Posts Tagged ‘Fishtown’

September 10th, 2010

Out with summer, in with brand new stories on PhilaPlace!

By Ian Charlton

LeemonSugarH

Hi everybody,

Hope you’ve had a great summer. I know it’s been awhile since the last blog, but in the past few months, we’ve added seven sites in the Fishtown/East Kensington area.  These include a few along the Delaware waterfront such as Penn Treaty Park, the Sugar House, Dyottville Glass Factories, and Cramp’s Shipyard, as well as a few on or near Frankford Avenue like St. Mary’s Hospital, Newt’s Playground, and Palmer Cemetery.

The story of Palmer Cemetery goes hand-in-hand with the history of the neighborhood and is a good place to start in understanding its development.  Anybody with an interest in utopian experiments will get a kick out of Dyottville, which was a very interesting response to “the labor problem” in early industrial–era Philadelphia.  Next, the Sugar House and Cramp’s Shipyard reveal Kensington at the height of its proud industrial history as well as its subsequent decline. The numerous fights over the proposed closings of St. Mary’s Hospital and the rehabilitation of Penn Treaty Park both demonstrate the resolve of the community in the face of decades of hardship after World War II.  And the story of Newt’s Playground , featuring an interview with a veteran of the formerly cinder-covered field, provides  a glimpse of what it was like to grow up in the Fishtown of the 1960s.

PASugarCompanyThe Sugar House (Pennsylvania Sugar Company), Delaware & Shackamaxon, 1936


SugarHouseCasinoThe Sugar House Casino, Delaware & Shackamaxon, September 2010


DyottvilleviewT. W. Dyott’s Glass Works at Richmond & Beach, as seen from the Delaware River, 1831

Stay tuned in the next few weeks, because we’ll also add sites west of Front Street like Fairhill Cemetery. And, I’m finishing up a couple longer essays dealing with Kensington west of Front Street that I blogged about when I first started my internship. One piece focuses on the company-produced employee newsletters of Stetson Hats and features an interview with a former Stetson employee, and another tells the story of the now defunct Old Kensington Redevelopment Corporation through three interviews.

Meanwhile, here are some contemporary shots of some of the sites. Check them out!

DSCN2859Penn Treaty Park, Delaware & Beach, September 2010


DSCN1180Palmer Burial Ground, Palmer & Memphis, September 2010


0001_2075_001Shissler Recreation Center, or “Newt’s” to longtime Fishtowners, Blair Street, September 2010


0001_2068_001View of the El from Newt’s, September 2010


DSCN1184Neumann Senior Housing, formerly St. Mary’s Hopsital, 1600 E. Palmer Street, September 2010


DSCN1250Olde Kensington Pavilion senior housing, 3rd & Thompson, September 2010

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May 17th, 2010

From the legendary docks of Fishtown came…The Slinky

By Ian Charlton

Sprang-Slinky_Family-500pxhSlinky inventor Richard James and son Thomas, play with Slinkys on the stairs of the James family home in Philadelphia in 1945. Courtesy of the Independence Seaport Museum.

Last week I was researching Cramp’s shipyard in Fishtown so that I could add this site to the PhilaPlace map. Cramp’s shipyard was a fixture on the docks of Fishtown from 1830 until the end of World War II (with the exception of a twelve-year stretch during the Great Depression when it fell into disrepair). It had developed a reputation for producing not only commercial ships but also “men of war” starting in the Mexican War and continuing through World War II.  Cramp’s  good reputation was international– it produced ships for the Imperial Russian Navy as well as the Ottomans. Benefitting from lucrative naval contracts, during World War I Cramp’s employed 11,000 workers. During World War II, the number shot up to 18,000. Cramp’s was a major player in the shift from wooden clipper ships to steam-driven ships of iron and finally steel ships.

(more…)

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March 19th, 2010

Hand-drawn maps of Philly neighborhoods!

By Melissa Mandell

NO_LIBS_MAP_2010Last week, (my personal) über-cityblog Philebrity.com came up with the most brilliant idea ever (albeit borrowed from the blog Londonist) and entreated its readers to submit their very own hand-drawn maps of  their neighborhoods.    Why, oh why didn’t I think of that?  …it’s probably just as well since Philebrity gets a lot more traffic than the PhilaPlace blog anyway.   The resulting entries – ranging in style from cheekily “Maira Kalman-esque” to back-of-the-cocktail napkin crude — are, I think, very Philadelphian: often hilarious, totally subjective, probably offensive, painfully forthright, practical, sentimental, contradictory, and self-conscious.

Just check out these maps depicting the many conflicting and overlapping identities of  our very storied and often contested neighborhoods north of Center City:  two versions of Northern Liberties (so far); West Kensington; “Secret” Fishtown (Shadtown?); and Norris Square/”Olde” Kensington…”dark and gloomy” borders, “poverty,” and “one-stop gentrification”…mini-restaurant reviews, social commentary, and snarky in-jokes… it’s all here in these maps. Be sure to brave the resulting comments, too.

Visit Philebrity to see the rest, including Wash West, Old City, Pennsport, East Passyunk Avenue, Queen Village, and the ever-mysterious Eraserhood, courtesy of bhiladelphia :

erasercallownorthchihood

Keep ‘em coming, Philebrity readers…Hand-drawn Philadelphia could very well become its own blog if we can continue to  map the entire city and argue about it, too.

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