(WBOC)
View news story:
Family Loses Pocomoke City Home, Possible Oxygen Tank Explosion - WBOC TV
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Fire ravaged the Ayres residence at 205 Laurel Street early Friday afternoon. We hope to have an update later.
The rocket launched Friday morning shortly after 8:30.
(Shore Daily News)
The Terrier Sounding Rocket launch scheduled for today at the Wallops Flight Facility has been postponed until Friday between 8 and 10 a.m. Wallops cited rough seas that could prevent the payload from being recovered.
(Shore Daily News)
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This Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye:
1993 ..
1882 .. A Pocomoke Sunday School excursion takes an unexpected turn but ends well.
1931 .. In Stockton-
The Prevention Services Program of the Worcester County Health Department is excited to announce the launch of two newly designed web pages that focus on diabetes education and prevention. The web pages are easy to navigate and user friendly.
For more information and to check the web pages out, visit worcesterhealth.org/
(WMDT)
Outdoor seating, to-go alcohol sales ending in Worcester Co.
Remembering-
When I rode down Willow Street recently I guess it was inevitable that I couldn't help but realize how dramatically the scene had changed from what I remembered when I was growing up in Pocomoke City. Today, with the exception of the One Room Schoolhouse museum at Front & Willow and the rear of the Discovery Center building, the street is a virtual ghost town of mostly vacated buildings and empty spaces where buildings once stood.
Back in "the day" (i.e. 1950's) Willow was a bustling street where some of the active points of commerce included a large laundry/dry cleaning company, appliance store, large grocery and fresh meat market, fountain and confectionery store, radio station studio, county liquor dispensary, telephone company headquarters, two auto dealerships, hotel/restaurant, Western Auto, office supply store, electrical repair shop, and other enterprises; also a Willow Street entrance to the original J.J. Newberry's store that fronted on the west side of Market Street near County Trust Bank.
R.I.P. good old Willow. It was pleasant to remember you and I suspect your pavements won't see resemblances of your former life again.
-tk for PPE
(Reader comment)
Leslie Bunting owned an electrical repair shop on Willow. He was noted for having the same panel truck his entire life. When it got rusty he just painted over it with a paintbrush and a can of silver paint.
tk for PPE says: Didn't know that about his panel truck but I remember Les. On occasion I'd take something in to his shop for repair. My dad, Bill Kleger, would call him for help if there was a problem with the refrigeration compressors at the store (Peoples Food Market on Willow Street; later renamed Bill's Foodland).
(Reader comment)
I don't recall Bill's Foodland but I do remember John Lee Taylor had a little market around the corner on Second Street.
Every spring Jeff Trader and I would catch bullfrogs, cut the legs off and skin them and put 5 pounds in plastic bags which we sold to John for $5.00 per bag. That was big money for high school boys in those days. Of course, that was before health department and USDA food regulations. We also caught shad during the spring shad run and sold the roe sacks to Billy Hudson at US 13 Restaurant for his famous shad roe sandwiches. I bet there's not 10 people left in Pocomoke who have ever eaten shad roe or local frog legs.
(Reader comment)
Whoops, John Lee Taylor's market was on Clarke, not Second. Old age strikes again.
tk for PPE says: I believe that's the store I remember as Merrill's grocery in the 1950's. My dad's store on Willow was in operation from the mid 1940's until his passing in 1964 and then new owners ran it a few more years.
(From this past weekend)
(WMDT)
Snow Hill celebrates hometown hero baseball player Judy Johnson - 47abc (wmdt.com)
April, 2010
February, 1921 (Pocomoke City)
Worcester Democrat
May, 1896
MY mother started work at Moore Business Forms in the mid-1950s for the princely salary of $70 per week. The employees were paid on Thursdays and she would stop by the Acme store at 5th and Walnut and purchased the whole weeks supply of groceries for the family for approximately $20. One week she complained that she had gone way over budget because her purchases had totaled $22.
The Acme was 5th and Market. Stuff like this happens when one gets old.