I hope these pictures will make do for now until I can write up an article that explains them and the unique title for this post. This is a companion post for the Lehighton Magazine Podcast from 10 August 2020 - History Night with Ron Rabenold.
Please check back here for more story as well as additional pictures soon (The only hold up is working through a process of some other writing I'm doing right now. I hope the delay will be worth it. "Creation is soul-searching, nothing is ever finished" (C. Ruggles) - This is my philosophical mantra for many areas in my life and I hope you can appreciate that I feel it's ok to simply start things sometimes and allow yourself the patience to dream the end.
This post is some sort of creation.
It could be so more, couldn't it?
And so are the many other creative outlets of our lives. I am comfortable with works in progress. I know I have the tenacity to finish them. All good things in all good time.
We must dedicate ourselves to "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness."
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Weissport bridge late 1930s. |
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"Wm. Hicks" was best known for his "Last Supper" paintings he did all winter long to help make ends meet while he boarded at Harry Berger's Hotel. It's been said that half the homes of Albrightsville had one hanging in their kitchens, however I've yet to see one myself. |
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Hicks also enjoyed carving and small handcrafts. He was known for his odd common-man philosophy and adages. Once the Getz family took him in for a few weeks one winter, and old Arsula Christman Getz, Charlie Getz's grandmother noticed Hicks walk up the stairs backward. When he came back down, the normal way, she asked him why he walked up backward. Hicks said, "Well that way I wont have to turn around when I get up there, of course." |
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One-eyed William "Hicks" Bergenstock - Originally from Allentown, most never knew his last name. A loving, musical family of older sisters and their mother who performed together for birthday celebrations and the like, but also a temperamental alcoholic, father who ended his life in suicide. Hicks lived a life of solitude, hand to mouth doing paint and wallpaper work around Albrightsville most of his adult life. |
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Foot Bridge over the Delaware near Tinsman Lumber and Lumberton - Once was spanned by a wooden covered bridge, destroyed in 1903 flood. |
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A colorful history - Even during Prohibition when up to 70 workers still did shift work there. In 1926 Federal Dry Agent Roy Edens single-handedly conducted a night-time raid of the brewery in Easton, was allegedly offered a $3,000 bribe he refused, later became of the Federal overseer of the plant, then arrested himself for producing and selling beer from the plant. Lost his federal job because he could not read or write to pass the newly imposed civil service test, so he went back home to Butler, PA, and was arrested again as a "rum-runner." Then the story gets sad. |
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Ascension of Christ by "Wm. Hicks" - St. Paul's Church - Albrightsville. Hicks like to toy with the congregation by painting subtle little hidden pictures in this painting as it developed from week to week. |
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This is an unknown man from Jonas Hotel. This picture gives the physical inspiration for Joseph Gambler's character in my book. Gambler actually lived in the Albrightsville area. He was a survivor the Great Fire of 1875 (May). The fire swept Hickory Run to Hell Hollow, Wild Creek Area.
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The Harry Berger Hotel of Albrightsville, as interpreted by "Wm. Hicks" - This mural appeared behind the tap room bar. |
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Poet Blake Lively of New Orleans makes a cameo appearance in "Kinglets in the Winterberry" - Mardis Gras 2020. |
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Ervin and Mamie (Strohl) Ahner - at the Weigh Lock around 1917 - with (l-r) Esther, Dorothy, Mamie. Esther lived to be 106, passing away in 2016. The last living person who lived on the canal. A video was produced about her life on the canal, among other things. A featured part of the segment featured her dancing at age 104.
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Mamie Strohl Ahner with gun right. During WWI, soldiers were stationed at the weight lock to protect our industrial might during the war.
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1936 Weissport Flood |
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Rickert Beer Recipe - Sent from a friend, perhaps Fred Horlacher. |
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The Dilldown Dam - Photo by John B. Stoj of Albrightsville - The Hickory Run area had many man-made dams to power the sawmills and to store logs. The terrible and tragic flood of October 1849 that took so many lives, including the Gould family who owned the timbering company. Their house was knocked off its foundations and tumbled under water for 500 feet. Enough air remained inside for some of the occupants to survive. The blacksmith West lost his wife, two girls, and two boys. Some of his children survived. |
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Schnupty of Allentown - Probably not the 1890s "Jack the Hugger" of Allentown. |
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Guard Lock of Lehigh Canal - Lehigh Valley RR station to right - Jersey Central (center - beyond the foot bridge) - Dam and Harbor supported the loading of canal boats from chutes off that once came off the mountainside above left (until 1872) - Boats could also be loaded to float upstream to Lock #1 of the Upper Grand Canal that traced the Lehigh on up to White Haven. That canal system was ruined in the June 1862 flood of the Lehigh River. Several hundred lives were believed to be lost. The village of Burlington (East Packerton along the river) was wiped out. Making way for the LVRR to take control of the land and build their Packerton Yard there. |
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Lehighton's Brights Department Store display window 1955. Brights's original store started and continued to run in Lansford. |
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Lehighton Fireworks as seen over the Lehigh's waters from the outskirts of Rickertsville 2019.
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Packerton Post Office - Along the RR tracks - Post June 1862 Flood. This was the former village of Burlington. The new area now aptly named for the progenitor of the LVRR, Asa Packer. |
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Snowy winter view of Lehighton as seen from Fifth and Coal Streets looking SE from second floor of Haas Store - 1940s. |
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Charles Snyder on the day they sold his family hotel to the Held family.
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A younger, Charles Snyder at Hotel Jonas. |
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Morris Desch, a friend of John Bitterling of Allentown, did extensive hunting in Hickory Run area. |
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Mauch Chunk Brook Trout Company - Penn Forest 1917. |
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Unknown women imbibers at Hotel Jonas - "Woman with the Clay Pipe." |
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A Couple Drink Sips - Up until 1986, if you got a glass of water at Hotel Jonas, this is where you water came from. |
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Charles and John Snyder, sons of Jonas Snyder - The inspiration behind the characters of Charles & Jonas Reise - Brains and Brawn. |
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Jonas Snyder & family- Front Center with animal on lap - c. 1890s. |
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Arthur and Charlie Meckes with Eddie Holtzman Hotel Jonas 1950s. |
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A dentist, Randy Starr, wrote the song "Green Door" for Elvis in the 1960s with a Held family relative. |
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Charles Snyder with pitch pines and forest fire gear - Younger, top, older, bottom. |
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Abraham Ahner of Long Run 1930s. |
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Abraham Ahner and sons - Not only does this picture suggest they ran moonshine, but... |
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Long Run Ahner girl with chickens. |
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William "Hicks" Bergenstock's simple grave at St. Paul's in Albrightsville - He bartered the plot for the painting of Christ's Ascension. |
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"An Innocent Soul Sent to Eternity" "Quilly" Henning's grave at the Old Albrightsville Cemetery at Henning and Old Stage Coach Roads - The Wenz Monument Company of Allentown took sympathy for the Henning saga from the sensational trial that ensued from the killing of Quilly (seen here, full body left, looking right) as the central character is the villain, the one-armed school teacher and part-time game warden Wilkinson, along with a cast of characters lurking in the woods, some of the human faces look like dogs. The fight occurred over the shooting of a Henning dog.
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Wilkinson was a principal in lower Carbon County Schools. He lost his arm in his youth. He is buried at Big Creek. |