Polly Shaw, a
native of Butler, BHS class of 1969, and lifelong Butler County resident, is a retired Seneca
Valley teacher. For over twenty years she
has been a volunteer at McConnells Mill and Moraine State Parks. In 2015 she heard about in inquiry from Arcadia
Press for someone to take up the challenge to write a book at Moraine State
Park. She stepped up, and it was published in 2017. She
is now working on a second book, this time about McConnells Mill State
Park. She is an area speaker and
presents programs about many aspects drawn from her book, to civic groups and
public park programs.
Larry D. Parisi, author of Butler County Revisited, compiled this book using rare postcards from his personal collection, as well as a few cards submitted from other collectors.
This pen and ink drawing of an earlier view of the Lowry House hotel used to
hang in my grandmother's house. I remember hearing that she had commissioned it
from a local artist, Robert C. Rehm. It is based on an old photograph. - - - Jeff Schalles
Butler Little Theatre is a non-profit that strives to offer a broad range of high quality and entertaining live theater experiences to the community. They have been doing this for 75 years and it has provided us with rewarding and fun experiences. They offer their audiences comedies to delight, dramas to stir emotions, mysteries to challenge, and classics to expand theatrical and literary horizons.
Bob Hazy is a writer inspired by the works
of Melville, Steinbeck, Hemingway, and Dostoevsky. He studied literature at
Yale University earning a BA and also holds a MS in computer science from
Stevens. Although Bob built a career in information technology leadership and
is currently an independent consultant, his real love is writing and painting Click here. He lives in
the foothills of the Sierra in Northern California with his son, Nathan, and
their dog, Gus.
Congratulations, Bob, on your recently published book:
Smoke continued to billow from the Alhambra Hotel - corner of Cunningham and Pillow Streets - at dawn as fireman from the Butler City Fire Department poured thousands of gallons of water into the 65-year-old building. Sixty-year-old Robert Walker died in the fire.
14 Marine reservists from the Cleveland area were killed in the first week of August 2005 by a roadside bomb -- one of the heaviest blows suffered by a single unit in the war. Two days earlier, six others from the battalion were killed while on sniper duty.
A Harmony Line trolley crosses the Lyndora valley. The trestle has been gone for many years, but at least one of the concrete posts used to support the trestle can still be seen from the location of the old Pullman Standard office building.
First generation Italians loved this Capuchin monastery. Crowds of them would make pilgrimages to Herman and spend the day there honoring St. Francis, the patron saint of the land they had left behind.