The Corridor - Old York Road Historical Society
Transcription
The Corridor - Old York Road Historical Society
The Corridor Volume XXIV, No. 1 Newsletter of the Old York Road Historical Society LECTURE SERIES The Program Committee has arranged for the following presentations to be held on Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m. in Homestead Hall, the Parish House of the Church of Our Savior in Jenkintown. The Parish House sits directly behind the church at the corner of Old York and Homestead Roads. The lectures are underwritten by a grant from the Jenkinstown Lyceum and are open to the public free of charge. March 11 – Wanamaker and Family: Gilded Age Citizens and Residents - One of the most illustrious citizens of Philadelphia’s Gilded Age was John Wanamaker. His exploits spanned three careers: Merchant, Politician, and Civic Activist. Several of his children, also residents of Chelten Hills, achieved their own fame and fortune. This presentation by author and Society Vice President, Tom Wieckowski, will review the accomplishments and lives of these notable citizens, and the Lindenhurst estate that was the center of many of Wanamaker’s life events. April 8 – Riding the Reading to Bethlehem – You may remember when the Reading Railroad had service from Philadelphia, through Jenkintown, to Bethlehem. Steve Stewart, who taught American History in the Abington Schools for 30 years remembers, and will take us on a tour of the route as it was from 1930 to 1970. From the famous Reading Terminal, through Jenkintown Junction and up the Bethlehem Branch, the route covered the old North Pennsylvania Railroad line, built in 1855. The North Penn System was taken over by the Reading Railroad in 1879 and turned over to SEPTA, in 1963. Join us for a ride on the Reading. May 13 – John Sullivan and the Battle of Brandywine - On September 11, 1777, British General Sir William Howe moved to capture Washington’s troops arrayed along Brandywine Creek. The defeat of Washington allowed Howe to take Philadelphia unopposed. Author Michael C. Harris will argue that while traditional history blames the American loss on General John Sullivan, an analysis of the primary documents paints a far different picture. Harris is the author of Brandywine: A Military History of the Battle that Lost Philadelphia but Saved America. Spring 2015 - - SPRING OUTING - EASTERN STATE PENITENTIARY Sunday, April 26, 1:30 p.m. Please join us for a private tour of Eastern State Penitentiary. Eastern State was once the most famous prison in the world, but stands today almost in ruin, a haunting world of crumbling cellblocks and empty guard towers. Built in 1829, the prison was known for its grand architecture and strict discipline. Prisoners were kept in solitude; this was the world’s first true “penitentiary,” a prison designed to inspire penitence, or true regret, in the hearts of convicts. The system of solitary confinement eventually eroded away until its end in 1913. The prison continued until it closed in 1971. Many of America’s most notorious criminals were incarcerated here, including bank robber “Slick Willie” Sutton and gangster Al Capone. Please register for this trip using the enclosed form. The bus will depart from the Jenkintown Library parking lot at 1:30 pm and return before 5:00 pm. Huntingdon Valley Library Display Case A new exhibit has been installed in the Society’s display case at the Huntingdon Valley Library on Red Lion Road. Entitled, “Sketching the Pennypack” the display highlights the artistry of landscape painter Russell Smith (1812-1896) who found inspiration along the banks of the Pennypack Creek. A number of his pencil on paper works are on display along with two photographs of Smith family members on the Pennypack Creek taken by Russell’s son Xanthus, himself an important 19th American painter. The Society is fortunate to own a number of works by Smith along with a collection of photographs taken by his son. The exhibition will be on view until the autumn. The Annual Meeting of the Society will precede the May lecture. Officer and Committee reports will be presented and the Nominating Committee will present a slate of Officers and Directors to be elected for the 2015-2016 program year. William Penn Warrant Campaign The effort to raise funds for the purchase and conservation of a William Penn signed land warrant has gone wonderfully well. With a goal of $5500, the Society raised just over $10,000. Enormous thanks to all those who made a donation (all donors are listed below in alphabetical order). After several discussions, the Board has decided to use the extra funds for future acquisitions and conservation projects, with the emphasis on conserving some of the wonderful items already in our collections For those who have made a contribution of $50 or more to the campaign, we will have a special event on Sunday afternoon, April 12 at Alverthorpe Manor (invitations to be mailed in early March). The warrant is presently at the Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts in Philadelphia where it is undergoing conservation treatment before being matted and framed. It will be unveiled at the special event and then will hang in the Society’s archives for all to appreciate. Again, many thanks to our donors who made it all possible! Frank Ames Leslie & Herbert Bell Marla Benjamin George Bishop James Butler William Chambres Janet & John Chapman Chelten Hills Savings Bank Louise Cohen Sandra Collins Carole Covert Shirley Davis Karl Diehl Charles Dirvin Joy & Les Dubin Sue & Edward Duffy Doris & Robert Fanelli June Felley Diane Foster Ann Frey Howard Frey Sunny & Ronald Friedman Carol Gillespie Eleanor Given Frank Grebe James Gulla Allison & Henry Hallowell Ruth Harbison Linda & George Harrison Bryan Havir Carol & Bruce Henderson Ellen & Clyde Herr Mershon & Mark Hinkel James Hornberger Carol Ingald Alison & Greg Jackson Frank Jarrett Barbara & Charles Kahn Carol & Marty Kalos Hannah & Richard Kaufman Janet & Lew Klein Eileen Koolpe Brenda & Joseph Krzaczek Liz & Ed Landau Carol & Jack Lieberman Dawn & Lin Magaha Therese & Robert Maher Donald Maloney Ceil & Rick Markham Nancy & James Marshall Theodore McCalla Matthew McCann Molly McDonough Elaine Meckling Sandra & Martin Mikelberg Edie Miller Shirley and John Neff Andrew Nehlig Albert Paulbinsky Marcia & Don Pizer Lynn & Joseph Pokrifka Amy Ragsdale Stephen Rappaport Diane & Lowell Reed Bonnie & Vince Rivera Geralyn & Linc Roden Josh Rosenbloom Barbara & Baron Rowland David Rowland Daniel Ryan Myrtle & Hugh Ryan William Schwarzchild Patricia Scott Aliki Seremelis Joseph Silverstein Robert Skaler Betty Smith John Stevenson Margaret Sullivan Ken Thomas Susan Treadway June Waltzer Mary & Jack Washington Jeanne & Tom Wieckowski Millie Wintz Recent Donations to the Archives The Society is pleased to have received several significant gifts over the past several months, including the following: • Records of the Jenkintown Music Theater including production materials, scores and photographs, from Dolly Kuykendall. • Papers of John Merriam to be added to an existing collection, from Robert Lockyer. • Additional records from the Abington Civic Club and the Kiwanis Club of Jenkintown to be added to their existing collections. • Poster of a painting by Ben Eisenstate of Willow Grove Park presented at the opening of the Willow Grove Mall in 1982, from Howard Aaronson. • Various works of art on paper by artists Russell Smith (1812-1896) and his son Xanthus Smith (1839-1929), from Joy Piscopo. • Microfilm of Aurora General Advertiser (17901812), from Chestnut Hill College. • Microfilm of The Philadelphia Inquirer (19832010), from Abington Free Library. • Papers, clippings, ephemera and photographs pertaining to the Wyncote Players, the Keswick Theatre and playwright Elliott Lester, from the Estate of Dorothy Spruill. • A number of local and Philadelphia area books, from Bill Schwarzchild. OLD YORK ROAD HISTORICAL SOCIETY 515 Meetinghouse Road Jenkintown, PA 19046 215 - 886 - 8590 Archive Research Hours Located on the second floor of Alverthorpe Manor, the archive is open: Mondays, 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Tuesdays, 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Wednesdays, 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Call for Special Appointments Thanks to the continued dedication of volunteers Leslie Bell, Eileen Koolpe, Betty Smith, and Mary Washington, for staffing the archive on a regular basis. Society’s Website www.oyrhs.org Special Event: Herkness Real Estate Books on Display The Society and Penn State Abington are pleased to host a special showing of the Herkness Real Estate Book at the Penn State Abington library in the Woodland Building on Sunday afternoon, March 15 at 2:30 p.m.. The event celebrates the digitization of the books. The Society also has a complete set of the books on CD-rom at the archives. The books document the developments of Herkness & Stetson Inc. and later Wayne and Malcolm Herkness who, more than any other people, charted the development of Rydal and Meadowbrook prior to 1940. Their realty books chronicle in photographs, plot plans and blueprints the houses bought and sold – and sometimes built – by the Herknesses in Abington, Bethayres, Huntingdon Valley, Jenkintown, Lower Moreland Township, Meadowbrook, Rydal, and Upper Moreland Township. These books are part of the collection at Penn State Abington and were recently digitized and made available online through Penn State University Libraries. The event will include a brief presentation about the Herknesses and the digitization process from David Rowland, Society President, and Dolores Fidishun, head librarian at Penn State Abington. General discussion, Q&A and a reception will follow where guests may view the original books and tour the library’s Ogontz School archive room. The event is free and open to the public. We hope to see you there. A Program of Interest Pennypack Mills Walk, Saturday, Saturday, April 25, 1 - 3 p.m. Nearly 30 mills operated along the Pennypack Creek and many are long gone. However, evidence and ruins remain. This tour is sponsored by the Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust and will meet at the Visitors Center off Edge Hill Road. Contact the Trust at 215-657-0830 for pre-registration information. Wear comfortable shoes for this hike. Membership Reminder We are mid-way through our 2014-15 membership year. If the mailing label on your envelope does not read “2015” or if you received a membership form, you are not current. Your generosity, as we continue to face increased operating costs at Alverthorpe Manor, is most important. Please consider renewing at the Patron level or above. Your support is appreciated. A Bit of History – Station and Bridge By Thomas J. Wieckowski Residents of Wyncote and Jenkintown gathered at Ralph Morgan Park on a fine late June 2014 Sunday afternoon to celebrate the return of a new old friend. The new version of the Greenwood Avenue bridge connecting the two communities was scheduled to open, “finally” many would add, the following Monday. The previous bridge spanning the SEPTA railroad tracks had deteriorated over its seventy-two year lifespan, necessitating its complete removal. That bridge and its predecessor watched over the development of the two communities from their infancy as country villages to modern suburbs. When the North Pennsylvania Rail Road hacked its way through the verdant countryside in 1854 and 1855, it placed stations at the country roads that crossed its path. The closest to the village of Jenkin- town (there was as yet no Wyncote) were the stations at Washington Lane – named Chelten Hills after the development of country estates in the area by abolitionist, cotton merchant, and entrepreneur Edward M. Davis – and the station at [Rices] Mill Road – named Tacony. The main road we know today as Greenwood Avenue connecting the two communities of Jenkintown and Wyncote did not yet exist. In fact the area was considered remote countryside. The first train on the line ran on July 2, 1855. The Philadelphia Inquirer noted that its route ran through “exceedingly beautiful country, in which highly cultivated farms and fields were agreeably alternated with majestic and parklike groves, hills, and dales, and watered with sparkling brooks and streams.” Apparently the site was chosen for its direct line to the center of Jenkintown village and the locomotive watering station that had already been established there by the railroad. Residents of Jenkintown desired more convenient access to the new railroad and petitioned the president of the railroad to construct a new station in return for their establishment of an access road. Called Station Road, the new road would be 50 feet wide with an all-weather gravel center and a “summer road” (compacted dirt) on either side. The board of the railroad approved the request on July 13, 1859, and named the new station “Cheltenham.” The name lasted only until 1862 when Jenkintown residents again petitioned the board, this time for a change in name to “Jenkintown.” The station was a simple whitewashed wood-frame structure. It opened along the one-track line in the fall of 1859. Access to the building on the northeast side of the tracks was from Station Road. The North Penn’s chief engineer Edward Miller designated the station an “accommodation” stop only; that is, a flag-stop dependent upon a waiting customer. By 1869, the success of the railroad demanded a second track, although the original grading and bridges were designed from the beginning to accommodate two lines. By this time, Station Road, now renamed Greenwood Avenue, was extended southward to connect with an 1854 road that terminated at Church Road next to Abraham Barker’s estate, Lyndon. (Today’s Curtis Arboretum.) Thus Greenwood Avenue evolved into a single stretch from the center of Jenkintown to the Limekiln Pike. This created the fateful crossing of the road with the railroad tracks on the southeast side of the new station. Continued growth prompted the railroad to recognize the increased patronage, as well as the affluence of its customers, by constructing a more fitting stone edifice in 1872. The building included a waiting room and an outdoor privy, as well as a roof that protected the wood platform below. Patrons also demanded that water for thirsty travelers be provided, particularly since those coming from the city suffered the “less perfect” water of the city. Accordingly, a well was drilled – right next to the privy. In less than two decades, traffic at the stop outgrew the station and extensive renovations were made that included raising the roof by twelve feet, constructing two waiting rooms (for men and women), and indoor toilet rooms at the rear of the old waiting room. A baggage house was added during this construction to the outbound platform. Increased pedestrian accidents at the station prompted the railroad to construct a footbridge in 1895. It ran from Beechwood Avenue overlooking the baggage house, across the tracks, and down to the northern side of the inbound platform. In order to encourage pedestrian use, an iron fence was installed between the tracks. Increasing development, including the official founding of the new village known as Wyncote in 1887, brought traffic problems to the once secluded Greenwood Avenue railroad crossing. The problem may have concerned residents for a while, but public awareness did not emerge until an article in July 1899 in the Public Spirit about the county’s plans to replace the rickety old bridge over the Tookany creek. The article in that newspaper opined that, if a new bridge were to be constructed over the creek, they might as well continue northward and “carry the street over the North Penn railroad tracks and thus obviate a dangerous grade crossing.” The article continued with the opinion that “the railroad company would help bear the expense as they now must employ watchmen at this point day and night.” By the spring of 1900, the county appointed a jury to consider the matter of erecting a bridge that would result not only in the taking of adjacent property but also the vacating of a portion of Greenwood Avenue in the vicinity of the station. The panel included architect Milton Bean, who was responsible for many structures in the northwestern area of the city’s environs. and John W. Pepper, surveyor and constable Joseph Hunter; contractor Hugh O’Neill; state senator Joseph Heacock. The proposal percolated for a year, and the jury reconvened for another hearing in the same location on Tuesday, April 30, 1901. In the intervening year, the proposal generated opposition and an alternative plan. The alternative, probably the work of neighbor and famous merchant John Wanamaker, was to build a bridge connecting the bend in West Avenue on the Jenkintown side, with the bend at The jury met in the “old drug store” near the corner of Greenwood and Glenside Avenues on Thursday, May 24. The first witness was Jenkintown physician and owner of the general store and post office at the Greenwood corner, Dr. J. E. Peters. He summed up what would emerge as the general sentiment of the community: the crossing was “very dangerous,” and he had been “kept waiting on many occasions” for trains to pass. The witness list looked like an area Who’s Who: financier Clement Newbold; bankers Wharton Barker the top of the hill on Glenside Avenue on the Wyncote side. This route was duly considered, if unenthusiastically, at the hearing. Opposition to a bridge stemmed mostly from the Jenkintown Borough Council, which voted to officially oppose the new edifice, and from Thomas Nicholson, owner of the coal yard adjacent to the railroad station, who would have part of his property covered by the bridge and his access to his Greenwood Avenue entrance compromised. In a seemingly modern touch, Nicholson had sued to block the bridge, but a court decision in Norristown on January 7, 1901, declined to grant him relief. The chief opposing claims were that the project would damage the businesses located at Wyncote and depress property values. (There were businesses on the Jenkintown side that had to be removed for the ramp.) The proposed bridge, with its angular route, was approved by the jury in early 1902, and Joseph W. Hunter, the Jenkintown entrepreneur and surveyor, began documenting the bridge-site in July, 1902. Excavations began in Nicholson’s coal yard in September of 1902. Nicholson was awarded $7,500 for his lost property, but once again sued to obtain what he considered a more suitable level of compensation due to the “ruthless destruction” of his property. And once again, he was unsuccessful. Logs, presumably from the remnants of “Kent’s Woods” nearby, were used as vertical supports for the span over the tracks, although iron beams were used as the horizontal base of the travel surface. L. M. Bean, the local liveryman on Greenwood Avenue in Wyncote, had the contract for hauling the dirt fill for the Wyncote ramp in Au- gust of 1903. Later in that month, the stone retaining wall along Beechwood Avenue was rebuilt to move the roadway (today’s West Avenue in front of the train station) further north to intersect the new incline to the bridge. You can still today see the bend in the stone wall where the two subtly different styles of stonework meet. By November, crushed rock was being laid over the surface in preparation for a macadam covering. Workers were being paid $4 per day for their labor. Concerns about teams driving off the carriageway and down the embankment led to the installation of an ersatz fence made from logs pounded into the ground at the edge of the carriageway, topped with old gas pipes in early November 1903. A surprising amenity was added to the bridge on January 30, 1904, when a new-fangled electric light was placed atop a telephone pole at the center of the bridge. With the construction of a stone wall on the Jenkintown side of the platform blocking off Greenwood Avenue, concerns mounted that pedestrians were being forced to use the bridge, not designed for that purpose, in order to cross from one town to the other. The result was a pedestrian tunnel that was also constructed through 1903 linking the outbound with the inbound platforms. Finally open for traffic in January of 1904 – with little apparent fanfare – that bridge and its two successors safely linked vehicular traffic between the two burgeoning communities of Wyncote and Jenkintown without fear of railroading mishaps. The station would survive until 1932 when society architect Horace Trumbauer was hired by the Reading railroad, successor to the North Penn, to design a new station worthy of the affluent communities surrounding it. The bridge lasted another ten years after that and was replaced in 1942. ______________________________________ Thomas J. Wieckowski is vicepresident of the Old York Road Historical Society. He is a resident of Wyncote and wrote Making Marathon: A History of Early Wyncote that traces the history of the area from William Penn through the Gilded Age. ______________________________________ Captions 1. Greenwood Avenue crosses the tracks. The view looks south towards Washington Lane. Note the hut for the full-time gate attendant. 2. The 1872 station lies alongside the 1769 Mather Mill pond, site of today’s Ralph Morgan Park. John Wanamaker purchased the property in 1887 and put his own men to work dredging the “foul muck of the malerial pond,” turning it into an attractive stand of water. 3. The new Greenwood Avenue bridge in the spring of 1905. Note the wood pilings. The waterway in the foreground is the millrace that led from the Mather pond to the Mather Mill which was located at the Washington Lane crossing, one half mile to the South. War Monuments Conservation Fund The Coates-Jordan American Legion Post #163 and the Society recently signed an agreement whereby the Society established an endowment fund with a gift of nearly $42,500 from the Coates-Jordan Post. Interest that accrues on the endowment will be used to maintain the various public war monuments in Abington and Jenkintown. The Society looks forward to working with the appropriate municipalities and school districts to keep the identified war and veteran monuments in good condition. The Coates-Jordan Post was founded by returning World War I veterans. The Post was based in Jenkintown and owned a property on Cedar Road for a time. The proceeds from the sale of that building went into a fund that allowed the post to operate over the years. However, with a declining membership roster, the remaining members recently decided to fold the post and turn the bulk of its assets over to the Society to create this endowment. In its earlier days, the post was responsible for laying wreaths at the war monuments in Abington and Jenkintown every Memorial Day. The Society has created this endowment in furtherance of its mission to identify and preserve historic sites and landmarks in its communities and to promote the history of this area, which includes honoring the memory of those who have served or given their lives to their country in time of need. To the extent the endowment generates income above and beyond that needed to maintain the monuments in Abington Township and Jenkintown, then funds can be used to support other local organizations and events for purposes that honor American war dead and veterans or to maintain and preserve existing public veteran and war monuments in other locales within the Society’s territory. The Society wishes to express its thanks to the Post for funding this endowment and for its vote of confidence in the Society to serve as steward for our local war and veterans monuments. - - - YOUR HELP IS NEEDED - - Annually, the Society pays a visit to Montgomery Newspapers to get a copy of the previous year’s newspapers to save in our archives. This year and without notice, the publisher decided not to save any of its newspapers for 2014. Thus, we are in a distressed state as we attempt to gather a year’s worth of local newspapers. Many of the area libraries save the local paper for only a limited time. At this point, we have collected from area libraries and others the Times-Chronicle, the Glenside News and The Globe. However, the Public Spirit is not retained by the two local libraries that receive the paper and The Willow Grove Guide is only retained for a couple of months. So we must rely on others who might have saved some or all of these two newspapers for the past year. If you or anyone you know has any copies of the Public Spirit or The Willow Grove Guide for any week during 2014 and is willing to donate them to the Society for permanent retention, please contact the Society at 215-886-8590. Thanks for your assistance! Funeral Home Records Indexed The Society holds the funeral home records for the Helweg Funeral Service of Jenkintown and the Baron Rowland Funeral Home in Abington. Both establishments were multi-generational and thus the records of deaths are quite extensive. In order to make the best use of this resource, Board Member Leslie Bell developed a project to index the funeral records. The Old York Road Genealogical Society was approached for volunteers to type identifying information into a spreadsheet that can then be sorted. Genealogical Society volunteers Cathy Bolton, Barbara Hughes, Mary Ann Reynolds, Flossie Waring, Barbara Wentling, and Margie White began to tackle this project in December 2013. For each death recorded, a volunteer entered the name of the deceased, date of death, cemetery, volume and page number. The project was finally completed in January 2015. The index contains some 9700 entries and will be used in conjunction with the numerous genealogical requests that come into the Society each year. The Society is grateful to the volunteers who helped make these funeral home records easily accessible. THANKS TO OUR MAJOR MEMBERSHIP DONORS The Society gratefully recognizes those who have so far supported our work for the 2015 program year through membership at the Patron level and above. All of those listed will be invited to this year’s Patrons’ Party. BENEFACTOR Eileen A. Koolpe Joyce H. Root David B. Rowland Joseph C. Scott Foundation SUSTAINER Mr. & Mrs. Michael F. Czerwonka The Jenkinstown Lyceum Mr. & Mrs. Louis M. Golden Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kahn CONTRIBUTOR William D. Barker, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John B. Chapman Mr. & Mrs. Mark Hinkel Kiwanis Club of Jenkintown Mr. & Mrs. H. Lewis Klein Mr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Krzaczek Mr. & Mrs. Donald Pizer Mr. & Mrs. Baron Rowland Dr. & Mrs. Frederick Rude Rotary Club of Jenkintown Mr. & Mrs. Jack Washington PATRON PLUS The Rev. David R. Adam Chelten Hills Savings Bank Mr. & Mrs. Larry Eastwood Mr. & Mrs. George W. Elkins James T. Gulla Mr. & Mrs. George E. Harrison Barbara A. Jacobs Mr. & Mrs. John B. Neff Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Pokrifka Mr. & Mrs. L. Vicente Rivera Elizabeth B. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Wm. Weihenmeyer Dr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Wieckowski PATRON Mr. & Mrs. John F. Bales Pamela Bannon and Samantha Hutcherson Mr. & Mrs. Herbert V. Bell Nan S. Bers & Harry J. Sears James A. Butler, Ph.D. Sandra S. Collins Mr. & Mrs. Jan E. DuBois Diane B. Foster Dr. & Mrs. Ronald H. Freidman Eleanor Given John F. Glynn Mr. & Mrs. Harold N. Grier Rep. Kate Harper Mr. & Mrs. Herbert L. Harris Bryan T. Havir Mr. & Mrs. Clyde R. Herr Carol A. Ingald Mr. & Mrs. Gregory A. Jackson J. Theodore Jensen Mr. & Mrs. Martin G. Kalos Natalie Karas Jeffrey Kenneth Kohn, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. Edward C. Landau Mr. & Mrs. Robert Maher Martha C. McDonough Elaine C. Meckling Mr. & Mrs. Martin L. Mikelberg Edie Miller Andrew G. Nehlig Albert R. Paulbinsky Dr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Peff Dr. & Dr. Melvyn P. Richter Josh Rosenbloom Mr. & Mrs. Hugh T. Ryan Kenneth E. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. John L. Waite Patrons’ Party to be Held at Netherfield This year’s annual Patrons’ Party will be held Sunday, May 17, at Netherfield, an estate that adjoins the Huntingdon Valley Country Club. The original farm house was built in the mid-18th century and was expanded several times in the 19th century. In the mid-1920s, the owner W. W. Justice, undertook renovations and an addition designed by the architectural firm of Thomas, Martin & Kirkpatrick of Philadelphia. This signaled the transition of the property from a farm to an estate. The current owners purchased the property in 2000 and restored the residence to top condition and made an addition to the structure. Invitations will be mailed to all 2015 Patron and above members in mid-April. In order to receive an invitation, you must be a current 2015 Patron member or higher, a donor to the Annual Fund, or a donor of archival materials to the Society’s collections.