A Historic foot bridge over the Kiski River with a Unique Story

As you take River Road Pa 66  east out of leechburg Pa. you can not miss seeing a very uique  Steel Foot Bridge which goes over the Kiski River  to  the  little community of Hyde Park
But when you look at the piers which hold it it appears  to have held a much larger bridge at one time and you would be correct in your thinking.

At one time this was a railroad bridge  built in 1886 which connected trains across the Kiski from Leechburg  but this was before the massive Flood Protection Projects to keep Pittsburgh from flooding where put in place ,after a horrendous flood took many lives and  caused hundreds of  millions in damage in 1936 to Southwestern Pa

You see the problem was before the flood protection measures where put in place Higher up on the Conemaugh River which feeds the Kiski River  during the winter time massive sheets of ice would build on the river  and come down stream thru Leechburg and several times the railroad bridge was destroyed.


 

Finally in 1904 in an effort to keep the bridge from being wiped out by spring time flooding they put a train full of coal cars on it and weighted it down to hold it in place and of course this also failed and train was swept down stream.
 So then the only way across was a Ferry boat till the earlier  foot bridge was built in 1920  with the current bridge version being built in 1955 which is very unique to the area.

 With its 600 foot length. and fantastic photographic view This is one day trip well worth it to take about 45 minutes from Pittsburgh.

A small shopping plaza on old William Penn highway in Penn Hills rumored to have Paranormal activity's

Its easy to miss as you go out old US 22  William Penn Highway thru Penn hills at the busy Jefferson intersection  a small 3 store front shopping plaza  behind a Sunoco C store. once an Open Pantry  C store and Pizza shop and tavern only the tavern remains open no wonder given its strange configuration for a parking lot and 2 c stores beside each other just does not work.
But thats not the only thing strange about the plaza a Penn Hills Progress article from 20+ years ago tells of strange goings on at the plaza of the paranormal type particularly in the now closed  Pizza shop seems an old employee or owner stayed behind after their death.
 becuase doors would open and close by them selves and lights turn on and off. was it employyes playing games maybe but then again maybe not. I have been unable to locate the original article but a late freind Noel McCarthy   who drinked at the tavern on ocassion said there was talk about the ghost.
among patrons .
I do not have much more on the place but hopefully will be able to investigate it further and confirm what I read all those years ago.

If you have this Top Hat design on your Game Room Floor ? Your old house may well have a conection to the Old Pittsburgh Mob.

I have worked in many old homes in the Pittsburgh area and many where at one time owned by Italians who make up a  large part of the population  and even have community's  they settled  in like Bloomfield , Sharpsburg and Penn Hills etc .
So it would not be unusual to find similar likes and taste  in how the homes are furnished . But in one case  the old home you own may well have been owned by an old Pittsburgh Mobster or one of their many friends and associates ,if they have a certain top hats' champagne glass and playing card motive in the center of there game room Floor.
It seems that Pittsburgh Godfather  John Larocca liked this one particular floor pattern that he  had in his own game room  in his north Hills residence in Ingomar , its middle square a top hat with cane  playing cards around outside border   and when friends  who would visit with Mr. Larocca and be invited to his game room for drinks asked him about the unique design he would send a  rug /tile layer over he knew and had it put in for them.
I found this out after installing a burglar alarm at a woman's house in the Squirrel hill section of Pittsburgh I asked her about it when I saw it in her basement and told her I had seen others and thats when she told me the story about the floors .  Her late husband who died in a private plane crash during bad weather  was John Larocca's  long time attorney and the floor was a gift from Mr Larocca. The center top hat tile was designed custom just for Mr. Larocca and his friends and associates.

I have seen the floor pattern in old   Bloomfield  ,Squirrel Hill  and in East liberty sections of Pittsburgh
It was definitely a 50's  Vegas cocktail lounge type theme to it and unfortunately most of the floors have been removed or covered over or the homes demolished ,  which is a shame as it was seen as dated and uncool. Unfortunately I do not have a picture of the design but needless to say  this floor was expensive to put down and since the Pittsburgh mob was big time into gambling I can see why the floor  design would have been so popular
Hopefully I will run  upon it one more time and be able to share an image of it. But its now one of those great hidden story's about the Pittsburgh Mobs past. They may have been criminals but they did so in style.

A strange phenomena at a AM radio Station a burned out bulb comes to life after electrical storm activity

Yes  if you have spent any time around radio stations especially strong signals you hear all kind of strange story's of people living near the stations and hearing the radio station comes over their toaster or microwave or dental work .One long time engineer at KQV 1410 am often tells of an old woman calling the station  and saying she could hear the station in her dining room coming over her Crystal Chandelier .

So I have my own strange mystery where a long burned out Circle Fluorescent  light fixture miraculously gets re-energized and stays lighted for 1-2 days after a strong thunder storm near station particularly when towers take a lightning hit at WAVL910 AM in Apollo Pa.
Some how the energy from the storm energizes the light and turns it on  even thou the bulbs burned out a long time ago.  It also only happens around first week or 2 of August  but not every year . its been 3 years since last time the phenomena has happened .

 Talk about creepy when you get a call from a neighbor telling there is a light on in transmitter building and you know no one is there strangely also the alarm system does not trigger which you think it would with that much energy being released. 

I have contacted a couple electrical engineers I know and hopefully will will have an answer to this riddle . While there are those quick to say its  rev. Cliftons spirit coming back to light it and its a super natural happening. I am sure there is a logical answer why.

The Creepy Tradition of taking your Prom Date to the Allegheny County Morgue

Yes back in the 20's to50's it was seen as a cool tradition to take your date to observe the unknown at the Allegheny County Morgue

The Morgue for many years had an observation deck  they called the chapel you walked onto where you could look thru glass windows into the coolers  and observe the preserved body's of those who where unknown. My aunts and uncles talked about going on there Prom date to see the body's






 Call it creepy to say the least and guys setting up their dates on a dare  so they could hold them tiight but what ever the cause it sure sounds like a macabre thing to do. 

When I was a young man I visited the morgue as part of a trip planned by the Law Enforcement Explorer Post  777 I belonged to  which was sponsored by the old Station 7 on Southside .  and we saw some of the items used and learned some of the history of the morgue including the fact  They painted over the windows in the chapel in 60's so you could no longer observe the body's and how the morgue was at one time  was attached to the county jail and was then moved by horse and man power to its present location.




 Its all closed now and has been taken over by county health dept but the memories of our greatest generation going to see the body's will be remembered for many generations to come as we pass down their story's .


 

The Very Dark Christmas of 1969 The Jock Yablonski Family Murder was Horrific but not the first time tragedy had visited the house

The week of Christmas of 1969 started off joyous and happy as usual in The Pittsburgh area but just a couple days in on  December 31 when killers would creep into the  the home of dissident union  Coal Miners Labor leader Jock Yablonski home and kill jock and several members of his family violently with shotguns.

The crime and the headlines where Horrific who could do such a horrible crime and why.

The case would end with the lifetime imprisonment and death in prison  of UMWA  Union President
Tony Boyle .

It all started with a disagreement between Yablonski and Boyle on how the union should be run as Yablonski saw Boyle being involved in criminal matters with union assets .
and ended up an all out war.




With Yablonski  His wife and daughter murdered and there bodies not being found till January 5th by there son.

But in a very strange twist  involving their home this was not the first time Murder Visited it.

In fact 31 years earlier a Pa. State Trooper by last name of Naughton who had mistreated  Jock years
earlier died in the homes when it was a boarding home and a mad man resident went on a terror spree in the home killing the responding trooper.

http://tenmilecreekcountry.blogspot.com/2008/11/most-are-aware-of-murders-of-jock.html

Jock viewed the house shortly after the incident got interested in it and had it mad into his home

Below is a full account of the home  from Haunted Pittsburgh Tours

If you ever get the chance you have to take in one of their tours

THE YABLONSKI HOUSE: WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA'S CREEPIEST STORY
The following isn't an urban legend, and it's not a campfire story. Every word can be verified, and you have to read this one to the end.
The story centers around the house in Clarksville, Pennsylvania (about an hour's drive south of downtown Pittsburgh) where Western Pennsylvania's most famous crime occurred -- the Yablonski family was slain there. This is a picture of the house.
In the late 1960s, “Jock” Yablonski was a crusading labor reformer who loathed and despised injustice. Until the day he died, Mr. Yablonski was still talking about the time way back in the 1920s when, as a very young man, he was arrested on some minor offense. He claimed he was treated miserably by the police officer who arrested him. We're not sure what happened, but he never, ever got over it.
Mr. Yablonski’s distaste for injustice led him to announce in June of 1969 that he would try to unseat the powerful president of the United Mine Workers union, Tony Boyle because the union was marred by corruption. Within a short time after that announcement, as if to prove Mr. Yablonski’s point, Tony Boyle ordered his subordinates to kill Jock Yablonski. Several failed attempts were made on Mr. Yablonski’s life, and when the union election was held in December of 1969 – an election marred by violence and corruption -- Boyle defeated Mr. Yablonski.
But winning the election wasn’t enough for Tony Boyle. Three weeks later, in the pre-dawn blackness of the last day of 1969, three men skulked into the Yablonskis’ historic three-story farmhouse in quiet Clarksville, Pennsylvania, 45 miles south of Pittsburgh, and brutally massacred Jock Yablonski, his wife, and their 25-year-old daughter. It was the biggest story in America when it happened, and it remains the most shocking crime Western Pennsylvania has ever witnessed. Ironically, in the end, Jock Yablonski’s war on injustice was a success: a court threw out the union election and ordered Tony Boyle to run again, something that would not have happened if Jock Yablonski had not been murdered. Boyle went on to lose that election to a Yablonski protégé, and it wasn’t long before Boyle was tied to the Yablonski murders and was convicted.
But there’s more to the story -- something so bizarre, it defies explanation. After the murders, all sorts of wild tales began circulating about the Yablonski house being cursed - - about screams and gunshots emanating from the house, and about blood running out of the walls. That is the typical sinister folklore associated with a house where such a terrible thing happened. But there is actually something well-documented about the house that is creepier than all those urban legends.
You see, the Yablonski murders were not the house’s first brush with horror. During Prohibition, so the story goes, a previous owner had hanged himself in the basement.
Wait. Four untimely deaths in one house in quiet little Clarksville? How much tragedy can one house bear?
Hang onto something because that's not all. Long before the Yablonski murders, in the late 1930s, the house was used as a boarding house, and one of the boarders was a man named Frank Palanzo who said he heard voices from the sky and that witches spoke to him. Palanzo was known to string barbed wire around his house to keep people out, and one time he was spotted in a cornfield covered in corn to the point that he resembled a giant ear of corn. Then, on January 30, 1939, Frank Palanzo barricaded himself in a room upstairs, stuck a shotgun out the window, and threatened to shoot people below. Someone called the police. A state trooper named George D. Naughton (pronounced “knock-ton”) came to the house and climbed the stairs to Palanzo's room. Palanzo opened the door, and supposedly on orders of witches, shot state trooper Naughton dead with a 12-gauge shotgun. Like the Yablonski murders three decades later, this shocking crime was a major news story reported on the front pages of newspapers across America.
Are we getting your attention yet? What are the odds of FIVE gruesome deaths – including two incidents involving grisly murders reported on front pages across America – in the same house in quiet little Clarksville?
“Just one of those things” you say? Alright, then let us tell you just one more thing about the house.
Remember at the outset of this story, we told you that Jock Yablonski claimed he was treated miserably by a police officer when he was a very young man back in the 1920s, and that Mr. Yablonski never, ever got over that mistreatment? So, what does that have to do with the house, you ask?
The police officer who treated Mr. Yablonski so miserably was none other than state trooper George D. Naughton -- the man who was killed on the order of witches in the same house where Jock Yablonski and his family also would be massacred some three decades later.
Ladies and gentlemen, some people believe that coincidence is God's way of remaining anonymous. Others might attribute something more dark and sinister to this particular set of facts. We, personally, don’t know what to make out of any of it -- but please, please, do not try to tell us that this was “just one of those things.”
NOTE: There are no ghost tours of the Yablonski House--it's a private residence. Join us for a ghost tour at Haunted Pittsburgh: http://www.hauntedpittsburghtours.com