for april fool’s will it be shady as always, west goshen township?

Oh yes, it’s never dull whenever West Goshen is trying to pull something shady as shit.

The latest? They want to erase their meeting videos.

You know just when you think this truly bass ackwards Pennsyltucky municipality has nothing left to make you say WTF, oops they did it again.

Start copying all those videos West Goshen residents if you wish to preserve whatever shady ass record exists or literally they will make a giant April Fool’s joke out of all of you. And oh yeah, get thee to the APRIL 1, 2025 meeting starting at 6 PM. Pack the halls.

this post isn’t about scrapple

I’m really thinking that we’re living in a world gone mad. Every day there’s something else it has gotten bad enough that I don’t even really watch the news any longer.

I used to love to watch the news to learn what was going on in other parts of the country and other parts of the world, let alone our own region. But you start with our own dysfunctional country imitating 1930s Germany pre-World War II right on through to whatever is happening in Europe and elsewhere, and I just am oversaturated with the ugliness of it all.

And that truly is what should terrify all of us. In the US, we don’t have elected officials that represent us. I don’t care what political persuasion you’re discussing. It’s all about extremism and whatever agenda of someone else’s they are pushing like whoever thought a crazy man from South Africa would be the Rasputin to a United States president? But here we are.

And then you have all of the people who are claiming they wish to be part of a movement that saves our country from socialism and communism, and a dictatorship yet they’re feeding into that narrative? And oh yeah Chester County did y’all know that there is a resurrection of the Chester County branch of the Democratic Solcialists of America? Yep and I have been told they have a zoom call this week.

So last week we had people in Muslim garb protesting outside the personal house of I guess Penn’s new president on Cherry Lane in Wynnewood . I have no problems with a peaceful protest, but I do have a problem with people protesting outside someone’s home like that. Other people live in that neighborhood. And then they don’t feel secure. And they were going up his driveway. It was in the Daily Pennsylvania that’s not OK.

http://www.thedp.com/article/2025/03/penn-jameson-house-palestinian-demonstration

It’s like a few years ago now when that Chester County lawyer was one of the lawyers representing Trump And people basically protested on his road by writing stuff on the street or whatever. That was wrong because that was a neighborhood of a lot of people not just one guy.

https://nbcphiladelphia.app.link/Km20ingK0Rb

And what was even uglier is on social media people shared photos of the protesters outside this home and people were making comments like telling those people to go back to their own country. I mean, seriously are we that ignorant now?

And then this weekend when I posted the picture of scrapple and where I had gone a few hours later, I received a private message from a really nice person who asked me if I was aware of the politics of one of the family members of the establishment we had visited. I said yes because I am aware of this person’s politics and I also know that they’re not involved in the food establishment from day to day.

This person said they choose not to go there because of this other person’s politics. And I respect their position but at the same time I don’t like being made to feel guilty that because I went out for breakfast for once and happened to go to this place and that I somehow did something wrong. it’s not that I’m not sympathetic, but there’s nothing about politics in the restaurant. I just went there for brunch. A local business with no politics to be seen.

And then there’s the amusing case of one of these people that likes to say I am such a terrible horrible person seems to be using me for part of his political platform for his run for supervisor. I don’t live in his municipality, so I’m not quite sure how I am part of his political platform.

Mob mentality. That is social media in a nutshell.

And sheer craziness.

Then today I see a post from a woman who is essentially an anti-vaxxer for her cat. Posting to see if she really has to get her cat a rabies shot. Umm yeah, state law. Every animal I’ve ever had has gotten a rabies vaccine because it’s the law and it’s responsible pet ownership, like spay and neuter. I have had vets that have skipped certain vaccines when a pet is dying for example and has next to no time left, but never the rabies. I don’t get it, but hey, measles is a thing again, right?

Then there is the woman who is posting in parenting groups about her 13 year old daughter being pregnant. The post I saw asks if anyone has lawyer referrals. Wait what? How about how did a 13 year old get there? Has she seen a doctor? And it takes two to tango so IS it the boy’s fault? And then there were all of the comments about how she should just have the baby and put it up for adoption and that blew my mind too. She’s 13. I realize kids sneak around, but again, not driving, she’s 13. How about how is your daughter doing? Does she have anyone to talk to? That is going to be a kid who needs support. How about start there?

Then there are the love notes I get. Like take today:

I wish the cancer had taken you, nazi. Playing the victim after you commit an act of blatant racism and antisemitism with a smile on your smug face. Poor woman.

FURacist
0 approved
thatonemathnerd@gmail.com
142.0.248.234

Again, the funny thing is this person thinks they are masked and can’t be revealed. They can be.

Apparently they didn’t like a recent post:

So ok. you don’t like my post. Then don’t read it in East Jibip where you live. You don’t know me, I don’t know you, how do you decide I am a Nazi and racist? Neat trick calling me a Nazi since a late relative of mine had non Jewish German relatives sent to some camp during WWII because they were sympathetic to those being persecuted. Does this person think only those who were Jewish were sent to the camps? Ummm no.

And this person wishes the cancer took me? Sweet! Would that be breast or skin? Or both. Can I get that on a Hallmark Card please?

I don’t live on a reality TV show, yet this is how I feel. Between the ridiculous drama stirred up by people who tell outright Fibber McGees about you and you have never met them or their family and don’t want to, add the ones who are the backdoor gaslighters terrified that their truth will emerge who manipulate people on social media, to the combinations of the two who are constantly whipping up new Facebook hornet’s nests to further their personal vendettas, it is quite remarkable this world we live in.

And it’s not just our regional corner of the universe, it’s all over. I have a friend down south who must have said something somewhere and now she is getting hate from someone they don’t know who not only doesn’t live where they live, but like ridiculously far away who just decided to interject themselves.

I have dealt with the bullshit for years and it’s enough is enough time. No one has to agree with anyone on social media but people don’t just get to randomly harass or incite people to do harm just because. It’s the whole mob mentality thing. Now the irony with some of those who attack me? They start these groups and pages supposedly where community can love on one and other….provided you follow only their lead. It is very surreal to be sent screenshots from these groups to see them talking about me. They don’t know me, I choose not to know them, some have been removed from groups I am part of or my blog’s Facebook page for essentially not following basic rules. Often the basic rules involve basic manners.

People act like wild animals on social media, yet I am the problem? Oh I am sorry, no thank you I don’t care to sit and listen to you denigrate me with a vivid assortment of F-bombs that are usually astonishingly vulgar.

So there we have it.

Cheers!

life’s little coincidences

Joseph Price House secured for now

So today I was sent proof that West Whiteland Township is making good on their word to secure the historic Joseph Price House at 401 Clover Mill Road on the corner of S. Whiteford in Exton. West Whiteland Township has a property maintenance code that they enacted I guess within the last couple of years so it appears they went over and they had their public works board up the parts of the Joseph Price house that had basically deteriorated, rotted or were broken into. So the house is secure for now and I am told township/police are keeping an eye on it and isn’t that great?

Joseph Price House boarded up

I’m guessing that you all remember I wrote about this again recently right? It’s just when the urban explorers tell you a historic house needs to be boarded up, you know it’s bad, right?

Joseph Price House a couple of
weeks ago.

So again, here’s the ownership of the property :

That ownership tags back to a property in Ambler, but not the Borough of Ambler. Here’s an aerial shot of that house:

Interestingly enough, this is another old house and according to Montgomery County was built around 190 one. Sometimes they aren’t particularly accurate so it could be a little earlier and ironically close to the same period of the Joseph Price house correct?

Now the owner of record has lived there longer than 2002, actually the property dates back to being purchased in Ambler around 1985. Anyway, when you look at the aerial shot, you see all those old cars right? What’s so interesting? Is the old cars that West Whiteland has wanted them to remove off the Joseph Price house property, right? And does the Joseph Price house have anything weird on the roof?

So is that a sad coincidence the both properties appear to have old car corpses?

And there is one more coincidence. The Township Manager of Lower Gwynnedd is the former manager of West Whiteland and Tredyffrin. As the Saturday Night Live Church Lady would say, “isn’t that special?”

Also there is this lovely act in PA called Act 135. Could West Whiteland Township put the Joseph Price house into a conservatorship to save the house ?

Only time will tell. Sigh.

hayti / coatesville /passtown : miscellany discovered

Yesterday I put up a post about Hayti / Passtown which is part of the Coatesville area. So many seemed to like it, so I went into newspaper archives and did a search. And I did another internet search. And I tried to search the Chester County History Center online archives, and came up empty there, which surprised me truthfully. I found in 2023, the Hayti Historical Society purchased a building from Valley Township at 890 W. Lincoln Highway. The Hayti Historical Society had a website, but it is currently down pending updates it says.

I also found a 2021 article in The Daily Local wrote about the Hayti Cemetery (also known as New Evergreen Cemetery, Evergreen Cemetery, Passtown Cemetery, Midway Cemetery, Midway Hill Cemetery)

Also found a video about the memorial day ceremony of 2021:

This area is in a brief history of Valley Township:

https://www.valleytownship.org/about/pages/valley-township-history

Hayti is an unincorporated community within Valley Township, yet it has a very specific history that deserves more attention, especially in light of America’s upcoming 250th, right?

I also found this really interesting presentation:

I am going to post a slew of clippings I found today. I am hoping all of these old clippings with encourage others to share more about the history of Hayti / Passtown so it is not lost to time entirely.

I would welcome being able to post old photos of Hayti as well since they don’t appear to have any online for people to see in the Chester County History archives.

Thanks for stopping by.

what’s in a name? hayti, passtown?

Chester County has this amazing history. A lot of it unsung and unrecorded. some of it is just by bits and pieces.

Such is the case of Hayti and Passtown…outside Coatesville.

A friend who used to do missionary work and nonprofit work in Haiti sent me two articles of Hayti in Coatesville. They are from the Daily Local, December 1986. They were written by Douglas Harper and I’m sharing them both in their entirety.

This is the kind of wonderful history that no newspaper does anymore, or if they do so it’s rare.

Before there was Hayti, there was Passtown.

Pasttown is the old name for the area along Lincoln Highway just west of Coatesville. It was also called hands pass, or simply the pass.

There is a narrow gap in the north Valley Hills here, and this past gave the place it’s early.

As for Hand’s Pass in the days when the Lancaster Turnpike was a toll road, the name was rumored to mean that travelers could gain free access to the highway here by giving a secret sign, made by a certain twisting of the hands.

But this was just wishful thinking by commuters. Hand’s Pass actually springs from the revolutionary war exploits of General Edward Hand of Lancaster.

A century ago, the battle that gave Hand’s Pass its name was told in much more glowing terms than today. Those were the days when patriotic pride was more important than historical veracity. Skirmishes and minor exchanges sometimes took on the aspect of major battles and glorious victories in the account of history writers . Such was the case with Hand’s Pass.

It was during the darkest days of the revolution. The American defeat on the Brandywine in September 1777 left Chester county open to the marauding British armies. According to the traditional account, General Hand and a small, but brave contingent of continental were prowling around the north Valley Hills. They encountered a detachment of Hessians, the hated mercenary forces of the British army. The Hessians had been out pillaging local farmers, but when they met with hand, he drove them back and took possession of the strategically important pass.

The revised version is somewhat different. Actually, both the Hessions and Hand’s continentals were out foraging from local farms – a practice, both sides employed during the war. When the two groups of hungry soldiers met, it is unknown who retreated faster. Only Hand and his men returned to the gap and camped there . The Hessians didn’t. Thus it was accounted an American victory. No one was killed in the battle, or even wounded. Neither side fired a shot.

Hand went on to a later distinguished political career in Lancaster County. His mansion still stands south of Lancaster. The Hession’s probably went on to fight for the British and other colonial wars, or whatever conflicts their prince leased them out to.

The name Hand’s Pass stuck for the gap, however. At the pass, or nearby, was a cave called Indian cave, which was rumored to be haunted in the late 1800s.

Earlier the cave had been the reputed hiding place of the notorious highwayman “Captain Fitz. “ James Fitzpatrick was a deserter from the Continental army in 1778. He earned the reputation as a local Robin Hood robbing the rich and sharing spoils with the poor.

He was eventually caught and hanged, but Bayard Taylor immortalized Captain Fitz as “Sandi flash“ in “the story of Kennett,“ and his career was one of the most colorful incidents in Chester county history.

In the last century, the past school stood across the road from a famous spring of clear, cold water. The waters of the Brooke that ran down to the Brandywine from the spring, refreshed generations of travelers, teamsters, school, children, horses, and tramps that passed through past town When Hayti first developed as a settlement of poor migrant workers, the spring was the sole source of water for the town. Both the spring and Indian cave disappeared under the expansion and relocation of Route 30 about 50 years ago.

In the approximate center of Valley Township on Lincoln Highway is the village of Hayti. 

Hayti, pronounced “hay-tie”, is a busy, neat Coatesville suburb of about 1000 people overlooking the Chester Valley. But Hayti has different roots than most Chester county villages. The first inhabitants of Hayti weren’t scotch/Irish farmers or Quaker store and in keepers: they were immigrant millworkers from the Caribbean.

Valley Township was born in 1852. It already had two ironworks, and was near several more. The huge Brandywine Mills of Coatesville, later Lukens Steel, also had facilities in Valley. Most of Valley was farmland at the time, but the need for a permanent labor force for the mills soon changed the complexion of the Township.

Work in the mills was back, breaking and dangerous, even by pre-labor law standards. Mail jobs were undesirable to men who could find work elsewhere. Employment at the mills was sporadic. When there was work, the mills ran night and day for several weeks at a time. When orders dried up, they stood idle for whole summers, their employees out of work. From an early day, millwork devolved to immigrant workers.

According to tradition, sometime after the Civil War, a group of Haitians from the Caribbean island of Haiti came to Chester county and worked in the local Steel Mills near Coatesville. Perhaps they arrived one by one, perhaps they came as a group. Perhaps they were lowered there by company recruiters.

A little row of houses was erected for them on a street off of Lincoln Highway. On 1883 maps Hayti appears as an unnamed community of about 10 homes on the south side of Hayti Street now Front Street.

Local residence identified the village by the nationality of its inhabitants, and the pronunciation, and later the spelling of Haiti changed to suit the local tongue.

Hayti was one of several such company towns west of Coatesville in the age of Steele. Rock Run, Cat Swamp, Siberia, and Newlinville were names of others, many of which still stand. Mostly they were shabby patches of row homes, often without running water, rented by a series of poor tenants who stayed a few years and moved on.

“The story about Haitians is the one I’ve always heard, but historically I cannot confirm or deny it,” said Eugene DiOrio chairman of the Coatesville historical commission .

“I know that Lukens did recruit around the country, especially at the time of the first world war, when of course, there was a great demand for steel. Whether they ever recruited outside of the country, I’m not aware of,” DiOrio said. The Haitians were possibly in America already before removing to the Coatesville area.

“These things sometimes happened in the history of American immigration,” DiOrio said. “There are Jillians of good stories about how people got here.“

The story of the Haitians of Hayti is almost entirely forgotten. Details of their lives are difficult to glean today. Newspapers of the day, rarely mentioned immigrants or blacks, except an accounts of horse, thievery or revival meetings. But there are strong hints that these towns lived and died with the economy. When Steele thrived, times were good. When work fell off, people defended for themselves.

a correspondent in a newspaper of the 1880s reported on the changes brought to Rock Run by a change in prosperity: “dilapidated houses and hungry looking dogs met the eye at every return. Now comfortable houses and well clad children are the happy scenes that greet the eye.“

In another newspaper article, dated 1893, farmers and still rural Valley Township reported being “annoyed“ by petty pilfering of corn and grain, and by people who even broke into barns and milked the cows in their stalls.

“It is supposed,” the article continued, “that the mischief is done by some persons of the neighborhood, who, being thrown out of employment, are obliged to steal to secure a living.”

As late as 1920, most of the houses of Hayti were still occupied by black families, but the Haitians had either died or moved on. New developments sprang up in the Hayti area in the prosperity of World War I.

Russell Hill, a development south of Hayti, was nipped in the bud when route 30 was relocated through the middle of it. Lincoln Heights, as laid out in 1917, also faltered, but not before adding three new streets – Main, Lafayette and George– to Hayti . Meadowbrook was laid out in 1918.

In the days when horses took the place of cars and trucks as the principal means of transportation, disposing of dead animals was an urban problem. Just as junk cars are towed to scrap heaps today, dead horses, cows, and other animals were dragged to the edge of Coatesville, and left to rot in a field, just south of Hayti known as Horse Heaven.

Horse Heaven was a paradise for buzzards, crows, possums, and rats. It was also a source of income for small boys, who picked through the gruesome carcasses and gathered bones, which they sold for a few pennies to a nearby phosphate mill, the Charles E Cook bone mill.

An even older name for the Hayti area, and one that is now almost forgotten is Rainbow. One of the first settlers there, even before the Lancaster Turnpike was laid through, called his plantation rainbow farm. Later, the farmhouse became a tavern for the traffic on the turnpike.

This in, and a newer one that was replaced in around 1800, was called Rainbow Inn. The inn which later became a private home, was said to be haunted by the ghost of a man who was shot in a barroom brawl there a century or more ago.

Though the Rainbow Inn was already out of business by the turn of the century, when the Valley Township school board built a new one room school house to handle the growing population of Haiti they called the place Rainbow School.

Until 1957, under a defective system of segregation, the white children of  Hayti attended rainbow school, while black students went to the Pass School. In 1957, Valley, integrated it schools under orders from the state Department of Public Education.

In 1929, the old Rainbow School was sold and a new one opened, and some school board members wanted to change the name to James A. Long school. The old Rainbow Inn had already passed from memory for most people.

But Rainbow survived the attempt, and Rainbow school remains one of the elementary schools in the Coatesville Area School District.

The Pass School has had a number of homes since it first opened as a private academy in 1800. Its first home was a log cabin, with a crude blackboard on one wall and a row of split logs for  seats. Schooling grew more sophisticated over the years, but even as late as 1893 the Pass School had to stay closed one Monday because the teacher forgot to bring her key. Through the late 19th century Coatesville children who lived west of the Brandywine attended the Pass School, and the shade of an ancient oak tree, and beside a clear spring.

Anyway, there was a historical society website for Hayti and it’s under construction again so you can’t read about it . I have gathered some snippets of articles I have found and am including them because how can Chester County be doing the 250th of this country without including history like this? Or of Mount Pleasant in Tredyffrin?

https://america250chesco.org/

Here’s hoping the Chester County History Center shows some initiative here.

ribbon cutting for west whiteland public works building.

Cutting the ribbon!
(Bill Rettew photo)

This afternoon was the long awaited ribbon-cutting of the new West Whiteland Township Public Works complex on Valley Creek Boulevard.

It was a nice afternoon with members of the public and public works. Yes I was supposed to go…and I forgot. Life gets busy and I just plain forgot. Thanks to Bill Rettew of The Daily Local I have photos to share with everyone!

Congratulations West Whiteland Township!

Chair of the West Whiteland Supervisors Raj Kumbhardare provides remarks at the
ribbon cutting ceremony.
(Bill Rettew photo)

what is going on at the joseph price house in exton?

I have literally lost count of how many times I have written about this house. I’m speaking about the Joseph Price House in West Whiteland Township, Chester County. Located at the corner of Clover Mill Road and S. Whitford Rd. in Exton the address is 401 Clover Mill Rd.

This is a historic asset that is rotting day by day, week by week, year by year. This home is owned by two older gentleman that I assume bought it as as an investment property only nothing has ever happened. It just rotted.

This house is known as a rural or Queen Ann Gothic. It was built in 1878 and altered in 1894. It is constructed of quarried green serpentine limestone that was quarried locally.

I have known of several people in the past few years who have tried to make a deal with the owners to buy it and save it.

It could have so many adaptive reuses, it could also be a single-family home again. I think it would make a great boutique bed and breakfast AND as there is one down the street so there is a market for this.

The urban explorer known as Abandoned Steve had written about this house in the fall and there was a video. The video has since disappeared.

Coming March 2025 from
Abandoned Fantasies

I really wish the video had not disappeared because it gave an accurate account of what the interior of the house was like as well as the fact that it was not a secured location. Sure houses can be empty, but don’t they also legally have to be secure?

I received a tip from another urban explorer letting me know that the interior of the house seems to be getting cleaned out. Not necessarily cleaned up but cleaned out so that could mean any number of things.

At the top of the wish list is it’s being cleaned out to sell.

At the bottom of the wish list is it’s being cleaned out so someone can file a demolition permit.

Using AI, Abandoned Fantasies shows how this beautiful house could just disappear if not saved.

Also on the list is just the thought wrinkling my brain is someone simply stealing from this house because it’s not secure? (I mean, obviously it’s not secure if urban explorers aren’t really having any difficulty entering the premises, right?)

Now, honestly? I would not enter the premises unless I had someone in an official capacity with me and I had permission. I’ve actually wanted to do that for years to photograph the inside before it disappears. Because I really feel unless something happens, it will disappear.

The Joseph Price House is a very unique and special piece of County history and architecture.

In the fall when I saw the video from Abandoned Steve Exploration, I forwarded that video to someone on the West Whiteland Historic Commission whose response was nothing short of snotful after I contacted them a week later to make sure they had received the video after not even receiving a courtesy acknowledgment of receipt of it. I found that rather disappointing personally, but hey, I tried. I do believe that that this historic commission overall is interested in preserving this property. Obviously I just contacted the wrong person.

There have been quite a few urban explorers in and out of this house. None of them want to see the house disappear. Every single one of them says how fabulous this house is and how it could be saved.

As a matter of fact, one has sent me video snippets and there are videos coming the third week in March called Abandoned Fantasies. They are combining actual footage of the house with software that shows you what the house might look like if it was renovated and restored. It takes urban exploration to the next level and I hope it encourages people to have a vision of what can happen if you restore an old house.

Coming March 2025 from
Abandoned Fantasies

So I’m voicing concern yet again this morning about this beautiful house.

The Joseph Price House needs to be saved. It’s pretty much that simple.

#thisplacematters

I was sent this photo – very decrepit from the rear also obviously not secure so what if kids get in and I bet they have gone in.

If the house is being cleaned out for some reason, I hope the things that were original to the house like some of the furniture that I have seen in urban explorer videos and photographs are not just disappeared forever.

yo penndot time to fix the potholes on 30 bypass in caln.

Irish Eyez ChesCo is reporting more pothole / sinkhole hell on the 30 Bypass.

This has been going on for weeks.

This has even been on the news.

So I don’t know what it’s gonna take to get PennDOT to actually do something but they can’t wait anymore. And I have to wonder about liability given how many people have reported the holes and road issues and they haven’t been fixed properly yet?

PennDOT really needs to get moving somebody could die here.

It’s another hot PennDOT mess.

follow up for the no-no queen of tredyffrin zoning re: mt. pleasant

I wrote a post last week about Tredyffrin.

So…a little follow up for the no-no queen and the ostrich collective…err I mean supervisors and staff in Tredyffrin. I don’t mean to be so municipally sarcastic but somehow Tredyffrin brings it out in me regarding the do nothing attitude of helping Mt. Pleasant and a lot of other stuff these days. But hey you now have an art committee to do I am not quite sure what, right?

Anyway, Erin McPherson, Tredyffrin’s director of planning and zoning seemed like she so couldn’t possibly about anything at last week’s meeting that I wondered if this brand new photo would encourage her to get out from behind her desk and lumber on over to Mt. Pleasant and see for herself? She can use Waze if she doesn’t know how to get there, or ask Manager Bill Martin because he definitely knows where Mt. Pleasant is located, right? He lives in the township, correct?

The next photo is from the summer of 2024 and I was wondering how Erin McPherson, Tredyffrin’s director of planning and zoning thought everyone was going to navigate this?

Tredyffrin Township, your slip is showing….again. And your zoning notices about developers wanting taller fences over on Vincent Road are also amusing…perhaps people really don’t want McMansions backing up to 252 after all?

Welcome to Tredyffrin where officials seem to drool and/or make excuses?

a life well lived in willistown : r.i.p. fred de long.

I don’t know the family, I didn’t know this gentleman but these are the people who we should celebrate MORE in Chester County.

We need to celebrate our real farmers who just get out there and do their thing to make all of our lives better without glam shots on tractors they don’t own and expensive publicists.

People whom I know described Fred de Long as an amazing man who contributed so much.

Requiescat in pace Mr. de Long.

https://www.dignitymemorial.com/obituaries/paoli-pa/conrad-delong-12211535

OBITUARIES

Fred de Long, longtime director of the community farm program for the Willistown Conservation Trust, has died at 55

They lovingly called him Farmer Fred, and he turned Rushton Farm in Newtown Square into a national model of community supported agriculture.

by Gary Miles
Published Feb. 21, 2025, 3:34 p.m. ET