Wednesday, May 27, 2026
All City Instrumental Music Festival – May 1956
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
The House at Cooper Foster and South Broadway
![]() |
| Looking south on South Broadway; Cooper Foster Park is left to right in the foreground |
Oh, Broadway Assembly is still there; and so is Flowerama (in the former gas station) on the southwest corner. But the tiny white house on the northwest corner has been demolished, as the large property it sat on for decades is finally being redeveloped. That's it in the photo above.
Here's a closer look at what it looked like. If you were sitting at the traffic light, it was easy to overlook with the monstrous spruce (?) trees crowding it.
I've tried to find out about the house with no success. The Lorain County Auditor website – which used to be so user-friendly and useful to researchers – is pretty worthless, at least to me. (I defy anyone to use its mapping feature with any success.) But my 1964 Lorain City Directory has the house's address as 5490 Broadway with John and Sara Galter retired and living there. I'm guessing it didn't take long to mow the front lawn.Monday, May 25, 2026
Memorial Day – 1926
One hundred years ago, the holiday's evolution from its original name – Decoration Day – to that of Memorial Day seemed to have been complete, judging from the articles below on the front page of the Saturday, May 29, 1926 Lorain Journal.
So who is the wizened gentleman in the large illustration? That's General Josh A. Logan, who as the article notes, "is credited with the first general proclamation setting aside one Memorial Day each year as a day of tribute.Friday, May 22, 2026
Elks National Memorial – May 1926
Which on the face of it would seem to be a good thing. After all, Lorain was a hotbed of fraternal organizations and for decades beginning in the early 1900s, many men enjoyed memberships in several of them. "It's not what you know – it's who you know," was one of Grandpa's sayings that Mom often repeated, and he believed it. That's why he was an Elk as well as a Mason.
![]() |
| Grandpa and some fellow Elks. He's second from left (with the cigarette holder) |
Grandpa worked at the Lorain Journal as a Linotype operator when it was located on Seventh Street, and he had to walk by the Lorain Elks Lodge on Sixth Street to get home. And since Grandpa (as Mom used to say) was a 'hale fellow well met," he used to stop there for a few drinks and songs with the boys. Unfortunately what was supposed to be a short visit used to last several hours. And many times, Grandma had to send Mom over to the Elks to go fetch her father for dinner. Years later, Mom still remembered the loud boisterous singing going on there.
Anyway, Grandpa was no doubt proud that his beloved Elks erected a memorial to the members who died in the Great War. This small photo and caption appeared in the Lorain Journal on May 18, 1926.
Years later, the beautiful Memorial was rededicated to honor all veterans, regardless of whether they were members of the Elks. You can find a great detailed history of the Memorial here on the Elks website.Thursday, May 21, 2026
The Elephant Pretzel Holder
They were very handy indeed. If you were organized like my mother, then you had your photos all in order chronologically through the decades, and possibly even labeled. Really old color photos from the 1950s even had the date and Kodak information printed on the back.
And family photo albums were fun to look at. As a kid, I remember that we sometimes pulled them out on a rainy day to look at, just to have something to do. The photos of Mom and Dad as young parents seemed so old. But they really weren't.
Some of the photos from the early 1950s are hopelessly discolored, with a weird yellowish hue. I was looking at some of them around Mother's Day this year, trying to find one with Mom, her mother and my Dad's mother to scan. I found one (below) that had the whole motherly lineup.
From left to right: Mom's mother, Mom (holding my sister), Dad's grandmother, and Dad's mother.Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Boron Ad – May 1956
Part of the mystique of the Sohio brand was its Boron gasoline, which was advertised as being better for your engine – especially in winter since it contained Ice-Gard®.
But Boron was advertised in the summer too. Here's an eye-catching ad that ran in the Lorain Journal on May 15, 1956.
It's actually kind of funny in that it resembles a horror movie ad. You can imagine the wide-eyed beautiful blonde reacting to a giant tarantula or crab-like monster. I also love the Boron logo with its rotating atoms (or electrons or whatever they're supposed to be).![]() |
| March 19, 1956 |
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Grand Opening of Lorain's Most Modern Service Station – May 16, 1936
Why? Because it's not easy to reach people any more in the traditional marketing methods. There's no newspaper that everyone reads in which to place an ad. There are still a few local radio stations (although WEOL is no longer over-the-air) so it's probably a waste of money telling someone in another city that a new station in Vermilion is opening up. There's no direct mail opportunity either, for the same reason – there's no definite audience to reach, other than the people who will drive by it regularly.
Thus the advertising is pretty much limited to a sign and some flags out in front of the station announcing its Grand Opening. At least, that's what I witnessed with our new Marathon station on US Route 6 last year.
But in the old days, the Grand Opening of a new service station was a big deal, as we've seen in countless ads on this blog. There seemed to always be flowers and corsages for the ladies, as well as a variety of freebies and/or items that were free with a fill-up, including pop, tumblers, a sack of potatoes, balloons and lollipops, and whisk brooms.
And below you see yet another ad in my quest to document the Grand Opening of every service station in the Lorain area. It's for the Rogers Oil Company's New Fleet Wing Service Station at 5th Street and Reid Avenue. It ran in the Lorain Journal on May 15, 1936.
Surprisingly the half page ad doesn't include any giveaways. But it does boast that it is Lorain's most modern service station, with a "lubritorium with hydraulic lift," "a homey waiting room," "5 pumps to save you time and service your car better," and "a full line of finest accessories of course."

































