Monday, October 5, 2009

Figuring that I needed to take a more aggressive approach to getting the public interested in preserving Silver Spring's history before the developers knock it all down, I enlisted the help of the below "volunteer" to work at the Silver Spring Historical Society's booth, set up last Saturday at the Fenton Street Market.


Actually, he (she?) belonged to the folks next door who were selling dog treats. While looking a bit intimidating, the dog was actually quite friendly and never once barked during the entire five hour time that the market was opened (as opposed to my back, which was barking from sitting and standing that long)!

A group of high school students, whom market manager Hannah McCann had enlisted to help vendors set-up, stopped by and started thumbing through a copy of Historic Silver Spring. They became very enthusiastic as they recognized photos of various places in Silver Spring and couldn't believe how it used to look.

They even proclaimed that I had the 'coolest" booth at the market. I felt heartenend that perhaps there is a chance that the current generation might take an interest in preserving our community's history.


Friday, October 2, 2009

Picturing Old (and Not So Old) Silver Spring

Appearing next year at a bookstore near you...if there are still any in business by then...will be Then & Now: Silver Spring, to be released by Arcadia Publishing. This will be a follow-up to my 2005 book, Historic Silver Spring, published in 2005.

While my first book was released as part of Arcadia's "Images of America" series, this one will be part of its "Then & Now" line (even though I would love to have it titled Then & Again in acknowledgement of my column, which has appeared in the Silver Spring Voice since February 2003). The "Then & Now" series consists of about eighty paired photographs arranged in thematic chapters that illustrate how a community has changed over the course of half century or so...for better or for worse.

My hope is to have very little repetition of images in the two books and to do this I need your help. It took me almost a decade to assemble the 200 images that appeared in the first book and then many of the photos were contemporary views that I took. When the book came out, several folks complained about such and such a place not being featured. When I asked them if they had an old photo of said place (for I didn't), they replied that they also didn't...except the one person who said that he did!

A huge gap in the visual documentation of downtown Silver Spring as it appeared in the 1950s, '60s, '70s, and '80s still exists. I know these photos are out there, probably still in scrap books, photo albums, and shoe boxes and being stored in basements or attics (never good places for materials like this) or under beds or in closets (better). If you have any photographs of downtown Silver Spring taken during this period (or even earlier) that you would like to be considered for use in the new book, please contact me.

One of the chapters in the book will be devoted to Silver Spring Park, better known today by its generic moniker East Silver Spring. Surveyed in 1905, the borders of this now over 100-year old neighborhood were originally Bonifant Street on the north, Cedar Street and Carroll Lane on the east, Sligo Avenue on the south, and Georgia Avenue on the west.

I hope to feature many pairings of "Then & Now" photos of houses located in this historic neighborhood, both extant and lost. Two of the houses for which I have located vintage images are reproduced here.

Situated at 732 Thayer Avenue is a unique residence whose simple lines belie its age. Constructed around 1905 by James Edward Faulconer with help from his father John Benjamin Faulconer, the house was originally to have been one story. Father convinced son that he needed more room and should add another level. Together they framed the second level which afforded much needed space for the five children that would eventually be raised there.


732 Thayer Avenue, constructed ca. 1905 by James E. Faulconer
and his father John. Photo by Jerry A. McCoy.


The same house as it appeared in the 1940s. Photo courtesy
Deborah McGreevy.

Design and construction ran in the Faulconer family for John's other son, also named John, became a professional architect. Standing at 805 Silver Spring Avenue is a wonderful circa 1918 bungalow that he designed for John and Estelle Crawford. Mr. Crawford was a signal man for the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad and later an electrician. The house has been beautifully restored and appears nearly identical to the way it did nine decades ago

805 Silver Spring Avenue, constructed ca. 1918 from a design by
John M. Faulconer. Photo by Jerry A. McCoy.

The same house as it appeared in the 1920s. Photo SSHS Archives.
There are probably more vintage photographs yet to be found of the many historic homes constructed in the early 20th century in Silver Spring Park. If you have an early image of one of these houses, please contact me at (301) 537-1253, email sshistory@yahoo.com, or write Silver Spring Historical Society, PO Box 1160, Silver Spring, MD, 20910. Our web site is www.sshistory.org.


























































































































































































Monday, June 2, 2008

Architectural Surprise on Thayer Avenue






For me the best part of conducting historical research is the serendipity of discovering a really interesting piece of information while looking for something completely unrelated. Such was the case recently while scanning through newspaper microfilm of the 1946 Silver Spring Standard. I was looking for stories about the opening of Tastee Diner that year when I came across “Silver Building Gleams in Glass At the Busy Bonifant Corner” on the front page of the April 19th issue.

The article was about the tenants occupying 8248 Georgia Avenue; a two-story commercial structure originally built in 1927 but, according to the article, newly remodeled and renamed the Silver Building. The building is no longer extant. Sometime around 1972 the structure was heavily damaged by fire and razed. Today the lot is occupied by a playground and parking lot owned by the Bethel World Outreach Ministries International.

One of the tenants of the Silver Building was “well-known businessman” August F. Kohlman, an optician and jeweler. Mr. Kohlman was occupying room number 200 but only temporarily while work was underway on his new shop at 922 Thayer Avenue that “was designed and is being erected under the supervision of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Corporation.” As I read this I could literally feel my eyes open wide with excitement!

For years I’ve walked past 958 Thayer Avenue (originally numbered 922), the long time home of the landmark “oldies” record store Roadhouse Oldies, and I instinctively knew that there was something special about the store front’s architectural design. Featuring a center entrance flanked by two protruding glass display cases, the bulk of the façade is constructed of intricately cut and installed metal trim, molding, sash, and fluted panels.

Above the entrance and display cases, and extending the full width of the store front, is an expanse of opaque glass blocks. This light source easily takes up a third of the store front’s overall design before it is vertically cut short by a small projecting canopy.

What also makes the façade of 958 Thayer unique was my suspicion that it was the only “survivor” of what had probably been three identical store fronts, the other two with the addresses of 956 and 954 and located directly to the east. All three businesses are contained within a single structure built in 1946. At some time over the past six decades the owners of the other two businesses decided to “update” the look of their shops. This involved tearing out the original store fronts and replacing them with new glass windows set into brickwork.

Aware as I am of the architectural detailing of commercial buildings located in Silver Spring’s Central Business District, and knowing that there were no other structures similar to this design, I felt it prudent to set aside my original research on Tastee Diner and see what I could find out about the fabricator of the 958 Thayer Avenue façade.

The Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company was founded in 1883, oddly enough not in its namesake city but in Creighton, Pennsylvania, located twenty miles northeast on the Allegheny River. Known since 1968 as PPG Industries, Inc., the company today has 125 manufacturing facilities and subsidiaries around the world.

In 1936 the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, in an effort to promote wider use of its products, inaugurated a traveling exhibit of twelve architectural model store fronts featuring the latest developments in commercial design, construction, lighting, and color schemes. Meant to encourage retailers to modernize their establishments, these one-seventh scale models had their debut in New York City on September 8th of that year and went on a “caravan” tour of 75 cities in the United States.

Commenting on the exhibit, PPG Co. Representative Edward L. Patton stated, “…the final test of whether or not a store front is successful depends on whether or not it ‘pulls.’ Instance after instance may be cited where sales increases have followed or a new tenant secured that made the modernized property a worth-while investment” (“Improving Store Fronts: Demand Far Exceeds the Supply, Edward L. Patton Says,” New York Times, August 30, 1936). Three months later the caravan arrived in Washington, DC and set up in the display rooms of the Electric Institute, located in the Potomac Electric & Power Co. Building, 929 E Street, NW.

The following year Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. published in 1937 Pittco Store Fronts: 12 Suggestions for Store Front Modernization. Pittco Store Front Metal was a subsidiary company of PPG Co. and produced the trim, molding, and sash materials that were utilized in these store fronts. Likewise another subsidiary, Pittsburgh Corning Glass Block, manufactured the glass block that was frequently incorporated into the store fronts.

Throughout the 1930s and ‘40s these three companies heavily advertised in the architectural trade journals of the time. A double page PPG Co. advertisement spread that appeared in the May 1944 Architectural Digest trumpeted “Interesting Ways to Use Glass in Commercial Buildings.”

A caption in this advertisement accompanying an illustration of a modern store front proclaimed, "Store fronts must have sales appeal...the ability to turn sidewalk traffic into store traffic. Pittsburgh Glass Products are calculated to supply the beauty and appeal you demand in the execution of your store front designs. Carrara Structural Glass in many colors, PC Glass Blocks, Herculite, Pittsburgh Plate Glass and Pittco Metal work as a team to help you create exteriors of distinction." The facade of 958 Thayer incorporates the latter three of these PPG Co. products.

Perhaps Mr. Kohlman learned of the availability of these ready-designed store fronts via any one of the many advertising venues and decided that should he ever have the opportunity to own his own ground-floor business, he would make sure it had a Pittsburgh Plate Glass store front.

The first listing for Kohlman’s Jewel Shop at 958 Thayer Avenue (phone SHephrd-7272) appeared in the September 1946 Washington Metropolitan Yellow Pages. Subsequent listings appeared in the June 1947 and March 1948 editions. The next business to occupy the address was Maternity Lane; “Smart Fashions for Every Occasion and Every Budget” touted an advertisement that appeared in the December 19, 1948 Washington Post).

Below is a list of subsequent businesses that occupied 958 Thayer Avenue (published years obtained from Polk’s Silver Spring City Directory):

1960 - Davis & Carmack Inc. (sound equipment).
1962 & 1964 – Deaner & Son (electronics).
1966 – Vacant.
1968 – Keyser-Deaver (audio electronics repair).
1969 & 1971 – Universal Tailoring Co. & Voula’s Dressmaking Studio.
1973 – Sam Lim’s Lighting Design Co.

By late 1974 the little store front whose façade never changed, only the businesses inside, saw the arrival of a tenant who must have liked the neighborhood because it is still there 34 years later…Roadhouse Oldies! Originally located at 946 Sligo Avenue, this establishment was started by then WGTB-FM radio jock Alan Lee and encyclopedic record collector Les Moskowitz. The record store originally specialized in 1950s rock ‘n’ roll and rhythm and blues recordings.

Still owned today by Lee with the assist of longtime manager and disc jockey Warren “Scooter” Magruder, Roadhouse Oldies has deservedly earned its reputation as a landmark Silver Spring small independent business. Today their stock encompasses 1950’s and ‘60s rock ‘n’ roll, doo-wop, Motown, and ‘70s and ‘80s soul music on 45s, LPs, CDs, DVDs, and cassettes. Its patronage extends far beyond the local community, having a national reputation for being able to procure hard-to-find collectible recordings. Unfortunately, Roadhouse Oldies’ current location with its original store front is endangered.

The owner of 954-56-58 Thayer has plans to raze the structure to construct an office and retail development project. Doing so will not only destroy this historic 1948 Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. store front, but also displace Roadhouse Oldies along with the two other small independent businesses in the building, the Silver Spring Mart and TravelCo International.

While the Silver Spring Historical Society fervently hopes that the developer of this project will assist these business owners to remain in downtown Silver Spring, it is also our desire to see the developer preserve the store front of 958 Thayer Avenue, an effort that I have no doubt would prove to be incredibly newsworthy by the public at large.

The SSHS would like to suggest to the developer that this store front, including the current contents of its display cases and the Roadhouse Oldies sign, be systematically disassembled and reconstructed as a permanent exhibit in the new Silver Spring Library!

Imagine it. Patrons who visit the “Popular Library” area of the new library, where videos, music CDs, audio books, etc. will be housed, could walk past the Roadhouse Oldies store front in whose display cases reside the artifacts of a 20th century sound reproduction medium… 45 r.p.m. (revolutions per minute) and 33 1/3 r.p.m. LPs (“long” playing) record albums.

An entire generation has come of age never having played a record album on a turntable much less having seen either in person. What an incredible opportunity this installation would be to not only teach visiting library patrons about our society’s technological and architectural past but to also serve as a exhibit of Silver Spring’s history.

A similar historic preservation project has already been accomplished at Rockville’s new library, located at 21 Maryland Avenue. Installed in one of its meeting rooms is a complete 1914 marble soda fountain that at one time graced Vinson’s Drug Store, a popular Rockville business. Owned by Peerless Rockville, that city’s historic preservation organization, the soda fountain was never previously assembled and displayed because of lack of space. Now all can see, enjoy, and learn about Rockville’s past when visiting the library.

Why shouldn’t Silver Spring’s residents and visitors be able to readily do the same?

If you have any information/photographs on any of the individuals/places profiled in this article, please contact the Silver Spring Historical Society at PO Box 1160, Silver Spring, MD 20910-1160, email sshistory@yahoo.com, or call 301.537.1253. The society’s web site is http://www.sshistory.org/. Silver Spring's heritage can only be preserved if you share it with us. Thank you!