Sunday, September 6, 2020

Time Machine: 1952, 1925, 1902, 1950, 1962, 1977.





April, 1952
 




Salisbury Times
(PPE Reader comment)
 Anonymous said...

Mayor George Matthews was a real piece of work. He owned the Pure Oil distributorship down on Railroad Avenue, known as Matthews Oil Company. He had hired George Mariner to help and Mariner turned out to be such a big help that Matthews didn't have to do anything. George Matthews would put in an appearance about 9:30 or 10:00 in the morning, open his personal mail, then spend the rest of the day at the pool hall downtown. After his passing George Mariner assumed ownership of the business, changed the name to Mariner Oil Company, and ran it successfully until his death when David and Patsy Mears bought the business from George's widow.



November, 1952

Salisbury Times


August, 1925
Worcester Democrat


February, 1902
Baltimore Sun



May, 1950
Salisbury Times



1962  ..  Popular Pocomoke City physician C. Stanford Hamilton was one of three fatalities when the car in which he was a passenger, returning from a Baltimore Colts game, crashed on Route 50.

(Dr. Hamilton came to Pocomoke City in the mid 1950's to assume the practice of Dr. Louis Llewellyn who was leaving to return to North Carolina. In later years Dr. Llewellyn's son Doug gained notoriety as the host of the popular TV program People's Court.  Dr. Hamilton's daughter Linda, who was a young child at the time of his death, is accomplished Hollywood actress Linda Hamilton.) -tk  


1977  ..  New on the computer scene.. it's the Apple II.


The Time Machine is a weekly feature I've enjoyed researching and compiling on The Pocomoke Public Eye since 2011.  I have fond memories of growing up in Pocomoke City and welcome reader contributions we can share about things you've read, remember, or were told relating to our Pocomoke/Eastern shore area...a sentence, a paragraph, or more all fine. Just email it.








1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Mayor George Matthews was a real piece of work. He owned the Pure Oil distributorship down on Railroad Avenue, known as Matthews Oil Company. He had hired George Mariner to help and Mariner turned out to be such a big help that Matthews didn't have to do anything. George Matthews would put in an appearance about 9:30 or 10:00 in the morning, open his personal mail, then spend the rest of the day at the pool hall downtown. After his passing George Mariner assumed ownership of the business, changed the name to Mariner Oil Company, and ran it successfully until his death when David and Patsy Mears bought the business from George's widow.