John Henkel had a pharmacy here. Bought Sunday paper here after church, joined to form Henkel and McCalister Pharmacy on East Chestnut Street.
Provenance
Photo album entitled "My Cabbage Hill" compiled by Francis X. Schaller, Jr., of photos of the Cabbage Hill neighborhood of Lancaster. Photographs were taken in 2008, but Mr. Schaller's memories of the neighborhood from 1935 to 1948, from the age of 5 to the age of 18, are included. Mr. Schaller is an Armstrong retiree and grew up in the Cabbage Hill neighborhood.
Left was liquor store, right was Dr. Shear's office, pharmacy and soda fountain. 601 - 605 Manor Street at Dorwart Street. Later Luckee's Elbow Room.
Provenance
Photo album entitled "My Cabbage Hill" compiled by Francis X. Schaller, Jr., of photos of the Cabbage Hill neighborhood of Lancaster. Photographs were taken in 2008, but Mr. Schaller's memories of the neighborhood from 1935 to 1948, from the age of 5 to the age of 18, are included. Mr. Schaller is an Armstrong retiree and grew up in the Cabbage Hill neighborhood.
Laurel Street Trolley at the intersection of South Dorwart and St. Joseph Streets. Return of trolleys to Laurel and Filbert lines by ODT order, 1943. Known in the Cabbage Hill neighborhood as the Toonerville Trolley.
George Moser, left, and friend outside George's Cafe before setting off on a hunting trip. Building still remains today, now a home at 615 Fremont Street.
Emil Strosser, Jr., and friends gather in his 1-ton Republic truck for a Sunday outing to Pequea. This truck was the only one of its kind on Cabbage Hill. It was used in Emil's wood business.
First three generations of the Shickel family in America gather in this yard on Manor Street for their family portrait. They are, rear from left, Frank, Cora, Charles E., Katherine, John, James; front from left, Paul, Mary Boas.