Time flies, but 100 years is still quite a long time. Pennsylvania's landscape has changed in many ways, though some of the same buildings and businesses still stand. The biggest notable difference is that the world is no longer in black and white. Here are some incredible old photographs taken in Pennsylvania around the year 1915, from about 1911 to 1920. See if you can recognize any of the places pictured!
Hess Brothers in downtown Allentown was once a major attraction.
Here is a picture of the soda fountain at Hess Brothers. It was taken in 1913, the year it opened!
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Allentown used to be a shopping destination for more than just Hess. Here is the 600 block of Hamilton Street as it stood in 1917. Shankweiler and Lehr department stores became big names in the upcoming years.
The Museum of the University of Pennsylvania clearly has a long-lasting legacy. Here it stands in 1915.
The Newton Hardware House in Newton was looking patriotic back in 1915.
The faces in group photos may change through the ages, but the awkwardness will always remain. Here we have a 1915 photograph of Carlisle Indian School Band seated on steps of a the school building.
Fans line up to enter Shibe Park in Philadelphia in 1914.
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This is a drawing of a League Radio Station in York from the year 1916. The transmission poles are each 60 feet high.
Here we have a 1921 photo taken of The Deanery Garden at Bryn Mawr College.
This is a sight you definitely won't find these days! A group of breaker boys sorts coal in a South Pittston coal breaker in 1911.
Here is a 1911 shot of the B&O Railroad Depot in Pittsburgh.
Wow! Which of the pictures above was your favorite? Do you have any cool old pics? Share below!
A drive along the backroads and through the small towns and big cities of Pennsylvania invariably leads us past at least a few abandoned buildings, with fading facades as they’re slowly reclaimed by nature. Glimpses of those long-forgotten buildings tend to spark the imagination, leaving us to wonder about the backstory – who once lived or worked there and why they left. Lost to time and a demolition crew, this Pennsylvania religious center remains only in photos, including those of photographer Johnny Joo, and memories of those who walked through its doors.
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If you love creepy content, Only In Your State’s Vacant series – which partners with talented photographer Johnny Joo – explores a dozen other fascinating abandoned places just waiting to be discovered.
Editor’s Note: Due to the nature of abandoned destinations, many of the places featured in this series are off-limits to visitors or have been demolished. We do not condone trespassing and other illegal activity but rather encourage readers to enjoy learning about these fascinating destinations.
For nearly six decades, the Gilmary Catholic Retreat Center was a familiar landmark in the Pittsburgh suburb of Coraopolis, the culmination of a longtime partnership between the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh and the Religious Sisters of Our Lady of Charity of the Refuge. Although its mission evolved over the years, the group’s original goal was to enrich the lives of so-called “emotionally distressed females” through training and education.
The Gilmary Catholic Retreat Center began its story in the Troy Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh in 1872. The Troy Hill Home, as it was originally known, proved so successful that, by the 1950s, it had outgrown its current location. Plans were drawn up to build a bigger, more spacious compound that would include a school, dorms, and an indoor swimming pool, with groundbreaking ceremonies taking place in 1958. Just a year later, the Gilmary School for Girls officially opened its doors.
Welcoming 100 girls, the school provided a safe and supportive place for residents to learn and grow, offering access to a vocational training center, an indoor gym that doubled as an auditorium, and a chapel. Divided into four groups, the residents lived in split-level cottages, each with a cottage mother. The girls had the opportunity to learn how to swim and eventually become lifeguards, participate in water ballet, play sports, act in school productions, and volunteer at local organizations. By many accounts, the Gilmary School for Girls was a success for nearly 20 years.
Despite its success, the Gilmary School for Girls closed, and the Gilmary Diocesan Center replaced it in 1977. The center created the Diocesan Office for Youth and Young Adult Ministry and continued to champion its mission of providing educational and spiritual support for young people. The final transformation of the organization, in 2007, resulted in the Gilmary Catholic Retreat Center, which would continue to help disadvantaged young people.
The Gilmary Catholic Retreat Center’s story ended in 2017 when it permanently closed and was sold to a developer. It was later demolished.
Have you heard the story of the Gilmary Catholic Retreat Center, a religious center in Pennsylvania? Or perhaps you’ve been there? Share your experience in the comments! View more of Johnny Joo’s photos and learn the fascinating story of an abandoned prison in Pennsylvania. While you can’t visit Gilmary Catholic Retreat Center, you’ll likely pass abandoned places in your adventures in Pennsylvania. Make sure you have your camera so that you can snap photos.
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Special thanks to Cleveland-based photographer Johnny Joo of Odd World Studio for the photos used in this article. To discover more creepy and abandoned places, check out his website, Architectural Afterlife.
Let's turn back the clock to life in the 1930s in Pennsylvania! Today, we're going to journey back through Pennsylvania history to the Great Depression. Life back then certainly was much different than it is today. But, when you view these 11 historic photos of Pennsylvania in the 1930s, you'll also realize that some things never change in PA.
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1. This railroad crossing in Westmoreland County, photographed in 1935, was just one of many crisscrossing the state in the 1930s.
2. Many Pennsylvanians, like those in Connellsville, still used outhouses back in the 1930s. The outhouse pictured below was for diners at a BBQ restaurant; it was captured in this photo in 1935.
3. Billboards certainly have evolved since 1935, when this picture was taken in Uniontown.
4. A snapshot of the homes of Bethlehem in 1935. In addition to the single family homes, rowhomes were also popular in the 1930s.
5. Some things never change in PA, do they? Kiddos enjoy a little sledding on a snowy winter day in Mount Pleasant, 1936.
6. Both young and old worked in the coal mines and searched for coal in the local slag heaps. Photo taken in Nanty Glo in 1937.
7. A snapshot of Philadelphia’s City Hall in 1937.
8. Back in the 1930s, Pennsylvanians could mail letters and pick up milk, bread and other groceries at the local post office and general store. Photo from 1937.
9. A road sign in Lancaster County shows the way to Mt. Joy and Mt. Hope in 1938.
10. Fields of corn and farmland are just as familiar to Pennsylvanians today as they were back in Lancaster in 1938.
11. An old one-room school house in Lancaster as seen in 1938.
Which of these 11 historic photos of Pennsylvania are your favorites? They really show what it was like in the 1930s in Pennsylvania and offer a sense of pride in our resilient Keystone State roots. Let us know in the comments! Then, turn the clock back even further, to the early 1900s, when you check out these 10 vintage photos of PA.