Middletown Revisited
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About this ebook
Marvin H. Cohen
To illustrate this fascinating history, author Marvin H. Cohen has selected the finest images from the collection of the Historical Society of Middletown and the Wallkill Precinct, of which he is president and curator. A lifelong resident of Middletown, he is proud to share his deep knowledge of the community, gained in part from his fifty-year membership in the Middletown Fire Department and his decades of research as a railway historian.
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Middletown Revisited - Marvin H. Cohen
photographer.
INTRODUCTION
This book, the second Images of America volume on Middletown, tries to cover the period from the 1920s to the 1960s. A few earlier photographs, however, are included.
Middletown had many industries, factories, businesses, and stores that deserve to be remembered. A vibrant and busy downtown, as well as a number of neighborhoods with their own homes and stores, was a feature of the city.
There were numerous industries, some of which are shown in this book, others that seemingly were not recorded. We recall the aroma of baking bread at the Spaulding Bakery on Sprague Avenue, the sweet smell of flavoring made at Polak’s Frutal Works. We remember Ideal Wrapping Machine Company on Sprague Avenue, which manufactured machines to wrap candy. Master Rule on Mulberry Street, Avon Products on James Street, and Middletown Footwear and Clemson Lawn Mowers on Railroad Avenue are a few more of our businesses that are now gone.
National chain stores such as Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward were downtown, as were A&P supermarkets and Grand Union. Postal Telegraph and Western Union were here as well.
As we pass through the streets of Middletown, we note buildings that have been rehabilitated, buildings that are derelict, and vacant lots where buildings once stood. Perhaps this book will fill in some of the blanks and enable us to realize what once was there.
Middletown is still a thriving small city in the center of Orange County. We may no longer have our numerous dairy farms, our railroads, or our heavy industry, but we have progressed in other ways, as a desirable community in which to live and raise a family.
One
THE HEART OF THE CITY
If any one place could be deemed the heart of Middletown, it would be Franklin Square. It is not known how the name came about. The building on the square with the busts of Benjamin Franklin was built long after the name was applied to the intersection.
The junction of North and South Streets as well as East Main and West Main Streets has long been the hub of downtown. This area seems to have been a favorite place for photographers to gather. Many old buildings remain, others succumbed to changing times and still others are being rehabilitated today. Presented in this chapter are a number of photographs of Franklin Square as it once was.
The city’s Christmas tree is being decorated in 1934. Erected by the chamber of commerce each year, the tree was placed in the center of Franklin Square. It looks like snow is on the ground as workmen scale the tree to place the lights.
This view of Franklin Square shows the time before automobiles existed. A lady pushes a wicker baby carriage across North Street.
The center of Middletown, Franklin Square, looked like this in 1934. Visible on the right is Joe Henderson’s men’s store with Ben Alexander’s photography studio above. In the background is Main Bakers. On the other side of the street is Whelan’s Drugs, the Mohican Market, and Pelton’s Hardware Store.
East Main