The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, August 15, 2003, Image 4

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4 The Dallas Post
PHOTO ALBUM
Friday, August 15, 2003
Huntsville celebrates its past, enjoys the p
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By JESSE DANOFF
For The Dallas Post
Visitors to the last weekend's
Huntsville Days festival got a
small taste of what life was like
two centuries ago in the little
hamlet.
In the 1770s residents of
Huntsville, now a section of
Jackson Township, would ride
down Church Road in wagons
heading toward the general
store or the post office, both
conveniently located at the
crossroads where five roads
meet.
On Saturday, modern-day res-
idents rode in wagons, only this
time the passengers were seat-
ed in $3,000 models equipped
with shock absorbers and re-
flectors, the better to be seen
by drivers of horseless car-
riages.
Huntsville Christian Church
sponsored the third annual fes-
tival, which in addition to wag-
on rides featured a fellowship
dinner and talent show, ice
cream social, games and an ap-
ple pie baking contest. On Sun-
day, a joint worship service and
fellowship hour was held with
Huntsville Methodist Church.
Pastor Dennis Gray said he
thought it was a great opportu-
nity to reach out to the commu-
nity.
“The program helps people
who just moved here to under-
stand the community and the
values it is built around,” Gray
said.
Youth Pastor Harry Haas also
is interested in learning about
the area where his church was
built. “(Huntsville Days) cele-
¥
RY
Zac Harvey gingerly reached to touch the nose of
brates our heritage. It also
gives people something to do,
since a lot of children complain
that there is nothing to do.”
Haas, who was a passenger
on one of the wagon rides, en-
joyed learning about the area’s
past. The wagon ride, anchored
by two Percherons named
Prince and Pat, ran down
Mountain Road to the
Huntsville Methodist Church,
up to the corners and then back
to the church. On the ride, tour
guide and program organizer
- Bob Bullock talked extensively
about the Huntsville area.
“Use your imagination of
what Huntsville was 200 years
ago,” Bullock advised the rid-
ers, “when there were about
300 people living in this imme-
diate area.”
Bullock mentioned that
Huntsville was once a bustling
stop between Plymouth and
Harveys Lake that had two ho-
tels, a general store, four
schools, a post office, and nu-
merous grist mills.
Huntsville is thought to have
had 16 homes built there be-
tween 1772 and 1825 when a
small footpath was built from
Plymouth to the area and tra-
versed frequently by
Huntsville’s founder, William
Levy Hunt. Bullock said the
area was in great shape until
the invention of steam power,
when grist mills near
Huntsville Reservoir weren't
needed anymore.
“When the grist mills faded
so did Huntsville,” Bullock
said.
This article appeared in orig-
inal form in the Times Leader.
: | m
Taking a break from badminton, from left: S
Stefani Manzoni and Stevie Kioske.
resent
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3
5
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s
one of the
Percherons that pulled the wagon, as Omeed Firouzi looked on.
tephanie Cichoski,
Contest.
Apple Pie Baking Contest winners
Winners of the Apple Pie Baking Contest were:
1st Place - Eleanor Yanalunas
2nd Place - Lavada Riggins
3rd Place - Eleanor Yanalunas
4th Place - Phyllis Bullock
5th Place - Jeff Shimp
‘Charlie Hayes, left, and John Hudak, chef at Huntsville Golf Club, tested, tasted and rated entries in the Apple Pie Baking
/
community.
|
Yuri Ackerman stripped the kernels off corn cobs to be used as chicken feed,
Post PHOTOS BY CHARLOTTE BARTIZEK
Bob Bullock gave wagon riders some insight into the history of Huntsville, the Back Mountain's oldest