Greenwood Colliery, Minooka

Greenwood Colliery, Minooka

Friday, July 27, 2012

Reap v. Farrell


The Scranton Tribune - May 20, 1899

REAP WAS UNGRATEFUL.
Given a "Lift" and Then Made Off
with the Horse.
The police were looking high and low last night for Patrick Reap of Minooka, who is wanted to answer for downright cussed meanness. The courts may dub it horse stealing. It was that, but that wasn't the worst of it. It wasn't so much what he stole as the nasty way he stole it.
Reap was trudging towards his home in Minooka when overtaken by Patrick Farrell, of 134 Apple street, Dunmore, who was driving towards the South Side. Reap asked him for a "lift" and Farrell readily accorded it to him. Well down toward the end of Pittston avenue, Farrell made a stop, but bade Reap keep his seat and he would drive him on some distance further towards his destination.
Farrell went inside in a store and remained a few minutes when he came out his horse and carriage and Reap were missing. This was at 5 o'clock. At midnight he was still looking for his missing turnout.
A report reached police headquarters late in the night that Reap had been seen driving through Minooka in the early evening with two girls. At 3 o'clock this morning word was received that Reap had been captured at Avoca by Chief of Police Conboy.  The two girls were not with him at that time.

Contributed by Maria Edwards

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Woodrow Wilson School and Groundbreaking for Kennedy School

Woodrow Wilson School, Minooka

No. 7 D. G. Farragut School
2230 Prospect Avenue
Demolished in 1962


Groundbreaking for JFK School
March 17, 1964

JFK School



Contributed by Tricia LaFrance

Hurricane Diane 1955 Inundates Scranton


On August 10, 1955, a cyclonic circulation was noted northeast of the Leeward Islands with tropical storm force winds. On August 17, Diane struck near Wilmington, North Carolina. Floods in New England led to Diane becoming the first hurricane with $1 billion in damages with about 200 people losing their lives in the flood from Pennsylvania through New England. At a creek near Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, fifty people drowned when they were unable to escape the rising water. Compounding the problem was the fact that Diane was, and still remains, the wettest tropical cyclone on record for the Northeast.







Contributed by Tricia LaFrance