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Snow is back!

December 4, 2012

stone mill building

The Mill at Anselma, a National Historic Landmark

Chester County, Pennsylvania

Twinkle division: “I Love Lucy [the Elephant] Memory Contest”

November 27, 2012

It’s time for candy canes and twinkle lights.

And if you’re feeling a bit chilly, the recollection below of a summer childhood will warm your heart and soul.  Fireflies are the twinkle lights of the summertime.  (If you missed the other stories in the Lucy [the Elephant] Memory Contest, you can start catching up here.)

The Fall of the Summer King
by Paul Nettles

Once upon a time.

But this isn’t a fairy tale.  This is real life.  This all happened in a real place, to a real little boy who was not the handsomest of all, was not a prince, not even a squire, and he didn’t have companions with fey powers that were perfectly suited to his need to win the fair princess’ hand.

No one ever gave him three tasks, each harder than the last, in order to win unimaginable riches.

He did have a kingdom he could visit, though.  Not a kingdom with a king who wore a gold crown, but  a king who wore a black felt fedora, and old, faded slacks and button-down white cotton shirts.  His queen wasn’t the most beautiful woman in the world, but she ruled her kingdom with a strong and fair hand alongside the king, whom she loved very much.  Together they raised four boys who were kings in their own right, kings without titles or fiefs who rode out in the mornings with the dogs and hunted all day, then came home at night and brought wild game they had caught, and together they prayed and sang songs with the king and queen.

Those young men grew up into men, and claimed lands and took what power was in their hearts to hold.  They had children, boys and girls of their own.  None of the children were cursed by witches who weren’t invited to the christening.  None of them were locked in tall towers and forced to spin hay into gold, nor were they in any way involved with magic kettles, frogs down wells or ogres who lived in castles placed conveniently right up the road.

Not that I know of.

I do know about one little boy, however.  A son of one of the four young kings.  He loved the kingdom with all his heart.  It was far, far away from his own home, and it was magical in its own way, heavy with age and memory and subtle differences.  It had pecan trees like his own home but these were old, and the nuts were shaped differently. It had pine trees like his own home, but the ones in the kingdom were taller, so much thicker, and girt the kingdom like a fortress wall.  His mind peopled the forest wall with giants and rocs and serpents of immense size, but those were just the imaginings of a young, impressionable, fantasy-prone young boy.  There were no giants and no rocs and the serpents that lived in the lake and the little tiny pond were of the regular variety.  The kingdom had creeks, beautiful clear running streams that leaped and burbled over stones like they could speak, and all the prince had at his home was bayous, which were brown and muddy and smelled like rotten mud and dead fish.

The kingdom had something that the little boy’s home didn’t have, however.  It had fireflies.  At the little boy’s home were huge rocs, giant metal flying creatures that sprayed mists from their wings over the crops belonging to other kings, and those mists killed most of the little flying bugs that populated the air, so when summer came, hot and cloying and the prince went outside in the dark of night there were just the usual noises of giants rolling over in their sleep and huge feral wolves prowling at the edge of the porch light and the soft wet hop and plop of toad frogs in the grass.  But no fireflies.

The kingdom had fireflies in the warmth of summer, though.  The kingdom, ruled over by the kind and gentle king, whom the little boy loved with all his heart, loved with the blind and unquestioning love of someone who has never had his heart broken, never been hurt.  The kingdom whose air smelled different, whose bayous were clear and bright and burbled and almost spoke aloud, the kingdom whose tree-girt walls made it the safest, most pure place ever, had fireflies.

They moved in the air like faeries dancing in the dusk, gyreing and gimbaling to a music that we kids couldn’t quite hear.  They filed out of the forest walls by the hundreds, each drawn to the wide open spaces of carefully groomed lawn, there to dance for the sheer pleasure of being alive.  And when the old king would sit on the front porch in his swing and push himself slowly back and forth, and dispense quiet, calm wisdom to his sons and their wives, the princes and princesses would leap and caper off the wide grey porch into the huge green expanse and dance with the faeries.

Those nights would never end, it seemed.  If you were a very careful prince or princess with a very clear, very innocent heart you could track the on-again, off-again flashes of the fireflies, track them the way a hunter tracks his prey by where it has been, postulating where it will be, and you could cup your hands around a tiny black speck and suddenly you held in your hand the most magical of all things: a tiny speck of life whose sole power enabled it to make light at will.  Looking down at this tiny piece of magic in your hands your face would be limned with that yellow-green fire that didn’t burn, didn’t consume, simply existed, simple Was.

Those nights, those endless summer nights, parceled out like chartreuse pearls strung on a black wire.  We knew they’d last forever.  But they didn’t.  They never do.  One day the king faltered, grew weak, and died.  The prince had to put aside chasing the faeries for a time to carry the king’s coffin, the first time he had to assume the mantle of Manhood.  After that the kingdom felt empty, the gentle absence of its king manifest in his empty throne, in the lack of his voice carrying out softly across the faeiry-dappled night.

Nights still passed when the fireflies would dance and the heart of the prince would stir, and he would leap off the porch and chase and plot trajectories in the dark with his eyes and hands, but always, in the back of his mind, something was missing.  The ogre had closed up his castle and moved to a nice bridge in county Cork.  The rocs had taken wing, leaving behind the remains of nests made of tree trunks and boulders.  The stalking wolves had shrunk to the size and shape of foxes and racoons, and trundled in the dark reaches away from prying eyes.  The king no longer sat on his throne, and the kingdom would never feel quite the same way again.  Only the faeries remain, with their cold green light, stitching unread messages across the night.

“I Love Lucy [the Elephant]” Memory Contest: On the Road Division

November 13, 2012

Now this entry in the “I Love Lucy [the Elephant]” Memory Contest is a little different from the others, but no less fun or inspiring!  Thanks, Traci, for the submission and for the intro to your Go Big or Go Home blog.  Hope you enjoy her entry — it’s about a place with a certain “no one puts Baby in the corner” vibe.

 

Shuffling Back in Time

by Traci L. Suppa

The” yin and yang” of family travel means that, in return for enduring godawful meals at “Chuck E.”-type establishments which please my kids, I expect their best behavior at places which may not hold a lot of kid-friendly appeal. This deal doesn’t always work, but it’s a goal. I thought I might have to cash in a few credits when we took them to the Mirror Lake Shuffleboard Club, but they actually enjoyed it – almost as much as I did!

This club, located in St. Petersburg, Florida, is the world’s largest shuffleboard club, and the oldest in the United States. Since it’s not open every day, I made special arrangements with the St. Petersburg Shuffleboard Club president, a gracious and enthusiastic volunteer named Christine.

We played shuffleboard last spring as a family at the Woodloch Pines Resort, and we all enjoyed it. (Momma had game…thoroughly surprising everyone.) So we were all up for trying it again. Even Grandma and Grandpa came along.

This was one of those times I wish I had a time machine. The Mirror Lake complex, built in 1923, is an Art Deco charmer. I would have loved being there on a spring evening at the height of its popularity, gussied up in white – as was the custom — for a night on the court.

In its heyday — the 1930’s through the 60’s — the club gained international fame for its size, with 110 playing courts and an annual membership of over 5,000. There are now 65 shuffleboard courts at Mirror Lake, and covered grandstand seating for over 100. We had the place to ourselves, so Christine directed us to a regulation court.

I really wanted to learn how to play shuffleboard, the right way. Christine outfitted us with poles and disks, drew the scoring triangle on the chalk board, and gave an overview on how to score. She glassed the court for us, which involved spreading microscopic glass beads across the court’s surface to make the disks slide faster.

There is some skill involved in shuffleboard; you have to put the right amount of force behind your shot so the disk goes far enough, but not too far. Another important aspect is strategy, and knowing how and when to knock your opponents’ disks off the court. After a few frustrating shots, I was hooked. I wanted to get my game back.

A match is usually three games. Whoever wins two games first wins the match. We didn’t make it that long. Our four-year old daughter wasn’t cooperative. She played for a while, climbed up and down the steps of the grandstand, then told us it was time to go. Our 10-year old son enjoyed the game and would have stayed longer.

Still, I got some good shots in, and was able to spend some time inside the clubhouse, poring over the black and white photos of former club members, as well as the wall of trophies from as far back as 1934.

Mirror Lake is a special place. It’s an endearing example of historic preservation moving in the right direction. I learned that this club has been experiencing a rebirth, offering weekly play on Friday nights, and attracting hundreds of locals. In particular, families. For me, shuffleboard has a “retro” appeal, representing a time in our history when family entertainment was more social, and wholesomely unplugged.

St. Petersburg Shuffleboard Courts, 559 Mirror Lake Drive North, St. Petersburg, FL

727-822-2083

BIO — Traci L. Suppa drags her small-town family to see a quirky array of the world’s largest, longest, or tallest things, and blogs about it at Go BIG or Go Home.

The Battle of Sand Hill Cove

November 8, 2012

plush Lucy the ElephantYou’ve been on the edge of your seat waiting for another one of the wonderful entries in the “I Love Lucy [the Margate Elephant] Memory Contest,” haven’t you?  Well wait no more!  Herewith, The Battle of Sand Hill Cove and its prize-winning original illustration, both by Anne Fontaine (all rights reserved).

 

original illustration by Anne Fontaine

Original illustration by Anne Fontaine, All rights reserved

The Battle of Sand Hill Cove

Striding importantly through the beach peas, I was on my way to find my brothers and my cousins on the crowded public beach and bring them back to the cottage for lunch.  It seemed to my 12-yr-old brain that as the eldest child and eldest grandchild there ought to be more to it but this was just the sort of errand I was sent on, often several times a day, when we stayed at the beach.  I knew exactly where they were, too.  Junior anthropologists all, they were crawling through the dunes to spy on awkwardly passionate teenagers.  Fetching them out might blow their cover, a prospect I was looking forward to until I noticed the tide was out.  The rocky shore on this side of the breakwater now extended past the middle of the jetties—it was like finding the door to a closely-guarded castle wide open and I thought, just for a minute.

It was slow going; some of the rocks were slippery, covered with green hair that lifted and sank with the rhythmic movement of the water.  I was watching my footing. peering intently into the sandy pools, when the jerky motion of a small shell caught my eye.  Two shells, actually, their occupants locked together, moving balletically over the sand and rocks.  Then my schoolyard instincts kicked in and I recognised the behavior: the two hermit crabs were fighting.  I knew boys fought, of course, and that men fought in wars; I knew that some animals fought over territory but they all seemed land-based, and large.  Around and around they went, my view of the battle sometimes obscured by patches of  sunlight that turned my watery lens opaque.  Then, suddenly, with what should have been an audible POP, one hermit crab pulled the other out of its shell.  It appeared on the sand, a bent knuckle with legs, as the victor quickly vacated his own shell and popped himself neatly into the emptied one.

Amazed and outraged at the same time, my head shot up to call out.  I realised my mistake instantaneously, along with a few other things.  I was alone and a lot further from the beach than I  thought but I had to know what happened to the newly naked crab.  Hurriedly turning back to the sandy battlefield, the water almost to my knees, the depth was now too great to see through clearly.  I couldn’t find it.   A frisson of fear shot through me as I heard, from the jetty to my left, the unmistakable gurgles and ominous sucking noises that meant the occupants of the black spaces between the boulders would be returning; the tide was on its way in and had been for a little while.  I moved quickly toward the shore, suddenly aware that I might be trampling over other oceanic dramas, a silent sorry, sorry repeated in contrition, just in case.  As the water level on my legs dropped and I began to see the stones again, a line of recognisable boys walked across the beach in the direction of the cottage, laughing and joking.  I never told anyone I witnessed a war that afternoon.  It seemed too big, and I was terribly late for lunch.

It’s Electrifying!

November 5, 2012

We were without power for a couple of days after Sandy blew through town.  Our many thanks go to the men in the Mississippi Power trucks for their efforts in our neighborhood to restore our electricity.  Though there is a certain charm to living by candlelight, after a while you start fantasizing about being able to take a hot shower, or make yourself a cup of tea.

No. Not THAT Sandy. I mean the Hurricane.

How about that Sandy, huh?

(And I mean the hurricane, not Sandy, baby, in “Grease”)

If, post-superstorm, you’re feeling the need for a little lightness after the darkness, have I got an event for you!

What’s more — it’s electrifying!

By which I mean that you buying a ticket to sip a cocktail in a National Historic Landmark and mingle with other cool people like yourself will help raise money to upgrade the electrical system at the wonderful, quirky, Victorian Wagner Free Institute of Science.  (Oh, did I mention that it’s a National Historic Landmark, a designation awarded to only 2,500 sites in the United States that are considered exceptional examples of our shared American history?)

Wagner Free Institute of Science party 2011

At some cocktail parties, “small talk” is a challenge. Not at the Wagner. You are surrounded by conversation starters! “Is that a wombat?” “Have you ever seen a Chinese pangolin before?”

When?  Where?  Mark your calendar.

A Sip of Science: Electrifying!

2012 Benefit Cocktail Party

Wagner Free Institute of Science

1700 W. Montgomery Ave (nr Temple)

Friday, November 9, 2012, 5:30-8:30pm with a special “welcome” @5:45

If you can’t make it to SIP OF SCIENCE  but you like the idea of the spark of knowledge and bolts from the blue, you can still make a donation.

You and the Wagner’s stuffed alligator, crocodile, three-toed sloth, and whatnot will be rubbing elbows with more than 250 guests.  Guests who love cool science, and want to support the Wagner’s efforts to provide FREE science education to Philadelphia schoolchildren (and all the grown up visitors too; I always learn something whenever I visit).

Mayor Nutter and Governor Corbett are Honorary Event Chairs.  Senator Casey, Senator Toomey, Congressman Fattah, and Councilwoman Reynolds-Brown are members of the Honorary Committee.

Moth and Victorian exhibit hall

Founded in 1855, the Wagner Free Institute of Science is dedicated to providing free public education in science. Its programs include free courses and lectures, field trips and lessons for children and museum tours for all ages.

The evening science courses — for all ages — are in their 157th year, making them the oldest program devoted to free adult education in the United States.  The Institute also has a strong commitment to children’s science education and offers a range of programs for school groups and through partnerships with neighboring schools and community groups.

The Institute’s Museum houses more than 100,000 natural history specimens, a collection begun by founder William Wagner in the early nineteenth century and expanded by the pre-eminent scientist Joseph Leidy in the 1880s.  Completed in 1865, the Institute’s National Historic Landmark building is essentially unchanged since the late-nineteenth century and includes a Victorian Exhibition Hall filled with fossils, shells, minerals and mounted animal skeletons and skins displayed in original wood and glass cabinets.  The Museum is open to visitors Tuesdays – Fridays, 9 AM to 4 PM, year-round.  Evening and weekend programs are offered during the fall, winter and spring.

Lucy — whew! just another day at the beach

November 2, 2012

wind damage, old house

Big, bossy Hurricane Sandy blew through town.

I’m not even current on all the damage she caused because here we’ve only just had the power restored.  (200,000+ people  in the area still without power; MontCo and Bucks were hardest hit.)

However, I’ve managed to glimpse a few photos, including remarkable scenes showing  a twisted roller coaster  in the ocean, and a New York City subway platform, deserted, and  underwater.

Not long ago I wrote about my childhood “friend” Lucy the Margate Elephant and her 131st birthday.  She stands looking out to sea on the Jersey shore.  As I listened to Governor Christie talk about the flooding in Atlantic City, Lucy was much on my mind.  Would she survive the storm after standing beachside for more than a century already?  (Wondering how she was faring helped distract me from thinking about the giant oak tree leaning just outside my window in the blasting winds).

I was pleased to read a note from Executive Director Richard Helfant on Lucy’s Facebook feed.

Many have written in sending Lucy prayers and kind words during this unprecedented storm. Although we cannot return to the island yet to conduct a visual inspection, the Margate City Police Department is keeping a watchful eye on Lucy. As of now, we have had no reports of damage to the monument. Some things to keep in mind;

1. Lucy has weathered everything mother nature has sent her way for more than 131 years.

2. She is a stronger structure today than she was in 1962 during the March storm. Her main ‘superstructure’ is now steel; it was wood in 1962.

3. She is farther back from the shore line than she was in 1962.
4. Lucy’s Beach Grille building sits directly in front of her. It will bear the brunt of the wave action and serve as a barrier for Lucy.  Our thanks goes out to all of Lucy’s well wishers. Good luck and be safe.
Even more remarkably, the hurricane reportedly made landfall 5 miles south of Atlantic City — so Sandy was right in Lucy’s face!  Yet here she stands (in a photo posted to Facebook on Halloween).
The old gal is looking as if she got a brisk sand scrubbing, but overall, the reports are good.  Helfant said there was no structural or water damage, and only a minimal amount of water got in to Lucy’s feet. Fundraising is underway to make repairs elsewhere on the property.
I launched the First Annual “I Love Lucy [the Margate Elephant]”  Contest not long after my post about Lucy and her long history.  Click on and read the wonderful winning entry!

WINNER! The First Annual “I Love Lucy [the Margate Elephant]” Memory Contest

November 2, 2012

plush Lucy the Elephant

Because an elephant never forgets…..

Not long ago I shared my little ramble about a childhood friend who was a giant elephant.  (I’m pleased to report that Lucy the Elephant survived Hurricane Sandy intact!)

Then I challenged you to share a recollection of a place, object, or landscape that stays in your memory as something special.

Thanks to all of you who took the challenge, turned a memory into a story, and were willing to share it with us.

Thanks also to my panel of judges, who took their jobs very seriously!

The entries were wonderful.  Long. Short.  Fanciful,  Practical.  Some came with images, some didn’t.  While my judges and I had discussions about judging criteria to help guide their selection, their gut instincts were their best guides, and we quickly came to our final decisions.

I’m delighted to announce that the first winner of the first “I Love Lucy [the Margate Elephant]” Memory Contest is Ms. Rebecca Hodgkins.  Her story, Lagan, is a memory from her childhood, with elements of the magic we all believe in when we are young (and some lucky few still believe even as the years pile on).

Ms. Hodgkins wins the grand prize — a plush Lucy the Elephant (see above), sporting a bejeweled crown (stitched during the blackout caused by Hurricane Sandy).

original illustration by Anne Fontaine

Original illustration by Anne Fontaine, All rights reserved

A special prize for illustration goes to Ms. Anne Fontaine, who submitted “The Battle of Sand Hill Cove” accompanied by a watercolor/collage to help tell the story.  The prize is a plush Lucy the Elephant (sorry, no crown for this category).

All other entrants receive a certificate of excellence.  Please send me your mailing address (see the email address in the sidebar).

You’ll have the opportunity to read each of the wonderful stories, leading off with our winner, “Lagan” by Ms. Rebecca Hodgkins.

 

Lagan

I had a weird childhood.  My parents and I would take these trips to Nashville to see my Dad’s family.  It wasn’t quite Shawn Mullens singing, “She grew up with the children of the stars,” but we’d go to a funeral and Dolly Parton would be there.  My dad jokingly tried to trade me for a pair of black jeans to Alice Cooper on a golf course.  When Elvis died, we sat stunned around my great uncle’s TV set while he called his son for the details firsthand.  So I developed this sort of worldview that anything could happen, and probably would, if I simply expected it.

That’s how I explain the sand dollar.

But connected to the sand dollar is a memory I can’t even explain to myself.  It did happen.  I remember it happening.  I remember it happening a certain way.  It couldn’t have happened.

Nashville was only a stop on our way to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina – our “real” vacation.  I’d spend the rest of the year in landlocked Illinois loving a place where I couldn’t be, thinking about the trip down, watching the moss begin appearing in the trees, waiting to see the gap in the land where I knew the ocean was, just over a sand dune, finally opening the car door and breathing in the tangy perfume of the Atlantic.

When I was seven, my dad brought home an illustrated book of seashells.  Among the conches, the abalones, the spiraling snail shells like staircases, I found a page about sand dollars.  That was it.  I would find one on the beach.  My dad was skeptical; we were too far north, he said.  He’d never found one himself, and this would be his ninth trip there.  But I was seven years old.  I would find one, because I wanted to find one.  Simple logic.

No one surfed Myrtle Beach.  I had an inflatable canvas raft like everyone else, and I rode it back to shore on every wave I could catch.  Sometimes, if I were lucky, I could catch a wave just behind the crest and I would fly all the way back to the beach.  Without luck, I’d overshoot the sweet spot and tumble forward into the white foam, the wave throwing me under its feet.  I’d come up sputtering and scared, feeling betrayed, then paddle back to the beach to build a sand castle until I felt the ocean had forgiven me, and it was safe to go back in.

I was pulling my raft behind me in shallow water when I first saw the sand dollar, round and white and only a few feet away.  I lunged for it just as a wave came in and snatched it away.  The water calmed between swells, and I saw it again, sitting back on the bottom in deeper water now.  The same thing happened; as I reached for it, the next wave came and pulled it away.  The water was too deep now to safely grab the sand dollar without going under.  I knew I was being teased.  I was too young to know I was being reeled in.

Frustrated, I rode the next wave back to the beach.  Turning back, I saw it again, flipping over in the wave that followed mine.  No – not a sand dollar but a piece of round, white cardboard – trash, a fool’s dollar.  I was angry that the ocean would tease me like that.    The sand dollar was out there.  It was mine.  I looked up the beach to where my parents had their umbrella and towels.  My mom was lying down, my dad, reading a book.  I paddled out past the breakers, watching the sand under my feet.  Nothing.  The bottom here was smooth and void of treasures.  It was also at least four feet below my toes.  I saw something, something bigger than a fish, moving just within the murk.

I never saw the wave coming.  It picked up my raft and flung it forward.  I lost my grip when my back hit the water.

I remember this.

I remember lying on the sand.  I remember the way it felt as my fingers trailed through it, like silk.  I remember opening my eyes because I wasn’t alone; I was being watched, or watched over; I felt curiosity flowing like a current around me.  Above all, I remember feeling peaceful and safe.  The sun shone down on me.  And then it didn’t, as my raft floated across the light, six, maybe seven feet above me.  It reminded me that I didn’t belong down here, despite the fact that I didn’t seem to be in any danger of drowning.  I calmly sat up and pushed off from the bottom, broke the surface without so much as a gasp or pause in breath.

That is what I still remember, and what I cannot explain.

I paddled to my raft.  Just as I pulled myself onto it, another wave came, picked me up and carried me all the way back to the beach, faster than I’d ever gone.  I came to rest on the sand.  And it was right there, not an inch from my hand.  My sand dollar.

I picked it up and ran to the umbrella, excited to show my dad what I’d found.

***

I kept the sand dollar, of course.  I wish I could send you a picture of it, but that’s impossible.  We went back to the ocean every summer, moving north up the coast as the prices rose in Myrtle Beach.  By the time I was fourteen, we’d made it to the Outer Banks.  I was a bit of a lost teenager then, wanting independence from my parents, hanging out with a group of other teens from the condo we rented, and my dad decided that we’d had enough of the beach.  We never went back.

A year later, the sand dollar (kept safe in my desk drawer) cracked right down the middle.  By the time I was packing for college, it had turned to a fine powder, only the little “doves” inside left sitting on the pile like lagan at the sandy bottom of the ocean.

“They don’t build them like that anymore….”

November 1, 2012

Ah, it’s an oft-heard phrase — “they don’t build ’em like that anymore” when you ogle a wedding cake of a building like Philadelphia’s City Hall (built 1871-1901, architect John McArthur, Jr. deemed too expensive to tear down), or the gargoyle-encrusted Fisher Fine Arts Library at the University of Pennsylvania (built 1888-1890, architect Frank Furness).

Because it’s Halloween, I’m letting those beasties run amok here for your enjoyment.  (Go ahead, say it: “They just don’t build them like that anymore….” Can you believe they were going to tear this building down?  I think its interior spaces are among my all-time favorites.)

An Old-Fashioned Hallowe’en

October 31, 2012
image

Shane Confectionery on Market Street in Philadelphia has a long, sweet historical pedigree (and is lots of fun on Halloween).

Before there were binders full of women….

October 21, 2012

Before there were notorious binders full of women, there was a celebrated Philadelphian named Binder, who earned a Medal of Honor in the Civil War.  I’d never have “met” Mr. Binder, if it weren’t for the sort of time traveling that you can do just walking along a city street and looking up at hidden signs from the past.

Look at that lovely typeface.

Ladies’ and Children’s Hair Dressing

Suddenly, I pictured mothers, rustling along the street wearing long skirts, taking their little darlings for their first haircuts, young daughters making appointments to have their hair dressed for some fancy occasion, a first dance or holiday party.

Then I noticed the signs on either side of that one, painted over, but still legible.

Binder’s Ladies’ and Children’s Hair Cutting, Dressing, and Shampooing

Hair Cutting and Singeing

Hair Cutting and Singeing?

Suddenly I could imagine the scent of burning hair.  Ugh.

But what was this?  A clue!

Binder

In the 1890-91 Boyd’s Blue Book for Philadelphia, one may discover (on page 677 and thank heavens for Google books!) the following ad.

 

 

My confidence was restored when I read Fine French Hair Goods of all Kinds of the First Quality in Stock or Made to Order.  I wonder what kinds of hair goods were made to order…… Could a gal match some ribboned fancy to her dress?

Ah, how a stroll down a side street can teach you something new about a place.  How a painted-over sign can spark the imagination….

 

Oh, and if you are wondering about Mr. Binder’s famous product “Phytalia” (also available across the street at Wanamaker’s!), it “positively cures dandruff and strengthens the hair.”  Click the 1889 ad in Lippincott’s monthly magazine (Vol. 43) to see a bottle of the stuff.  I think it was a big seller for Mr. Binder.

Click the advertisement to see a bottle of Mr. Binder’s phytalia product at “Hair Raising Tales” website

 

City Paper confirms Mr. Binder’s successful career with a little research of their own on the history of 13th Street:

The Binder Building (29-41 S. 13th St.) –Home of the Binder Company hairdressers and makers of wigs, toupees and soaps. According to the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places, Richard Binder, who commissioned the building in 1887, was one of the most successful hairdressers in 19th- and early 20th-century Philadelphia. Before the 1860s most hairdressing was done in the home. Binder was one of only 100 hairdressers in Philadelphia, most of whom did not have stores. Now the spot hosts the Carmel Deli, but the Binder sign is still visible.

Bill’s query about a map (now below) showing this location (35 S. 13th Street) re-sparked my curiosity and I discovered a photo and some new info about our subject, Mr. Binder.

Turns out he was a Civil War hero who earned the Medal of Honor!  First I came across the Roster of the Medal of Honor Legion, a military and naval order of the United States of America, from April 23, 1890, date of organization, to March 1, 1898, inclusive (Cornell Library).  It lists Binder, Richard, Sgt. U. S. Marine Corps, U. S. S. Ticonderoga 35 S. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa as a first class member and Binder, Richard C. R., son of Richard Binder, 35 S. 13th St., Phila., Penna. is listed as a second class member. So Mr. Binder had his shop there and his family lived there as well.

The U.S. Naval Historical Center offers up a photo as well as this description of Sgt. Binder’s war service on the U.S.S. Ticonderoga. (Click the ship link for great images of the ship.)

Richard Binder, variously described as having been born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1840 and in Germany on 26 July 1841, served in the U.S. Marine Corps during the Civil War. In 1864-65, he was assigned to the sloop of war USS Ticonderoga. He participated in the two assaults on Fort Fisher, North Carolina, on 24-25 December 1864 and 13-15 January 1865 and was awarded the Medal of Honor for his performance at those times.

Photo: U.S. Naval Historical Center

The official Navy publication “Medal of Honor 1861-1949 — The Navy” contains the following entry on page 15:

“BINDER, RICHARD, Sergeant, USMC. Born 1840, Philadelphia, Pa. Accredited to Pennsylvania.”

“On board the U.S.S. Ticonderoga during the attacks on Fort Fisher, 24 and 25 December 1864; and 13 to 15 January 1865. Despite heavy return fire by the enemy and the explosion of the 100-pounder Parrott rifle which killed 8 men and wounded 12 more, Sergeant BINDER, as Captain of a gun, performed his duties with skill and courage during the first 2 days of battle. As his ship again took position on the 13th, he remained steadfast as the Ticonderoga maintained a well-placed fire upon the batteries on shore, and thereafter, as she materially lessened the power of guns on the mound which had been turned upon our assaulting columns. During this action the flag was planted on one of the strongest fortifications possessed by the rebels.”

Mr. Binder died in 1912, at the age of 71 (or thereabouts), and is buried in West Laurel Hill Cemetery.

Photo: Home of Heroes website (click image)

Wow. Who knew I’d come across a national war hero just having a ramble after work?