Quick Tip: Navigating World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1942
This could also be filed under: When in Doubt, Read the Instructions. While I don’t use them all that much, I’ve always found the World War II Draft Registration Cards (freely…
This could also be filed under: When in Doubt, Read the Instructions. While I don’t use them all that much, I’ve always found the World War II Draft Registration Cards (freely…
Photo of an unknown pair from the recently donated Clyde L. Queen collection. Queen was a minister in Point Marion. Credit: Uniontown Public Library.
It’s a little remarkable to me that, being a connoisseur of all things dark and spooky, I’d never read about Frank Monaghan until I began working here. Yes, I’d heard the…
Next month marks the 109th anniversary of the Rand Powder Mill Explosion, a series of blasts at a Fayette County black powder factory that killed 18 people, shattered windows in…
“Three more bankers were sentenced to the penitentiary Saturday. The gentle practice of appropriating other people’s money is sometimes subject to slight discouragements.” — The Morning Herald, 18 Jan 1909.
For all the inquiries about family history I get from visitors to the PA Room, I also field plenty of unusual questions about local history. One patron wondered where his uncle…
“The fellow who wrote that ‘a woman’s only weapon is her tongue’ was evidently a bachelor, with no expert knowledge on the subject of pokers, broomsticks, and hatpins.” — “A…
Ah, the most mundane of library tasks: “reading the shelves,” or going book by book and putting everything in order. A few weeks ago, after reading the general history and genealogy…
The cover of a brochure for the Summit Hotel (also known as the Summit Inn) on Route 40, circa 1948.
J.C. Doolittle’s Blacksmith Shop. A note on the back indicates that it was in the Smithfield area. Credit: Uniontown Public Library.