Master Penman, Designer,
Engrosser & Illustrator
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Left: 1913
Incorporation of Saint David's Society of
Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Names mentioned: E. C. Newcomb: Hector James; Edgar A. Jones; Marshall
Jones; D. J. Davis; John Reynolds; Wm. Connell; John R. Jones. Image courtesy of the Lackawanna Historical Society |
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![]() The Jewish Home for the Friendless, Scranton, PA, is now called The Jewish Home of Eastern Pennsylvania. The facility was originally located on Harrison Avenue, but is now at the corner of Vine St. and Clay Ave., on the site of William Connell's home. Charter Members:
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Left: Jewish
Home of
the Friendless – PA Decree of Incorporation – October 1916. Lettered
and Illustrated by P. W. Costello. Transcribed Text: In Re: Incorporation of The Jewish Home of the Friendless of Scranton, PA In the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County, October Term, 1916, No. 417 The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania County of Lackawanna, S.S.: Decree of Incorporation And Now, this thirty-first day of July, A.D., 1916, the within Certificate of Incorporation Jewish Home of the Friendless of Scranton, PA, Having been on file in the Office of the Prothonotary, of the said Court, since the fifth day of July, A.D., 1916 as appears from the entry thereof, and due proof of publication having been presented to me, herewith, I hereby certify that I have perused and examined said instrument and find the same to be in proper form, and within the purposes specified in the class of corporations designated as of the first class, in the Act of April 29, 1874, and the supplements thereto; and that the said purposes are lawful and not injurious to the community. It is therefore ordered and decreed that the charter be approved, and it is hereby approved, and that upon the recording of the same and its endorsements, together with this order, in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Lackawanna County, the subscribers thereto and their associates and successors shall thenceforth be a corporation for the purposes and upon the terms and under the name therein stated. Newcomb, Judge. Certified from the Records this 17 day of August 1917 John B. Griffiths Robert P. Silverstein, Esq., Prothonotary, Solicitor |
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![]() The year 1916 marked the fiftieth anniversary of Scranton’s incorporation as a city. To celebrate this milestone, the Board of Trade commissioned P. W. Costello to design the cover of their journal’s October issue. Mr. Costello’s engrossing [immediate left] highlights factors that defined Scranton’s industrial and cultural growth. They are set against a backdrop of wood and carved stone decorated with ribbons, wreaths, palms, and scrolls colored in varying tones of burnt umber and gray. A keystone is the centerpiece, the symbol of the State of Pennsylvania, the “Keystone State.” At top, bordering the city flag, are portraits of the city founders, Joseph and George Scranton, bold entrepreneurs in the coal, steel and railroad industries. At left, the story of the first half century is illustrated in six vignettes, starting with Chief Capouse, representing Scranton’s early Native American inhabitants, followed by textiles, electricity, the International Correspondence School (I.C.S.), machinery and Anthracite Coal, the cornerstone of the city’s economy. For a free scan of most of the pages in the exposition booklet above CLICK HERE. Left: Image of brochure courtesy of Judi Keller, Albright Memorial Library, Scranton |
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Olmstead Engrossing – done in 1930
for Dr. Charles M. Olmstead, Associate Pastor of Elm Park
Church.
It was a gift from a Men's Bible Class when Olmstead was leaving Elm
Park for another assignment. This is an important piece
because
it's one of PW's last engrossings. His health began to fail in the
early 1930s. He had a heart attack in 1932, was largely bedridden and
unable to work. He died in 1935. Men’s Bible Class Signatures (for an enlargement of the 69 signatures, Click Here) E. B. Ides – President F. A. Cross – Vice-President John J. F. York – Secretary A. S. Biesecker – Treasurer Harry C. Hubler – Teacher
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