Jul28 A01 Bct
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Transcript of Jul28 A01 Bct
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THURSDAY JULY 28, 2011 50 cents
B E AV E R C O U N T Y
92o | 71o
Partly sunny, more humid
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MUSEUM, PAGE A12
SILK AND TEXTILES AMBRIDGE
Ambridge, which was known for its booming steel industry led by American
Bridge Co., was originally home to a softer side of manufactured goods. The Harmony So-ciety, a Christian communal group that inhabited the part of Ambridge now known as Old Econ-omy Village, raised silkworms and produced silk and textiles during the mid 1800s. Pottery, glass, ceramics and similar industries were
found mostly in New Brighton, Beaver Falls, Beaver, Bridgewater and
Vanport Township.
ENGINE, CHAMPION GAS BEAVER FALLS
The museum’s 8,000-pound Champion gas engine ran on natural gas and was used in the Alan Freed Mill in Beaver Falls. The engine was manufactured by the Champion Saw and Engine Co. of Beaver Falls in 1903 and is the only known engine of its kind still in existence in Beaver County. Many similar engines produced by Champion and other area manufacturers were used for scrap over the years.
KEYSTONE MODEL 3 SKIMMER BEAVER FALLS
A large Keystone Model 3 skimmer is one of the focal points at the McCarl museum. This early version of a backhoe was manufactured by Keystone Drilling Co. of Beaver Falls, which was on the current site of
Beaver Falls High School. The skimmer shovels were used to move earth and for tasks such as stripping coal and preparing streets
for paving. Charles Townsend said the skimmers and a similar Keystone machine used for drilling were
used all over the world, and a few are still operated in parts of Alaska.
TOWNSEND WIRE MACHINE NEW BRIGHTON
A wire-forming machine from Townsend Co. in New Brigh-ton features decorative legs. Charles Townsend, whose family
owned the factory, said after about 1890, machines were no longer designed with such fl ourishes.
“[Machines] just became functional,” he said. “There was no beauty or aes-
thetic side to it after that.”
Workinghistory
Valleys were carved out for roads, and railways and hills were leveled for vast industrial parks.
Nowadays, schools, ball fi elds and shopping centers stand in the fl at foot-prints of many of the manufacturing plants of the past, and much of the county’s industrialized setting has been reshaped. Younger generations may not recall the major manufacturing center Beaver County once was, but they can see and touch the technology that helped create the place they now call home, thanks to a new project of the Little Beaver Historical Society.
THROUGHOUT THE 19TH CENTURY, MANUFACTURING AND INDUSTRY SCULPTED MUCH OF BEAVER COUNTY’S
LANDSCAPE.
Today’s TimesClassifi ed C1
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© 2011 Beaver Newspapers Inc.
DARLINGTON — On one of the hottest days of summer, it is cool inside the McCarl Industrial and Agricultural Museum of Beaver County. The building’s insulation keeps the indoor tempera-
ture comfortable and pro-tects the artifacts from the scorching sun and corrosive elements outside.
The McCarl museum, also known as IAM Beaver County, along with the
Hamilton Forge and Foundry and the McCoy Log Cabin, will be dedicat-ed this weekend during a special ceremony and rib-bon cutting from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday.
The three facilities, built by the Little Beaver Historical Society, were opened to the public on May 31, 2008, and are part of the society’s ongoing efforts to preserve the county’s history.
The industrial museum, named for the late Foster McCarl of Chippewa Township, who founded McCarl’s Plumbing and
IAM preserves county’s manufacturing history
S TO RY BY T H E T I M E S ’ J EN N Y WAG N ER | PHOTOS BY T H E T I M E S ’ SA L LY M A X SO N
Illustration by The Times’ Christopher Ream
BY BILL [email protected]
AMBRIDGE — An Ambridge man was charged with two counts of aggravated assault after threaten-ing to kill his wife with a garden hoe, according to Ambridge police.
Jacqueline Poore told police she spent three days in the basement “to keep away from” Fred E. Poore II, who had been “drinking for several days” and con-fronted her with the hoe. The report said Fred Poore
then used the hoe to wreck their living room.
Fred Poore, 51, of 804 18th St., was also charged with simple assault after police arrived at 1:34 p.m. July 26, according to the police report.
Jacqueline Poore was not allowed to have a tele-phone, she told police, but she eventually found her husband’s phone and called her daughter, Katie, who contacted police.
Police were warned by Jacqueline Poore, waiting
outside for police, that her husband might be violent, according to the report.
Inside, police found Fred Poore “clearly highly intoxicated ... speaking pro-fanities and making state-ments that made no sense,” according to police.
The report described the living room as being “in total disarray with turned over and broken furniture (and) broken glass all over the floor.” The hoe had been broken into three pieces.
Man threatens wife with garden toolAs part of the merging
of flight schedules be-tween Southwest Airlines and AirTran Airways, four flights from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia will be elimi-nated by the end of the year.
Southwest officials an-nounced changes to the low-cost airline’s schedule Wednesday that included all of its daily flights to Philadelphia being discon-tinued starting in November.
Southwest also will end two of its six daily flights from Pittsburgh to Chicago in
November and some flights over the summer to Florida, up three to five to Orlando and up two to three to Tampa in November. The extra flights will be eliminated in February.
Bob Jordan, Southwest spokesman, said the moves are part of an effort to opti-mize operations and sched-ules at both airlines.
Flights to Philly dwindle
More transportation news: Page A8