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by Robert Giles
Growing up in Byersdale, I
would often look about me and ask – “What was this like a hundred years ago?” I guess I had a natural bent
for history.
The view from our back porch
was underwhelming – an Atlantic service station, a truck park, Jan’s Bar, and
the Byersdale Hotel. If I leaned forward, I could make out the corner of the
Isaly store.
There was a large billboard just on the other side of Duss Avenue.
It obscured the view of Byers’
Field, not that Byers’ Field was much to look at, even if it was as important
as the roadside markers said. “Logstown”. “Legionville”. “The Battle of Fallen
Timbers”.
Beyond Byers’ Field were the
railroad tracks. They were down on the river bank where they couldn’t be seen.
We could hear but not see the Pennsy. The Ohio River we could make out on a
clear day when the light hit it just right. It was almost a mile off. The J&L
steel mill was always there, chain-smoking and coughing fire. At day’s end, the sun
settled over the dark Aliquippa hills.
Once we watched a worker put up a new advertisement on the billboard. He used a long-handled brush
(like a wide soft broom) to glue sheets of paper to the board. When
all the sheets were glued in the proper arrangement, it all looked whole and
formed a nice picture. The glue dried invisibly and you had to be real close to
see the seams. Just like wallpaper.
The day we watched, the man
with the brush was putting up an ad for a new brand of cigarette, Salem.
There was a handsome couple sitting down for a picnic beside a pond, pine
trees and mountains in the background.
You could almost smell the pine scent. You guessed it. They weren’t eating
fried chicken – they were enjoying Salem cigarettes. Everything was clean and
nice. (And mentholated.)
That billboard was as close to Paradise as we would get, sitting
on our back porch in Byersdale.
It seemed that the history of
Western Pennsylvania began and ended with the French and Indian War. I learned about
it at school – Braddock’s Road, George Washington, Fort Necessity, Jumonville,
the Battle of Bushy Run.
Admiral Perry defeated the
British fleet on Lake Erie, but that was another war, the War of 1812, and a
long way from Byersdale. Lake Erie was almost in Canada.The Revolutionary War
and the Civil War bypassed us entirely.
The time between the
Revolutionary War and the Civil War was a big blank. Isn't that when they spent four score years quarreling about slavery when they weren't fighting about whether to have a national bank? And the Whigs were for “internal improvements” but the
Democrats were against them.
Why any one would vote
against “internal improvements” I couldn’t guess, but as soon as someone
proposes, someone opposes. That’s just the way it is.
In sixth grade, our home room
class walked down Rice Avenue to visit
“Old Economy”. That wasn’t in our text book but Mr. Scimio just wanted to have
a nice walk on a warm spring day, I guess.
We learned about the Harmony Society before we went – I
think there may even have been a movie that Mr. Scimio showed us. He adjusted the venetian blinds to darken the room. “Frank, switch off the lights
now, please.”
The Harmonists (or is it Economites) couldn’t decide where
to settle down, moving from Germany to Butler County to Indiana on the Wabash
back to Beaver County within the space of twenty years. In that short period,
they built three prosperous towns. It makes me tired just thinking about all
that moving and constructing.
Finally they settled down in present-day Ambridge but they
were celibate so they died out, proving forever and ever that socialism is
harebrained and will not work.
I remember only two things from that field trip – besides
Rice Avenue being the steepest hill on earth, that is. There was a building
that had structural problems and the Harmonists installed iron bars and stays
from wall to wall (up high out of the way) to keep the brick walls from splaying out.
Very clever, practical people those Harmonists. (Wait a minute; didn’t we say
they were harebrained in the previous paragraph?)
They also had this place called a grotto or cave that
symbolized the inner beauty of the spirit – plain on the outside, beautiful on
the inside – something like that. Anyway, we were given a big build-up - I
thought it would look like the cave of Ali Baba when I got inside.
Sheesh, no way – what a letdown – to me it seemed almost as
plain on the inside.
Now that I am approaching the age of wisdom,
I have turned the focus of my meditation from my navel to my feet. I study my roots.
There is a wealth of resources for this, all made possible
by Al Gore and his invention of the internet. Those little town centennial
booklets that you could only find on obscure library shelves have been scanned
and are available on Google Books.
Just yesterday, I read about the Reverend William A.
Passavant, a saint of the Lutheran Church. His sainthood is commemorated every
November 24th.
The name caught my eye because so many things in my old
neighborhood bear his name – all sorts of hospitals and charities – the Orphan's Home and School in Zelienople (now Glade Run Lutheran Services), the Passavant Home in Rochester (now Passavant Memorial Homes), the Passavant Hospital in Pittsburgh (now UPMC Passavant Hospital).
He also founded hospitals and charities in distant places like Chicago, Milwaukee and Mount Vernon NY.
Passavant established a Lutheran church in Rochester as
well as the Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church in nearby Baden (less than a mile from my old home in Byersdale).
He was born October 9, 1821, at Zelienople and died on
January 3, 1894. He was educated at Washington & Jefferson College (undergraduate) and
Gettysburg College (seminary).
At the age of 18, Passavant journeyed to Old Economy. (The
trip back and forth from Zelienople on horseback may have been as arduous as
climbing up and down Rice Avenue.)
Here is what Passavant had to say about the view from my
back porch in Byersdale --
On the opposite side of the Ohio a lofty ridge
covered with oaks and pines followed the windings of the river as far as the
eye could reach. Clumps of sugar maple clothed in a livery of the richest green
… were scattered over this valley in every direction, while fields of grain on
the uplands; often surrounded by primitive forests, presented a quiet yet
beautiful scene which wanted only the painters skill to be eternalized on
canvas.
The very
first field* of the Economites was used as a camp by the army of General
Anthony Wayne for the whole winter previous to his expedition against the
Indian tribes of the West. The field contains about ten acres and was defended on
two sides by the nature of the ground; the other two were surrounded by an
embankment of earth eight feet high and a ditch which are still visible.
The amount
of land owned by the society amounts to two thousand acres and without doubt is
among the best on the Ohio. A large part of this is what might be called high
river bottom land which runs back to the hills, and is in many places a mile in
breadth. This part is all cleared and cultivated, while on the hills there are
yet large tracts of woodland.
It is really a pleasure to walk over this
immense plantation and see the perfection to which farming is carried. Some of
the fields contain fifty or a hundred acres, and are surrounded by the best
fences, and on their entire surface not a stump is to be seen. If the land is
too steep for the plough, it is covered with rows of white mulberry trees to
supply the silk worms with leaves. If there is danger of a run washing away,
its banks are lined with willows. Should the ground prove too marshy for the
purposes of agriculture, it is planted with a species of osiers for the
manufacture of baskets, and a deep ravine between sand hills which would
otherwise be of no value has been chosen as the pleasure ground of their herd
of hogs, where they may exercise their rooting propensities to their hearts
desire, without injury to the soil.
In this
manner everything is arranged, the different grains and plants are adapted to
their appropriate soils; everything receives a proper degree of attention and
shows what can be done by a community of common interests properly governed.
The number of farmers is very large and often in harvest fifty reapers may be
seen in a single field. The women who are not otherwise employed often work in
the field during harvest, and with their sleeves rolled up, and broad rimmed
bonnets on their heads present a very picturesque appearance.
Much
attention is paid to the raising of fruit trees, and in the fall of the year
every variety of apple, pear, plum, peach, quince, etc., may be had for the
asking. Some of their orchards are very extensive, especially the apple which
covers several hills. The trees are grafted and produce every variety from the
Rambo to the juicy Pippin.
The flock of sheep belonging to the society is
very large and numbers many thousands; they are pastured by shepherds during
the summer who with their dogs lead a solitary life watching their flocks.
So you see that my valley was long ago something closer to
an earthly paradise than that billboard advertisement for Salem cigarettes. I've pieced together a picture of it from eyewitness accounts from old-timers like Passavant.
It
wasn’t a utopia, which translated from the Greek means “no place”, but it was a
genuine place of beauty and order and prosperity, notwithstanding the inevitable portion of human frailty.
_____
To read more about Reverend Passavant, visit this link in Wikipedia.
The excerpted material authored by William A. Passavant is
from the “Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine”, Volume 4, Number 3, dated
July 1921.
*The "first" field of the Economites is none other than present day Byers’ Field.