Monday, February 2, 2009

Celebrating African-American History Month

The Mahoning Valley Historical Society will be hosting a panel discussion entitled Discovering African-American History in the Mahoning Valley on Saturday, February 21st at 4:00 p.m. The discussion will include community historians actively researching and disseminating information about important people, places and events in the Mahoning Valley’s African American community; panel will include Stacey Adger, Steffon Jones, Vince Shivers, Judy Williams and Bill Lawson as moderator.

This free event will be held in the MVHS Carriage House, behind the Arms Family Museum, 648 Wick Avenue in Youngstown. Support for this program is provided by the Ruth H. Beecher Charitable Trust.

Panelist Vince Shivers has been exploring the life of P. Ross Berry, an influential African-American architect from Youngstown whose legacy includes important buildings such as the current home of the Board of Education and the Helen Chapel of the First Presbyterian Church of downtown Youngstown.


Plimton Ross Berry

P. Ross Berry (1835-1917) was the masonry contractor for many of the most significant buildings in the Mahoning Valley during the late 19th century. Born a free man in Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, he began his career as a bricklayer at the young age of 16. At that time, Berry was commissioned by Lawrence County to do the brickwork for a new courthouse in New Castle, Pennsylvania. Ten years later, Berry and wife Mary traveled by boat to Youngstown after he was awarded the brickwork contract for the Rayen School (now the Youngstown Board of Education building.) During his forty year career in Youngstown, Berry became recognized as a master builder and respected citizen of the Mahoning Valley.

Berry proved himself to be an experienced and devoted bricklayer. While building the original Rayen School (now the Youngstown Board of Education Building), he simultaneously built second Saint Columba sanctuary. Other buildings included the Youngstown Opera House, the 1866 jail on Hazel Street, the 1876 Mahoning County Courthouse, the Tod House Hotel and many others. His masonry work included the Homer Hamilton & Company Foundry and Machine Shop and the Dollar Bank Building.

During his career in Youngstown, Berry contributed heavily to the growth of religious institutions in the Valley when he was commissioned to build three major churches including St. Columba, First Presbyterian, and First Baptist Temple.

With his partner, Lemuel Stewart, Berry built a legacy that would last into the present. Stewart was a building contractor who moved to the Mahoning Valley after Berry. The Stewart and Berry families were connected by both friendship and marriage and their sons continued as builders in the Youngstown area. Berry’s own four sons were trained as brick masons and later became union organizers of the Brick Masons Local #8.

Members of the Berry family were also the driving force behind the founding of St. Augustine’s Church in 1907. Today, many descendents of the Berry family belong to this church. P. Ross Berry greatly contributed to the building boom that occurred in Youngstown at the turn of the century, not just with bricks and stone, but with a family and descendents who have contributed greatly to the history and heritage of our community.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Upcoming Events


Reservations can be made by email to mvhs@mahoninghistory.org
RSVP by November 28th.



Wednesday, November 12, 2008

A Journey to Christmas Past


The Mahoning Valley Historical Society’s collection of Christmas decorations includes a variety of ornament styles, from 19th Century blown-glass and paper ornaments to 1950s glow-in-the-dark plastic ornaments. The ornament collection, as well as holiday postcards, greeting cards, and photographs, will be out for enjoyment in the exhibit A Journey to Christmas Past, opening November 28 at the Arms Family Museum of Local History.
A Journey to Christmas Past
November 28th through January 4th
The Arms Family Museum of Local History
Tuesday-Sunday 1:00 to 5:00 p.m.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Take a Tour Through History

Sunday, September 14th from 1:00 to 4:00, the Mahoning Valley Historical Society will be hosting a Family Day at the former Harry Burt/Ross Radio building – 325 West Federal Street in downtown Youngstown. This historic Building is the birthplace of the Good Humor Ice Cream Bar and the future home of the new Mahoning Valley History Center. There will be food and fun activities for everyone, tours of the Building and walking tours of downtown Youngstown.


Schedule of Entertainment

1:00-4:00 Bounce-Around
1:00-2:00 Jocko the Clown
2:00-2:20 Story Teller
2:20-3:00 Tours/ Crafts
3:00-3:20 Story Teller
3:30-4:00 Youngstown Connection


For more information please call 330.743.2589

Monday, August 4, 2008

New & Improved

The Mahoning Valley Historical Society website has received a makeover!
Check it out!


www.mahoninghistory.org

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Visit the Historic Idora Park Carousel

In 1984 Jane Walentas purchased the 1922 Idora Park Carousel at an auction. She has spent the past 22 years painstakingly restoring this beautiful ornament to its original beauty. The carousel resides in Brooklyn, New York and Ms. Walentas is looking forward to the day when a Carousel Pavilion will be in the Brooklyn Bridge Park, and the Idora Park Carousel will have a permanent home.




A bus trip is being organized to see (and ride) the Carousel, here are the details:

Depart Thursday October 23rd 6:30 a.m.
Return Friday October 24th 11:30 p.m.

Tour highlights:
Round trip transportation via deluxe motorcoach
One night lodging at the Fairfield Inn in East Rutherford, NJ
Dinner included in Little Italy - Pellegrino's Restaurant
Reserved seats to the evening Broadway musical Chicago at the Ambassador Theatre
Visit to the 1922 Idora Carousel in Historic Dumbo
Free time to browse Chinatown and Little Italy


Cost for the trip:
$340 per person, double
$320 per person, triple
$310 per person, quad
$405 per person, single

A $150 deposit is due by Friday, July 25th with the balance due by September 23rd.


Please contact Joan Yanchick at (330) 542-3444 or Jane Wardle at (330) 793-9878 with questions and to make reservations.

Monday, July 14, 2008

The Boys & Girls of Summer

The game of baseball has been known as America’s national pastime since the 1870s, but its origins are much earlier. While the sport’s exact beginnings are disputed, an early English folk game called stoolball is likely the forerunner to modern baseball. In stoolball, which may have been played as early as the 11th Century, one player defended a target (the stool) while another player threw a ball trying to hit the target. Eventually, the player guarding the target used a bat to deflect the ball. Later, the batter had to run between two stools in order to defend both from the thrower.

The modern game of baseball did not come to be until the mid-19th Century. The New York Knickerbockers club, founded September 23, 1845, is credited with outlining the rules for playing the game as we now know it. In the following decade, more than a dozen teams, including the Knickerbockers, formed the National Association of Baseball Players, the first organization to govern the sport of baseball and its first professional teams. In 1876, that organization was replaced by the National League of Professional Baseball Clubs. The National League, along with the American League which formed in 1901, constitutes modern Major League Baseball.

While baseball became a popular professional sport, it also thrived in amateur and school leagues across America. Beginning July 12, the Arms Family Museum of Local History will show the photographic exhibit The Boys and Girls of Summer. The exhibit will feature images of local baseball teams from throughout the 20th Century. From the Rayen High School team of 1901 to the General Electric Softball team of 1976, the exhibit will show some of the teams and players that have brought our national pastime to life in the Mahoning Valley.




A New Exhibit at The Arms Family Museum of Local History

Open Tuesday-Sunday from 1:oo to 5:00 p.m.

Images: Rayen High School Baseball Team, 1901; General Electric Softball Team, 1976; Youngstown Sheet & Tube Baseball Game, 1920