The Orbital
Sciences Corporation Antares rocket, with the Cygnus spacecraft
onboard, is scheduled to launch this evening, Monday, Oct. 27 at 6:45 PM
EDT. The spacecraft will deliver over 5,000 pounds of supplies for the
International Space Station, including science experiements, experiment
hardware, spare parts and crew provisions. This is the third contracted
cargo delivery flight to the space station for NASA. Weather remains
98% go for launch.
Family friendly and striving to be a worthy choice for your Internet browsing. Comments and material submissions welcome: tkforppe@yahoo.com . Pocomoke City-- an All American City And The Friendliest Town On The Eastern Shore.
Tuesday, October 28, 2014
Sunday, October 26, 2014
TIME MACHINE ... 1962, 1920, 1956, 1930, 1996, 1903.
"Friendliest Town On The Eastern Shore." Our tradition runs deep. Excerpt from a letter to the editor from a visitor to Newtown, (former name of Pocomoke City) published in the Baltimore Sun, April 28,1847.
This place (Newtown) is a pretty snug little village, containing about 500 clever and hospitable inhabitants; is has good wide streets, quite clear of that "eye sore," known mostly over the Peninsula by the name of "deep sand"; the houses, though built of frame, are generally built substantially and with some discretion and taste; there are two neat, new, and quite handsome frame churches in it; as for the merchants of the place, suffice it to state that they are very clever and hospitable. F. Mezick, Esq., the landlord with whom I stopped, and his very obliging and jolly assistant, are richly deserving of a passing notice, for the good treatment and the extension of the many civilities to "the stranger."
(Reader-friendly viewing of news archive/historical archive material)
(Halloween)
October, 1962
The Salisbury Times
(Excerpt)
Four Towns In Worcester Plan Ghostly Activites
Pocomoke City is planning a week-long celebration, said James Morrison, member of the town's Jaycees, who are sponsoring the program there. Store windows will be painted by pupils of the lower grades in the elementary school, he said, then they will be judged by the number of votes (a penny is a vote) placed in the ballot boxes in front of the windows. A $5 prize will be given to the class painting the best window.
J. William Robertson, chairman of the parade, said that the parade itself will be held on Halloween night beginning at 7PM. Contestants will line up between 6:30 and 7 p.m. at various downtown locations. They will be divided into four age groups, he said, and prizes will be given to the funniest, the most original, and the best dressed parader in each group.
At 8p.m. there will be a dance on Willow Street, Mr. Robertson said. Music will be provided by the "Sparks," a combo made up from members of the high school band.
At 10p.m. there will be a free movie at the Marva Theater, he said.
Footnote: Snow Hill, Berlin, and Newark were also planning Halloween activities, including a parade in each community.
October, 1920
The Washington Post
DOCTOR IS JAILED UNDER "DRY" LAW
Admits Prescribing and Selling Liquor to "Sick" Cannery Hands.
Special toThe Washington Post.
Baltimore, Md., Oct. 11.- Admitting that he unlawfully prescribed whiskey on the Eastern Shore on at least six occasions, Dr. Samuel Alexander Ross, of Crisfield, Md., was sentenced to four months in jail today by Judge Rose in the United States court. He is the first physician to be jailed under the prohibition laws in the Maryland district.
According to revenue agent Herman E. Parks, Dr. Ross was engaged in an extensive illegal traffic with canning house proprietors and other businessmen. One transaction, according to the government man, involved the sale of 24 pints of whiskey.
There were 38 charges against Dr. Ross and he pleaded guilty to five of them, requesting that he be sent to jail at Princess Anne, near Crisfield, rather than the city jail. The court took the request under consideration.
Among other offenses the physician is said to have prescribed 33 pints of whiskey and sold them between July 6 and July 16, dating the prescriptions from Crisfield. He admitted that he was not in Crisfield during that period and dated the others ahead of time. He told the court he operated all along the Eastern Shore, prescribing and selling liquor for the canning houses, where employees were reported to be "sick."
February, 1956
Somerset and Worcester Counties lost one of their prominent agricultural leaders with the death of J. Miles Lankford. He was active in farm and civic organizations in the two counties, a member of the State Forests And Parks Commission, and was proprietor of the Southern States Co-operative Store in Pocomoke City. His father was the late state senator Edward B. Lankford.
August, 1930 (Time Machine archive)
(The Daily Mail- Hagerstown, Md.)
LIGHTS MATCH AND BUS CAUGHT FIRE
POCOMOKE CITY, Aug 25. (AP) - At 3 o'clock in the morning 14 passengers enroute on a bus from New York to Cape Charles that halted here for a few minutes were hurriedly driven into the open as fire destroyed the vehicle. Some were cut and bruised in rushing for the door. Blame was placed on a passenger who alighted as the stop was made at a filling station and stuck a match to light a cigarette. The passengers were transferred to a train for the rest of the journey. The bus was owned by the Pennsylvania Railway Transit Company.
January, 1996
The Somerset Herald (Princess Anne)
(Excerpts)
First phase of renovations begin this month at Crisfield High School
According to Crisfield High School principal John D. Samus, the first phase of the school's long awaited renovation will begin Jan. 17. This portion of the renovation will include the newer wing of the building.
Footnote: Former students will recall the reshuffling of classroom and office space during this renovation period. Auditorium and cafeteria renovations were to begin the following September.
(A visitor to Chincoteague writes his observations.)
August, 1903
The Times Dispatch (Richmond, Va.)
PART 2 (continued from last week)
Chincoteague is out of the world in the sense that it is a few thousand acres of land surrounded by water, but in other senses it is close to what outsiders are pleased to call the world. Franklin City and Greenbackville are only six miles away. Franklin is the terminus of one branch of the Pennsylvania Railway. There are three mails to and from the island every day. The Baltimore papers are received by noon of the day on which they are printed, and the Philadelphia papers come in on the same train. There are but few dailies taken on the island. Many weeklies come to the Chincoteague postoffice.
There are forty-four licensed stores of various kinds ln Chincoteague. D. J. Whealton, the wealthiest man on the island, is the proprietor of one of the largest general stores I have seen anywhere. The stock carried is probably worth $25,000. The trade at all the stores appeared to be good. The islanders have plenty of money, and they spend it.
The oyster and clam industries form the chief sources of income. I was told of one man who had made for several weeks an average of between $25 and $30 a week digging and marketing clams. The clam industry is comparatively new, but several persons have told me that it will soon become more profitable than oystering, unless the Baylor survey (public access to naturally producing oyster areas) is broken by act of the Legislature. What I have seen in this oyster country in the past week convinces me that legislation breaking the survey would mean much suffering, if not starvation to Chincoteague.
Captain J. T. Rowley, who deals more extensively in clams than any other man on the island, sold seven million clams last winter a year ago, and last winter he sold between five million and six million. He is rich, and growing richer. The hundreds of men and women who sell him clams are making good livings. They could not do so if the Legislature throws open the State oyster beds to pre-emption by individuals. It is the constant fear of such action that makes the average Chincoteaguer grow old before his time.
But I was talking of the prosperity of the people of Chlncoteague.
"There is not another place of three thousand inhabitants in the United States where more than ninety per cent of the people own their own homes," said Captain Rowley the other afternoon, as we were driving over the island behind his fast horse. "There are very few renters on the island, though, of course, there are no large landholders."
Just about that time Captain Rowley stopped In front of a tiny house in the pine grove a few yards away. It was a frame structure, one story high, and not an inch over twelve feet square. I admitted that I hardly thought a person could live in so small a house.
"A man and his wife and five children live there." said the Captain, as he started up his horse. "The oldest child is a boy twelve years of age, and he works with his father every day, making good money."
(More from this article next Sunday.)
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!
"Somewhere Over The
Rainbow Bluebirds
fly.."
Flying On For JMMB.
Her Pocomoke Public
Eye postings (April,
2008 to June, 2014)
kept us informed.
This place (Newtown) is a pretty snug little village, containing about 500 clever and hospitable inhabitants; is has good wide streets, quite clear of that "eye sore," known mostly over the Peninsula by the name of "deep sand"; the houses, though built of frame, are generally built substantially and with some discretion and taste; there are two neat, new, and quite handsome frame churches in it; as for the merchants of the place, suffice it to state that they are very clever and hospitable. F. Mezick, Esq., the landlord with whom I stopped, and his very obliging and jolly assistant, are richly deserving of a passing notice, for the good treatment and the extension of the many civilities to "the stranger."
(Reader-friendly viewing of news archive/historical archive material)
(Halloween)
October, 1962
The Salisbury Times
(Excerpt)
Four Towns In Worcester Plan Ghostly Activites
Pocomoke City is planning a week-long celebration, said James Morrison, member of the town's Jaycees, who are sponsoring the program there. Store windows will be painted by pupils of the lower grades in the elementary school, he said, then they will be judged by the number of votes (a penny is a vote) placed in the ballot boxes in front of the windows. A $5 prize will be given to the class painting the best window.
J. William Robertson, chairman of the parade, said that the parade itself will be held on Halloween night beginning at 7PM. Contestants will line up between 6:30 and 7 p.m. at various downtown locations. They will be divided into four age groups, he said, and prizes will be given to the funniest, the most original, and the best dressed parader in each group.
At 8p.m. there will be a dance on Willow Street, Mr. Robertson said. Music will be provided by the "Sparks," a combo made up from members of the high school band.
At 10p.m. there will be a free movie at the Marva Theater, he said.
Footnote: Snow Hill, Berlin, and Newark were also planning Halloween activities, including a parade in each community.
October, 1920
The Washington Post
DOCTOR IS JAILED UNDER "DRY" LAW
Admits Prescribing and Selling Liquor to "Sick" Cannery Hands.
Special toThe Washington Post.
Baltimore, Md., Oct. 11.- Admitting that he unlawfully prescribed whiskey on the Eastern Shore on at least six occasions, Dr. Samuel Alexander Ross, of Crisfield, Md., was sentenced to four months in jail today by Judge Rose in the United States court. He is the first physician to be jailed under the prohibition laws in the Maryland district.
According to revenue agent Herman E. Parks, Dr. Ross was engaged in an extensive illegal traffic with canning house proprietors and other businessmen. One transaction, according to the government man, involved the sale of 24 pints of whiskey.
There were 38 charges against Dr. Ross and he pleaded guilty to five of them, requesting that he be sent to jail at Princess Anne, near Crisfield, rather than the city jail. The court took the request under consideration.
Among other offenses the physician is said to have prescribed 33 pints of whiskey and sold them between July 6 and July 16, dating the prescriptions from Crisfield. He admitted that he was not in Crisfield during that period and dated the others ahead of time. He told the court he operated all along the Eastern Shore, prescribing and selling liquor for the canning houses, where employees were reported to be "sick."
February, 1956
Somerset and Worcester Counties lost one of their prominent agricultural leaders with the death of J. Miles Lankford. He was active in farm and civic organizations in the two counties, a member of the State Forests And Parks Commission, and was proprietor of the Southern States Co-operative Store in Pocomoke City. His father was the late state senator Edward B. Lankford.
August, 1930 (Time Machine archive)
(The Daily Mail- Hagerstown, Md.)
LIGHTS MATCH AND BUS CAUGHT FIRE
POCOMOKE CITY, Aug 25. (AP) - At 3 o'clock in the morning 14 passengers enroute on a bus from New York to Cape Charles that halted here for a few minutes were hurriedly driven into the open as fire destroyed the vehicle. Some were cut and bruised in rushing for the door. Blame was placed on a passenger who alighted as the stop was made at a filling station and stuck a match to light a cigarette. The passengers were transferred to a train for the rest of the journey. The bus was owned by the Pennsylvania Railway Transit Company.
January, 1996
The Somerset Herald (Princess Anne)
(Excerpts)
First phase of renovations begin this month at Crisfield High School
According to Crisfield High School principal John D. Samus, the first phase of the school's long awaited renovation will begin Jan. 17. This portion of the renovation will include the newer wing of the building.
Footnote: Former students will recall the reshuffling of classroom and office space during this renovation period. Auditorium and cafeteria renovations were to begin the following September.
(A visitor to Chincoteague writes his observations.)
August, 1903
The Times Dispatch (Richmond, Va.)
PART 2 (continued from last week)
Chincoteague is out of the world in the sense that it is a few thousand acres of land surrounded by water, but in other senses it is close to what outsiders are pleased to call the world. Franklin City and Greenbackville are only six miles away. Franklin is the terminus of one branch of the Pennsylvania Railway. There are three mails to and from the island every day. The Baltimore papers are received by noon of the day on which they are printed, and the Philadelphia papers come in on the same train. There are but few dailies taken on the island. Many weeklies come to the Chincoteague postoffice.
There are forty-four licensed stores of various kinds ln Chincoteague. D. J. Whealton, the wealthiest man on the island, is the proprietor of one of the largest general stores I have seen anywhere. The stock carried is probably worth $25,000. The trade at all the stores appeared to be good. The islanders have plenty of money, and they spend it.
The oyster and clam industries form the chief sources of income. I was told of one man who had made for several weeks an average of between $25 and $30 a week digging and marketing clams. The clam industry is comparatively new, but several persons have told me that it will soon become more profitable than oystering, unless the Baylor survey (public access to naturally producing oyster areas) is broken by act of the Legislature. What I have seen in this oyster country in the past week convinces me that legislation breaking the survey would mean much suffering, if not starvation to Chincoteague.
Captain J. T. Rowley, who deals more extensively in clams than any other man on the island, sold seven million clams last winter a year ago, and last winter he sold between five million and six million. He is rich, and growing richer. The hundreds of men and women who sell him clams are making good livings. They could not do so if the Legislature throws open the State oyster beds to pre-emption by individuals. It is the constant fear of such action that makes the average Chincoteaguer grow old before his time.
But I was talking of the prosperity of the people of Chlncoteague.
"There is not another place of three thousand inhabitants in the United States where more than ninety per cent of the people own their own homes," said Captain Rowley the other afternoon, as we were driving over the island behind his fast horse. "There are very few renters on the island, though, of course, there are no large landholders."
Just about that time Captain Rowley stopped In front of a tiny house in the pine grove a few yards away. It was a frame structure, one story high, and not an inch over twelve feet square. I admitted that I hardly thought a person could live in so small a house.
"A man and his wife and five children live there." said the Captain, as he started up his horse. "The oldest child is a boy twelve years of age, and he works with his father every day, making good money."
(More from this article next Sunday.)
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!
"Somewhere Over The
Rainbow Bluebirds
fly.."
Flying On For JMMB.
Her Pocomoke Public
Eye postings (April,
2008 to June, 2014)
kept us informed.
Saturday, October 25, 2014
Every Sunday On The Pocomoke Public Eye..
<1800<1850<Time<1900<1950<Machine<2000<<
It's reader-friendly viewing of newspaper archive and historical archive material, primarily of local interest.
This week we share items from 1962, 1920, 1956, 1930, 1996, and 1903.
Check back tomorrow, 10/26, right here!
It's reader-friendly viewing of newspaper archive and historical archive material, primarily of local interest.
This week we share items from 1962, 1920, 1956, 1930, 1996, and 1903.
Check back tomorrow, 10/26, right here!
Thursday, October 23, 2014
TIME MACHINE ... This Sunday's Preview
1962.. Pocomoke City planning week-long Halloween celebration; 1920.. Prescriptions for whiskey send Crisfield doctor to jail; 1956.. Lower shore loses an agricultural leader; 1930.. Passengers flee burning bus at Pocomoke City stop; 1996.. Crisfield High renovations to begin; and more of the observations made by a visitor to Chincoteague in 1903.
Although you may not find all of these items in a history book, they are a part of our local history and you can read more about it this Sunday right here at The Pocomoke Public Eye!
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Accidental release of murder suspect latest O'Malley-Brown failure to place Marylanders at risk
Despite assurances by Lt. Gov. Brown that administration addressed “issues” at Baltimore Detention Center, a state correctional
facility went full weekend unaware that dangerous murder suspect was accidently released
Lt. Gov, Anthony Brown: “We took far-reaching, decisive action in response to the recent
safety and personnel issues discovered at BCDC.” –
Baltimore Sun primary candidates questionnaire
Annapolis, MD – October 21, 2014
– Gubernatorial candidate Larry Hogan today issued the following
statement following reports that a state-run corrections facility
in Baltimore accidentally released a murder suspect.
“The
lives and safety of Marylanders are once again at risk because of a
colossal management failure in an O’Malley-Brown Administration agency.
Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown on numerous occasions assured Maryland
families that his administration had addressed the horrific problems in
the Baltimore City Detention Center, which was overtaken by a dangerous
street gang under their watch.
“How
many examples do overtaxed Marylanders need that Anthony Brown lacks
the management and leadership skills necessary to run our state
government?” Hogan asked.
“Despite
spending $288 million of our tax dollars, he couldn’t build a
functioning Health Exchange website; despite 40 straight tax hikes, he
raided billions from
environmental and transportation trust funds; despite warnings,
assisted living facilities with track records of abuse and neglect were
awarded tens of millions in state contracts; and now we learn that a
state-run detention center didn’t realize for a full
weekend that it failed to detain a murder suspect.”
“As governor, I’ll hold my administration accountable to the people who pay their salaries.”
“What
should be done to correct and prevent problems at the state-run Baltimore City Detention Center?” -
Baltimore Sun 2014 gubernatorial primary questionnaire
“We took far-reaching, decisive action in response to the recent safety and personnel issues discovered at BCDC. – Anthony Brown
response to Sun questionnaire
# # #
For more information and interviews, contact Adam Dubitsky at O (443) 221-4450, M (240) 625-2683 adubitsky@ hoganforgovernor.com or
visit www.hoganforgovernor.com
Facebook:
www.facebook.com/ ChangeMaryland
Authority: Hogan-Rutherford Committee to Change Maryland.
John C. Wobensmith, Treasurer
Times Endorses McDermott...Kinda..Sorta
“Times Endorses McDermott for Senate...Kinda, Sorta…”
by Delegate Mike McDermott
The DailyTimes rightly states, “It’s time for change in Annapolis”
and then makes the case for that change by pointing out the failed
policies which have continued to provide high unemployment, increased
burdens on business, and no recovery from the Great Recession.
They
go on to outline their rejection of Maryland’s Lieutenant Governor in
favor of Larry Hogan with words that they should have also utilized to
endorse me for the Senate seat in District 38.
“Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown/Senator Jim Mathias, the Democratic candidate for governor/Senator,
has a distinguished career. His dedication to public service is
remarkable. Sadly, however, he comes out of the same mindset that’s
helped create Maryland’s current economic problems. Is Brown/Mathias likely to set a new course for the state and for job creation? It is hard to see that happening.” -The Daily Times 10/19/14
To
further their point, the Times goes on to highlight several key issues
they believe Hogan will address. They are the same issues and policies
that I have fought for in the House and campaigned on in the district:
• Lessen the tax burden.
• Reduce the impact of burdensome regulations, an especially important issue for the Eastern Shore’s poultry industry.
• Promote jobs and the middle class. -The Daily Times 10/19/14
Yet, the Daily Times appears bifurcated when they consider our future. They believe we need a new pilot, but they think the navigator should keep his job.
I think the Times did a nice job on the Hogan piece so allow me again
to offer another minor correction to make it perfect in closing:
“When
you vote, in early voting starting Thursday or at the polls on Nov. 4,
think of the economy. Better yet, think of your children and
grandchildren. Which candidate will best serve their futures?
In our view, it is clearly Larry Hogan and Mike McDermott.”
-The Daily Times 10/19/14
I could not have said it better myself!
Sheriffs Who Are Protecting Liberty
An increasing number of sheriffs are rising to resist federal
overreach in their counties. About 100 of them met in mid-September at
the National Press Club in Washington, DC.
The gathering was organized by the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association -- a group that was formed by former Sheriff Richard Mack. It was a time of mutual encouragement, where several sheriffs shared their experiences in resisting federal overreach.
Sheriff Mike Lewis of Wycomico County, Maryland was one of the sheriffs in attendance. He got national attention recently for saying that the feds better not try grabbing guns in his county.
“I can tell you this,” Lewis said, “if they attempt to do that, it will be an all-out civil war. No question about it.”
Another attendee, Sheriff Denny Peyman of Jackson County, Kentucky, was equally blunt. “My office will not comply with any federal action which violates the United States Constitution or the Kentucky Constitution which I swore to uphold.”
Gun Owners of America presented Sheriff Peyman with the “Nullifier of the Year” award last year because of his strong commitment to defend the Constitution -- and the Second Amendment in particular.
Source: [GOA CLICK HERE]
The gathering was organized by the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association -- a group that was formed by former Sheriff Richard Mack. It was a time of mutual encouragement, where several sheriffs shared their experiences in resisting federal overreach.
Sheriff Mike Lewis of Wycomico County, Maryland was one of the sheriffs in attendance. He got national attention recently for saying that the feds better not try grabbing guns in his county.
“I can tell you this,” Lewis said, “if they attempt to do that, it will be an all-out civil war. No question about it.”
Another attendee, Sheriff Denny Peyman of Jackson County, Kentucky, was equally blunt. “My office will not comply with any federal action which violates the United States Constitution or the Kentucky Constitution which I swore to uphold.”
Gun Owners of America presented Sheriff Peyman with the “Nullifier of the Year” award last year because of his strong commitment to defend the Constitution -- and the Second Amendment in particular.
Source: [GOA CLICK HERE]
Vote For Enchanted Florist Pocomoke
VOTE FOR US!!!!!!! Go to choice.delmarvanow.com and vote for 10 or more businesses. You will be entered in a drawing for a $500 gift certificate to the business of your choice. Go to shopping and scroll down to florist and click our name.......Your vote would be appreciated, make us your number one choice!!!!! Thank you
Monday, October 20, 2014
Business After Hours
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Regent Homes by Beracah
1609 Ocean Highway
Pocomoke City
5:00 - 7:00 PM
HALLOWEEN PLANNER NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:October 20, 2014
CONTACT: Gayle Waters, Pocomoke City
Police, 410 957-1600, PocomokePD@comcast.net
Trick-or-Treat?
Drink-or-Drive?
Buzzed Driving is
Drunk Driving
Pocomoke City, MD; Halloween is quickly approaching, which for many
people means celebrating with alcohol. As you carve your pumpkin or pick out a
costume this year, keep in mind that one of the best choices you can make is to
drive sober or designate a sober driver to get you home safely. Chief Kelvin Sewell and members of the
Pocomoke City Police Department is reminding all drivers that Buzzed Driving is Drunk Driving because
every Halloween there are still some people who think they can drive after
drinking.
“We want people to remember: like ‘Trick-or-Treat;’ ‘Drink-or-Drive.’ One or
the other, but never both,” said Gayle Waters. Before you take your
first sip of alcohol on October 31, figure out who your designated sober driver
will be. If you wait until you’re
‘buzzed’ to make a decision, you may decide to drive. Buzzed Driving is Drunk Driving, which means that driving “buzzed”
brings very serious consequences. In 2012 alone, there were 10,322 people
killed in drunk–driving crashes. Those were preventable deaths that happened
when drunk drivers failed to plan ahead.
According to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, Halloween is a statistically dangerous night for
drunk driving. In 2012, almost half (48%) of all crash fatalities that night
involved a drunk driver.
Chief
Kelvin Sewell recommends these simple
tips for a safe Halloween:
·
Before
the Halloween festivities begin, plan a way to safely get home at the end of
the night.
·
Always designate
a sober driver.
·
If you are drunk,
take a taxi, call a sober friend or family member, or use public
transportation.
·
Walking impaired can be just as dangerous as drunk driving. Designate a sober friend to walk you home.
·
If you see a
drunk driver on the road, contact local law enforcement, it’s your
responsibility.
·
If you know
someone who is about to drive or ride impaired, take their keys and help them
make safe travel arrangements to where they are going.
|
|||
Sunday, October 19, 2014
TIME MACHINE... 1969, 1905, 1977, 1937, 1960, 1903
"Friendliest Town On The Eastern Shore." Our tradition runs deep. Excerpt from a letter to the editor from a visitor to Newtown, (former name of Pocomoke City) published in the Baltimore Sun, April 28,1847.
This place (Newtown) is a pretty snug little village, containing about 500 clever and hospitable inhabitants; is has good wide streets, quite clear of that "eye sore," known mostly over the Peninsula by the name of "deep sand"; the houses, though built of frame, are generally built substantially and with some discretion and taste; there are two neat, new, and quite handsome frame churches in it; as for the merchants of the place, suffice it to state that they are very clever and hospitable. F. Mezick, Esq., the landlord with whom I stopped, and his very obliging and jolly assistant, are richly deserving of a passing notice, for the good treatment and the extension of the many civilities to "the stranger."
(Reader-friendly viewing of newspaper archives material)
April, 1969
Evening Capital (Annapolis, Md.)
Renowned Mansion Destroyed
BERLIN, Md. (AP)- The mansion on an estate where the great racehorse Man O'War trained burned to the ground today.
Richard Ketterman, caretaker for the 1,500 acre spread, said the three-story frame house with at least 21 rooms was a total loss. He estimated the loss at $500,000 since the house was filled with antiques and at least 100 paintings of famous racehorses.
The estate, between Berlin and Ocean City, now called Winchester, was bought by the late Samuel D. Riddle in 1917, the same year that Man O'War was born.
Most of his horses had been transferred from the estate to Garden State Park by Trainer Oscar White. The flames did not reach any of the stables.
Ketterman said the fire in the house started around 7 a.m. and two hours later it was in ruins. Firemen from four towns were hampered by the lack of water, having to pump it from a creek one-quarter of a mile away.
Footnote: The property encompassing the estate has been developed as the Glen Riddle new homes community in recent years.
November, 1905
The Washington Post
OYSTERMEN RAIDED COURT
Mob Released Prisoner and Made Magistrate Revoke Sentence.
Held Him A Captive Until He Yielded.
Paraded Crisfield, Md., in Triumph.
Threatens Planters.
Special to the Washington Post.
Crisfield, Md., Nov. 29- A mob of several hundred oystermen this afternoon attacked the courthouse, rescued Ralph Nelson, just convicted of raiding oyster beds, and captured Justice G. W. Kennedy, whom they released only after they had forced him to revoke his decision.
Nelson was arraigned on the charge of raiding oyster plantations of the Tangier Packing Company, in Tangier Sound, and it was alleged that he and his friends had been defying the law for a long time. After trial to-day, he was pronounced guilty by the magistrate.
The announcement of the verdict was a signal for an attack by the oystermen, who throunged the court. A rush was made, in which the prisoner was taken from the court officers, and the magistrate was captured.
For about an hour Justice Kennedy was held prisoner by the mob, before he was induced to revoke his verdict, declaring he would never try another oyster case.
Nelson and his friends then paraded the streets in triumph. The mob declared there shall be no planting of oysters, and threatens to raid and tear up the beds that already exist in these waters.
March, 1977 (Time Machine archive)
A health care clinic was being readied to open in Pocomoke City in the former school building at Fourth & Walnut Streets. A fund drive for the clinic's start-up operation was underway and the City Council was making a $5,000 contribution. A physician assistant, Theodore Holt, was hired for the clinic's operation.
(Correct reference would be "Smith Island.")
October, 1937
The Daily Mail (Hagerstown, Md.)
Smith's Island Soon Will Have Paved Road
SMITH'S ISLAND, Md., Oct. 7. (AP).- Smith's Island motorists-all twelve of them- soon will be able tlo whiz up and down a paved road, as least as much as it is possible to whiz on a three-mile stretch.
Whizzing is not possible at all now. The only roads now on this Chesapeake Bay isle are little more than trails, with occasional spaces wide enough for cars to pass one another or turn around.
But the Somerset county commissioners over on the mainland about ten miles away voted $800 to surface the road from Ewell to Rhodes Point.
The County commissioners opposed the appropriation at first on grounds their were no traffic problem(s). Islanders replied:
"Without roads how can we have a traffic problem?"
May, 1960 (Time Machine archive)
(The Salisbury Times)
Pocomoke Kiwanis Entertain Team
POCOMOKE CITY- The Pocomoke Kiwanis Club had as their guests on Monday evening the varsity basketball team of the Pocomoke Boys Club.
Ben Cohen introduced the leaders of the club, Avery Smith and Dave Wagner. Mr. Smith introduced the boys to the club and praised them on the excellent way they played during the season. He then awarded a trophy to the most improved player. This award went to Jerry Smith.
(A visitor to Chincoteague writes his observations.)
August, 1903
The Times Dispatch (Richmond, Va.)
PART 1
CHINCOTEAGUE ISLAND, ACCOMAC COUNTY, VA., August 7.-Many attempts have been made to tell the outside world of Chincoteague and its inhabitants, and all that I have seen have failed. I came to the island with very hazy ideas concerning the nature and appearance of the people and their manners and customs. I cannot say that I have learned all there is to know concerning Chincoteague and the Chincoteaguers in the course of my stay, but I have learned enough to make me look forward with anything but pleasure to the time tomorrow morning when I must board the Franklin City boat and say good-bye to Chincoteague, probably for good, for though this old world is small it is very busy.
I do not believe that one-half the boys and girls of Virginia, who are studying geography, could tell where Chincoteague is if asked the question offhand. The other half would say it is an island off the coast of Virginia, inhabited by about 3,000 people and wild ponies. A few of the older generation who have come here would tell stories to illustrate the primitive way in whlch the people live. A smaller number, imbued with the ladder day spirit of commercialism, would tell of the money the people make off the oysters and clams, and the fish and crabs, and would speak of the number of stores on the island, and the volume of business done.
After spending some days on Chincoteague I find it impossible to give any of the descriptions I have given above. It may be the air, but I think it is the people; at any rate, I have found in Chincoteague that which makes me hate to leave. The island is so contradictory. It is up-to-date in many ways; it is fifty years behind in others. There is a railway terminus only six miles away, but three hundred or four hundred ponies run wild on the island, and men with money in their pockets walk along the main streets of the town in their bare feet, and nobody thinks of looking at the feet. Those facts seem to me to state in a satisfactory way the contradictory conditions on Chincoteague.
Chincoteaguers are amphibious, living on an island half a mile wide and seven miles long, those three thousand islanders have occasion to know much more of the sea than of the land. Only a very small fraction of the vegetables eaten on Chincoteague are grown on the island, and more than six hundred vessels of various sizes are owned in Chincoteague and call Chincoteague the home port. An average of one sailing craft for every five of population is probably greater than at any other sea town in the country.
(More from this article next Sunday.)
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!
"Somewhere Over The
Rainbow Bluebirds
fly.."
Flying On For JMMB.
Her Pocomoke Public
Eye postings (April,
2008 to June, 2014)
kept us informed.
This place (Newtown) is a pretty snug little village, containing about 500 clever and hospitable inhabitants; is has good wide streets, quite clear of that "eye sore," known mostly over the Peninsula by the name of "deep sand"; the houses, though built of frame, are generally built substantially and with some discretion and taste; there are two neat, new, and quite handsome frame churches in it; as for the merchants of the place, suffice it to state that they are very clever and hospitable. F. Mezick, Esq., the landlord with whom I stopped, and his very obliging and jolly assistant, are richly deserving of a passing notice, for the good treatment and the extension of the many civilities to "the stranger."
(Reader-friendly viewing of newspaper archives material)
April, 1969
Evening Capital (Annapolis, Md.)
Renowned Mansion Destroyed
BERLIN, Md. (AP)- The mansion on an estate where the great racehorse Man O'War trained burned to the ground today.
Richard Ketterman, caretaker for the 1,500 acre spread, said the three-story frame house with at least 21 rooms was a total loss. He estimated the loss at $500,000 since the house was filled with antiques and at least 100 paintings of famous racehorses.
The estate, between Berlin and Ocean City, now called Winchester, was bought by the late Samuel D. Riddle in 1917, the same year that Man O'War was born.
Most of his horses had been transferred from the estate to Garden State Park by Trainer Oscar White. The flames did not reach any of the stables.
Ketterman said the fire in the house started around 7 a.m. and two hours later it was in ruins. Firemen from four towns were hampered by the lack of water, having to pump it from a creek one-quarter of a mile away.
Footnote: The property encompassing the estate has been developed as the Glen Riddle new homes community in recent years.
November, 1905
The Washington Post
OYSTERMEN RAIDED COURT
Mob Released Prisoner and Made Magistrate Revoke Sentence.
Held Him A Captive Until He Yielded.
Paraded Crisfield, Md., in Triumph.
Threatens Planters.
Special to the Washington Post.
Crisfield, Md., Nov. 29- A mob of several hundred oystermen this afternoon attacked the courthouse, rescued Ralph Nelson, just convicted of raiding oyster beds, and captured Justice G. W. Kennedy, whom they released only after they had forced him to revoke his decision.
Nelson was arraigned on the charge of raiding oyster plantations of the Tangier Packing Company, in Tangier Sound, and it was alleged that he and his friends had been defying the law for a long time. After trial to-day, he was pronounced guilty by the magistrate.
The announcement of the verdict was a signal for an attack by the oystermen, who throunged the court. A rush was made, in which the prisoner was taken from the court officers, and the magistrate was captured.
For about an hour Justice Kennedy was held prisoner by the mob, before he was induced to revoke his verdict, declaring he would never try another oyster case.
Nelson and his friends then paraded the streets in triumph. The mob declared there shall be no planting of oysters, and threatens to raid and tear up the beds that already exist in these waters.
March, 1977 (Time Machine archive)
A health care clinic was being readied to open in Pocomoke City in the former school building at Fourth & Walnut Streets. A fund drive for the clinic's start-up operation was underway and the City Council was making a $5,000 contribution. A physician assistant, Theodore Holt, was hired for the clinic's operation.
(Correct reference would be "Smith Island.")
October, 1937
The Daily Mail (Hagerstown, Md.)
Smith's Island Soon Will Have Paved Road
SMITH'S ISLAND, Md., Oct. 7. (AP).- Smith's Island motorists-all twelve of them- soon will be able tlo whiz up and down a paved road, as least as much as it is possible to whiz on a three-mile stretch.
Whizzing is not possible at all now. The only roads now on this Chesapeake Bay isle are little more than trails, with occasional spaces wide enough for cars to pass one another or turn around.
But the Somerset county commissioners over on the mainland about ten miles away voted $800 to surface the road from Ewell to Rhodes Point.
The County commissioners opposed the appropriation at first on grounds their were no traffic problem(s). Islanders replied:
"Without roads how can we have a traffic problem?"
May, 1960 (Time Machine archive)
(The Salisbury Times)
Pocomoke Kiwanis Entertain Team
POCOMOKE CITY- The Pocomoke Kiwanis Club had as their guests on Monday evening the varsity basketball team of the Pocomoke Boys Club.
Ben Cohen introduced the leaders of the club, Avery Smith and Dave Wagner. Mr. Smith introduced the boys to the club and praised them on the excellent way they played during the season. He then awarded a trophy to the most improved player. This award went to Jerry Smith.
(A visitor to Chincoteague writes his observations.)
August, 1903
The Times Dispatch (Richmond, Va.)
PART 1
CHINCOTEAGUE ISLAND, ACCOMAC COUNTY, VA., August 7.-Many attempts have been made to tell the outside world of Chincoteague and its inhabitants, and all that I have seen have failed. I came to the island with very hazy ideas concerning the nature and appearance of the people and their manners and customs. I cannot say that I have learned all there is to know concerning Chincoteague and the Chincoteaguers in the course of my stay, but I have learned enough to make me look forward with anything but pleasure to the time tomorrow morning when I must board the Franklin City boat and say good-bye to Chincoteague, probably for good, for though this old world is small it is very busy.
I do not believe that one-half the boys and girls of Virginia, who are studying geography, could tell where Chincoteague is if asked the question offhand. The other half would say it is an island off the coast of Virginia, inhabited by about 3,000 people and wild ponies. A few of the older generation who have come here would tell stories to illustrate the primitive way in whlch the people live. A smaller number, imbued with the ladder day spirit of commercialism, would tell of the money the people make off the oysters and clams, and the fish and crabs, and would speak of the number of stores on the island, and the volume of business done.
After spending some days on Chincoteague I find it impossible to give any of the descriptions I have given above. It may be the air, but I think it is the people; at any rate, I have found in Chincoteague that which makes me hate to leave. The island is so contradictory. It is up-to-date in many ways; it is fifty years behind in others. There is a railway terminus only six miles away, but three hundred or four hundred ponies run wild on the island, and men with money in their pockets walk along the main streets of the town in their bare feet, and nobody thinks of looking at the feet. Those facts seem to me to state in a satisfactory way the contradictory conditions on Chincoteague.
Chincoteaguers are amphibious, living on an island half a mile wide and seven miles long, those three thousand islanders have occasion to know much more of the sea than of the land. Only a very small fraction of the vegetables eaten on Chincoteague are grown on the island, and more than six hundred vessels of various sizes are owned in Chincoteague and call Chincoteague the home port. An average of one sailing craft for every five of population is probably greater than at any other sea town in the country.
(More from this article next Sunday.)
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!
"Somewhere Over The
Rainbow Bluebirds
fly.."
Flying On For JMMB.
Her Pocomoke Public
Eye postings (April,
2008 to June, 2014)
kept us informed.
Saturday, October 18, 2014
Every Sunday On The Pocomoke Public Eye..
<1800<1850<Time<1900<1950<Machine<2000<<
It's reader-friendly viewing of newspaper archive and historical archive material, primarily of local interest.
This week we share items from 1969, 1905, 1977, 1937, 1960, and 1903.
Check back tomorrow, 10/19, right here!
It's reader-friendly viewing of newspaper archive and historical archive material, primarily of local interest.
This week we share items from 1969, 1905, 1977, 1937, 1960, and 1903.
Check back tomorrow, 10/19, right here!
Friday, October 17, 2014
This Weekend October 17 & 18 7 PM @ The Mar-Va Theater
If I Stay
October 17 & 18
7 PM
Tickets: $5
Life changes in an instant for young Mia Hall after a car
accident puts her in a coma. During an out-of-body experience, she must
decide whether to wake up and live a life far different than she had
imagined.
For Up-coming events at The Mar-Va Click [HERE]
Thursday, October 16, 2014
Free CPR & AED Class for the general public & civic organizations.
Non provider course. To register call Michael Thorton at 410-726-0622 or Pocomoke Ambulance Squad 410-957-3600. Course will be held a the Pocomoke City Ambulance Building on 137 Eighth St. in Pocomoke City, MD.
TIME MACHINE ... This Sunday's Preview
1969.. Fire destroys renowned mansion near Berlin; 1905.. Oystermen force Crisfield magistrate to reverse sentence; 1977.. Progress towards health care clinic in Pocomoke City; 1937.. A paved road for Smith Island; 1960.. Pocomoke Kiwanis Club hosts Boys Club team; 1903.. A visitor to Chincoteague writes his observations.
Although you may not find all of these items in a history book, they are a part of our local history and you can read more about it this Sunday right here at The Pocomoke Public Eye.
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!
Although you may not find all of these items in a history book, they are a part of our local history and you can read more about it this Sunday right here at The Pocomoke Public Eye.
Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about? It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish. Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!
Monday, October 13, 2014
Pumpkin Hunt! Find your favorite pumpkin in the Costen House Garden and decorate it.
Halloween Event
at the Costen House
Pumpkin Hunt!
Find your favorite pumpkin in the Costen House Garden and decorate it.
Make a Scarecrow!
Materials provided
Saturday
October 25, 2014
2 - 4 PM
General Membership Luncheon
Mark Your Calendars:
General Membership Luncheon
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Riverside Grill
12:00 - 1:00 PM
Guest Speaker:
Judy Morgan
Eastern Shore Communications
REGISTER ONLINE!
Business After Hours
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Regent Homes by Beracah
5:00 - 7:00 PM
Beaver Dam Presbyterian Church Harvest Music Festival!
Beaver Dam Presbyterian Church Harvest Music Festival!
Place: Beaver Dam Presbyterian Church 345 Makemie Rd.Pocomoke, Maryland 21851
Date: Sunday, October 19th, 2014
Time: 2:30pm
Come join us for our Harvest Music Festival! There will be music, entertainment, fellowship, & food. For more information contact The Church Office at 410-957-2383 or pittsbeaver@verizon.net. Invite all your friends to this fun event!
___________________________________________________________________
Vocalists:
*Faith Dimattia *Eunice Esposito *Rosebel Pruitt *Donna Hardin *Lowell Stoltzfus *Ray Annis *Jimmy Worth *Danny Bell *Eric White
Music from Virginia:
*Second Chance
Our Church:
*Beaver Dam Choir *Beaver Dam Strings
And More!
“Growing up, the doctors told
us that Jacob was essentially born with half a heart. For him to surf
with Ricochet and Jacob K is kind of like having a whole heart for the
first time”.
Jacob J’s sister, Hailey.
Jacob J’s sister, Hailey.
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Surf Dog Ricochet
306-N West El Norte, #20, Escondido, CA, 92026 |
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