Monday, May 31, 2021

good day to go to parks

semi-elusive glossy ibis at Lorain Impoundment
Killdeers lay eggs on the ground, no nest.
Killdeers feign injury to lead you away.
guessing, eastern phoebe
Karma resting in shade, wearing beads given to her by a kid in a parade.
1957 Firedome Desoto with a V-10 from a 1996 truck
It drives on a stick, but originally on push button automatic.
fish eats kid
Lindbergh was a brave pilot, but not a very secret supporter of Nazi Germany. An American fascist is a traitor to the principles this country was founded upon.
That awful number, which i mockingly call evil, marks a Lake Shore Electric Railway car.
roses in Lorain's Lakeview Park

"P" is for posing with Greyhounds

 Sarah & Elizabeth Mills (twin sisters), Antonio Snuzzer (sp?), and Cassius

A Memorial Day Parade began from St. Columbkille. It was for Seven Hills, which is across the street. Parma (currently) Redmen, previously Greyhounds, and future? Three Parma High Schools marched, Normandy, Parma, Padua Franciscan, a Scottish Pipe and Drums, Ghostbusters, and other groups.
Antonio led the band
Normandy 
Padua
Parma

Friday, May 28, 2021

2021 Miscellany #7

 

Yestereve, there were visiting celebrity birds at the Lorain Impound. Saw a glossy ibis, mostly the butt end. Birdie in the phragmites, viewed over water, and behind a thin line of phragmites--foto fail. In the last minutes of light, visited the rose garden at Lakeview Park. Played with flash. Early in the rose season, but that near 90 degree day was not good for the blooms.

very young bunches of grapes

St. Colman beyond the electric rail line, as viewed through a small link fence on West 44th.
Twin cannons repositioned to face E. 116th entrance of Calvary Cemetery. It is now in front of St. Margaret of Hungary Parish Memorial. A Christian burial ground should not look like a military cemetery. [foto May 26th]

Thursday, May 27, 2021

photographs of abandoned places #29

Verlassen Protestantische Kirche

 
foto from new metropark trail, bell is still in tower 
Unabhängig Protestantische Kirche erbaut A. D. 1899 
 (Independent Protestant Church built A. D. 1899) 
Now it could read Verlassen Protestantische Kirche (Abandoned Protestant Church)

And that is about all the information available, probably someone who lives nearby knows, but i am not knocking on doors. There were a lot of Germans in Cleveland. This church is on West 44th next to an entrance ramp to I-90, which took many houses away. On the other side of the freeway, entrance on West 53rd, the huge Joseph Feiss/Clothcraft garment factory stood and was active from 1920 to 1977, and which employed many German speakers. 

Most people would assume that Germans were either Catholic or Lutheran, but many Germans who came to the United States were of other Protestant groups, and many of the Lutherans organised into synods that were more stringently "conservative" than old country Lutherans. 

For sometime these American Germans maintained their language. Germany in the first half of the 20th century was aggressively militaristic, started and lost two world wars; this did not bode well for American Germans wanting to maintain their ethnicity. Of course, the highways destroyed neighbourhoods, and dispersed populations. The census shows Cleveland's population began declining some time after 1950, and that decline has been continuous. Cleveland is a fraction of what it once was.

Social change has made Americans less church going. Cleveland had many churches built by European immigrants, and their families. Often they built successive buildings to replace lesser quality buildings. Demographic change that brought in new people to Cleveland, brought with it different religiosity and that religiosity had less attachment and concern with church buildings. Church buildings became empty, and passed to new owners. Decay and abandonment was a common result. The German word, "verlassen", is apt and à propos. In this context, "verlassen" means abandoned, but in neutral context "verlassen" means both lost, and forlorn.

 

I have driven past this church for over twenty years, and i think it may have been vacant the entire time. The red flag and white St. Andrew's cross placard has been posted by the fire department, marking it abandoned and unsafe. In the past, i remembered fragment of stained glass windows; i see none now. There is symmetry with the windows, and there are outlines of yellow brick that suggest placing for non-existent windows. I do not expect to see this building for long. There is several bits of new construction immediately nearby, including new highway overpasses, park trail, new multi-unit housing, and commercial establishments on Lorain Avenue.

There are two blank tablets that cover the yearstone, they were not original with the Germans. And they are not stone. They were made like high school stage props. Look and see 2x4s and chicken wire.

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

red line greenway

 

trail officially opened 12 May 2021


The Cleveland Metroparks do a very good job in making the county a better place. A new path next to the electric rail lines has opened up between West 53rd down to the Columbus Road Bridge, before Riverview Park.
Alan Giberson. 2016. 
Some mural graffiti art was commissioned when the devils came to gather in Cleveland to crown Orange Caligula in 2016. The phrase "noblesse oblige" is from the fanciful, French romantic concept of the obligation of nobility to be honourable and generous to others and society. Of course this had to be condemning sarcasm when to be viewed by the self-satisfied Repukes convening in Cleveland.

Monday, May 24, 2021

photographs of abandoned places #28

B&O Depot, Terminal, Freight Office
A Flats Terminal Project had been talked about from at least 2006, and nothing. Cleveland has had so many proposals that were to be done, and then nothing. It began as Cleveland Terminal & Valley railroad depot in c.1897-8. The CT&V RR was absorbed by Baltimore & Ohio Railroad from 1889 to 1915. This station was Cleveland's busiest rail passenger depot until Cleveland Union Terminal started operating in 1930-4. A fire destroyed the clock on the front center tower, and roof. The property sits next to Sherwin Williams, which has had it since 1975.

"A Model Passenger Station." The Railway Agent and Station Agent. September 1898, p. 92.
this tower is elliptical

Do not know how long this building has got. The fire department has a notice on the front door.
Gothic revival stone and brick work makes this like a fortress or armory.

 

Sunday, May 23, 2021

Pentecost during semi-quarantine

 Pilgrim Congregational, West 14th Cleveland (both formerly Jennings Road)

Driving by on West 14th, i noticed the service. By the time the car was turned around and parked nearby, i missed my foto by a half minute. It is Pentecost Sunday, the birthday of the Church. The day's liturgical color in the west is red. I am thinking, the red banner was folded and tucked up by the wind. Next to the speaker, on the porch of the church, is a fan pointed upwards, with red and yellow streamers. When the music was playing a few seconds ago, the ribbons took the form of tongues of fire. It looked good.

It was well before noon, near eleven, and the temperature was 85°F with a full sun. The leaf canopy was perfect to create shade, and block traffic noise. West 14th is being re-tarred, and is reduced to two lanes closest to Pilgrim. Parts of nearby Clark, and Scranton also have road work. This makes the corner of West 14th and Starkweather busier.

And when the days of the Pentecost were accomplished, they were all together in one place:  And suddenly there came a sound from heaven, as of a mighty wind coming: and it filled the whole house where they were sitting. And there appeared to them parted tongues, as it were of fire: and it sat upon every one of them. — Acts of the Apostles ii. 1-3.
                                           Some people have "tongues of fire" on their heads.

Saturday, May 22, 2021

Wendy Park & Merwin's Wharf

 

Karma at Wendy Park: “and when this park is finished, my statue is to be right here”.
in search of a mourning warbler
“pump, pump” these paddleboards are not solid
art employed as a safety warning
Paddling with freighters, foto before this, one can see the size of a paddleboard (here kayak, blip on the bottom). Terminal Tower, was once the 2ⁿᵈ tallest building in the world. An iron ore freighter is about as long.