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 Books for Sale on Kensington & Fishtown History Minimize

This page offers several items for sale on the history of Kensington & Fishtown.

Payment:

You can order these items directly from me by:

1. Sending an email to: kennethwmilano@comcast.net

2. Sending check/money order made out to: "Kenneth W. Milano",  2313 E. York Street, Philadelphia, PA 19125

3.  Telephoning Ken Milano at: 215-317-6466

4. Please specify what book you are ordering. Postage is EXTRA. Postage for 1 book is $4.00, each additional book add $2.00.

If you would like to pay electronically, I have a Paypal address set up, it is my email address listed above.  If you do not already have a Paypal account you'll have to set one up in order to use this type of payment. Click here for direct link to Paypal.

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The items for sale are listed below. Scroll down to read about them. Write if you have any questions.

 

The History of Penn Treaty Park

 

The History Press of Charleston, SC, the publisher of my book Remembering Kensington & Fishtown, has issued my second book, The History of Penn Treaty Park. It is now available for sale for $19.99 ($4.00 extra for postage if needed). The book looks as follows:

 

 

Contents

 

Preface

Acknowledgements

Introduction

 

Chapter 1: Penn’s Treaty, Benjamin West and His Followers

Chapter 2: The Fall of the Treaty Elm, Elm Tree Relics, the Penn Society and the Treaty Monument

Chapter 3: The First Decline, Fernon’s Attempts and the Founding of the Park

Chapter 4: Penn Treaty Park: The First Sixty Years, 1893 to 1954

Chapter 5: The Bicentennial, Tercentenary and the Park Expansion, 1955 to 2008

Chapter 6: The Artwork in the Park

 

For Further Reading

 

 

From the “Preface” of the book written by the Penn Treaty Museum founder John Connors:

 

“In 1682, along the gentle banks of the Delaware River, under the shade of a great elm tree in an area then known as Shackamaxon, William Penn is believed to have made a Treaty of Amity and Friendship” with the Native Americans.

   Few events in American history are noted for the just and fair treatment of peoples from different cultures. The legend of William Penn’s treaty with the Indians became a universal symbol of religious and civil liberties. Voltaire made reference to the event in 1764, and artists throughout Europe recreated the scene first painted by Benjamin West in 1771. Drawings of the transaction were used to promote commercial interest in the emerging land. American painter Edward Hicks created numerous depictions of the treaty meeting to promote social change. In the pre–Civil War era, artistic renderings of Penn’s Treaty were used to encourage political movements, religious agendas and social reforms.

   Most artists rendered Penn, the English Quaker, and the Native Americans as meeting in friendship and trust beneath the branches of a stately elm tree. The “Great Elm” as it was known, remained as a living monument to this event until it fell during a violent storm in 1810. Concerned citizens thought that the site, and perhaps the event itself, would be forgotten once the mighty tree had toppled. Much of the timber was salvaged, however, and many objects were crafted from the tree’s wood, ensuring that the significance of this unique event was not lost. The first public monument, an obelisk, was placed on what was then private property to mark the site of the historic tree.

   In 1831, Chief Justice John Marshall received a box created from the Treaty Elm from Roberts Vaux. Marshall replied:

 

The box is to me an inestimable relique. I know no inanimate object more entitled to our reverence than the tree of which it was a part, because I think few events in history have stronger claims on our serious reflection, on our humanity, our sense of rights, and on our judgment, than the treaty which was made under it, and the consequences which followed that treaty. The plainly marked difference of intercourse between the colonists of Pennsylvania and the aborigines, and that which other colonists maintained with them, furnishes a practical lesson on the influence which intelligence, real friendship, and justice may acquire and preserves over their untutored minds which ought not even yet to be forgotten.

 

   Interest in creating a permanent park and preserving the site continued throughout the years. Penn Treaty Park was officially established in 1893. Native Americans have always honored the location of this peaceful event along the river, handing down the story of this historic occurrence in their traditional oral history, and have gathered at the site on numerous occasions in the past 326 years.

   This book is inspired in part by Dr. Etta May Pettyjohn (1909–2005), who for many years championed the preservation of Penn Treaty Park and outlined a vision for a museum in 1970. Dr. Pettyjohn was a member of the tercentenary committee and often spoke of how this simple event had impacted political and social change in the young America. She believed that the story of Penn Treaty Park richly deserved a museum as a permanent tribute to the extraordinary message of Penn’s Treaty from long ago.

   Today, the Fairmount Park Commission maintains the grounds with oversight from the Friends of Penn Treaty Park.”  - John Connors, 2008.

 

The book is 160-pages with 60 illustrations and maps. $19.99 ($4.00 extra for postage)

 

 

 The History of the Kensington Soup Society, 1844-2008

“Kensington Soup House. - This building, located in Allen Street, Eighteenth Ward, daily presents a scene of interest to all who concern themselves about the alleviation of human suffering. The society is now busy in dispensing its charities, and many a crushed spirit is the recipient of its bounty. Every morning hundreds of the poorest residents of the vicinity vie to the spot to have their kettles filled with soup, which is received with an eagerness which shows that want and hunger is pinching. The applicants are of all ages and of both sexes and colors. Ragged children come from squalid homes, but there are also some attired with comparative neatness, who show by their demeanor that their position is strange and unpleasant. Women approach at times timidly, obtain the relief and depart quickly, but with eyes that speak gratitude. Old men bowed with age and sorrow also come, and tearfully thank the dispensers of the nourishment which is to prolong their days of sadness. There is much distress in the vicinity of the Soup House, and the society well deserves the aid and co-operation of the benevolent in their good work.” - 2 Feb 1861 Philadelphia Inquirer

This book will also be published by The History Press and will be released in late February or early March 2009.  The price is $19.99 ($4.00 extra for postage). The book should look as follows:

 

 TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Acknowledgements

Chapter 1.                The Founding of the Kensington Soup Society

Chapter 2.                The Early Years of the Soup Society –Managers & Benefactors

Chapter 3.                Early Homes of the Kensington Soup Society and the Financing of the            

                                Crease Street Soup House

Chapter 4.                The Running of the Soup Society

Chapter 5.                The Soup Society in the Late 19th Century

Chapter 6.                The Williamson Family and Coal Fund

Chapter 7.                Word War I, The Great Depression, & World War II

Chapter 8.                Changing Shape of the Kensington Soup Society

 

 

Remembering Kensington & Fishtown Philadelphia's Riverward Neighborhoods

Remembering Kensington & Fishtown: Philadelphia’s Riverward Neighborhoods. By Kenneth W. Milano. Charleston & London: The History Press, 2008.  128 pages, 36 illustrations (3 maps). Perfect bound, paperback. In-Print $19.99. (Postage if needed is $4.00 EXTRA) 

 

Back Cover blurbs:

 

The Well-Known, the Obscure and Everyday Folks all have their Roles in this Panorama of the Past.

 

The Native Americans called it Shackamaxon, the “place where the chiefs meet,” but Kensington soon became a meeting place of a different kind. Ideologies and demagogues, industry and entrepreneurs all came together in Kensington and Fishtown. Kensington was the epicenter of the American vegetarian movement, and a decade later the area’s shipyards gave birth to the U.S. Navy’s first submarine. In Kensington & Fishtown, native son Kenneth W. Milano presents a collection of fascinating and diverse articles from his column “The Rest is History.” Relive the golden age of Kensington and Fishtown as you learn about their fascinating pasts.

 

Contents of Book: Part I: Olden Days of Kensington. Part II: Early Industry in Kensington and Fishtown. Part III: Recreation in the Neighborhood. Part IV: Interesting Nineteenth-Century Vignettes. Part IV: Stories of Cemeteries, Churches and Hospitals. Part V: Some Kensington Biographies 

 

 Pennsylvania Legacies; the newsmagzine of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. November 2002. Volume 2. Number 2. PRICE: OUT OF STOCK  

 

Printed illustrated wrappers, 37 pages, numerous illustrations with photographs, maps, prints, etc. This issue of the Pennsylvania Legacies is dedicated to the work of the Kensington History Project, a community based historical society that researches, collects, promotes, publishes, and lectures on the history of Kensington and Fishtown, two Philadelphia, PA, neighborhoods. The magazine features 5 articles on the history of these communities, as follows: "Old Kensington" by Rich Remer, "John Hewson: Kensington's Revolutionary War Hero," by Ken Milano, "Fishtown and the Shad Fisheries," by Rich Remer,"The Kensington History Project: Can History become the future?," by Torben Jenk, and "Playtime on the Streets of Kensington," by Torben Jenk.


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