Tag Archives: David Morrison

Historic preservation priorities announced for 2025, Broad Street Market tops list

Harrisburg’s historic farmers market tops a list of “preservation priorities,” as an area historic preservation group has released its annual list.

On Monday, Historic Harrisburg Association (HHA) presented its list of endangered historic structures in the Harrisburg area.

“This is how we alert the entire community and potential buyers and developers of their opportunities for preserving these buildings,” said David Morrison, HHA’s executive director. “And that has proven to be very effective.”

HHA named the Broad Street Market as its top preservation priority for 2025, following a devastating fire that gutted and shuttered the 1870s-era brick building. Since the July 2023 blaze, the city has cleared out the brick market house, but doesn’t expect the rebuilding and restoration process to begin until later this year.

“It’s very important that whatever is done to the brick building is done in kind, so that both its roof structure, its window structure, the building envelope is the way it was before the fire occurred and it’s restored as such,” said Jeb Stuart, president of HHA’s board of directors.

The Broad Street Market’s gutted brick building (file photo)

In his presentation, Stuart added that improvements also need to be made to the second market house, the 1860s-era stone building, which was untouched by the fire and remains open. For instance, that building needs a new roof and upgraded HVAC system.

The remaining “top five” preservation priorities for 2025 are:

  • William Penn High School, a shuttered, century-old school building near Italian Lake
  • Balsley House, a dilapidated, Federal-style building in downtown Harrisburg
  • Lochiel Hotel, a former school, restaurant and club in south Harrisburg off of the Capital Area Greenbelt
  • Riverside and Paxton firehouses, which are two vacant, city-owned former fire stations

Last year, HHA named William Penn as its top preservation priority, as the Harrisburg School District had proposed demolishing the school. The district later reversed course, but the future of the building remains unclear.

Moreover, HHA placed almost two-dozen buildings and structures on its “watch list,” meaning they’re historic properties of concern. These are:

  • Mira Lloyd Dock House, Front and Reily streets
  • Former Chisuk Emuna Synagogue, 423 Division St.
  • Central Publishing House, 100 N. 13th St.
  • DeVout Mansion, 208 Hummel St.
  • Harrisburg State Hospital
  • Prospect Hill Cemetery Gatehouse, 25th and Market streets
  • Camp Curtin Church, 2221 N. 6th St.
  • Old State Police HQ/American Dream Diner at 2100 Herr St. (Susquehanna Township)
  • Market Street Bridge
  • 19th Street Armory, 1313 S. 19th St.
  • Cumberland County Railroad Bridge
  • Historic Peace Church (Hampden Township)
  • Donald Cameron Mansion, Front and State streets
  • Nauman Mansion, 315 N. Front St.
  • Meyers Mansion, 213 Front St.
  • Bishop Bridge, Cumberland and York counties
  • First United Methodist Church, Boas Street
  • Former St. Paul’s Methodist Church, Vine Street
  • Former Bishop McDevitt High School
  • Atlas Building, 6th and Maclay streets
  • Walnut Street Bridge
  • Grace United Methodist Church, State Street
  • Former German Jackson residence (now an empty lot)

Stuart also identified the former Bucks Tavern in West Hanover Township as a preservation “loss” over the past year, as the building was demolished. On the positive side, he listed two recent preservation “successes”—Zembo Shrine Center in Uptown Harrisburg and the former Coca-Cola Bottling Works on Allison Hill.

HHA’s 2025 “Preservation Priorities” was drafted by the organization’s preservation committee and now must be approved by the full board.

Both Morrison and Stuart emphasized that they believe it’s important for HHA to release its preservation priorities annually so the public is aware of these structures and may even be able to help preserve them.

Click here for more information on Historic Harrisburg’s Preservation Priorities, including the presentation.

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Deck the City: House tour puts Harrisburg history on display

Breeze Hill in Bellevue Park

In August, an EF-1 tornado ripped through parts of Harrisburg’s heavily wooded Bellevue Park community.

Unfortunately, it damaged several homes slated to be featured in Historic Harrisburg Association’s annual Candlelight House Tour.

David Morrison, HHA’s executive director, gave the owners the opportunity to opt out, but they insisted that their homes would be ready, even decorated for the season, come Dec. 8.

“Every homeowner wanted the community to see they were recovering, and Bellevue is still a great neighborhood,” Morrison said.

Coincidentally, the house tour arose from another natural disaster.

The tour started in 1973, shortly after HHA’s founding, following the devastation caused by flooding from Hurricane Agnes, which prompted residents to focus on preserving the city’s history.

This year’s self-guided tour, the 51st, focuses on three clusters of Harrisburg: Bellevue Park, Uptown and in the Capitol district. Bellevue Park, Morrison said, features a unique history dating back to the early 1900s.

J. Horace McFarland, a local Harrisburg businessman and civic leader, partnered with landscape designer Warren H. Manning of Boston to create Pennsylvania’s first landscaped suburb. McFarland and Manning outlined the streets by following the land’s natural contours instead of the more typical grid design.

“In 1909, designing a neighborhood that respected the environment was pretty radical,” Morrison said.

He said that many of the properties on the tour are usually closed to the public.

Near the Capitol, tour attendees can view modern dwellings housed inside historic buildings. Their exteriors look the same as they did when first built, but their interiors have been remodeled to accommodate modern design schemes and comforts.

“The public has become far more sophisticated when it comes to historic preservation,” Morrison said. “I always marvel at the creativity.”

House Curious

Morrison said the buildings’ inclusion on the tour reflects a recent trend to renovate former commercial spaces for residential dwellings.

“People like and want old buildings,” he said.

Louisa Eyler is one of those people. Eyler’s affinity for old houses began in her childhood home in Dillsburg, which was built in 1731.

A few years ago, she purchased 511 N. 2nd St. and a property in the rear of the lot, rehabbed them, and began a short-term rental business. Eyler said that most of her guests are families looking for a central gathering place.

Eyler said that she focuses on what the house needs when decorating it. She kept the original stained radiators but added custom heat covers for safety.

A friend’s home was on last year’s tour, and Eyler was impressed with the guests’ sincere interest in Harrisburg’s history.

“The people on the tour were curious,” she said. “It wasn’t a parade of trespassers.”

Eyler hopes that the tour sparks others’ interest in preserving old properties.

“If you take care of it, it will take care of you,” she said.

Other spots, such as St. Lawrence Catholic Church and Grace United Methodist Church on State Street, are largely the same since they were founded in 1918 and 1871, respectively.

The Pennsylvania Governor’s Residence on Front Street, built in 1968, is one of the tour’s mainstays.

Tour attendees will receive a program book that serves as their ticket. It contains information on each property and a map of their locations. Participants can visit the sites in any order they wish. Some attempt to view them all, Morrison said, while others choose their personal must-sees. A few of the locations are walkable from one another, while some require a vehicle.

Morrison is pleased that the city has shifted from preservationists being viewed as adversaries to partners. Harrisburg consists of seven municipal historic districts and four national historic districts, so there are many stories within the city’s boundaries.

“It’s quite possible that someone may go on the tour, be inspired by what owners have done with their property, and take on a project of their own,” Morrison said. 

Historic Harrisburg Association’s 51st annual Candlelight House Tour takes place Dec. 8, 1 to 6 p.m. Tickets are available at the HHA Resource Center, 1230 N. 3rd St., and at www.historicharrisburg.org.

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Bob’s Art Blog: Gallery Walk #36, in the Books

An award-winning work by Andrea Finch at AAH

“Blue skies smiling at me, nothing but blue skies do I see.”

The report from the front is in on Gallery Walk #36, held on Sunday. The weather proved to be a huge factor for the event as it was sunny, breezy and felt like the first day of fall. Art was everywhere you looked, especially on all the Gallery Walkers faces (picture yourself here) with art in their eyes.

The day started at the Art Association of Harrisburg, that bastion of brilliance and boldness with bravura brushstrokes a-plenty. CEO Carrie Wissler-Thomas and director of exhibitions, Nate Foster, had stars forming a halo over their heads as they walked on cloud nine over the unveiling of the “Heroes and Heroines” exhibit. Awards were handed out from Wissler-Thomas and its board president, Travis DiNicola. Best-of-show went to Sarah Jacobs for her work, a nod to Ophelia. A standout piece of textural interplay came from Andrea Finch, which took a second prize. AAH counted a record number of visitors, topping 300.

Checking in with Vivian Sterste-Brandler and Jackson Boyd of the Vivi on Verbeke outpost, they shared, “We had tremendous tourist traffic all day long with clients still shopping even after the closing bell rang at 5. Many new faces, collectors and young artists kept the gallery open going into overtime through 7 p.m., which was fine with us. I reckoned over 100 visitors passed through our doors for a record turnout.”

The colorful backyard at Vivi on Verbeke

Civic Club President, Contrena Baltimore and art adventuress R76 (you know you’ve arrived when the public knows who you are by a letter and number) staffed the battlements at the Overlook Mansion with visitors as the tally grew to double digits. Art vendors included Prittyfy, Witmer Wood, Toro Comics, Bootleg, Iquan Summers, Carrie Feidt, Art by Elliot, Tom Walsh and King Prolifik. Reina shared, “The Civic Club offered a variety of art experiences throughout the day. I pointed the way with guests as to the direction creativity was taking in the City of Harrisburg. My mantra ‘Artists Unite’ applies to everything I support. Art is bringing a fresh energy to our communities.”

Ted Walke (“talked the talk” and you know the rest…) at his Gallery at 2nd (608 to be exact). Ted shared, “Many visitors enjoyed ‘talking art’ and were happy to immerse themselves in the city’s art venues. I thought of myself as a ‘link’ in a chain. That is, making sure to direct visitors to both the Civic Club and the State Museum as their next stop. I would have to say that, with the turnout I saw, it was one of the most well-attended Gallery Walks in my 14 years of participation in this annual event.”

Julia Mallory of TEN OH! SIX found the day full and rich with art lovers for her very first Gallery Walk at her studio on 3rd Street. Art friend Cody spent the entire day at the gallery and reported a strong turnout. Featured artists were Bryan “King” Prolifik and Cheryl Peoples. Julia stated, “Gallery Walk was an incredible opportunity for us to connect both with existing friends and new supporters which demonstrates the power of what is possible when art and community collide.”

When you make a list, you better check it twice! Artist Craig Bomberger of the hand-painted silk scarves soirees, had two stops to make for Gallery Walk. “Check to make sure my art is hung in the best possible light at the LGBT Center. Secondly, set up my live painting demonstration providing in-house poetic painting for the Historic Harrisburg Association, which also featured members of the AAH who displayed their work.”

Artwork by Craig Bomberger at the LGBT Center

It turned out that Mr. Bomberger got to meet a lot of Harrisburg history buffs all afternoon. In fact, Executive Director David Morrison greeted visitors to this resource repository with a warm welcome and tour of the rich history our beloved city entails. In speaking with Mr. Morrison, he related, “The Center was so busy throughout the afternoon that there was no time to take pictures. But there were plenty to be seen from archival photographs showcasing the tapestry of time since the city was founded in 1719 by John Harris.”

It was a great sign for Harrisburg artists to have the tremendous outpouring of support that was shone throughout the day with a record number of art lovers, gallery walkers, and first-time visitors to the city. A huge thanks to all on both sides of the aisle on the avenues of art and behind the counters both. Harrisburg’s creative community basked in the limelight.

When you get right down to it, is there anything more beautiful than the person to your right or left, in front or behind you…there is beauty in everyone if you take the time to look.

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Downtown Turnaround: Marking its golden anniversary, Harristown reflects on where it’s been, where it’s going

Construction of Strawberry Square, 1977

In mid-2022, Ashley Crist got a sneak preview of the Menaker Apartments while Harristown Development Corp. was renovating them. When she saw the top-floor unit with the 180-degree views of Market Square, she immediately claimed it as her own. 

“Oh my gosh, it’s beautiful,” Crist said. “Now, I host New Year’s Eve every year because we’re right there by the strawberry drop. I entertain all the time. I’m on the Candlelight House Tour with Historic Harrisburg and let people walk through and get the views. It’s fantastic.” 

In 1974, Harristown was created to help restore a city gutted and unrecognizable from its Bedford Falls heyday. This year, it celebrates 50 years of evolving with the times and, once again, helping lead Harrisburg’s recovery from the upheaval of the global pandemic. 

“Together, we’re making this an interesting downtown that’s a place people can access and enjoy for work, recreation, leisure and residential,” said Brad Jones, Harristown’s president and CEO. “Harristown has brought half-a-billion dollars’ worth of assets to this downtown in the last 50 years, and each project continues to help that get a little bit better.” 

 

Founded in Crisis 

Carol Cocheres came to Harrisburg in 1975, a young lawyer working for the then-Department of Community Affairs.   

There was nothing going on in Harrisburg in 1975,” said Cocheres, a bond attorney and Harristown board member. “The stores were closing. There was no hotel. It was sort of a dump at that point.” 

Downtown Harrisburg of the 1950s and ‘60s buzzed with activity. Department stores. Boutiques. Movies. But by the late ‘60s, racial protests fueled white flight. The steelmaking and railroads that powered the economy were faltering. In 1972, the floodwaters of Hurricane Agnes made buildings uninhabitable. 

In 1974, civic leaders created an independent, nonprofit organization to renew roughly 50 acres from Chestnut Street to Locust Street. Inspired by the New Town Movement of the era, they named it Harristown Development Corp. 

“The first thing I saw in improvements was Strawberry Square,” said Cocheres. “It was full of shops and the food court. There was even a night club.” 

After building and buying parking garages, Harristown built Strawberry Square in 1980. First-floor retail was designed to lure customers away from suburban shopping malls. Forty-year leases with the Shapp administration to house state workers generated cash flow.  

As Cocheres notes, the lease agreement helped the state compensate Harrisburg for the tax-exempt properties that deprived the struggling city of much-needed revenue. The creation of Harristown “was essential to the commonwealth helping Harrisburg after the difficult times the city was having in the late ‘60s and ‘70s,” she said. 

Projects that followed included:  

  • City Island cleanup. The rundown ballpark where legends Babe Ruth and Josh Gibson once played became the home of the Harrisburg Senators. 
  • Strawberry Square Phase II, a complex puzzle that enclosed alleys and restored streetside retail. “That was a very cutting-edge project,” said Historic Harrisburg Association Executive Director David Morrison. “That was part of the saving of Strawberry Square, giving it a historic feature.” 
  • Facilitating construction projects that changed the face of downtown Harrisburg, including Penn National Insurance, Whitaker Center, Harrisburg University and the UPMC Health Sciences Tower at HU.
  • Construction of a long-envisioned grand hotel in Market Square—the Hilton Harrisburg, completed in 1990. By forging a financing deal with the city and stepping in to manage, Harristown kept the hotel from succumbing to early struggles.  

Of course, there were controversies and lawsuits, as well. State lawmakers and officials questioned the 40-year lease. Competing developers claimed Harristown monopolized downtown redevelopment. The Patriot-News forced compliance with state right-to-know and public meeting laws. Harrisburg City Council members balked at handing over control and bond issues to an entity outside their oversight. 

“The city should have been the dog and Harristown the tail,” said early opponent and City Council member Herbert C. Goldstein.

But Harristown was learning. Frosty relations with city officials thawed and, Jones said, remain positive. Partnerships—a key to initial success—gained importance. In the last decade, private sector investors have seen steady returns on their money and “have a sincere interest in helping the city,” said Harristown board Chair David Black. The thoughtful leadership from 1999 to 2014 of President Russell Ford, a professionally trained planner, laid the groundwork for the visionary style of Jones and prepared Harristown for the COVID pandemic that cratered American downtowns, he said.  

“Office occupancy still isn’t back to where it was, but without the residential downtown, it would be a much different place today post-pandemic than it is,” Black said. 

 

Here Comes Housing 

“Eds, meds and beds.” That’s the focus of today’s Harristown, said Jones, meaning education, health care and residential. In contrast, retail, once a mainstay of Strawberry Square, has ebbed, a trend that started over a decade ago and accelerated following the pandemic. 

“Nobody’s building new card stores, right?” Jones said.  

Now, anchors include Harrisburg University’s Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship, the Capital Area School for the Arts, Best Friends Day Care, and one of downtown Harrisburg’s only doctor’s offices.  

And on the floors above, those former state offices now house 22 units of The Flats at Strawberry Square. Today, Harristown has developed, owns and manages about 250 apartments carved out of former office, restaurant and retail spaces.  

In hindsight, early Harristown can’t be faulted for the “somewhat regrettable” demolition of historic buildings in the name of urban renewal, said Historic Harrisburg’s Morrison.  

“They evolved rather promptly in the direction of revitalizing and repurposing historic buildings and taking advantage of the existing building stock that surrounds Strawberry Square,” he said. “They began to see it as an asset rather than a liability in center city.” 

Facing dire need, Harristown was meant to “rebuild faith in the private sector in doing business in downtown Harrisburg,” said Black.

He was on the board for the “monumental moment” when the Hilton flipped to private ownership in 2012. Harristown’s “what next?” conversations led to apartments opening six years before the pandemic made work-from-home a truth universally acknowledged. 

“People from all walks of life are living downtown,” Black said.  

Here in 2024, office tenants are downsizing as employees “are waking up and staying in their pajamas and working on their laptops from home,” Jones said. Harristown can’t convert every vacant office to residences, but “our city, like so many cities, is going to need a reimagining of the use of buildings,” he said.

“That will take a lot of capital. It will take partners. It’ll take creativity. In the end, I think it’ll be good for the downtown,” he said. 

Adding residential units spreads a ripple effect of growth and development throughout the city, including affordable housing and tax-credit projects, said Crystal Brown, board member since 2018 and former director of Brethren Housing Association.  

“While its footprint is restricted, its impact isn’t,” she said. “If there are more businesses and people moving into the city, that helps increase the tax base that allows the city to do more things. It absolutely is a win-win, and Harristown serves a great role and a great purpose in helping others do more of what they do.” 

 

Future Focused 

Jones has been in the top post at Harristown for nearly a decade now. He’s nearing retirement age, but has no immediate plans to do so. Why? There’s too much “unfinished business.” 

“There are a lot of big projects in pre-development that I would like to help move this company to achieve,” he said. 

The SoMa project revitalizing the blocks of 3rd Street south of Market Street is nearly complete. On Market Street, watch for new uses of the former CVS and Rite Aid stores. “And, hopefully, we’ll be announcing another big new project that will have everyone on the edge of their seats,” he said. 

Harristown plans a 50th anniversary celebration on May 16—in Strawberry Square, of course. Other anniversary events include SoMa block parties from May through October.  

Through awareness of opportunities, Harristown will evolve as the city’s needs evolve, said Black. 

“You don’t always know what’s ahead, but it’s good to keep your eyes forward, and that’s what Brad and the team do,” he said.  

Ashley Crist counts her Menaker Building apartment, the one she rented on the spot, as “by far my favorite” of her city apartments. She crosses the river to walk the City Island loop. She enjoys 3rd in the Burg craft beer tastings in SoMa.  

“Harristown has done so much,” she said. “I feel like every time I turn around and I’m at a cool new spot or something new to check out in Harrisburg, it’s Harristown that’s doing it. They have their hands in a lot of really great things with the city.”

For more information on Harristown Development Corp., visit www.harristown.net.

On April 13, starting at 10 a.m., Historic Harrisburg Association will hold a walking tour of Center City Harrisburg, including a look at Harristown’s 50 years of impact. For more information, visit www.historicharrisburg.org 

 

Plants + Pints

In the 1970s, many cities built enclosed malls to try to compete with suburban shopping centers, most long gone.

In downtown Harrisburg, Strawberry Square has survived through constant adaptation and renewal, including as an events space. In fact, Harristown Enterprises recently completed the “Clock Box,” a colorful, modern-style meeting and lounge space that juts over the atrium.

This month, Strawberry Square will host one of its largest annual events, Plants + Pints Harrisburg, a family-friendly event highlighting local vegetarian and vegan vendors, craft beverages, wellness and other plant-based products in the community.

Proceeds benefit Downtown Daily Bread, which helps to feed Harrisburg’s unhoused population. The event is presented by Members 1st Credit Union and produced in partnership with Harristown and Sara Bozich Events.

“We so appreciate the Plants + Pints event,” said Corrie Lingenfelter, executive director at Downtown Daily Bread. “With Sara’s efforts, this fun event will bring much needed funds and support to our hungry and homeless populations through Downtown Daily Bread.”

Guests will be able to sample and purchase food and drink from local restaurants, food purveyors and breweries, and shop from vendors who promote locally made and plant-based products.

“We’re excited to return Plants + Pints to Strawberry Square,” said Brad Jones, president and CEO of Harristown. “We’ve seen how interest in a healthy or plant-based lifestyle has grown, and the Harrisburg area has so much to offer.” 

 

Plants + Pints Harrisburg will take place on April 14, 1 to 5 p.m., at Strawberry Square in downtown Harrisburg. Tickets are $20 (adults) and $10 (under 21; kids under 12 are free) at www.sarabozich.ticketleap.com/plants–pints-2024. A full list of vendors can be found at www.sarabozich.com/event/plants-pints-2024.  

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Historically Speaking: In Harrisburg, much has been lost–but much has been saved, too

Illustration by Rich Hauck.

Each winter, I get to cover one of my favorite annual news stories.

As an old building buff, I look forward to Historic Harrisburg Association’s “Preservation Priorities,” a list of endangered historic properties that the organization updates every year.

First, I watch the presentation then I write a story detailing what’s in, what’s out, what’s old, what’s new for the year.

For 2024, the William Penn building topped the list (natch!), followed by the former Harrisburg State Hospital grounds and then our beloved, if beaten down, Broad Street Market.

The rest of the list reads like a who’s who of our area’s blighted, beleaguered and broken. The 30 or so properties on the “priority” and “watch” lists include everything from 19th-century mansions to historic bridges to old churches, schools and fire houses.

The common thread: all need new love, new life and, often, a new owner—as well as tons of money and vision to go from forlorn to fixed.

As much as I enjoy the presentation, I’m often left feeling empty afterwards, given the tragedy inherent in broken-down buildings and in how many linger on the list from year to year.

Last year, in this space, I expressed some of that frustration by emphasizing the negative—the loss of so many of downtown Harrisburg’s once-beautiful buildings, which has left, in its wake, an abstract jumble of structures, parking garages and empty lots. I did that to contrast our situation with that of Lancaster, a thriving small city whose historic core remains largely intact.

I stand by my opinion that Lancaster’s success can be credited, at least in part, to the retention and restoration of its federal and Victorian-era built environment.

However, this year, in this column, I want to flip that script.

When I arrived in Harrisburg in 2009, I remember my first walk through Midtown.

On a bitter, mid-winter day, I took a stroll up 3rd Street, starting at Forster and ending at Reily, before winding back, mostly to check out this new city I had landed in.

On that walk, I felt a bit like Gary Cooper in “High Noon.” In the climax to that 1952 film, Cooper’s character, Marshall Will Kane, walks down the main street alone, the dusty road deserted of townspeople, who have sealed themselves up inside their homes and businesses.

My walk felt just as forlorn. I wandered the street without encountering a soul, passing one boarded-up building after another. I wouldn’t have been surprised if a tumbleweed or two had come bouncing by.

Had I just waited 15 years, until 2024, I would have had an entirely different experience. Since that first walk, the boards have been ripped off and the buildings brought back, including for all of the landmark structures along that half-mile stretch.

Some of these restorations and adaptive reuses are truly remarkable.

Arguably, the new era dawned when GreenWorks Development turned the enormous Evangelical Press Building into beautiful classroom space. Down the street, Midtown Scholar then remade a forlorn retail strip into one of the best independent bookstores in the country. Two blocks away, H*MAC took on the daunting challenge of reviving the shuttered, sprawling PAL building, resulting in an extraordinary transformation into a live music venue, restaurant and bar.

The list continues: ModernRugs, Susquehanna Art Museum, Pursuit/Union Lofts, Carpets & Draperies, COBA, Millworks. On that day 15 years ago, I walked past all of these buildings, which, at the time, were unused, unloved and falling apart.

Even better—these have all been discrete projects, not done by some mega-developer or large corporation, but, one by one, by local people who have poured their time, dollars and souls into them.

So, yeah, sometimes I need to slap myself out of my funk. Am I upset that, for the nth straight year, the 200-year-old Balsley House downtown continues to deteriorate? I sure am. But we need to celebrate our wins, too—and those wins have been real and substantial.

As he introduced the 2024 version of “Preservation Priorities,” Historic Harrisburg Executive Director David Morrison explained why his organization undertakes this exercise each year.

“By compiling this list and publicizing it, it has played a very significant role in encouraging these important properties to be preserved,” he said. “When we publicize them, sometimes it spurs the owner into doing something about it. Sometimes, it spurs somebody to look into purchasing the property. So, it’s a very effective tool for promoting historic preservation.”
Agreed. Now, let’s take it from here, Harrisburg.

Lawrance Binda is publisher and editor of TheBurg.

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Classical Era: The Wednesday Club is one of the oldest musical organizations in the country

It may be 142 years old, but the Wednesday Club for the Performing Arts is as energetic as ever.

Just ask Norma Swain, the nonprofit musical performance organization’s executive director.

“We present concerts by classical musicians, but since all are so talented and multifaceted musicians, we almost always have another genre of music in our concerts,” said Swain of Camp Hill. “Show tunes, ragtime, folk, etc. We’ve even presented Irish step dancers on one of our concerts and have had jazz bands from area high schools participate.”

The group is scheduled to continue its 2023-24 concert series this month with a performance at the Art Association of Harrisburg on March 10.

“This provides the community a chance to see some wonderful performers,” said Frank Rapisarda, the club’s new president. “I enjoy getting together with other people who enjoy classical music. I’m also totally impressed when I see young people perform in the art.”

David Morrison, Historic Harrisburg Association’s executive director, has been involved with the Wednesday Club for about 40 years, once serving on its board of directors. His involvement with the club came about in a roundabout way through a job assignment at the Forum while employed by the state Department of General Services.

“Next thing I knew, I was on the Wednesday Club’s board of directors and doing fundraising,” he recounted with a laugh.

Morrison’s interest in the Wednesday Club is fueled not only by a love of music but by the group’s “tie into history,” he noted.

“The Wednesday Club goes back to the 1800s,” he said. “It was founded by a lot of our community’s leaders of that century and has lots of rich history. That was as much of an interest to me as the music.”

 

Growing Club

The Wednesday Club actually didn’t originate from music. It began as a 19th-century ladies’ group sharing the fruits of their kitchen skills, according to the club’s printed history, “Wednesday Club Hi-Notes.”

The history states that around 15 “prominent young women of the Harrisburg area” pooled their talents into forming a cooking club, the Hungry Lunch Belles. The group soon tired of cooking, however, and began to perform music together.

The music club’s first regular performance took place on May 17, 1882, at a member’s Front Street home. Performances that day kicked off with a piano recital of Franz Liszt’s “Hungarian Rhapsody.” Following that, the initial 25-member club met every other Wednesday.

In 1915, the growing club was incorporated exclusively for “charitable and educational purposes” and expanded to include men. In 1931, the club held the Forum’s first-ever public event, the Don Cossacks Russian Orchestra. In 1939, the organization presented groundbreaking Black contralto Marian Anderson at the Forum immediately prior to her historic performance for 75,000 in Washington, D.C.

“Marian Anderson was treated to a tea at the (Harrisburg) Civic Club before her concert at the Forum,” Swain said. “We have always been about music and promoting classical music without discrimination.”

The Wednesday Club was also “instrumental in the vision of a performing arts center in Harrisburg,” according to Swain, which eventually led to the opening of Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts in 1999. The club remained a resident company there for 13 years.

Today, the nonprofit organization stands as one of the world’s oldest continuously operating music clubs and still abides by its original mission, “to stimulate interest in classical music and to develop and promote the musical talents of its performing members through concerts and educational activities.”

“We no longer present concerts on Wednesdays,” Swain said. “Since I’ve been involved these many years, we moved from Tuesday evenings to weekends. We now only present concerts on Saturdays, or mostly on Sunday afternoons, avoiding all the other presenters in the region.”

The club is supported through grants, member dues, community donations, program ads and various foundations.

The organization currently offers around 10 concerts per season, featuring performances by members and guest musicians from throughout the region. Auditioned performance categories include Resident Professional Concert Artist, Collegiate Concert Artist, Young Concert Artist and Ensemble Concert Artist. Performers range from elementary-level students to adult professionals.

“I love classical music,” Rapisarda said. “My mission as board president is to get the word out about our organization to (performing) students and professionals.”

For more information on the Wednesday Club for the Performing Arts, visit www.wednesdayclub.org, or their Facebook page or call 717-571-5189.

Catch a Show
The Wednesday Club has numerous performances in the coming months. These include:

  • March 10, 3 p.m., Art Association of Harrisburg, 21 N. Front St., Harrisburg. Young Pianists in Concert
  • April 14, 4 p.m., Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, 509 Hummel Ave., Lemoyne. Dr. Elizabeth Etnoyer, pianist, and other featured artists
  • May 5, 4 p.m., Zion Lutheran Church, 15 S. 4th St., Harrisburg. Daniel Stokes, organist, and instrumental and vocal ensembles
  • May 25 to 27, Artsfest Five-concert series at Art Association of Harrisburg, 21 N. Front St., Harrisburg
  • June to August. Three-concert summer series, to be announced.

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Historic preservation priorities announced for 2024, William Penn tops list

William Penn High School (illustration: Rich Hauck)

A Harrisburg school building tops a list of local “preservation priorities,” as an area historic preservation group has unveiled its annual list.

On Monday night, Historic Harrisburg Association (HHA) detailed its list of endangered historic structures in the greater Harrisburg area.

“By compiling this list and publicizing it, it has played a very significant role in encouraging these important properties to be preserved,” said David Morrison, HHA’s executive director, reflecting on past efforts.

In an hour-long presentation, HHA board President Jeb Stuart outlined the group’s priorities for 2024, with the former William Penn High School topping the list of preservation priorities.

Last year, the Harrisburg School District proposed demolishing the century-old school, which has been vacant and deteriorating for over a decade. That proposal met pushback from the community and alumni, resulting in the appointment of a task force to weigh other options for the building and property. Those options are due to be presented imminently to district officials.

“There is agreement that the property can be saved and should be saved,” said Morrison, who sits on the task force. “I think there’s a good chance that a good outcome will result from this effort.”

The sprawling Harrisburg State Hospital complex, located mostly in Susquehanna Township, was second on the list. The commonwealth had been trying to sell the property, with Dauphin County as a proposed buyer, but that deal later fell through.

The Broad Street Market takes the third spot on the list. Last year, a fire devastated the market’s 150-year-old brick building, which has been shuttered since. The older stone building remains open, but reconstruction has not yet commenced on the brick building’s restoration, which could take years.

“We hope to work very closely with the city and with the Pennsylvania Historical Museum Commission in making sure, to the extent possible, that this [fire-ravaged] section of the brick building will be rebuilt as it was,” Stuart said.

The fourth “preservation priority” was the former Camp Curtin Memorial Mitchell UMC Church. In 2021, a local developer purchased the church from the Susquehanna United Methodist Conference, proposing to redevelop it into housing. That project didn’t occur and, just last month, the church was sold to a Lancaster-based congregation called Ministry Int IPDA.

HHA listed two vacant Harrisburg firehouses as the fifth “preservation priority.” Sale of the Riverside Firehouse has been in limbo for years, as it sits on two different property parcels that have not yet been consolidated. Likewise, the Paxton Firehouse in Shipoke has long been empty, despite an attempt two years ago to turn it into a facility serving the homeless population.

HHA’s top-five preservation priorities differ significantly from last year’s when the Market Street Bridge topped the list, followed by Balsley House, a dilapidated, Federal-style building in downtown Harrisburg.

Moreover, HHA put about two-dozen buildings and structures on its “watch list,” meaning they’re historic properties of concern. These include the Market Street Bridge, Balsley House, Prospect Hill Cemetery Gatehouse, Zembo Shrine Center, the Walnut Street Bridge, Grace United Methodist Church, former Coca-Cola bottling works and several Front Street mansions, among others.

Balsley House

HHA’s 2024 “Preservation Priorities” was drafted by the organization’s preservation committee and still must be approved by the full board.

“When we publicize [these properties], sometimes it spurs the owner into doing something about it. Sometimes, it spurs somebody to look into purchasing the property,” Morrison said. “So, it’s a very effective tool for promoting historic preservation.”

You can watch Historic Harrisburg Association’s “Preservation Priorities” presentation on their Facebook page. The video also will be posted on their website.

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Highlighting History: The Homeland Center in Harrisburg learns about its unique founding, shares discoveries in annual calendar

These women helped establish the Society for the Home for the Friendless and were appointed to its original board of managers.

Eighteen women stand behind the history of Harrisburg’s Homeland Center.

In 1866, women from nine city churches, two from each congregation, met to discuss a problem in their community and how to solve it.

The meeting, at that time, was revolutionary for several reasons.

“It was probably unusual for multiple churches and denominations to come together like that, and it was women that led this effort,” said Wendy Shumaker, director of marketing for Homeland Center. “I think that it was probably unusual and necessary all at the same time.”

What they came up with was an institution that would last for decades.

After the Civil War, many women were left widowed and children orphaned. The 18 women decided to do something about it and, in 1867, established a chapter of the “Society for the Home for the Friendless.” In 1870, they built their own facility to house those in need, which is now Homeland Center.

Tasked with fundraising for the building, the group undertook what David Morrison, executive director of Historic Harrisburg Association, called a “significant business venture.”

“They were the visionaries,” Morrison said. “They saw a need, and they came up with a way to address that need.”

Although Homeland Center, now a continuing care retirement community located in Uptown Harrisburg, knew some of this history, staff recently started digging deeper into the story of its formation.

Each year, the center creates and sells a calendar to raise money, and Shumaker needed a theme for 2024. When she brought up the idea of spotlighting Homeland’s history, staff and board members showed enthusiastic support. And so, Shumaker, with help from Morrison, HHA’s board President Jeb Stuart, church leaders and local historians, dug in.

Included in the calendar is information on each of the nine founding churches, the 18 women and the origin of the center.

During the research process, the development team at the center uncovered handwritten notes and meeting minutes from the first time the women gathered. Local historians also found pictures and the full names of the women, who were often only identified by their husband’s names. Among them were Margaretta Brua Cameron, member of Zion Lutheran Church, and Eliza McCormick, member of Old School Presbyterian Church, now Pine Street Presbyterian. The women’s husbands, Simon Cameron and James McCormick, were both prominent Harrisburg figures, as were several of the other women’s husbands.

In order to make the Home for the Friendless a reality, the women needed the help of their husbands to get loans to support the project, as women at the time could not. The men would also make up the board of trustees. However, it was the women who managed day-to-day operations of the organization.

“Those women went beyond the limits of their time and showed that you can be successful,” Morrison said.

While Homeland Center has transitioned from helping widows and orphans to providing care for senior citizens, the mission has remained the same.

“The evolution of becoming what we are today was because of the center responding to the needs of the community,” Shumaker said. “We are still taking care of people and providing excellent care.”

The legacy of those 18 women remains at the center in a very visible way, as the organization maintains a board of managers, made up of 18 women who oversee care of Homeland Center’s facility. This board serves alongside the board of trustees, today consisting of men and women.

The impact of the founding churches is also an important aspect of the calendar, which highlights each of their histories.

Pine Street Presbyterian Church, located on N. 3rd Street, was one of the founding churches of Homeland. However, that piece of history was missing from the church’s archives.

Kenneth Hays, the historian of the congregation, was intrigued by the history, as he knew nothing about the church’s involvement. However, when he found out, it made sense, as the church has always been dedicated to local service work, he explained.

“I was very interested,” he said. “I will definitely put this in the archives now.”

Homeland hopes that from this project will come opportunities to provide history presentations at churches and possibly even a play centered around the story of the women. Shumaker has been inspired to see how many people have been a part of building upon Homeland Center’s and Harrisburg’s history.

“The fact that so many people have come together even for this small project is truly amazing,” Shumaker said.

The 2024 Homeland Lottery Calendars are currently available for purchase. Everyone who purchases a calendar is eligible to be entered into daily drawings for cash prizes of up to $100.

While the calendars will help support the center financially, those involved in the project are just as excited to see how the process has created new partnerships and how the history will continue to connect the community.

“It’s important not to let history slip through our fingers because that history can teach valuable lessons,” Morrison said.

Homeland Center is located at 1901 N. 5th St., Harrisburg. For more information or to purchase a calendar, visit www.homelandcenter.org.

 

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Bricks & Grit: The Broad Street Market rebuild will take equal parts construction and community

Temporary structure for market vendors.


David Morrison recently asked an engineer about the chances of preserving all the fire-scarred walls of the Broad Street Market’s brick building. The engineer responded with a question and answer of his own.

What is brick used for? Fireplaces, actually.

“There’s really no substitute for 150-year-old material that basically has been very well preserved,” said Morrison, executive director of Historic Harrisburg Association.

ICYMI, Broad Street Market’s brick building suffered severe damage in a July 10 fire. While city and market officials have been working to house displaced vendors in a temporary market building, they are also looking ahead.

There will be codes, historic considerations and the desires of vendors and shoppers to navigate, but hopes remain that, in about two years, the brick building will be restored and open for business.

 

How to Rebuild

A building that represents “one of the last vestiges of the old school where you can see your neighbor and chat”—that’s City Business Administrator Daniel Hartman speaking—has had its guts ripped out. How does a rebuild recapture that old feeling?

“It’s pretty much going to have to be returned to the way it was, but modernized,” said Hartman. “When you think ‘modernized,’ think of the things that didn’t exist in the 1870s but that exist now, like the Americans with Disabilities Act and fire sprinklers and other safety improvements.”

Here, a reminder that the physical Broad Street Market is owned by the city of Harrisburg. That makes reconstruction the city’s responsibility. The market’s board of directors, like a condo board, oversees business matters inside and outside the market’s two buildings, the shuttered brick building and the undamaged, operating stone building.

“If you pick the building up, turn it upside down, and see everything that falls out—that’s not what we are overseeing,” said City Director of Housing and Economic Development Dennise Hill, a former market manager. “We are making sure that the messaging has to be clear that we’re all working together, but everybody is a subject-matter expert on one thing or another, and really giving everyone the lane and the license to do what they have to do.”

The market’s placement on the National Register of Historic Places, since 1974, places few restrictions on rebuilding and doesn’t preclude interior modernizations. The state Historic Preservation Office has offered to help the city’s planning department, said Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission spokesperson Howard Pollman.

“The market’s National Register status doesn’t mean that the owners are required to work with our office on rebuilding the section damaged by the fire, but we are available to offer advice and assistance to the city and the market’s board about preservation issues related to the destroyed and surviving sections of the market,” he said.

Contractors will be procured through competitive bidding, but historic status means that some contractors will need certifications and specific skill sets “because we can’t just put up a regular flat roof with a rubber finish on it and say we’re done,” said Hartman. “It’s got to be true to form.”

Local building trade unions “are committed to do this and do this right,” he added.

Today’s building materials can deliver modern advantages without sacrificing the historic look, Morrison said. He sees an opportunity to swap some of the “old, rickety windows” with energy-efficient but historically sensitive replacements. The roof, with its distinctive clerestory, could be rebuilt “using historically appropriate new materials and maintain the silhouette.”

“That silhouette is so iconic that it’s part of the Broad Street Market’s logo,” Morrison said. “The roof, the ceiling, the beams, the lighting system, the air handling system—all of that isn’t a question of historic preservation. That’s a question of the best possible reconstruction.”

In the rebuild, architects and engineers will rethink how utilities are run and how ADA access is assured, but in a way that respects the past.

“We can’t build a beer garden on the roof,” Hartman said.

 

 Historic Cooperation

Market leaders expect to continue their partnership with the city along two tracks—operating the temporary market and rebuilding the fire-damaged one, said Executive Director Tanis Monroy.

“The city has said they want our input, especially when it comes to vendor relations and their needs, like the layout and equipment,” he said. “The vendors are looking forward to improvements and upgrades of the building, but they want to see the historic nature stay.”

The temporary structure will include co-op food prep and refrigeration spaces, “with the trust that you won’t take my cheese, and I won’t take your meat,” Monroy said. If they succeed, the rebuilt building could replicate such collaborative efficiencies for cooking, refrigerating and storage. The fire, he noted, offered “a great start for a lot of new relationships and strengthening old ones at the same time.”

The market fire shook up more than vendors and their customers. Harrisburg firefighters are accustomed to putting out blazes, dealing with the immediate needs of the victims, and moving on, said Harrisburg Fire Chief Brian Enterline. Now, he said, “we’re part of the rest of the story.”

“It has been an eye-opener, working directly with the insurance companies and those that are insured,” he said.

The department is considering developing a customer-service approach to help residents post-fire, especially the uninsured or underinsured, and to educate business owners about the importance of adequate fire coverage.

“We really need to look at this holistically and how we can make better use of resources, personnel-wise, to maybe help people navigate some of these issues,” he said.

The building is adequately insured and included in a policy that covers all city buildings, Hartman said, although as of press time, a payment figure wasn’t ready. Whatever the amount, a fundraiser such as a capital campaign is probably ahead because, in part, the market’s stone building needs the same love that the brick building is likely to receive, such as HVAC upgrades.

As for that greatly-to-be-desired air conditioning, it’s wrapped up in a key distinction. The city’s insurance plan covers reconstruction of what was there, plus upgrades needed to bring damaged buildings up to code. Under those considerations, insurance will cover a sprinkler system and full ADA accessibility in the brick building.

But HVAC is not a code requirement. It’s part of what city officials call the “above and beyond,” so funding would have to come from capital campaigns, grants and other non-insurance sources.

The brick building comprises conjoined structures built in 1874 and 1878. On July 10, the wall separating them served as a firebreak. In the rear, destruction was profound from flames and 180,000 gallons of water. In contrast, in the front, menus can still be read on the walls.

The lesser-damaged side could be open for business earlier than the full building, “depending on how the construction team does it,” Hartman said.

To Hill, with her economic development duties, rebuilding focuses on the business owners trying to sustain their livelihoods and the community that depends on them.

“A lot of people don’t have regular access to supermarkets,” she said. “This might be their only place they can regularly go to be able to get a head of lettuce or tomatoes or fresh fruit or meat.”

Hill recalled her time as market manager, when vendors kept an eye on her young daughter, who thought she was a vendor herself.

“The market is ingrained in your family, from vendors to staff to the board and everybody who goes there,” she said.

Based on more than 100 years of success stories coming from the market, the city is confident of future success, said Hartman.

“It’s going to be back, and it’s going to be better than ever,” he said. “It’s going to be something that will surprise people with how modernized it’s going to be, but it’s also going to let them feel like an old friend is back in town.”

This is the second part of our two-part feature on the Broad Street Market fire and its aftermath. See our September issue for part one, which focused on the market’s vendors.

For more information on the Broad Street Market and to donate, visit www.broadstreetmarket.org.

 

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Harrisburg School District to demolish long-vacant William Penn building, approves 2023-24 budget

Harrisburg School Board meeting on Tuesday

The Harrisburg School District on Tuesday took action on two significant agenda items—the district’s budget and the future of one of its most storied buildings.

District Receiver Dr. Lori Suski approved the demolition of the long-vacant and blighted William Penn School building, citing the financial burden that it has caused the district.

“We have gone through extensive dialogue about this property,” Suski said. “The building was improperly shuttered years ago, and I agree with the residents that it’s a travesty. But we need to look at how best to use our resources. It doesn’t really appear that there is any other direction to go than to proceed with the demolition.”

Suski approved a $6.8 million proposal from the Gordian Group to demolish the building, built in 1926.

According to district officials at a previous board meeting, William Penn has increasingly suffered structural damage, fires and break-ins. Over the years, the school district weighed options such as selling the building and renovating it for use as a magnet middle school. However, Suski explained that the district wasn’t interested in any sales offers it got and received quotes estimating renovations could be as high as $90 million.

Several William Penn graduates and community members attended Tuesday’s meeting to express frustration with the plan to demolish the building.

“I’m upset that they allowed the building to deteriorate,” said Elle Richard, of the William Penn class of 1966. “It shouldn’t have gone this far. It’s sad because it seemed so much like home.”

David Morrison, executive director of the Historic Harrisburg Association, said that while he wished the building could have been adaptively reused, “that moment, sadly, appears to be long gone,” he said.

“To lose that majestic façade that looms over Italian Lake will indeed be an enduring loss,” he added. “But we know that you can’t save everything.”

Some school board members expressed support for the decision to demolish the building, agreeing with district officials that maintaining the building had become too costly.

“It does hurt that this decision had to be made,” said school board director Danielle Robinson. “We’ve done everything to try to figure out how to save this building but realistically it just can’t be done.”

The school district will likely begin demolition in August or September, which would take around a year to complete, said John Reedy, chief of operations for the district.

According to Superintendent Eric Turman, the district plans to host community meetings in the fall to hear input from residents on how they’d like to see the property used after William Penn is demolished.

Also on Tuesday, Suski approved the final 2023-24 budget of $218.5 million, which does not include a property tax increase.

Taxes will remain at a millage rate of 30.78.

In an earlier form of the preliminary budget, the district proposed raising taxes by 3.25%, however, officials removed the tax hike from the proposal at a previous meeting.

The 2023-24 budget is lower than the 2022-23 budget of $223.8 million, due to the end of some of the district’s Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) money, COVID relief funding, officials stated.

In other news, Suski also approved the termination of a license agreement of the district’s Joshua Farm with Harrisburg-based Wildheart Ministries, effective June 30. According to Suski, since the district began the partnership with the nonprofit about a month ago, the district has had concerns with the way the organization has used the property, located at 213 S. 18th St.

Suski said that district officials will create a new plan later this summer for the use of the property.

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