Good Read: Cozy bookstore with a focus on representation opens in Linglestown

Owner Ashley Bailey at her new store, Heart & Soul Books

Tucked on the second floor of a Linglestown storefront is a cozy bookstore with a vintage flair and shelves of good reads.

Heart & Soul Books began as an online vendor in 2020, but will open a brick-and-mortar location this weekend on Linglestown Road.

“I’m excited,” said owner Ashley Bailey. “I want it to be a safe place. I want people to feel like they can get a book and see themselves in it.”

Representation is at the forefront of Bailey’s mind when she’s collecting new and used books to sell at the shop. She wants to make sure that people of color and those who aren’t always depicted in popular literature can find a reflection of themselves in the books she carries.

Bailey pointed out the wide range of genres that she stocks on the shelves, including books for adults, teens and children.

Books for sale

She began selling new and used books online after rediscovering her love for reading as an adult. She recalled how, as a kid, reading helped her get through her time spent in a juvenile detention center. Maya Angelou’s “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” impacted her, she said.

“Reading was therapeutic to me,” she said.

Eventually, Bailey hopes to incorporate a nonprofit aspect of her business to help people in similar shoes to those that she was in.

In addition to offering a calming place to read a book, Bailey plans to eventually provide classes, book clubs, spoken word performances and children’s story times. Her mom will teach a sign language course, as well.

Around the shop are touches of Bailey’s personality and family. Maya Angelou quotes hang on the walls alongside vibrant tapestries, her mom’s vintage furniture fills the rooms, and trinkets handmade by her daughter are for sale.

Bailey will happily share book recommendations and order you specific titles if she doesn’t have them in stock.

It’s a shop that’s easy to feel at home in, partly because it is an old house turned storefront, the bookstore occupying what must’ve been three bedrooms before. But it’s also Bailey’s warm personality that may make you feel like you’re at a friend’s house, browsing her book collection as she tells you about her favorites.

That’s something you can’t get at a big box store.

And while Bailey hopes it’s the books and the homey vibe that keep you coming back, there’s also a pot of coffee, which doesn’t hurt.

Heart & Soul Books opens this weekend on Feb 12 and 13, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. They are located at 5970 Linglestown Rd., Harrisburg, on the second floor. For more information or to order books online, visit their website or Facebook page.

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Harrisburg’s Federal Building to become upscale apartments, restaurants, bars, says purchaser

The Federal Building in downtown Harrisburg

An international investor who recently bought a landmark downtown Harrisburg building says he has plans to turn it into an apartment and nightlife complex.

In an email to TheBurg, Justin Etzin, principal of Global Ocean Investments Ltd., said that he plans to transform the Ronald Reagan Federal Building into “The Federal,” a 288-unit “luxury” apartment building.

“The ex-Federal building sits at the corner point of the Pennsylvania Capitol Complex in Harrisburg and offers spectacular views across the city,” said Etzin, founder and CEO of Global Ocean Investments, which is based in the Seychelles, an island nation in the Indian Ocean. “We aim to create the most desirable residential address in Harrisburg with cutting edge separate facilities you would normally see in an international five-star hotel.”

The company’s website lists several other projects, including one in the Bahamas.

In the email, Etzin said that he is a Seychelles diplomat currently serving as a special envoy, having previously carried out three terms as his country’s consul general/tourism ambassador in New York.

Under the name RRF Building LLC, Etzin bought the 56-year-old, 251,000-square-foot modernist structure for $10 million from the U.S. government in a sale that closed last week.

On Thursday, TheBurg reported that the building was immediately back on the sales market, at a price of $22 million.

Etzin confirmed that the building is listed for sale. However, he characterized the listing as “standard practice” while he brings investors on board and gets the project underway.

“It is a standard practice to list all buildings for sale whilst the project is in planning and development stage,” he stated. “Quite often, our projects attract other investors who partner with us or buy out the project. However, the project will continue in its current concept and continue to develop whilst planning and zoning permissions are achieved.”

Etzin said that he expects to begin the project once the federal government vacates the building.

Currently, the U.S. General Services Administration is putting the finishing touches on the new federal courthouse, which is expected to open later this year at N. 6th and Reily streets in Midtown Harrisburg. Other federal government agencies with workers based in Harrisburg also will need to move to new offices.

Etzin said that he plans a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom units for the building at 228 Walnut St. In addition, the building will feature two restaurants and two bars, he said.

“This development will be a first for Harrisburg with a concept for a rooftop with two restaurants and ‘The Sky Bar’ which can be accessed up via a panoramic elevator directly to the roof terrace or straight down to the former court rooms which will house an incredible restaurant and below a speakeasy bar ‘the boiler room,’ which is located deep in the caverns of this former Federal building,” he said.

The plan also includes a health club, co-working space and a rooftop pool, he said.

“The roof level will feature an outdoor negative edge rooftop heated pool with two very special restaurants—one with an internationally acclaimed Michelin Star chef to create a fine dining experience and one being an upmarket casual restaurant with one of Harrisburg’s top existing restaurants moving into the space,” he said.

The project, he said, should be completed in 2024 or 2025.

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Sales flat, prices up in January home sales report

This Harrisburg rowhouse is under contract.

Harrisburg-area home sales were mostly flat in January, but prices were up, according to the latest report on previously owned houses.

For the three-county region, sales totaled 499 housing units compared to 508 in January 2021, but the median sales price rose to $211,900 versus $194,700 in the year-ago period, according to the Greater Harrisburg Association of Realtors (GHAR).

In Dauphin County, sales increased by four units to 244 homes, while the median price rose to $200,000 versus $174,900 in January 2021, said GHAR.

Cumberland County saw a small decrease in home sales, which dropped by six units to 215 houses. But the median sales price increased to $235,000 compared to $224,950 a year ago, GHAR stated.

In Perry County, sales were flat at 29 homes, but the median price rose year-over-year to $184,500 versus $174,900, according to GHAR.

Houses were selling relatively quickly in January, as the average “days on the market” dropped to 20 days compared to 31 days a year ago, GHAR said.

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Burg Review: A melding of time, generations stirs Sankofa’s “Echoes of Voices of the Eighth”

If you ask the average local resident about the Old Eighth Ward, you may get a puzzled look in return.

This month, Sankofa African American Theatre Company hopes to change that puzzled look to one of understanding by adding knowledge, depth and context to this important, often-lost chapter of Harrisburg history.

Coinciding with Black History Month, Sankofa’s “Echoes of Voices of the Eighth” is a play full of significant historical stories from Harrisburg’s Old Eighth Ward, a racially diverse neighborhood that once thrived prior to its citizens being removed to make way for the Capitol Complex expansion in the early 1900s.

Sharia Benn, the theater’s director/founder and executive artistic director, uses an ensemble cast to pop open a time capsule, stretching across centuries to show a highlight reel of lesser-known stories and people from an area and an era that might have otherwise stayed buried, lost to time.

Demolished in the name of “progress,” the Old Eighth Ward once proudly raised a community of artists, scholars, business owners, civil servants, veterans and activists. Its most notable figures became future leaders of the Harlem Renaissance, the first African American woman to attend Dickinson College, the first Black Civil War correspondent, a lawyer who overturned the segregation of a Harrisburg movie theater, and key members of the suffrage and abolition movements.

First, we meet young Della Carter (Jade Jarrell). She is only 15 years old in the late 1800s, but already in charge of her six siblings and all the chores that come along with them. Her goal is to learn enough of the alphabet to one day write a letter.

The influential people in Della’s life, like her abolitionist aunt Jane Chester (Kirby Davis), her teacher Hannah Jones (Paula Lewis), along with the voices of her ancestors, spur her to make her mark on future descendants. Della takes this on as an assignment.

Then we meet Della’s assignment, a young woman named Kay (Lunden McClain), in present-day Harrisburg. Kay is struggling with a history project, and all the barriers of learning in the midst of a worldwide pandemic. Her brother J. (Lyeneal Griffin) encourages her to find the untold stories. He loans her a powerful history book, with a stern warning not to lose it. As soon as Kay takes the book, lesser-known local historical figures—more cornerstone citizens of the racially diverse Eighth Ward—help bring her school project to life.

Kay meets only a sampling of the ancestors and stories connecting past, present and future and hears some of the advice they passed down through the generations. They wish to impart their strength, wisdom and compassion and to plant the desire to speak out for those who have been silenced. Passing that torch is her ancestors’ way of entrusting Kay with future generations to come, with the knowledge that they fought for Kay’s freedom without even knowing her.

I think it’s a challenge for any playwright to arrange a play’s scenes, to say everything they want to say in a sequence that makes it most absorbable for the audience. Benn gave herself the additional task of integrating a large number of stories of Old Eighth Ward residents. This had the consequence of introducing the modern-day descendant about 45 minutes into the play. The delay took me away from the context of the story a bit. It made me think, “So much action has already happened, and we’re only just now integrating the present day?”

Then the symbolism of that hit me. So many of our own ancestors have already lived their lives, spanning the centuries before the one containing us. Their common threads bond them to historic events and to each other, and the threads spinning toward their descendants (us) are only just now being woven. Much like our own human tapestry of stories, the Eighth Ward story collections presented in the play are loosely held together by strands of location and time. And when we tell their stories, we also tell our own.

The time-traveling, ancestor-meeting journey imparts powerful lessons. The play also features original poetry from writers in Sankofa’s Poetry in Place, Monologues in Motion program.

Dramaturge Kim Greenawalt wrote that Benn “is writing the change-making map for the young people in our community, by resurrecting the relatable, positive stories of the historical figures featured in this play.” In this way, young people are able to envision themselves modeled as future prominent community members.

“This story doesn’t end,” Benn said. “Learn the history of the Eighth Ward. There are more stories, more resources.”

“Echoes of Voices of the Eighth” runs Feb. 11 to 20 at Gamut Theatre, 15 N. 4th St., Harrisburg. For more information, visit www.gamuttheatre.org/echoes. Also check out Digital Harrisburg for more stories from the Old Eighth Ward and to see the virtual exhibit: www.digitalharrisburg.com/exhibits/eighthward.

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Harrisburg announces meetings to gather comments/opinions from residents on federal relief money

Harrisburg will hold a public meeting at H*MAC, along with other city locations

Want to see the nearby park revamped? The city’s aged sewer infrastructure improved?

Now’s your chance to speak up.

Harrisburg is giving residents the chance to voice their opinions on how millions of dollars in federal COVID relief money should be used.

On Thursday, Harrisburg announced that it would hold five public meetings over the next two weeks to receive comments on the spending of $48.8 million in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds.

At a City Council meeting on Wednesday, administration officials explained that the money can generally be spent in four different “buckets.” These categories include replacing lost sector revenue, responding to the public health and negative economic impacts of the pandemic, providing premium pay for essential workers, and investing in water, sewer and broadband infrastructure, they said.

The meetings will take place on the following dates:

  • Feb. 16: Boys & Girls Club, 1227 Berryhill St.
  • Feb. 17: Allison Hill Center, 1524 Walnut St.
  • Feb. 22: Boys & Girls Club, 17th and Hanover streets
  • Feb. 23: H*MAC, 1110 N. 3rd St.
  • Feb. 24: Nativity School of Harrisburg, 2101 N. 5th St.

All meetings will be held from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.

In addition to being held in person, all meetings will be live streamed on the city’s Facebook page.

The city will provide Spanish interpretation during the meetings.

Residents can send in comments and questions to be included by emailing [email protected] no later than 4 p.m. on the day of the meeting. Comments and questions are limited to one per resident and must include name and address to be considered.

Updated on 2-14-22 to reflect change in schedule.

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When the Minority Is the Majority: TheBurg Podcast, February 2022

Every month, we expand three stories from the pages of TheBurg magazine because “there’s always more to the story.” On the February podcast:

Dr. Kimeka Campbell reflects on her one-year anniversary as host of Harrisburg Black Newsbeat. We also learn more about her background, as well as her work with Young Professionals of Color-Greater Harrisburg.

Sue Kunisky, Vice President of Operations at Visit Hershey & Harrisburg, explores the Black Travel Experience—the organization’s latest trail experience which markets Harrisburg’s Black-owned businesses, Black cultural and historical landmarks, and more.

We also go beyond the surface of artist Wendy Allen’s nearly 40-year career of painting Abraham Lincoln, from her Gettysburg gallery Lincoln into Art. She explains why she strives to keep Lincoln’s legacy alive and relevant through each painting.

If there was ever a historical figure who stood up for minorities and equality for all, it was Abraham Lincoln.

All of the podcast’s stories give voice to people or causes representing minorities, which statistics reveal, actually comprise majorities. For example, Harrisburg has a Black-majority (52%) population. Women own 31% of the state’s businesses, yet comprise 51% of Pennsylvania’s population.

TheBurg Podcast is hosted and produced by longtime Harrisburg-area journalist Karen Hendricks. Visit her website here.

Backstories: This episode is based upon the following February magazine stories:

In the Spotlight | Getting the Word Out | Her Life’s Work

DYK? TheBurg Podcast received two prestigious awards in 2021: First place, Excellence in Journalism, Society of Professional Journalists, Keystone Chapter; and Honorable mention, Keystone Media Award, Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association Foundation.

TheBurg Podcast is welcoming sponsors and/or advertisers: Contact Lauren ([email protected]). TheBurg is a monthly community magazine based in Harrisburg, Pa.; Lawrance Binda, co-publisher/editor.

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Sale closes on Harrisburg’s federal building–and now it’s back on the market at twice the price

The federal building in downtown Harrisburg

When Harrisburg’s federal building sold at auction last year, many city residents wondered who had bought it—and what they planned to do with it.

Now, we seem to have some answers.

On Feb. 8, RRF Building LLC, which lists its address in Bronx, N.Y., closed on the purchase of the downtown building at 228 Walnut St., acquiring it from the U.S. government for just over $10 million, according to Dauphin County property records.

The intention seems to be for investment purposes, as the buyer immediately put the building right back on the sales market, listing it for $22 million, according to a listing on the commercial real estate site, Loopnet.

In the auction last year, the purchaser out-dueled three other bidders for the 11-story, 251,000-square-foot building, which was built in 1966.

While this outcome may not be what many city residents would want, there is a silver lining. The long tax-exempt building is now on the tax roles, as Dauphin County has assessed it at nearly $17.4 million.

According to the disclosure on Loopnet, the building’s annual tax bill clocks in at $440,000, which includes city, county and school district property taxes.

The U.S. General Services Administration auctioned off the building as it prepares to move its federal court operations to a new building at N. 6th and Reily streets, slated for completion later this year. Other Harrisburg-based federal offices, including the U.S. Post Office on site, also will need to find new homes.

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Thousands raised in fundraiser to support two young girls who lost parents in Harrisburg shooting

Meredith Greene, Tyler Thames and their two daughters (photo used with permission)

Within a day of the tragic deaths of two Harrisburg residents, thousands of dollars have been raised for their family.

By midday Thursday, an online fundraiser totaled nearly $20,000 to help the Greene/Thames family, devastated by a double homicide on Wednesday morning.

Early yesterday, the Harrisburg Police Bureau responded to a shooting on the 1300-block of Liberty Street, where they found residents Meredith Greene and Tyler Thames dead. Another woman, Brittonie Meredith, was also injured at the scene. Police have charged Gregory Gerrod Greene Jr. with the murder.

Meredith Greene and Thames’ two daughters, ages 6 and 7, were also found wounded at the home and transported to the hospital.

Early Thursday morning, a GoFundMe page circulated on social media, asking for donations to support the two girls.

Organizer of the fundraiser, Jaime Johnsen, a friend of the family and a Harrisburg School Board director, said that when she heard the news, she had to do something.

“I want to be there for them as much as I can,” Johnsen said. “The girls really deserve the world. They’re my princess, that’s what I call them.”

She set the goal for the fundraiser at $5,000, but by noon on Thursday, it had already raised four times that amount from over 200 donors.

One of those donors was Freshido, a local chain restaurant with locations in Harrisburg, Hershey and Mechanicsburg. The company contributed $3,000 to the GoFundMe.

According to the company, Meredith was an employee at the downtown Harrisburg location before the tragedy.

“She was amazing,” said Leneia Phillips, assistant manager at Freshido in downtown Harrisburg. “She gave us more than any donation could ever be worth.”

Phillips said that Meredith talked about her daughters often, sometimes even bringing them in to the restaurant.

“It’s been really hard,” she said. “You still want to think she will come into work tomorrow.”

Johnsen said that all of the money raised from the GoFundMe will go to the girls.

According to Johnsen, Meredith was the daughter of former Harrisburg City Council member Sandra Reid.

Last year, Meredith performed in a production of “Pretty Fire” at Sankofa African American Theatre Company. President and artistic director of the theater, Sharia Benn, shared on Facebook that “[Meredith] was a beautiful light on and off stage.”

Johnsen said that Meredith was a “great mother” and that Thames was “a total girl dad.”

“They both worked so hard to give the girls a good life,” she said. “The least I can do is help.”

Johnsen said that she plans to leave the GoFundMe up to hopefully continue to receive donations and has started another one to help the family with funeral costs, as well.

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Weekend Roundup with Sara Bozich

Plan your weekend with my weekly list of things to do around Harrisburg and central PA! Scroll down or use the menu links to find ideas for your weekend.

For something new: Make those Valentine’s Day reservations. And there’s still time to shop my local gift guide.

(Still) Worth noting: Check out my private Facebook community, Cheers Harrisburg. You can join the convo here.

Things on my agenda this weekend: Stopping by the Burn30 Open House (I’m starting workouts there this week), plus the Queen of Hearts Pop-Up Dinner with The JDK Group at The Willows at Ashcombe Mansion — they just added a special coffee & dessert ticket option that is perfect to cap your Saturday.

Don’t forget to support your local brewery! Click here to find one near you.

For your weekend planning

Below are options for your weekend.

Things to Do in Harrisburg + Central PA | Weekend Roundup | Sara Bozich

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Top Weekend Recs

  1. Make those Valentine’s Day reservations ASAP
  2. And make this perfect Valentine’s Day cocktail
  3. High Road Brewing will open in Camp Hill this summer
  4. An immersive dining experience at Amorette in Lancaster | A Review
  5. Submit your events for the Weekend Roundup

COVID-19 Disclaimer: Masking and social distancing policies may vary per business, venue, and event. All events are subject to change. Please be considerate, follow the rules, and be nice. And tip extra!

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


What are you doing this weekend around Harrisburg? Let us know on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram.

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Two Democrats announce bids for redrawn 105th PA House district

Two well-known area Democrats are stating their intention to run for the PA House in the newly redrawn 105th legislative district.

Eric Epstein

Over the past day, both long-time activist Eric Epstein and Susquehanna Township Commissioner Justin Fleming said that they would seek the Democratic nomination for the seat.

“As state representative, I will use my extensive skill sets developed as a public interest advocate and government watchdog for the last 35 years and as a Central Dauphin School Board member to continue to fight for your family and ensure you finally get the representation you need and deserve in Harrisburg,” Epstein said, in a statement.

Epstein, 62, of Lower Paxton Township, has been active over many years through citizen watchdog groups like Rock the Capital and Three Mile Island Alert. He was elected to the Central Dauphin School District board in 2013. Last year, he ran unsuccessfully for Dauphin County controller and has previously run for the PA House.

Justin Fleming during his swearing-in as Susquehanna Township commissioner

Fleming, 41, has served on the Susquehanna Township board of commissioners for the past eight years. He also serves on the volunteer boards of several nonprofits and has served previously as a trustee and elder for Market Square Presbyterian Church in Harrisburg, according to his campaign announcement.

“As a state representative, I will work hard for all of the citizens of the 105th district,” Fleming said, in a statement. “I will listen to your concerns, help you when you need to be connected to services and fight for your needs on the House floor.”

Rep. Andrew Lewis, a Republican, currently holds the 105th district seat. The district, though, will change considerably in boundaries and partisan makeup under a new map finalized last week by PA Legislative Reapportionment Commission.

Under the new map, the district will include all of Susquehanna Township and Penbrook and parts of Lower Paxton Township. It currently includes Lower Paxton, South Hanover and West Hanover townships.

Opponents of the new redistricting map have until March 6 to file challenges with the state Supreme Court. The primary is slated for May 17.

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