vation and promotion of Kent history. Sandy's youthful spirit permeates every as­pect of KHS - and it's the reason I constantly find myself encouraging younger friends to join our local history family with the catchphrase, "We're not your grandmother's historical soci­ety!" MATT METCALF KHS board treasurer Sandy's knowledge of the Kent community, its people and history will be impossible to re­place. The size and the incredible state of our mu­seum is a direct result of her years of hard work and dedication to the Kent Historical Society. And now that she is no longer volunteering on our projects, she better learn to keep her check­book ready. JIM MYERS KHS board member Sandy, more than any­one in the history of our organization, has PUSHED us to do more and do better as a group, encouraging others and relying on the skrns of others to make it happen. We should all be grateful for her being interested in the history of her adopted Myers home town. Since I as one of the founders of the KHS, have seen her ac­complishments make others, who like myself have helped along the way, seem "pale by com­parison" to what Sandy has done for us. The "latch of Hatch," that is the hiring of Tom Hatch, has taken us to a new higher level! CAROL SfROBLE KHS board member I first met Sandy about seven years ago when I stopped in the historical society when it was on Water Street. There had been an article in the paper about the society looking for new board members. So when I stopped in to inquire about the open- Stroble ing and to check out the place (I had never been there before), I met Sandy for the first time. I was so impressed and inspired by her en­thusiasm for the society, her love of the history of Kent and her passion for preserving it, I just knew I wanted to be a part of this group! I know we will all miss her constant presence there, but she can be reassured that she has been an inspiration to many others who will carry on her work. Winter/Spring 2014 From the pages of history Fire destroyed Longcoy grocery 102 years ago Store operated next day, was rebuilt after Feb. 1912 disaster The following is reprinted from a story in the Ju61 30, 1952, edition of The Record-Courier as the store shuttered its doors cifter 87 years of operation in Kent. In 1865 The Civil War had just ended when a new grocery store and meat business was started in Kent. Today, after 87 years' continuous service to the community under the same name, the store has gone out of business. The Longcoy grocery store is no more. The store that has carried the name "Longcoy" for 87 years, serving many of the old-time Kentites, has sold its stock and fixtures. *** THE STORE was started in 1865 by David Longcoy with his twin sons, Frank and Francis as partners. It continued that way until 1876 when Frank pulled out and went to Iowa. Soon afterward, the market was moved from its original location at the corner of Main and River Sts. to 124 S. Water St. Frank returned to Kent in 1889 and, with his brother, handled the store until 1902. Then, Harry C. Longcoy, son of Frank, bought the store along with WA. Sparror. It was during the tenure of these owners that disaster struck. Early Sunday morning on Lincoln's birthday in 1912 fire broke out and destroyed the store. H.C. Longcoy, aided by his employees, worked all day obtaining a new stock and business was resumed as usual Monday morning in an adjoining room. In 1917 Harry Longcoy bought out Sparror's interest and became sole owner. He continued in possession until 1946 when he sold to Harry De Voe, who operated the store for a year and a half under the Longcoy name. *** ON DECEMBER 1, 1947, David B. Longcoy, cousin of Harry Longcoy, bought the store and carried on in the family tradition until July 19. That date was the last business Tour, from page 1 the Masonic Temple, the Clapp-Woodward House (KHS Museum), the Franklin Hotel, the May Prentice House (new home of the Wick Poetry Center), the former Lilac Gardens of Daisy Wolcott, and several other gardens and historic homes where prominent figures from Kent's early days lived. One of the featured houses is the home and Winter/Spring 2014 A fire in 1912 destroyed the Longcoy grocery store at 124 S. Water St. It was rebuilt and continued operating until 1952. day for the Longcoy grocery. H. C. Longcoy expressed a desire and a hope that the store could have continued for 100 years. But in this modern day of constant change and movement, tradition has been overcome by practicality. Dave, whose health was the primary reason for the selling, said, "It was unfortunate that it fell to me to end the st

    The Kent Historian, Newsletter of the Kent Historical Society, Volume 61, Spring 2008

    No full text
    THE KENT HISTORIAN Newsletter of the Kent Historical Society Spring 2008 Number61 HISTORY FEATURE Spring Floods in Kent Cause Extensive Damage to the Area It may not have been the first flood in recorded history to inundate Kent over the years, but it certainly was the worst. The spring 1913 flood did exten­sive damage throughout the state, es­pecially in the Dayton area, though the Kent area was not spared its ravages, leaving extensive damage in its wake. The reservoir at the Kent water- Commerce and school children to­gether found the money to repair the dam. This was regarded as a civic en­terprise. The restored dam remained intact until the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency demanded that it be breached during the late 1990s and early 2000s. Kent's history of floods began in the early 1800s, not long after its first Cuyahoga River dam (albeit a crude one) was built in 1806, roughly where the Main Street bridge is today. The dam was about seven feet high and was made of stones, logs and dirt packed into it to stop the wa­ter flow. A mill race was constructed on the west side of the river, and several busi­nesses used the water. These included a small grist mill started by the Haymaker fami­ly. A short time later, a saw mill was erected, as was a forge with a trip hammer for the manufacture of scythes, The statewide extent of death and destruction in the 1913 flood exceeds all other weather events in Ohio history, justifying the title of Ohio's greatest weather disaster. Rainfall over the state totaled 6-11 inches. The death toll statewide was 467. In Kent (above) , the Cuyahoga River overflowed its banks. axes and pitch forks. All used works was breached, and the water did water from the dam. considerable damage to the B&O rail­road tracks. Uptown, people anxious­ly watched the dam at Main Street as the water rose higher and higher. The water was now almost to the floor of the Stow Street bridge. Large quanti­ties of stone were placed by the bridge's footers, and the bridge held. Back at the dam, the water finally washed through the lock gates. The rushing water then started moving the great blocks of stone from the ends of the dam. The stone was carried down the river, and the pool beside the dam .___; -vas reduced to just the river itself. The dam was not repaired until 1925 when the Lamson-Sessions Com­pany, women's clubs, the Chamber of In March 1832, it rained most of the month, and on March 28, the dam gave way. Water rushed downstream and washed away most of the busi­nesses that were along the river. The grist mill, the saw mill, the woolen mill and the forge all were gone. This dam was replaced with a sturdy stone dam when the P&O canal was built from 1836 to 1840. This new dam, which is historically unique in many ways, is the same one that is in place today. It has been reported that the Kent dam is the oldest masonry dam in Ohio, the 19th oldest masonry dam in the United States, the second oldest arched dam in the United States and the only masonry dam in the country that is attached to a canal lock. Al­though both the dam and the canal lock were severely damaged in the 1913 flood, the dam was rebuilt in 1925 to its current height and is in rel­atively good condition today. Under­water remnants of the canal lock also remain. Numerous periods of high water came along in the next few years, but the next flood of any importance oc­curred during the second week of March in 1868. This flood damaged the canal banks, breaching them in several places. The canal at this time was all but abandoned, but the banks were repaired by the Akron Hydrau­lic Company, which had purchased the water rights. This was not accept­ed by the villagers because they now complained that the canal was filled with weeds, had stagnant water and smelled bad. This flood also washed away several foot bridges. During May and June of 1904, the water in the river rose steadily until the top course of blocks on the dam gave way. The rushing water uprooted many trees and undermined Sec FLOOD, p. 6. Inside ... Tree City Ball . . ... . ... . ... .. .... . . 2 Happy Birthday, Kent . . . ... . . .... . .. 2 KSU Museum Fashion Exhibits . .... .. . 3 From the Kent Tribune . ...... .. ...... 3 KHS Volunteer Spotlight . . ... ..... . . 3 Tales from Oral History . . .. . ... ..... 4 Kent History Briefs .. . . . . ... . ... ... . 4 1924 Kent Cook Book . . ...... . ..... .. 5 New Book on Martin Davey . . . . . . . . . . 5 New KHS Volunteers . .... . ...... . .. 6 Third Annual KHS Tree City Ball Celebrates 'Preserving Community' T he Kent Historical Society's Third Annual Tree City Ball will cele­brate "Preserving Community" while it honors the recipients of its Leader­ship and Legacy awards. The gala event-which includes a buffet dinner, an open bar, and dancing to the music of the gifted singer Helen Welch and her band-is set for 6 p.m. on April 26 at the ' American Legion Hall, 1945 Moga­dore Road in Kent. Recipients of the Leadership Award are Nancy and Bruce Hans­ford; the Legacy .t Award will be • presented to the Main Street Kent or­ganization. The Hansfords are being honored for their lifetime of service to the Kent community, while Main Street Kent is being recognized for its dedication to preserving and revital­izing downtown Kent. Proceeds from the Tree City Ball support the many programs of the Kent Historical Society, including on­going preservation and care of the Erie Depot; the acquisition, preserva­tion and display of Kent artifacts and photographs; the Oral History Proj­ect, which records spoken accounts of Kent history; and the Community Education Program, which takes Kent history to local schools, organizations and businesses. Tickets for the gala are 45perpersonor45 per person or 90 per couple. Sponsorship tickets are available at three levels. The 1,000PreservationSponsorin­cludesacompanylogoordonornameonallprintedmaterialsandadvertising,pluseighteventtickets;the1,000 Preservation Sponsor in­cludes a company logo or donor name on all printed materials and advertis- · ing, plus eight event tickets; the 500 Legacy Sponsor in­cludes a listing in the program and four event tickets; the 250 Leadership Sponsor in­cludes a listing in the program and two event tickets. Tickets for the community event would make a thoughtful Mother's Day gift! Come out, support the Kent His­torical Society, and enjoy a fun evening. The Historical Society accepts Visa, Master Card and checks. Make checks payable to the Kent Historical Society, and mail them to P.O. box 663, Kent, Ohio 44240. For additional information, call the Historical Society office at 330 I 678-2712, board president Sandy Halem at 330 / 673-8632, or event chairperson Jack Amrhein at 330/ 678-9749. Happy 141s~ Birthday, City of Kent! Bake a big cake, and light the candles-all 141 of them-for that 2 day in 1867 when Franklin Mills Vil­lage was offi­cially incor­porated and renamed Kent on May 6, 1864. It was on that date that the Ohio legis­lature ap-proved the name change, though the Post Office Department adopted the new name on August 17, 1864. The community was so grateful to Marvin Kent for his efforts to bring shops and railroad jobs to the village that it pushed for naming the newly incorporated town to Kent in honor of Marvin Kent. But Marvin Kent thought other­wise. His preference for the town's new name was Rockton. It is not known why Marvin Kent favored that name. Despite his protestations, the name was changed to Kent. Kent Historical Society THE KENT HisroRIAN is a quarterly publication of the Kent Historical Society, a nonprofit organization that strives to be the primary Kent history resource and reference center, leading the community in the collection, preservation and inter­pretation of Kent's heritage through ex­hibitions, educational programs and ac­tivities. The society brings educational programs to schools, businesses and civic organizations and collaborates with the Main Street Kent and other historic preservation projects in the community. Board of Trustees Sandra Halem, President Dawn Carpenter, Vice President Jack Amrhein, Treasurer John Benedik Howard Boyle Scott Flynn Larry Hugenberg Audrey Cielinski Kessler Pat Morton Jim Myers Carol Stroble John Wunderle Staff Mary Ann Green, Administrator Newsletter Staff Audrey Cielinski Kessler, Editor Museum Hours Thursday: 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Friday: 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday: 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Groups and special tours by appointment Direct inquiries to Kent Historical Society P.O. Box 663 Kent, OH 44240 330/678-2712 [email protected] www.kentohiohistory.org Spring 2008 'Timeless Fashion' from Designers, Artists on Display at KSU Museum . ~ xperience .. . timeless fashion at the Kent State University Museum now - .1....1 through early 2009. Several galleries have been devoted to many of the world's great fashion designers and artists, with changing exhibitions spanning the 18th century to the present. Included are European and American gowns, celebrity gowns, traditional dress and more. The following exhibits ar on display: • Inner Secrets : Japan ese M en's Haori. Blum Gallery, extended until further notice • Native Americans through the Prism of Culture: Edward S. Curtis & the Legacy of Collectors. Mull and Palmer Galleries, through June 15, 2008 • Mood Indigo. Broadbent Gallery, through August 31, 2008 • Belle Epoque Brides. Higbee Gallery, through January_4, 2009 • Galanos. Stager Gallery, through January 4, 2009 Sec FAS HION, p. 6. From the Pages of the Kent Tribune, May 24, 1928: 'An Appeal to Public Spirited Citizens of Kent' "For the last month, 20 solicitors have worked constantly and steadily to raise a fund of 8,000 with which to purchase land now owned b y the Gougler Machine Co., hav­ing a frontage of 402 feet located on North River street [now known as North Mantua Street] to be deeded to the L.N. Gross Co., upon which said Gross Co. proposes to '-""~rect a beautiful fac­tory building, and to beautify this present unsightly lot from the street to the river, with lawn, shrubbery and trees .... Sub­scriptions will be ap­preciated and are solicited from 1.00upfromanyonecar­ingtogive."In1902,SilberandGross,washdressmanufacturersofCleveland,openedasmallArchitecturaldrawingoftheL.N.GrossCompanybuilding,1928.branchfactoryinKent.Thebranchoperatedforafewyearsandwasdiscontinued;later,SilberandGrosswassucceededbytheL.N.GrossCompanyandagainKentwasselectedforabranch,thistimelocatedintheoldAlpacaMillonSouthRiverStreet.In1928,officialsoftheconcerndecidedthatamoremodernplantwasneces­sary.ThroughtheeffortsoftheChamberofCommerce,1.00 up from anyone car­ing to give." In 1902, Silber and Gross, wash dress manufacturers of Cleveland, opened a small Architectural drawing of the L.N . Gross Company building , 1928. branch factory in Kent. The branch operated for a few years and was discontinued; later, Silber and Gross was succeeded by the L.N. Gross Company and again Kent was selected for a branch, this time located in the old Alpaca Mill on South River Street. In 1928, officials of the concern decided that a more modern plant was neces­sary. Through the efforts of the Chamber of Commerce, 8,300 was subscribed lo­cally to purchase a lot on North River Street where the company could erect the kind of building it needed. The building was completed in October 1928. A large amount of new equipment was installed and capacity operation was started within a short time. The branch employed approximately 150 persons, the large majority ,f whom were girls and women (source: The History of Kent, by Karl Grismer.) In .._/l 994, Dale Adams bought the building that had been vacant for many years and began its restoration. It i s now home to Dale Adams Enterprises, 315 Gougler Street (formerly North River Street). Spring 2008 KHS Volunteers in the Spotlight T he volunteers in the spotlight for the spring are Guenveur Burnell and Kathryn Hahn Burgess. Here is what each one had to say about do­nating their time at the Kent Histori­cal Society. Gu enveur: "I am a long-time Kent resi­dent and Kent State graduate. I have seen many changes in the city. I really enjoy learning more about its past and finding stories of the Kent people from long ago." (Guenveur is helping to scan the Historical Soci­ety's scrapbooks.) Kathryn: "I was born in Kent, at home, and have lived in the area for 84 1 / 2 years now. It was my home­town and having our family business here [Hahn's Bakery] for over 50 years, you become acquainted with ev­eryone. By volunteer­ing at the Kent His­torical So­ciety, I can help pre­serve the memories of the town I grew up in and relive them alongside the won­derful members who work so hard to keep Kent's history alive." The Kent Historical Society offers a variety of activities for volunteers, in­cluding making and sorting artifact files, identifying and organizing pho­tos, conducting research on a topic or individual, leading tours of the mu­seum, and helping with administrative tasks such as filing and making copies, and preparing new-member packets . To volunteer, contact the Historical So­ciety office at [email protected] or 330 / 678-2712. 3 Recollections: Tales from Oral Histories The following are excerpts from the oral history of Mabelle Apley (shown here as a young child) recorded December 6, 1990, pre­pared for the Kent Historical Society by Donna L. Jeffers and Bri­gette Bolger. Apley was born in Kent in March of 1915. She is a member of the Longcoy family who owned and developed a consid­erable amount of property on Kent's west side. DL/88: And when my father, Harry C. Long- Could you coy, went into business with the twins, tell us a little why they started a grocery store. The bit about the building was a wooden building origi- Longcoys and nally, and they decided that they their impact ought to make a cement building. It'd on the city of be safer .. .. in February of 1912, a fire Kent? broke out, and they lost a great deal. MA: ... the original David Longcoy came from New York state and settled in what was Franklin Mills at that time. He had some experience in a [linseed] oil mill, so he began an oil mill and then later went into the brick making business, which was on Franklin Avenue. And there are build-ings in Kent which have those bricks. Sue Nelson Designs' has uncovered some of those bricks ... in her store. He married Abbey Woodard, and for years we had a Woodard-Longcoy re­union. And as a child ... they told the story of Abbey's mother taking one of her babies and riding back to Geneva, New York, to see her family because she was so homesick, and she did this several times on horseback. Then Da­vid and she had a house at Twin Lakes, and eventually they changed property with the Haymakers ... which was known as Longcoy Acres eventually. And he built a large home there ... so they lived out here on the farm for a long time and they said that David Longcoy was one of the most generous people. That even with his large family, they never sat down to a meal without an outsider, and that he was a very kind man . . .. But my grandfather had married Ada Whetmore ... and they went into the meat business and [butchered] at night, late at night, 'cause there was no refrigeration, and went out the next day to sell the meat ... later the business moved across the river .... Correction ... They were able to save their cows, and some meat blocks, and some impor­tant things ... but the rest was gone. And they called into Akron ... and a company came and piled everything they could out of the store, and they took it down to another building, south of them, and put it in there ... they were able to open the store on the next Monday. DL/88: So they didn't lose a lot of money ... ? MA: ... my father had one of the first trucks in Kent, an International truck. They had cars, but they didn't have trucks. And so, after they got that truck, they could begin to make deliv­eries ... again, in the meat business, they would work and cut that up and go into the retail business . ... They would have a route, and they'd pull up in front of a house and a woman would come out, select her meat, for what she wanted, and they'd go on. And of course, the person at the end of the route didn't have the best selec­tion [laughs] unless she had ordered ahead. And my father started the Kent Packing Company, which is now [1990] part of the waterworks over here on Middlebury Road. The great hopes were for my brother to go into the business, but World War II came along, and he didn't come home. And so, in a couple years my dad decided to sell the store, and he sold to See APLEY, p. 5. The caption for the photo on page 1 of the winter edition, gave an incorrect date of 1826. The correct date is 1876. We apologize for the error. 4 Kent History Briefs First Mayor of Kent-by Two Votes John Thompson, a native of Scotland who emigrated to the United States in 1832 and settled in Streetsboro, had the distinction of being the first mayor of Kent. He was elected Tuesday, July 30, 1867, at the first election held after the Kent's incorporation as a village. He defeated Luther Parmalee 145 to 143. Multi-Arched Bridge The multi-arched downtown bridge was started in 1876 and completed in Sep­tember of 1877. The bridge it replaced was a covered bridge made of wood and constructed in 1837. This well­known, arched landmark is 275 feet long by 60 feet wide and consumed 123,750 cubic feet of stone. Underground Railroad Throughout the 19th century, African­American families lived and worked in Kent. Among them was George Jen­nings , a free black man who lived in the town for more than 40 years. He worked at the Cuyahoga House and Inn at the corner of Cuyahoga and Mantua streets. Run by Jonathan and Eliza James, the Cuyahoga House was one of the Underground Railroad "stations" operating in town. Even though it was against the law to do so, many citizens sheltered runaways who went through Kent, heading north. Town Slogan In 1910, a community contest was held to create a slogan to represent the bus­tling town of Kent. The winner? " Kent, Home of Hump and Hustle." The Original Tree City John Davey, founder of the Davey Tree Expert Company, published a book in 1901 titled The Tree Doctor, which pro­vided the foundation for a great busi­ness success story. From this book grew the Davey Tree Expert Company. John Davey became know as the father of tree surgery. Martin L. Davey would go on to become Governor of the State of Ohio in 1932. An Ohio Tree City Long before the National Arbor Day Foundation initiated the Tree City USA program , the city of Kent was pro­claimed the original Tree City of Ohio, on February 19, 1949. The Davey Tree Expert Company commemorated the occasion in its newsletter, The Davey Tree Expert. Spring 2008 Museum Gift Shop Featured Item: l924KentCookBookforMother's Day '" __,J- n 1924, when the ladies of Kent's Congregational Church published their cook- ~ .1. book, modem conveniences such as washing machines, refrigerators and gas stoves gave women more leisure time. The 17 women in the Circle C Ladies' Union who compiled and edited more than 300 of their favorite recipes for the book were happy to share a few of their cooking secrets. This nostalgic reprint is a perfect gift for your favorite lady. A small selection of vintage-style aprons also are available. To purchase the book or an apron, visit the Kent Historical Society Gift Shop during regular museum hours. Here is a recipe for Sunshine Cake from Miss Emma Patton. Sunshine Cake 7 whites small, fresh eggs 1 cup granulated sugar 1 / 3 teaspoon cream of tartar 5 egg yolks 2 / 3 cup flour Pinch of salt Beat whites, add cream of tartar and beat very, very stiff. Stir in sugar lightly, then 5 yolks, well beaten. Then add flour. Put in tube pan and into oven at once. APLEY Continued from p. 4 the wrong person ... were not mak­ing a go out of it. So he took it back, 'nd for a few years, David Longcoy _____.Al ran the store, and then finally he sold off the equipment. ... When dad retired, he built this house next door for he and mother . . . this was out in not uncommon for tramps to walk along there .... Generally people we called tramps were not really looking for work. They were just footloose, and would go to houses and ask for food, and the housewives generally did not want to turn anybody away .... they usually got some food. I can remember one time somebody stopping at our house when we lived on Park Avenue. Mother gave him a sand­wich, and at the end of the driveway he threw it away. It didn't suit him. But some­times they were really hungry, and they would sit on the steps and eat, and tell her how much they appre­ciated it. DUBB: You weren't afraid? I mean, today you'd be afraid if someone did Employees and interior of the Longcoy grocery store , 124 S. that to you. Water Street in 1917. the country. So when I came as a Girl Scout, we used to hike out there and bring our picnic lunches. And the old house down at the end of Middlebury Road, the David Longcoy house ... and the wallpaper was sagging off the ceiling and ... it was really spooky. t\nd there was a straw stack outside -..__....ihat was still standing, and one time we were playing around in that and we saw a man' s clothes and oh, were we scared! But in those days it was Spring 2008 MA: I wasn' t because I was young. And they, my parents, never made me afraid. But when I think about it, mother made me stay in the house when they were there. And one Sunday morning, I was the only one that had gotten up, and one came to the door, and I said, "Well, I'm the only one up." And after that, mother said, "You don't say those things." That was the time I began to realize you had to be a little bit more careful. New Book Tells Story of Kent's 'Most Famous Son' Politician Extraordinaire: The Tem­pestuous Life and Times of Martin L. Davey by history professor Frank Vaz­zana is a carefully researched and en­gagingly written political biography that marks the first full treatment of Ohio native and politician Martin L. Davey. An important figure on the lo­cal, state and national political scene in the early decades of the 20th centu­ry, Davey served as mayor of Kent, Ohio, was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives and completed two terms as Ohio governor. As Vazzana shows, Davey, a maverick Democrat, did things his way no matte

    The Kent Historian, Kent Historical Society Newsletter, Number 74, Winter 2011-12

    No full text
    THE KENT HISTORIAN The Newsletter of the Kent Historical Society Winter 2011-12 Number74 'All About Kent' features rediscovered author Rogue vagabond, author who spent time in Kent topic of Nov. 1 event By Paul Bauer Author and Kent book dealer A short, slightly stooped middle-aged man stubbed out a cigarette and walked through the door of my bookshop in Kent, Ohio. In the six years I'd known Mort Krahling this scene had repeated itself hundreds of times. Mort (real name Ron, Mort being a nickname acquired in tribute to comic Mort Sahl) was such a fre­quent visitor that I often handed him the keys to the shop when I was away. Mort had sur­vived the turbulent 1960s and his own personal aftermath in the 1970s to become one of the fine poets associated with Shelley's Book Bar at the corner of Franklin and Summit. He was also a first-rate bread baker and tended bar at the Town Tavern. And he was an inveterate note-taker, stopping every few feet in his wan­derings around town to jot down whatever struck him as interesting. Mort could be cur­mudgeonly and irascible - I regarded that as part of his charm - but was at his core a book­ish and gentle soul. On this particular summer afternoon in 1992, Mort, as usual, mentioned whatever book he had just finished. His typical review was, "It had its moments." Mort was an omniv­orous reader but consumed paperback myster­ies like salted peanuts. He also asked about one book in particular. Mort requested a copy of 1he Bruiser by Jim Tully, who was regarded by many as the father of hard-boiled fiction. I was slightly pained to say that I'd never heard of the book since I was a great fan of the genre. My humiliation was complete when Mort added that Tully had lived in Kent for six years. When Mort said Tully was a hard-boiled writer, I'd assumed he wrote mysteries. Yet Tully didn't appear in any of the usual mystery references. He did, I discovered, appear in my favorite reference book, William Coyle's Ohio Authors and 1heir Books. The entry for "Tully, Jim" was written by Paul Chapman, an English professor at Mount Union College in Alliance. Tully's biography, according to Chapman, was fascinating. Born in 1886 (Chapman gave an incorrect date) in St. Marys, Ohio, Tully had little formal education beyond a stint in an orphanage. Jim Tully, above, is the topic of KHS' "All About Kent'' program that will be held Tuesday, Nov. 1, at Christ Episcopal Church, 118 S. Mantua St. in Kent. Tully lived in Kent before making his way to Hollywood, where, for a time, he worked for Charlie Chaplin, seen at right with Tully. While still a child, he hopped a train and spent the next years crisscrossing the country. As Chapman gently put it, he "had wide, first­hand experience with various unattractive as­pects of American life ... " Tully traveled with drifters, slept in hobo jungles, worked as a cir­cus roustabout, a tree surgeon, professional boxer and newspaper reporter. Tully's life was the stuff of pulp nonfiction. And, we later learned, he wooed and lost Nellie Dingley, Kent's first librarian. During his road years he haunted public libraries and be­tween trains was kept company by Conrad, Twain, Dostoyevsky, and others. He found his way to Hollywood, where he committed him­self to writing, saw his first book published and, for a time, worked for Charlie Chaplin. That book, Emmett Lawler, like most of those that followed, was autobiographical in nature and drew on Tully's road years. How, I wondered, could I have never heard of this guy? Surely, my well-read friend Mark Dawidziak, then at the Akron Beacon Journal, would be able to tell me more about Tully. When Mark dropped by the shop, I mentioned Tully. Nothing. I pulled Coyle off the shelf, opened it to Tully's entry and jabbed my finger on the page. Mark was intrigued. He later found a copy of Shanry Irish at The Bookseller in Akron and, after reading a few pages of Tully's autobiographical novel of his childhood in western Ohio, he too was hooked. We started rounding up Tully's books. This was not as straightforward as it seemed. There was no bibliography and no Internet. We com­piled a working list of his books from Tully's dust-jacket flaps and began collecting magazine articles by or about Tully, as well as books about Hollywood, boxing, vagabondage and histories of St. Marys and Kent. And I started pulling newspaper microfilm at the Kent State University Library, scanning reel after reel, year after year, looking for Tully's name to pop up in See Tully, page A4 2 Pufferbelly Restaurant marks 30 years this Dec. 16 By Sandy Halem KHS President Everyone has always credited Sam Apicello with the idea of beginning the Kem Historical Society in 1971. Sam gathered the other founding trustees, Bill Birkner, John Carson, Titus Jackman, Leland Keller, Jim Myers, Reed Strimple and Loris Troyer, to help create the or­ganization that would preserve Kent's history. While Sam served as its first president, the task of creating a museum and all of the exhibits fell to Bill Birkner, who would devote thousands of hours of his time. Our first Board of Trustees reflected a variety of skills that would serve as the template for future board members. This was going to be a "working" board that had to craft a mission worthy of our community. Though the board drew up a list of impor­tant buildings worthy of preservation around Kent, the fate of the Erie Depot became the focus of all its energy. The Depot exists because of that mixture of public/private partnerships which seems such a familiar phrase today. With the opening of the Pufferbelly restau­rant on Dec. 16, 1981, the Kem Historical So­ciety had an anchor. By 1984 both the Kem Historical Society and the Kent Chamber of Commerce would occupy the second floor. The Pufferbelly Restaurant, now under the owner­ship of long-time manager Kevin Long, contin­ues to be a destination point. www.pufferbellyltd.com/ The second floor is now rented to Jason Noble who specializes in studio photography. His web site is / /www.nobleimages.net/ This past year the society acquired a new home at 237 E. Main St. I urge you to spend an hour with us before the end of the year and perhaps shop for something special for your holiday gifts. The warmth of our home, its beautiful rooms, displays and artifacts delight everyone who has visited. I smile every day I come to volunteer. Remember our hours are 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, or by special appoint­ment for research or tours. Tell us your memories of Kent landmark On Aug. 28, 1972, a Kem landmark burned to the ground. But many people have pleasant memories of shopping at Kent's commercial block, located at Main and Water streets, erected in 1836-37 by Zenas Kem. Roger Di Paolo, editor of the Record­Courier, is writing an article to mark the 40th anniversary of the event next year and would like to hear some of your memories. Where did you shop? Do you have photo­graphs of the fire? Help us paint a picture of that block's most recent history and its tragic end. Please email your written memories or pho­tographs to [email protected]. You may also mail them or bring them in person during our regular hours. Winter 2011 John, Jean Jacobs honored with first Birkner award This September, the Board of Trustees voted to create the "William A. Birkner Distin­guished Service Award." No two people could fill this extraordinary call to service more than Jean and John Jacobs, named our first recipients. Jean and John Ja­cobs first volunteered on Jan. 24, 2008. Hun­dreds of hours later, the two of them have shown the same love, devotion and respect to our society and museum that they show for one another. John and Jean are a team. They have a long and distinguished history within our com­munity which unites two outstanding families: the Longcoys and the Jacobs. They don't just volunteer to do what they want - they volun­teer to do what needs to be done. Please join with our board of trustees, staff and friends, including special guest Carol Birkner, as we honor our dear friends the Ja­cobs at the special award ceremony and recep­tion following the ''All About Kent" program on Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2011, at Christ Episcopal Church in Kent. The program begins at 7 pm and features guest speakers Paul Bauer and Mark Dawidziak. John Jacobs was born in Kent and graduated from Kent State High School in 1945. He graduated from the Philadelphia College of Os­teopathy and was a physician in Kent for 39 years. He retired from family practice in 1993. After becoming interested in learning about Jean's genealogy, their involvement at KHS "just seemed kind of natural," Dr. Jacobs said. "There are good people and interesting things to do and we are always learning," Dr. Jacobs said. Jean (Longcoy) Jacobs was born in Kent. Joshua Woodard, Jean's maternal grandfather, came to Kent in 1811. Her paternal grandfa- Oral History ... Bill Birkner Nov. 14, 1990 (transcribed and edited) Prepared for the Kent Historical Society Oral History Project by Dave Ressler and John Capretta, students of Dr. William Wilen's Sec­ondary Social Studies Methods Class in the Col­lege of Education. Interviewer: When the trains were running through here (Kent) quite frequently, (what were some of the) problems of the traffic be­fore some of the bridges were built? Birkner: Sometimes it was almost impossible to get through town, because - this was espe­cially during World War II. Of course, I can remember that quite vividly. There were trains Winter 2011 John and Jean Jacobs, above, are the first recipients of the 'William A. Birkner Distin­guished Service Award." The Jacobs will be honored at a ceremony and reception fol­lowing the Nov. 1 "All About Kent" program at Christ Episcopal Church. ther, David Longcoy, settled in Kent in 1834. Jean attended Kent State High School, where she studied business. She worked at the family­owned Longcoy Grocery, which began serving the community in the mid- l 800s. The Jacobs married in 1950 and have two children, Steve and Jan. "I love the city of Kent," Jean said. "I love learning about it and helping others discover Kent's history." Birkner was a founding member, past KHS president (1981-1995) and director ofKHS' Rowe Museum. Born in Kent, he served in the Navy during W.W.11 and graduated from Kent State University upon his return. He worked for several companies, including Davey Tree, on this track all the time, and you had three places where you could cross - one was Crain Av­enue and one was Main Street and one was Stow Street. And you might have trains ... actually, one train would come down the track this way, Birkner and just about the time that he was off of the three crossings, one would come from the other direction. And sometimes you would sit there - I know I have sat there for more than an hour, waiting and retired in 1989 from Field Local Schools, where he taught industrial arts for 18 years. Birkner worked at building a historical soci­ety, collecting its earliest artifacts and helping raise awareness about the importance of pre­serving the history of the Kent community. Loris Troyer, another founding member of KHS, described Birkner's role there in a newsletter article in July 1989: "Bill Birkner was a virtual one-man director of the renovation effort. He spent many hours of on-hands labor, an effort the community recognized in 1982 when he was awarded the Kent Area Chamber of Commerce Public Serv­ice Medal. The Depot's central tower is named in his honor." for a train. And then the other part that really got us was where the roundhouse was. They had all these tracks where they'd pull the cars off to unload them. It was like a terminal. And they'd be switching, and sometimes regu­lar trains weren't going in and out - while the switches were on the tracks, and they were switching stuff around. And sometimes they'd close Crain Avenue for 20 or 30 minutes before you could get across. And this is the reason that they finally built the bridge over the tracks. (Ihe new Fairchild Avenue Bridge over the Cuyahoga River, which will replace the Crain Avenue Bridge, is scheduled to open to traffic this November.) 3 Tully, from page 1 the local papers. Mark and I compared notes on Sept. 24, 1992, and, we grandly announced to our wives that we would write the first-ever biography of Jim Tully. They were encouraging. Publishers, we would discover, were not. Both of our big breaks occurred on the Kent State campus. The first came courtesy of Michael Cole, a KSU librarian. Michael had noticed my heavy use of the microfilm readers and asked what it was I was looking for. He noted Tully's name and promised to do some looking. A few weeks later, Michael surprised me with the news that he had located Tully's personal papers. Over 100 boxes were de­posited at UCLA 's Special Collections Library. In just a few months we'd gone from having lit­tle more than the entry in Ohio Authors to hav­ing more than enough material for a detailed biography. With the help of my wife, Francine, and Mort, who watched the shop, I flew to Los An­geles in July 1993 and met Mark, who was al­ready there on newspaper business. Mark's wife, Sara, also joined us. The boxes of Tully's papers were even better than we'd imagined. There were Tully's manu­scripts, published books and articles, tax re­turns, newspaper clippings, divorce papers and all the other raw material necessary for a biog­raphy. And, best of all, nothing had been touched since it was donated by Tully's widow in the 1950s. I will always look back on those UCLkdays with much happiness. Opening every box was Christmas morning. The trail in St. Marys and Kent had largely gone cold. Francis Kline recalled his father talk­ing about Tully's visits to the family grocery in Kent, but that was it. So we were thrilled to learn that Tully's daughter, Trilby, was living just outside Los Angeles. If we were to be lim­ited to just on<; interview, this was the one to get. Before flying out, we'd heard from Trilby's son, Robin, that his mother had suffered a stroke. With lowered expectations we decided to proceed with the interview and on a sunny California afternoon, Sara and I were greeted at the door by Robin and his wife. It was far worse than we'd imagined. Trilby was confused and speechless. All those memories. Gone. We'd missed her by just a few weeks. Back at UCLA, Mark, Sara and I sat at long, wooden tables in the Special Collections room and made our way through the boxes. Our time in LA was limited and we worked quickly, taking notes (pencil only) on yellow legal pads or setting some papers aside to be photocopied by the library staff. We worked from opening to dose with only a short break for lunch. It was both intense and exhilarating, but there was just too much to look at and too little time. Mark and I returned the following sum­mer and Mark returned a third time to exam­ine the last boxes. One afternoon stands out. We pulled a newspaper out of one of the boxes with a headline that was so shocking, we had to 4 Tully wooed and lost Nellie Dingley, above, Kent's first librarian, who later served as a nurse and died in France during W.W.I. reread it several times. The incident we read about that afternoon at UCLA would provide the perfect ending for our book: shocking, dark and twisted. We returned to Ohio and unpacked stacks of yellow legal pads and photocopies. We had gone from too little information to far more than either of us could remember - and none of it was organized in any useful way. Without logging it all into a database, it was worthless. Three years and 4,000 entries later, the database was complete. We wrote an introduction and began looking for a publisher. A few more years slipped by before we struck an informal agreement with a small press. It wasn't a good fit and we eventually parted com­pany. Thinking that an agent might have better luck we signed a contract with a New York agency. The response was the same everywhere. The acquisitions editors loved the idea, but the marketing people worried about promoting the biography of a subject so unknown. Even with two of us, the writing was daunt­ing. We were aware that this would be not just the first biography ofTully, but possibly also the last. We had to get it right. The book needed to be rich in detail but could not be­come a data dump. We outlined the chapters and divided them between us according to in­terest. Mark, for example, tended to get the chapters on Hollywood, Chaplin and Broad­way, while I worked on Tully's St. Marys and Kent days, including his boxing career. It was also important that the writing be seamless and have one voice so we edited each other's chap­ters. Disagreements were inevitable but rare and, in every instance, minor and quickly re­solved. I had many occasions to congratulate myself on my choice of partner. When our contract with our agent expired, we filed away the first few chapters we'd written and turned to other projects. Tully's life had seemed like a terrific idea for a book, but I was forced to concede that the project was begin­ning to look like a lost cause. Our second big break came at a reception hosted by Kent State University Press. Mark and I had both known Will Underwood, the Press's new director, for a few years and when we bumped into Will, Tully's name came up. Not only was the Press interested in the biogra­phy, but they had a strong desire to reissue a few ofTully's books. This coincided with our real goal: reestablishing Tully as an important American writer. We spent years looking for a publisher only to wind up, literally, across the street from my bookshop. With Will's enthusi­asm and the commitment of a publisher, work resumed. With the biography finally rolling to comple­tion, we began soliciting forewords for the reprints. We were very fortunate to get forewords from filmmaker John Sayles (for Shanty Irish), historian Gerald Early (for Ihe Bruiser), and my old friend Harvey Pekar (for Circus Parade). Harvey's fine piece was one of the last things he wrote. And Mark succeeded in getting a su­perb foreword from Ken Burns for the biogra­phy. The reissues appeared over the last two years and, after 19 years, Jim Tully's biography was published in spring 2011. Nellie Dingley once wondered aloud to Jim, "It will be interesting to know what becomes of you ... if you do not get killed in some saloon or the ring." Now, at last, we know. Books about, penned by Tully available at KHS The book ''Jim Tully: American Writer, Irish Rover, Hollywood Brawler," by Paul J. Bauer and Mark Dawidziak, is on sale at the Kent Historical Society. The biography "compellingly describes the hardscrabble life of an Irish American story­teller, from his immigrant roots, rural up­bringing, and life as a hobo riding the rails to the emergent dream factory of early and Golden Age Hollywood and the fall of his fortunes during the Great Depression," ac­cording to the Kent State University Press website. Also available are Beggars of Life, Cir­cus Parade, Ihe Bruiser, and Shanty Irish, writ­ten by Jim Tully. Books also are available through KSU Press at (330) 672-7913 or at www.kentstateuni­versitypress. com Birthday bash for bridge comes off without a hitch More than 100 people witnessed our celebra­tion of the Stone Arch Bridge dedication. The Kent Historical Society and Kent Parks and Recreation co-sponsored "Bridging Kent's History." A unveiling of the city's Bicentennial Sculpture was followed by a gala celebrating the 134th anniversary of the opening of the Stone Arch Bridge. The sun came out to welcome the crowd that gathered by the Gazebo as artist George Dan­hires spoke about the creation of Kent's own Bicentennial Sculpture. The sculpture, which is a bronze relief, is mounted on a sandstone taken from Plum Creek Park. It is located be­tween the Gazebo and the Pufferbelly Restau­rant on Franklin Avenue. Taking their seats directly on the bridge, spectators enjoyed a performance by the "Ad­vanced Choral Ensemble," or A.C.E.s. The group, from Theodore Roosevelt High School, was directed by Donna Crews. Following a wel­come from Kent Historical Society Director Tom Hatch, architect David Sommers of David Sommers & Associates spoke about the features of the bridge. Although there once were many similar bridges across the country, few remain because they were not large enough to accommodate traffic. Those responsible for the bridge's construction, particularly Marvin Kent, insisted that the bridge be built at 60-feet wide instead of the original proposal of 40 feet. The crowd was treated to a re-enactment of the ceremony that marked the bridge's opening in 1877. Donning costumes for their roles were Jeff St. Clair as then-Mayor Charles Kent; Ron Burbick as Edward Parsons; Jim Myers as Simon Wolcott; John Jacobs as Edward Day; David Hassler as T.B. Townsend; and Bruce Dzeda as Marvin Kent. The original script was written by Sandy Halem. The crowd smiled as an authentic 1891 Kramer freight wagon - owned by the Bour­geois family of Stow and Hudson - was pulled across the bridge by two magnificent Belgian horses named Jim and Cody, both about 9 years old. In the wagon were Harold and Harry Ruggles, who are the grandsons of Oscar Champney, the first person to drive a wagon over the bridge in 1877. Helping Jack Shuman with the horses were Roger Bourgeois, Ron and Kathy Sadler, Pat Shuman and Jessie Hodge, daughter of Pat and Jack Shuman. The festivities continued at the Home Sav­ings Plaza, where cake prepared by Judy Lan­franchi was served. Special thanks to Marilyn Sessions and Home Savings for their assistance in organizing this event. Tours in Heritage Park also were led by Cathy Ricks of Kent Parks and Recreation Winter 2011 Clockwise from top: The team of Belgian
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