Anyway, the new $800,000 Midview High School was dedicated back on November 6, 1955 – 70 years ago this week, as noted in the article above that appeared in the Lorain Journal a day later.
Friday, November 7, 2025
Midview High School Dedicated – Nov. 6, 1955
Thursday, November 6, 2025
Fall Cavalcade of Color - 2025 Part 2
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| Cooper Foster Park Road looking east where it intersects with Baumhart Road |
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| Baumhart Road |
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| Bacon Woods Reservation |
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| Bacon Woods Reservation |
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| The old quarry behind my condo on Woodland Drive |
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| Bacon Woods Reservation |
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| Bacon Woods Reservation |
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| Bacon Woods Reservation |
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| Bacon Woods Reservation |
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| Bacon Woods Reservation |
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| Mill Hollow |
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| Vermilion Road looking north |
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
Landmark Burns – Nov. 5, 1965
Various historic homes and building are said to have been places of refuge for the slaves during their journey. One old structure believed to be part of the network went up in flames, 60 years ago today.
"A Lorain County landmark, believed to have been a stop in the "underground railway" during the slave days more than 100 years ago, was destroyed by fire early today," noted the article on the front page of the November 5, 1965 Journal.
"An unidentified passerby was credited with probably saving the lives of seven occupants of a house on the northwest corner of SR 113 and Murray Ridge Road.
"Because the exact history of the building isn't known, it is believed it was a former stagecoach stop and a station on the "underground railway."
"Col. Raymond Vietzen, first vice president of the Lorain County Historical Society, said: "It was never a very much talked about place." But, he said, it had everything needed for smuggling escaped slaves.
"A porch ran the length of the house and there was a unique woodshed made of brick and wood. He said a wagon could be driven into the shed and unloaded. Steps led from the shed into the kitchen.
"The basement of the house, he said, could be entered from the outside at ground level. The carriage house also had a basement that could be entered from ground level or from a trap door.
"In the 1930s the building became the Owl Club, a tavern that emerged after the repeal of prohibition."
****
I found a few ads connected with the building in the Lorain Journal. It became the Owl Club in August 1934, and then changed to the Silver Bell Inn in Feb. 1935. It lasted as the Silver Bell Inn until at least the fall of 1953, when it was robbed during a wild crime spree stretching from Cleveland to Oberlin.
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| Aug. 28, 1934 |
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| Feb. 14, 1935 |
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| Feb. 22, 1935 |
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Davy Crockett Watch – Nov. 1955
But Davy Crockett merchandise was still being offered, as you can see in the Sobel Jewelers ad above that ran in the Lorain Journal on November 17, 1955. What interesting is that the Bradley wrist watch was apparently not an item that was produced and licensed by Walt Disney Productions.
Here's one currently on eBay that somehow managed to survive 70 years.
It's actually quite attractive. It still works, and there's a leather band. It is listed for $150.Monday, November 3, 2025
Meet Urlin Sargent – Lorain's Renaissance Man
It seemed a little odd. But not so odd when you know that sometimes script fonts have some weird-looking characters.
And that was the case here. A similar font (called Palace Script) has a 'S' that resembles an 'P.'
Next, the name on the watch was unusual: Urlin Sargent. 'Urlin' is not a common name. Nevertheless, I made the trek into Lorain to see if I could find him in the library's collection of Lorain High School yearbooks. The only information I had was that he had graduated in 1915.![]() |
| May 6, 1926 |
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| May 5, 1927 |
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| March 27, 1928 |
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| Nov. 10, 1928 |
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| Aug. 29, 1931 |
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| March 28, 1932 |
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| May 27, 1932 Note mention of Harrison Baumbaugh |
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| June 24, 1932 |
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| Aug. 5, 1935 |
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| Lorain Journal, March 13, 1936 |
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| Lorain Journal, March 14, 1936 |
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| March 14, 1936 Note that Urlin was living at the Overlook Apts |
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| Sept. 14, 1936 |
Friday, October 31, 2025
Halloween 1965
The well-remembered Ontario store seemed to start the ball rolling with this ad that ran on October 14, 1965. Candy and a very limited selection of costumes were included in the sales offerings.
After that, it seems like local stores pretty much waited until only a few days before Halloween to run ads for costumes. Grants played both sides of the street by featuring the competing ghoulish TV families of the Munsters and the Addams Family. This and subsequent store ads ran on October 27, 1965.






























































