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September 9, 2008

Before Jumbo Exploded, A Fly Wheel Burst

The front page of a recent York Sunday News featured an article about a horrendous explosion at the York Roller Mill. The tragedy occurred in 1908, and ten people were killed with another 20 injured. While researching the article, reporter Teresa Ann Boeckel contacted me and asked if I knew much about it and if I knew of anything worse locally. To my knowledge, that accident is the largest in the area, at least in terms of loss of life. (Read Jim McClure's recent post for more information.)

Two days after the article was published, I had the opportunity to speak to a local Rotary Club. Because I wrote Postcard History Series: York, people sometimes bring postcards to show me when they know I'll be speaking somewhere. As I looked through a postcard collection shared with me by a club member, I was surprised to find another postcard of the York Rolling Mill accident - one I had not previously seen. However, it turned out to be a totally different incident.

The postcard showed the aftermath of another industrial accident at the York Rolling Mill. According to the caption, a Fly Wheel burst, killing three and wounding four. This occurred in 1872.

The accident was certainly not as severe as the 1910 explosion, but it was still intriguing. Here, hidden away in a private postcard collection was a little piece of the past, forgotten to time. And so it goes with history - there are always new "discoveries" to be found about the past. Of course, "re-discovery" is a more appropriate term. For all we know about local history, how much is out there that we don't know?

December 20, 2007

Dog’s Wool, Swingling Tow & The York Christmas Tree

The use of evergreens as holiday decorations dates back thousands of years to when ancient Romans and Egyptians used evergreens as part of their Winter Solstice celebrations. The first known decorated Christmas Tree was in Latvia in 1510. An evergreen tree was decorated with roses. Alsace, France is also sometimes recognized as the birthplace of the Christmas Tree, based upon a depiction of a decorated “paradise tree” from a play about Adam and Eve. By the 1700s, some European Christmas Trees were decorated with lit candles.

It is believed that the concept of the Christmas Tree came to America with Hessian soldiers fighting alongside the British during the American Revolution. Probably the first account of an American Christmas Tree is 1804 when soldiers at Fort Dearborn in Chicago brought evergreen trees into their barracks during the holiday season. Charles Minnegrode is recognized for introducing to America the custom of a decorated Christmas Tree in Williamsburg, Virginia in 1842. One year earlier Prince Albert, the German husband of Queen Victoria, decorated a Christmas Tree in England’s Windsor Castle.

We’ll probably never know when or where the first decorated American Christmas Tree occurred; however, it was prior to 1842. Though York, Pennsylvania was part of Penn’s Woods, and had a notable population of English Quakers, the area was predominately settled by people from the Palatinate, an area that is today part of Germany. These Pennsylvania Deutsch (later mistranslated as “Dutch”) brought with them German Christmas traditions, including decorated trees. This tradition undoubtedly spread to other local residents, as evidenced by this newspaper advertisement, which ran in the York Demographic Press in 1840.


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