Daily stories of Pennsylvania : prepared for publication in the leading daily…

(13 User reviews)   5137
By Rebecca King Posted on Jan 2, 2026
In Category - Theology
Godcharles, Frederic Antes, 1872-1944 Godcharles, Frederic Antes, 1872-1944
English
Hey, have you ever wondered what it was *really* like to live in Pennsylvania a hundred years ago? Not just the big events, but the everyday stuff? This book is like finding a dusty old trunk in your grandpa's attic, full of short newspaper clippings from 1912. Each one is a tiny window into a different life: a bizarre court case, a local hero, a strange weather event, a funny town rivalry. It's not one story, but hundreds. The real mystery is how all these little moments, when you read them together, start to paint this incredibly vivid and surprisingly human picture of a whole state in a single year. It's history without the boring parts.
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This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects. Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_. The few footnotes have been moved to follow the paragraphs in which they are referenced. The many sections of this volume are presented in order of the month and day, regardless of the year, beginning with January 1. The Contents lists the topics alphabetically, and refers to a date (month and day) rather than a page number. These descriptions do not necessarily exactly match the title of the sections verbatim, and the same section occasionally appears twice, with different descriptions. There is a more detailed index at the end of the volume, with page references. Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding the handling of any issues encountered during its preparation. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [Illustration: THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE CAPITOL BUILDING] DAILY STORIES OF PENNSYLVANIA Prepared for publication in the leading daily newspapers of the State by FREDERIC A. GODCHARLES MILTON, PENNSYLVANIA FORMER REPRESENTATIVE IN THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY, STATE SENATOR, DEPUTY SECRETARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH, MEMBER HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF PENNSYLVANIA, HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF UNION COUNTY, HISTORICAL SOCIETY LYCOMING COUNTY, AND OTHERS Author of _Freemasonry in Northumberland_ _and Snyder Counties, Pennsylvania_ [Illustration: logo] MILTON, PA. 1924 COPYRIGHTED 1924 BY FREDERIC A. GODCHARLES ------- Printed in the United States of America [Illustration: publisher logo] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ THESE DAILY STORIES OF PENNSYLVANIA ARE DEDICATED TO MY MOTHER THROUGH WHOM I AM DESCENDED FROM SOME OF ITS EARLIEST PIONEERS AND PATRIOTS AND FROM WHOM I INHERITED MUCH LOVE FOR THE STORY OF MY NATIVE STATE. [Illustration: _Frederic A. Godcharles._] PRINCIPAL SOURCES UTILIZED Archives of Pennsylvania. Colonial Records of Pennsylvania. Hazard’s Annals of Philadelphia. Egle’s History of Pennsylvania. Gordon’s History of Pennsylvania. Cornell’s History of Pennsylvania. Day’s Historical Collection. Shimmel’s Pennsylvania. Frontier Forts of Pennsylvania. Pennypacker’s Pennsylvania The Keystone. The Shippen Papers. Loudon’s Indian Narratives. Sachse’s German Pietists. Rupp’s County Histories. Magazine of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. American Magazine of History. Egle’s Notes and Queries. Harvey’s Wilkes Barre. Miner’s History of Wyoming. Jenkin’s Pennsylvania Colonial and Federal. Scharf and Westcott’s History of Philadelphia. Lossing’s Field Book of the Revolution. On the Frontier with Colonel Antes. Meginness’ Otzinachson. Linn’s Annals of Buffalo Valley. Hassler’s Old Westmoreland. Fisher’s Making of Pennsylvania. McClure’s Old Time Notes. Parkman’s Works. Shoemaker’s Folklore, Legends and Mountain Stories. Jones’ Juniata Valley. Prowell’s York County. Smull’s Legislative Hand Book. Journal of Christopher Gist. Journal of William Maclay. Journal of Samuel Maclay. Journal of Rev. Charles Beatty. Scrap Books of Thirty Years’ Preparation. Annual Reports State Federation of Historical Societies. And others. INTRODUCTION The Daily Stories of Pennsylvania were published in the newspapers under the title “Today’s Story in Pennsylvania History,” and there has been a genuine demand for their publication in book form. During all his active life the author has been impressed with the unparalleled influence of Pennsylvania in the development of affairs which have resulted in the United States of America. Since youth he has carefully preserved dates and facts of historical importance and has so arranged this data that it made possible these stories, each of which appeared on the actual anniversary of the event or person presented. This idea seems to have been a new venture in journalism and the enterprising editors of our great Commonwealth, contracted for and published “Today’s Story in Pennsylvania History,” and their readers have manifested a deep interest to these editors and to the author. Soon as there developed a demand for the collection of stories in book form, the author determined...

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Forget dry history books with endless dates and treaties. Daily Stories of Pennsylvania is something completely different. Compiled by Frederic Antes Godcharles, it's a curated collection of brief news items originally published in daily papers across the state in 1912. Think of it as a year-long scrapbook for an entire commonwealth.

The Story

There's no single plot. Instead, you jump from town to town, story to story. One page might detail a farmer in Lancaster County winning a prize for a giant pumpkin. The next recounts a tense rescue by coal miners in Scranton. Then you're reading about a heated debate over a new trolley line in Philadelphia, followed by a quirky report of a bear wandering into a Wilkes-Barre backyard. It's a rapid-fire tour of a year in the life of Pennsylvania, told through the small dramas and triumphs that filled the local papers.

Why You Should Read It

This book is magic for your imagination. Reading these snippets, you start to hear the voices and see the world of 1912. You realize people back then worried about their jobs, laughed at silly gossip, and rallied around their neighbors, just like we do now. The charm is in the mundane details—the price of eggs, the style of a new hat, the complaint about potholes—that most history books ignore. It makes the past feel close, familiar, and wonderfully alive.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone with roots in Pennsylvania, lovers of social history, or readers who enjoy non-fiction you can dip in and out of. It's not a book you race through; it's a book you savor a few pages at a time, letting each little story spark your curiosity about the lives lived long before ours. If you think history is boring, this collection might just change your mind.



🟢 Public Domain Content

This masterpiece is free from copyright limitations. You do not need permission to reproduce this work.

Paul Hill
9 months ago

Good quality content.

George Jackson
7 months ago

The index links actually work, which is rare!

David Jones
11 months ago

Honestly, the atmosphere created is totally immersive. Don't hesitate to start reading.

Ethan Miller
1 year ago

I have to admit, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. Don't hesitate to start reading.

John Hernandez
10 months ago

My professor recommended this, and I see why.

5
5 out of 5 (13 User reviews )

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