Tunkhannock Party in NYC 1931
—Tunkhannock New Age (Tunkhannock, Pennsylvania), Thursday, November 26, 1931, p1.
TUNKHANNOCK PARTY
Large Number Made Merry At “Pepper Pot” In New York City Monday Evening
More than eighty former residents of Tunkhannock, or their descendants, including nearly a dozen hardy tourists who make their present homes in the valley of the Susquehanna, met in enthusiastic reunion Monday evening at one of New York City’s best-known nocturnal rendezvous, “The Pepper Pot,” at 146 West Fourth street, in the heart of Greenwich Village.
The reunion had been called by J. Herbert Leighton, of the Irving Trust Company, 1 Wall Street, New York. Mr. Leighton, the son of the late James G. Leighton, introduced the toastmaster, the Rev. Herbert Robinson, formerly of Mehoopany, and now of Oyster Bay, L. I., and the evening was on.
John Turn, the first speaker, kept well within his allotted three minutes and spoke feelingly of the fact that although he was not a native of Tunkhannock, the only home which he calls a home is now located there.
Victor H. Lyman, editor of the Republican and New Age, was introduced as a man noted for his tall stories, but despite his introduction, Mr. Lyman appropriately spoke of his pleasure at being present, and expressed the home that this first get-together was only the forerunner of many more to come.
William A. Kittredge, another honored guest from the home town, and according to the toastmaster, “the man who puts out the best products to be found anywhere in the world,” reminded his sympathetic audience that Tunkhannock’s first school was erected in 1816, on the site where Horlacher & Sherwood’s garage now stands. The first teacher, he recalled, was Sally Kellogg, to whom the mother of H. F. Metcalf went to school. And Mr. Metcalf, incidentally, has in his museum the first hand bell ever rung to summon the youth of the town to their books. It is a relic of one of the steamers which ran up and down the Susquehanna, and was first used in the brick building erected in 1845. Mrs. Jennie Hoadley, of Putnam street, is the town’s oldest teacher, and Mr. Metcalf is credited with having sat in her classes, according to Mr. Kittredge.
The brevity of the speeches delighted the assembly. Enthusiasm reached its height with the advent of circus whistles and toy balloons, and many a bald head, known to Tunkhannock only when its owner was in flourishing youth, resounded to the crack of deflated balloons and paper bags. Opinion was unanimous that the affair should be repeated, although no definite date for its recurrence was mentioned by the committee in charge.
The following persons are believed to have been present, although the hilarity of the guests precluded more than an approximate check-up:
Floyd D. Titman
Sarah (Billings) Titman
Louis L. Ansart
Mary Ansart
Mrs. Homer Asheld
Walter R. Betts
Ella Bliss
Miss Amy Brown
Edward J. Calahan
Molly (Camp) Hegeman
John G. Hegeman
Rose Cosgrove
Lulu (Cuddy) Lynch
Margaret Lynch
Frank Dietrich, Jr.
Blanche (Dietrich) Brasefield
Floyd W. Kellogg
Fannie (Borden) Kellogg
Dorothy (Dietrich) Joyner
Roderick Donley
Mary (Adams) Donley
Robert Farr
Florence Hufford
Stuart Hufford
Edna Kiethline
Cecil K. Krewson
Lucinda (Lyman) Krewson
Reba (Kittredge) Tyson
Levering Tyson
William A. Kittredge
Donald Tiffany
Mae (Kutz) Miller
Harry Miller
Victor H. Lyman
Josephine Lewis
J. Herbert Leighton
Margaret (Carver) Leighton
William Loftus
George Ross Leighton
Margaret (Leighton) Richards
Edward Richards
Lloyd Miller
Clara (McKown) Janeway
Jacob Janeway
Helen (McKown) Titcomb
G. Sheldon Titcomb
Fred Newman
Evelyn Hope Northrop
Angelique Prevost
Paul M. Rainey
Mrs. Paul M. Rainey
Adelene Reed
Rev. Herbert Robinson
Mrs. Herbert Robinson
G. Harry Ross
Mrs. G. Harry Ross
Louis K. Ross
Mrs. Louis K. Ross
Jessie (Ross) Royer
Dr. B. Franklin Royer
Emma Sickler
Edson A. Stark
Gladys (Graves) Stark
Charlotte Stark
Fanny (Stark ) Miller
Harry A. Miller
Anna (Sterling) Harber
W. E. Harber
Manning S. Taite
Marie (Platt) Taite
Beulah (Titman) Whitely
William G. Whitely
Guy Titman
Mrs. Guy Titman
Lucia (Titman) Keller
Omar H. Keller
Florence D. Townsend
John S. Turn
Alberta (Townsend) Turn
B. M. Van Dyke
Izetta (Zimmer) Dotts
Walter M. Dotts
More Information
The Pepper Pot Inn, “The Realest Thing in Bohemian Atmosphere” from the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation
The Pepper Pot Inn -- No. 146 West 4th Street from Daytonian in Manhattan
The Irving Trust Company's headquarters at 1 Wall Street—a prominent Art Deco skyscraper in Lower Manhattan—was a major financial landmark. Today, that building has been redeveloped into residences and luxury retail spaces, though it retains its historic architectural status in the Financial District.
