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Index to the Germantown Crier
Complete Index to 50 years of the Germantown Crier. An invaluable
resource for your research into Germantown, Mt. Airy, and Chestnut Hill
history. Thousands of listings by author and subject. Go to the subject
index for a complete listing of topics published in the Crier.
To buy a copy with full page references, send a check for $10 ($7.00 plus
shipping and handling) to GHS. Also available on CD in either MS Word
or MS Works for $15.00 ($12.00 plus shipping and handling). Or come into
the Germantown Historical Society and do research in person.
The following back issues of the Crier are also in stock ($10.00 plus $2.00 shipping):
- The fall 2008 edition of the Germantown Crier features “The Life and Times of John B. Middleton.” Middleton, a Civil War veteran and long-time mail carrier, kept a delightful diary, including entries about his mail route, his family, illnesses, visiting the Centennial Exhibition in 1876, the weather, and local lectures and entertainments.
- The 2008 spring Crier includes “A Poem Which Will Long Endure: The Walnut Lane Bridge at 100” by David W. Young; “Belfield Before Charles Willson Peale: 1684–1819” by James A. Butler; and “The History of Immaculate Conception Parish” by Dennis McGlinchey.
- The Fall 2007 issue of the Crier includes Movie Theaters of Germantown by Dennis McGlinchey; Protrait of Catherine Wister Miles by David D. mcCann; Doorways of the German Township by Irvin Miller.
- The Spring 2007 issue of the Crier includes the following articles:
- Shouting Old Satan's Kingdom Down: A History of Early Methodists in Germantown by Sam Whyte
- Naaman K. Ployd by Eugene Glenn Stackhouse
- "Our Sweethearts of the North": Civil War Portrait Photographs at the Germantown Historical Society by Susan Powell Witt.
- The Fall 2006 issue of the Crier includes interviews with African American and White Germantowners about life between the two World Wars. Topics discussed include schools, churches, recreation, work, and racism. Local resident J. Patrick Moran shares his experience of researching a Colonial Revival house on Church Lane.
- The Spring 2006 issue of the Crier features articles on East Germantown, including excerpts from Thomas Clemens’ 1930s history of the area, Lou Brownholtz’s memories of growing up in Belfield, and Gordon Howard’s account of and artist’s drowning death in a Germantown dam.
- The Fall 2005 issue of the Crier is a special edition devoted to women of Germantown. Some of these women were wealthy “do-gooders,” others teachers, artists, or tavern owners including Sarah Butler Wister, the mother of Owen Wister, a writer and friend of Henry James; the women who ran the Germantown Door of Hope, which aided “fallen women;” Clarissa Jones Dye, a Civil War nurse; Gina Carano, singer; the Germantown Needlework Guild members, who sewed thousands of articles of clothing for the needy; Ella Peacock, a 20th century artist from Harvey Street; Margaret Brooke, a woman determined to escape slavery, who was helped by black and white Germantowners; Hannah Zell, organizer extraordinaire; Elizabeth Head, a progressive teacher of girls; Mary B. Houston Williams, who opposed women’s suffrage but was a friend of Louisa May Alcott and Walt Whitman; the “wayward” Bessie Weaver; Les Jeunes Vocalistes, African-American vocal ensemble—and others.
- Spring 2005 features two articles on the Germantown Theatre Guild, one on its founding in the Depression years by Nancy Boykin, and a personal memory of the Guild by Dolly Beechman-Schnall. Also in this issue: “David McMahon: Germantown Contractor” by Norman Giorno-Calapristi and Donna Di Giacomo and “The (Other) Haines Residence, Then and Now” by Eugene Cole Zubrinsky.
- Fall 2004 features “The Lambdins of Germantown”
by Gordon J. Howard. James Reid Lambdin and his son, George Cochran
Lambdin, were both well-known 19th century painters, who spent much
of their lives in a house on Price Street in Germantown. The lives of
these (and other) members of the Lambdin family are described, with
many illustrations of their work. Also in this issue: “A Brief
History of Holy Rosary Church” by Norman Giorno-Calapristi and
Louisa May Alcott Returns to Germantown by Judith Callard
- Spring 2004 features the diary of 17-year-old Jacob
Hortter Bechtel from 1839 to 1842. Jacob lived at the Bechtel paper
mill on Cresheim Creek. His vibrant drawings are included with the diary
entries. Also in this issue, “Hamill’s Mill and the Harkins
Family: Two Irish Families,” by Rita Harkins Glancey. Ms. Glancey
looks at the intertwined lives of a mill owner’s family and one
of the families that worked at the mill.
- Fall 2003 issue
of the Germantown Crier featured an article that highlighted
the rich Italian-American history of Chestnut Hill: "Memories in Artifact
and Stone: Italians Build a Neighborhood" by Joan Saverino. It also
includes "Navajo Weaving with Germantown Yarn: Legacy of Survival-Legacy
of Beauty" by Linda Woal, Guest Curator of the "Eyedazzlers: The Two
Century Romance of Navajo Weaving and Germantown Yarn" Exhibit at the
Sedgwick Cultural Center this fall. Publication date is November 1.
- Spring 2003 Germantown
Crier features articles relating to the Pulaski Town section of
Germantown such as "Pulaski Town: The Evolution of a Black Community"
by Joseph O'Grady, "The Potter's Field" by Eugene Stackhouse,
and articles on Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church and Pulaski Town businesses
in 1902.
- Fall
2002 Germantown Crier features the following major articles:
"Mineralizing in Germatown" (mineral collectors and quarries)
by Jay L. Lininger; "Navajo 'Germantown' weavings" by Craig
Watson; "Germantown and Its Civic Organizations, pt. 2" by
Frank X. Delany.
- Spring 2002 Germantown
Crier features Frank X. Delany's article "Germantown and Its
Civic Organizations," William Will's "Germantown Renewal Program",
"William Byrd" (African - American quarry owner and businessman)
and "Internet Germantown" by Marion Katzenbach Rosenbaum.
- Fall 2001 Germantown
Crier contains winning entries from our Art and Writing Contest;
On the Trail of Owen Wister by James A. Butler; Winemaking
As We Knew It by Emilio F. Quartucci; Centered in Germantown:
18th and 21st Century Trades by Mary K. Dabney; Skating
at Kelly's Dam, Germantown by Gordon J. Howard; and The
Germantown Community Band by Norman Giorno-Calapristi.
- The Spring 2001 issue includes the following articles: "A Germantown
Artist: George Bacon Wood" by Gordon J. Howard; "Edward Jones and the Gardens of Montebello"; "Emily Fox Cheston" by Kathryn
Harriman; "Remarks at the Centennial Gala"
by Jeff Groff; "Joseph Murter, part II" by Edwin
C. Jellett; "The Basics of Historic House Preservation"
by Emily T. Cooperman; and "Finding your House's
History Through Philadelphia Records" by J. M. Duffin.
- The Fall 2000 issue includes articles on The Italians of Northwest
Philadelphia, and Mower Civil War General Hospital. Also, if you've
wondered how to preserve your own history, look no further than this Crier! This issue focuses on preservation, with contributions
from the GHS staff and Board of Directors.
- The Spring 1998 issue features the article "Charlotte Cardeza, Titanic Survivor."
- Also available is the 1997 single issue covering Louisa May
Alcott.
To order any edition of the Germantown
Crier, select the issue(s) you want from our Order
Form page, and send the printed page to us with your payment and address.
Prices include shipping and handling.
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