ECRWSS LocalResidentialCustomer PRSRTSTD USPostage PaidNewspaperMediaGroup IN THIS ISSUE: Safety Sean Maloney delivering big hits on the field Morry David, author & local business owner … and More! HISTORIAN Fred Moore Shares His Love of History SUMMER 2022
- ACCOUNT MANAGERS - MARKETING CONSULTANTS - FREELANCE WRITERS NOW HIRING! Come be part a eat team. Please send your resume areyes@newspapermediagroup.comto NMG Media Group is seeking creative, analytical and outgoing individuals to join our team. 19006 SUMMER 2022 ISSUE PUBLISHER/ VP OF ADVERTISING SALES ARLENE REYES EDITOR TOM WARING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES DAN RUTHMITCHELLKEVINLEHNERSTUSKISMITHCONSTANTINE CONTRIBUTORS JAIME STOW DEBRA WALLACE JOE MASON LAYOUT AND DESIGN KIMBERLY KRAUSS 19006 is a publication of Newspaper Media Group 130 Twinbridge Drive, Pennsauken, NJ 08110 (856) 779-3800 ext. areyes@newspapermediagroup.com6837 In this Issue: Take a Bite - Osteria Saporino 4 Author Morry David 6 Collin Gillespie 8 Safety Sean Maloney 10 Historian Fred Moore 12 Huntingdon Valley Happenings 14 Huntingdon Valley Library 15 COVER PHOTO BY JAMIE STOW Historian, Fred Moore 190062SUMMER 2022
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Osteria Saporino please see
For two decades, Kamber “Kam” Jaupaj has immersed himself in the hustle and bustle of restaurant life.
Kam runs the restaurant, and his brother handles the business side. Together, they make an unbeatable duo that is happy to honor special requests. While respecting the classics, these brothers bring out innovative dishes that are inspired by local, fresh and natural ingredients.
“I wouldn’t want to do anything else,” Kam reveals. “I thoroughly enjoy it because it doesn’t get boring. I love helping people celebrate mostly happy occasions in this lovely space. We sincerely want you to let us host your special event.” When it comes to special events, Kam said as people continue to venture out of their homes, he is booking bridal showers, baby showers and graduation, birthday and anniversary parties, both on the patio and inside theInrestaurant.fact,headvises everyone to call early if they know their date because there are dates booked through October.
What Tony enjoys most about running Osteria is the relationships that are forged.
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“Foremost, what I appreciate is the camaraderie with the people that we meet and sharing their stories and their lives. That is veryWhilesweet.”diners wait for their starters or main courses, the server will bring freshly
Where Everyone Is Treated Like a Member of the Family
Furthering his passion for the hospitality business, he is basking in the glow of Osteria Saporino, his local Italian family restaurant that is known for preparing and serving a scrumptious Italian and Mediterranean menu.For the last six years, Kam and his brother, Tony, have been happily tending to the needs of local residents and their families, helping them celebrate special occasions and find respite from the pandemic.
In addition to the inviting ambiance and music, another aspect of this dining experience that guests can count on is the diverse menu with eight daily specials.
takea
BITE, page 5
The main courses include such items as lobster ravioli with shrimp, Chicken Milanese and eggplant napoleon (layered eggplant parmigiana, fresh mozzarella and marinara sauce).
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For side dishes, there are Parmigiano truffle fries, sauteed spinach and roasted potatoes with fresh veggies, and to finish the meal there are several desserts and specialty coffees – all a scrumptious variety to tempt everyAmongpalate.the many starters on the menu are the hot creamy mushroom soup and a perfect summer first course of cold Gazpacho, Portobello Genovese (a combination of Portobello, shitake, champignon mushrooms, chopped shrimp, breadcrumbs, parmigiana and pesto).
BITE fromcontinued 4page PHOTOS COURTESY
SUMMER 2022519006 made delectable Italian bread, with a side of extra virgin olive oil for dipping. Kam picks up the bread daily from a bakery in Northeast Philadelphia.Theofferings include scrumptious appetizers, including calamari and zucchini with marinara sauce, grilled artichokes or mussels and clams. The creative salads include a fig salad, Cesare, arugula and Insalata Caprese. The wide variety of main courses for lunch and dinner include an array of seafood, fish, chicken, veal, lamb, steak and five kinds of pasta with seven choices of sauces.
Monday, July 25th - Wednesday, August 31st 10:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Being Held at: Artis Senior Living of Huntingdon Valley 2085 Lieberman Drive Huntingdon Valley, PA 19006 More TheArtisWay.com/HuntingdonMagazineTheArtisWay.com/HuntingdonMagazine267-338-4303Information
Today, there are still choices of the spacious in-restaurant dining room, cozy private room, large patio seating with a partially covered area (complete with heaters for chilly days and nights) and take-out. While dietary restrictions and special requests are considered a headache at other establishments, Osteria Saporino and the staff welcome them. “It comes with the business,” Kam explains. “We are in the welcoming business. If I can do something special for you and your family, why not? It’s the difference between ruining or making someone’s day, and I always want to make it a positive experience so you will want to come back and bring your friends.” Now Kam is seeing formerly regular customers who are returning to restaurant dining for the first time in three years, and it is like hosting long-lost family members. “We are proud to have many loyal customers and they can tell we want to make them happy,” he said. “If it is a good experience, they will come back.” ••
Osteria is open for lunch Monday through Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Sunday for private events, and for dinner Sunday through Thursday from 4 to 9 p.m. and Friday and Saturday from 4 to 10 p.m. For reservations or additional information contact, Osteria Saporino is at 1051 County Line Road, Huntingdon Valley. Call 215355-5577. OF OSTERIA SAPORINO
Check out our other nearby community in Yardley.
Help us collect school supplies for students in need. If possible, we’d like backpacks filled with various supplies donated to our cause. Please deliver your donations between the hours of 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. through the dates of July 25 - August 31. Feel free to include your business information so we know who participated! us for this
If all of this wasn’t more than enough, couples, book club members, groups of friends and families can enjoy soft drinks or bring their favorite bottle of wine to share and enjoy because Osteria is a BYOB. In what was formerly the Arugula restaurant, Kam kept on the same chef, Carlos Trinidad, and is proud that most of the staff have been happy enough to stay around for several years. “Despite the long hours, the environment isn’t too stressful. The people make the Duringplace.”theCOVID-19 restrictions, when restaurants were clearly in distress, Kam said he kept on all of his staff and pivoted by providing easy curbside pick-up.
Morry David is a bestselling author, business owner, mentor and natural-born teacher, who has always had the tenacity and engaging personality to make things happen.
In fact, the successful entrepreneur, and accomplished pianist at age 16, decided to start his own music school to teach his peers how to play his favorite instrument.
The frustrated parents he met told him that their teens hated to practice the piano, so how was David going to teach them differently?Hisplan was to find out what music each of them enjoyed listening to and cajole them into playing the songs, and even practicing.
“I have always had the penchant to take something apart and make it better,” explains David, who has been living in Huntingdon Valley since 1985. “I had my own recording studio at age 21 in which I recorded the music of Stevie Wonder, and then I worked with most of the discos in the area.”
The owner of the local security company BY DEBRA WALLACE
The confident and passionate David says that he never had one student who didn’t develop a lifelong love of playing the piano, one of the accomplishments of which this dynamic local resident is extremely proud.
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please see MORRY,
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onindeliblemakingDAVIDMORRYAuthormarktheworld
For David, teaching and mentoring are always paramount.
MORRY fromcontinued 6page
His current and future books, he says, have to be entertaining, but this dedicated teacher says they always need to have major underlying life lessons.
David has several future books, as well as many other projects, in the works. One of them is a nonfiction book entitled Why Some People Can Fly, which looks at the lives of 44 remarkable people on the autism spectrum – including Einstein, Mozart, Steve Jobs, Nikola Tesla and Elon Musk, and how each of them has used their gifts, talents and vision to change the world. “It is about how an ordinary person can do extraordinary things, basically how to achieve the American dream,” he explains. “There are a tremendous number of people out there who have the ability to look at a situation differently and not allow anyone or anything to detract them from their focus.”
“When you are younger you think that fancy clothes, cars and vacations – the materialistic things are important – but when you get older you realize it has to do with relationships and loving people who touch your heart,” he explains.
“I am trying to introduce children to what they are going to learn from pivotal relationships,” says David. “It is about how you affect people and how you make a difference. This is what my books are all about.” •• For information about his books, go to M. David – Best Selling Author on Facebook. When David is The Chase and the sequel The Ghost of Sheppard’s Inn, both young Not being daunted by the difficult publishing business, David received some 600 rejection letters from publishers advising him that they didn’t take unsolicited manuscripts and feedback from agents that they don’t represent findivegiveaauthors.unpublishedCaughtincatch-22,hedidn’tup.Hissupport-wifeurgedhimtoanotherway,and dream,” he explains. “There have the ability to look
Justin was 13 years old, the boy was having nightmares and his involved father wanted to know what books his son was reading that were working on his subconscious.WhenDavid could not find books that young adults would enjoy, he Vega,hefindivegiveaauthors.senttheyfromandliciteddidn’tingpublisherstionsomeDavidlishingdifficultdauntedadultbothSheppard’sTheandister,andwithheresult,own.writingstartedhisThethatsharedhissondaugh-Brooke,TheChasethesequelGhostofInn,youngfiction.Notbeingbythepub-business,received600rejec-lettersfromadvis-himthattheytakeunso-manuscriptsfeedbackagentsthatdon’trepre-unpublishedCaughtincatch-22,hedidn’tup.Hissupport-wifeurgedhimtoanotherway,anddid.SoonenteredDantheownerofIndigo River Publishing in Pensacola, Florida, which is affiliated with Simon & Schuster, and The Chase (written under his pen name M. David) became a bestseller in three hours. Much to his delight, David’s second book became a bigger hit.
SUMMER 2022719006 Alarms Plus since 1972, David is an ambitious man who sees solutions where others merely see problems. He and his wife, Sharon, are proud of their two grown children, helping to raise money for local breast cancer charities, and their years as members of the board of the Huntingdon Valley Athletic Association, where they were able to use their contacts, fundraising and marketing expertise to affect positiveWhenchange.hisson
“I want to show young adults that no matter what the circumstances, things are not as bad as they seem,” he explains. “There is always an opportunity to calm down and think things through.”
Beyond his love for writing, David says the books, including his upcoming tale of Cosmo, about an alien in the form of a golden retriever puppy with an ET vibe, change lives. In that book, his love for teaching comes shining through, and it’s soon to be made into a major movie, with filming expected to begin soon in Nashville.
He hopes that his movie will show Hollywood that there is a family audience out there and that filmmakers can provide children with entertainment other than movies filled with cursing and violence.
ON THE MEND AFTER INJURY PHOTO COURTESY OF DENVER NUGGETS190068SUMMER 2022
Huntingdon Valley’s Collin Gillespie, a guard with the Denver Nuggets, is recovering after suffering a lower left leg fracture in late July. Gillespie underwent surgery July 29 in Philadelphia to repair the fracture. He will be out Gillespieindefinitely.isunder a two-way contract with the Nuggets, and played with the team during July’s NBA Summer League in Las Vegas. In four games, he averaged 11.3 points, 5.3 rebounds, 4.3 assists and 1.5 steals. Gillespie, 23, a former Villanova star, did not get selected in June’s NBA Draft, but was immediately signed afterward by the Nuggets. carry two extra players in addition to the 15 on their regular season roster. Gillespie had been expected to play for both the Nuggets and Grand Rapids (Michigan) Gold, Denver’s affiliate in the G League, the NBA’s minor league. The 6-foot-3, 195-pounder recently completed a brilliant college basketball career. He appeared in 156 games (125 starts) in five seasons at Villanova, averaging 11.9 points, 3.1 assists and 2.9 rebounds while shooting 42.2 percent from the field and 38.7 percent from three in 29.0 minutes per game.
GILLESPIE
Gillespie earned the 2021-22 Bob Cousy Award as the nation’s top point guard, helping to guide the Wildcats to the NCAA Final that ended his 2021 season prematurely. He ended his career at Villanova with a national championship (2018), two Final Four appearances and two Big East Conference Player of the Year awards. As a senior, he had an especially outstanding season. He averaged 15.6 points per game, was a 90.5 percent free throw shooter and made 41.5 percent of his 3-point attempts.Inhigh school, Gillespie led Archbishop Wood to the Philadelphia Catholic League and state championships as a senior in 2017.
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SUMMER 2022 Sean Maloney the football player is much different than Sean Maloney the person. Maloney is a senior on the Lower Moreland High School football team, and if you see him around the neighborhood, at a barbecue or in school, you’ll find a very nice young man. On the football field, let’s just say you don’t want to be carrying a football when Maloney is playing safety. “I’m small, so people might not know I can hit, but I’ve always been a pretty big hitter,” said Maloney, a 5-foot-11, 155-pound safety, wide receiver and part-time outside linebacker who lives in Huntingdon Valley. “I learned to be a big hitter when playing for the BuxMont Saints, a very good football team that is known for being tough. They teach you to hit. “Sometimes people are surprised. They’ll meet me and say I’m not mean even though I hit hard. I take it as a (compliment). I am a nice person, I just love playing football and I love hittingMaloneypeople.”has been giving bumps and bruises to opposing football players since his freshman year, when he immediately became a starter at safety. Over the years, he’s worked in at wide receiver, mostly playing out of the slot, and sometimes playing a tight end role. He also could see time this year at linebacker. Offense? Defense? Special teams? It doesn’t really matter to Maloney. All he wants is a chance to play and help the Lions. “Safety is my position, but this year I’m going to play linebacker a lot more because we lost a lot of good athletes who were seniors,” Maloney said. “I’ll play anywhere I’m needed. Safety is fun. Linebacker is fun. And I’m having a lot of fun playing receiver. I just want to play, if it helps the team, I’ll play anywhere.”He’shelping the team in other ways, too.Last year the Lions finished 4-5, not a bad season for the small school, but Maloney wants to make sure the team continues to take steps to improve. Along with starting quarterback Tolan Stahl, Maloney rounds his team up four days a week at the school. There, they run, lift, work out and put in the work to make sure every player is ready both mentally and physically for football season. It couldn’t be going any importantball,importantwe’reseniorcan’twouldupyounger,thisIhassaid.great,”outproud,“I’mbetter.reallytheturn-hasbeenMaloney“Everyonebeencoming.rememberdoingwhenIwaslookingtotheguyswhoholdthese.IbelieveI’maalready.Butworkinghard.“Preparationisinfoot-butit’sreallyforour BY JOE MASON MALONEY A BIG HIT for Lower Moreland Football in at wide receiver, mostly said. “Everyone has been coming. I remember doing this when I was younger, looking up to the guys who would hold these. I can’t believe I’m a senior already. But we’re working hard. important in football, but it’s really important for our please see MALONEY, page 11
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SUMMER 20221119006 team. We have to be prepared for the season. We work hard in practice, but that’s not enough. You have to work hard during the summer. That’s why we’re out there every weeknight, other than Wednesday. We’re out there trying to become better.” This year the Lions will rely heavily on Maloney’s ability, as well as leadership. He will be a captain, and hopes he can inspire people the way the seniors inspired him when he was a starter during his freshman year. But football isn’t Maloney’s only sport. A former track athlete, Maloney now competes in unified track, where athletes are partnered with specialneeds athletes and they competeIt’stogether.aspecial activity for Maloney because his close family friend Gerry Gonzalez has Down syndrome, so the activity means a lot to him. “A few of my friends did it, so I joined and I really like it, everyone has fun with it,” Maloney said. “It’s athletes helping other athletes. Being the person I am, I have fun with it. It’s nice to help people and be kind. But we all have fun.” Maloney will have a lot of fun if the Lions improve upon last year. After this year, he’s hoping to play college football, but he’s also contemplating a career in trades, possibly in some type of technology.Butbefore he has to make that call, he’ll be making calls on the Lions defense. be so good. going to be very good. excited about getting started.”
I’m
to
We’re
about Local History Spreading Word the
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Moore wouldn’t mind getting involved in “I’d like to see a Huntingdon Valley Historical Society,” he said.
Moore also praises the Pitcairn family and the Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust for valuing the importance of land preservation.“Wecanthank them for a lot of this open space,” he said. “It’s benefited us all. It’s really important to Huntingdon Valley.” recently helped Huntingdon Valley Library and enjoying his enclosed back porch and big band street, and He has some theories, and is research-
Moore is active in Montgomery County, on the board of the Bryn Athyn-based Alnwick Grove Historical Society and a member of the Hatboro-based Millbrook Society. He’s a big fan of the Old York Road Historical Society, headed by David Rowland, an organization that is the author of The Morelands and Bryn Athyn historical book. And he noted the contributions of Rob DeMartinis, former president of the Lower Moreland Township Board of Commissioners, who recently helped Huntingdon Valley Library conserve and digitize a rare copy of a historic Farm Map of Moreland Township.
While living in the city, Moore fondly recalls 1997’s 300th anniversary celebration of the King’s Highway Bridge in Holmesburg. That cemented his love of history. “One thing just led to another,” he said.
Fred Moore moved to Huntingdon Valley a decade ago after 42 years in the Holmesburg section of Northeast Philadelphia, as he and his wife wanted to be closer to their daughter, who had moved to town so she could have her kids educated in the Lower Moreland School said.As a city resident, he studied the history of Holmesburg and took frequent walks in Pennypack Park. He enjoyed living near Pennypack Creek – which runs through parts of Northeast Philly, eastern Montco and Lower Bucks – and still does. “I love the Pennypack Creek up here, it’s so beautiful,” he said.
PHOTOS BY JAMIE STOW
He has some theories, and is researching how Huntingdon (sometimes called Huntington) Valley got its name, probably sometime in the early 1700s.
Moore has some hobbies – walking, enjoying his enclosed back porch and big yard and playing guitar for the last halfcentury in the bluegrass band Holmesburg Jam. He likes living on a peaceful street, with the sound of birds and sightings of deer, along with being close to Northeast At the same time, he’s continuing to explore local history. Montgomery County was created in 1784, he points out, and there’s plenty of history of note.
“Huntingdon Valley could easily be called Pennypack Valley if you look at the Moore studies maps, books, photos, wills, deeds and other historical documents to find out about things like mills, roads, bridges and houses. It helps that published works from 1926 and earlier are in the public domain. As Moore puts it, “I want to get the news out there.”
BY TOM WARING
A decade or so after that, he was among those who successfully fought Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter’s plan to close the historic Holmesburg Library. Today, Moore is editor of a dozen or so books. He’s worked closely over the years with some fellow Northeast historians and history buffs – Jack McCarthy, Bruce Conner, Joe Menkevich, Charles McCloskey, John Charles Manton, Roland Williams and others.Some of his titles have included president of the Trustees of Lower Dublin Academy and Holmesburg Civic Association and treasurer for Friends of Northeast Philadelphia History Network and Pennepack Baptist Historical Foundation.
For people interested in local history books, he recommends the websites of Arcadia Publishing and Amazon.
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In Moore’s view, the Lady Washington Inn, where Martha Washington is believed to have stayed, is a particular prized historic building.SoisFetter’s Mill, built around 1746 in Lower“TheMorelandbeautyof Fetter’s Mill is that it hasn’t been reconstructed too much,” he said.
Huntingdon Valley
SATURDAY, AUG. 27
MONDAY, AUG. 29 High School Girls Soccer Upper Moreland at Lower Moreland, 3:30 p.m.
Back to School Picnic Pine Road Elementary School, 3737 Pine Road. 5 to 6 p.m.
FRIDAY, AUG. 19 Basketball Tryout Registration Huntingdon Valley Athletic Association travel teams. Boys and girls in grades 3-8. Deadline to register is Sept. 4. Register: hvaa.net.
THURSDAY, AUG. 18 Lower Moreland Township Zoning Hearing Board meeting 7 to 9:30 p.m. 640 Red Lion Road.
FRIDAY, AUG. 26 High School Football Springfield at Lower Moreland, noon.
Weekly Mass Schedule St. Albert the Great Catholic Church, 212 Welsh Road. Saturday Vigil, 5 p.m. Sundays at 8 a.m., 10 a.m. and noon. SUNDAY, AUG. 21 Huntingdon Valley Presbyterian Church 2364 Huntingdon Pike. Hawaiian Sunday. Wear Hawaiian apparel to the services at 9 a.m. and 11:15 a.m.
SUNDAY, AUG. 28 Moss Mill Market Moss Mill Brewing Company, 109 Pike Circle, Unit D. 1 to 5 p.m. Vendors, live music, food, drinks. Continues Sept. 25.
TUESDAY, AUG. 30
MONDAY, AUG. 22 Huntingdon Valley Library Writing Group 7 p.m. Huntingdon Valley Library, 625 Red Lion Road. Meets fourth Monday of every month. Bring pen/pencil and notebook or laptop. Light refreshments. Register: 215947-5138.
First Day of School St. Albert the Great, 214 Welsh Road. Pre-K to eighth grade. Register: 215-9472332.
PTA Meeting Lower Moreland High School Library. 9:15 to 10:15 a.m.
THURSDAY, AUG. 25 L ower Moreland Township Planning Commission meeting 7 to 9 p.m. 640 Red Lion Road.
TUESDAY, AUG. 23 Basketball Program Registration Kindergarten through 12th grade. Season starts in January. hvaa.net.
5th Tuesday Simple Meal & Worship
WEDNESDAY, AUG. 17 Backpack and School Supplies Drive Artis Senior Living of Huntingdon Valley, 2085 Lieberman Drive. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Continues through Aug. 31. 267-277-2482.
TUESDAY, SEPT. 20 Realities of Dementia Artis Senior Living of Huntingdon Valley, 2085 Lieberman Drive. 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Register: TheArtisWay. com/Webinar.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 7
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Huntingdon Valley Presbyterian Church, 2364 Huntingdon Pike. Meal, 6 p..m Prayer and worship, 7 p.m. Free. 215-947-5500.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 8
TUESDAY, AUG. 16 Popsicles with the Principals 1 to 3 p.m. Pine Road Elementary School back playground, 3737 Pine Road.
Weekly Mass Schedule St. Albert the Great Catholic Church, 212 Welsh Road. Saturday Vigil, 5 p.m. Sundays at 8 a.m., 10 a.m. and noon.
SUNDAY, SEPT. 18 Magical Fall Fundraiser Huntingdon Valley Library, 625 Red Lion Road. 3 p.m. Performance by Danny, of Smoke and Mirrors Magic Theater. 50/50. Snack sales. $25 for adults, $10 for children.
MONDAY, SEPT. 12
SATURDAY, AUG. 20
Huntingdon Valley Library executive director Pam Dull announced that the library recently conserved and digitized a rare copy of a historic Farm Map of Moreland Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, surveyed and published by Matthew Hughes in 1861. The 160-year-old map was stabilized, reframed and digitized for the first time to provide access both at the library and online. The library’s map is the only known survivingThecopy.library, 625 Red Lion Road, received a donation from local residents Barbara and Robert DeMartinis to assist with the conservation work. The donation, along with some unrestricted library funding, was used to complete a project that otherwise might not have been possible. “Barb and I were pleased to be able to help the library with the map project. I love history and we both love the library. Pam and her staff do a great job and have a lot of hopes and dreams for making the Huntingdon Valley Library an even better community resource. Our hope is that in allowing our names and story to be used that others may also choose to step forward to help the library with important projects that otherwise cannot be done within the library’s operating budget,” Robert DeMartinis said. The library thanks Robert and Barb site,thecanisanytimeMapproject.theirpaperFramerySecondDeMartinis,toNunandACArestorersforhelpwiththeTheFarmmaybeviewedthelibraryopen.Adigitalcopybefoundonlibrary’sweb-History–Huntingdon Valley Library (hvlibrary.org). The library has a small local history collection that it hopes to expand. If you have local history items, a story to share, or want to help fund special library projects, contact Pam Dull at 215-947-5138 or Followhvldirector@mclinc.org.HuntingdonValley Library on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.
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