Peaches & Parking Meters
…while at the same time cutting into revenue. The state bill failed to gain approval. Did You Know? The Aug. 18, 1941 edition of Life magazine featured an area man…
…while at the same time cutting into revenue. The state bill failed to gain approval. Did You Know? The Aug. 18, 1941 edition of Life magazine featured an area man…
…boarding houses, 21 confectionery shops, 7 ice cream parlors, 14 dry good stores, 15 meat markets, 49 grocers, 27 boot and shoe shops, 9 clothiers, 21 paint and wallpaper stores,…
…ATLANTIC STATION – The gas station lot on Wilson Avenue previously was the site of the city’s No. 2 hose house and Creed’s gift shop. All of it meant that…
…was a painter and poet. She and her husband, Philip Guston, painted murals for the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Maritime Commission. Tony Como Tony Como Oil City claimed…
…charter for the new Mullins Boat Corp. on April 6, 1936. Officers in the new company were Gavin, W.A. Royston Jr., J.D. Trax, A.E. Mackintosh and J.E. Burns. The stockholders…
…a home & boarding house into a library, 1921. Portrait of James Denton Hancock. Portrait of Harriet Osborn McCalmont. Portrait of Samuel Plumer McCalmont. Oil City Library Cooperstown Public Library…
…(see ORLA history). Home of Mrs. Lee Miller, Original Location of Cooperstown Public Library. Mrs. Mary L. Boal The library’s current location on North Main St., 1989. Oil City Library…
…throughout the neighborhood. A volunteer fire department was organized and firefighting equipment was purchased. The jail and borough hall on Plum Street were refurbished. By 1910, Siverly listed 1,616 residents….
…the U.S. Senate. In 1936, Landon, the Republican candidate for president, was soundly defeated at the polls by Franklin D. Roosevelt. Landon’s grandfather was Rev. W.H. Mossman and he was…
…Trust Co. and president of Enterprise Milling Co. Rutherford B. Hayes Post GAR (Grand Army of the Republic) pin. Capt. William Hasson & his grandchildren pose for a family photo….