Sunday, January 30, 2011
Philly Church Project
For those of you who live in my neck of the woods, and even those of you who don't, here is an interesting website someone alerted me to after the TLM today. Take a look at some of the hidden treasures right here in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. What you see and where it can be found might surprise you!
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Many years ago, I lived in Bethlehem, PA. I always got a kick out of traveling 6 miles to Emaus, on Emmaus Road (one of them had two "M's" but I don't remember if it was the road or town), but I loved the idea of being a traveler on the Road to Emmaus....one of my favorite Bible stories.
ReplyDeleteThis link is awesome, for two reasons.
My sales territory for an oil company went from the Atlantic Ocean to the Susquehanna River, and top to bottom of PA and Jersey. I saw many, many of these churches.
Indeed, one day, I took my camera in Fall as colors changed, and captured prolific churches in Willow Grove and Perkesie, just north of these archives and you. These churches capture the essence of America in it's youth.
Freedom of Religion is prevalent everywhere I drove.
That included trips to South Philly too, and the link provides directions I recall from Germantown Pike, but I just roared at the "Safety" advice: He gives "8.5 tire irons" as icons of safety for one church, sadly in decline and will likely one day close.
I got lost one day in Bryn Mawr trying to catch I-476 north to Bethlehem. I rolled down my window at a red light to ask a coed in the next car to me, "Where am I" and "How do I get the turnpike?" I was unaware of the exclusive nature of the college there (I usually took Rt 1 or Rt 30). I-76 is a killer.
I thought the town was "Brian Mower", but the lovely coed responded by saying to me "You are in "brin"....exhale massive cigarette smoke...
"mwahhh", as if Miss Piggy was giving me a kiss.
She had no clue how to get to the turnpike, for the smoke may not have been a cigarrete exhale afterall, as the smell wafted to me.
I loved Abington, and Philly has a college, I think St. Joe's, that is built of white masonry stone, buildings and walls all the same. Someone took a lot of time and talent to assemble the place long ago.
I always wanted to go back and just walk the campus with a camera in fall, lovely spot.
You get of the "sure to kill" highway, I-76 into Philly, and head East on Rt. 1. You pass a TV station and head uphill. There it is, about a couple miles to the top, and worth the trip to see from anywhere in the country.
I do not know how many tire irons you need for safety there, but I made a habit of calling South Philly (below 13th St/ South Street, famous for Dick Clark and American Bandstand days) early in the AM. Folks wake up around 9 AM for some reason around there, but I was in town by 7 am to get out before dark.
I will meander the entire link of churches on display, and enjoy many,many memories from those days.
Fall always had me with camera traveling down PA along the Delaware River from top to bottom of PA, and return by the NJ side from a different panorama of God's artistry, and palette colorings.
Thanks for the link.
LOL, we call it the SureKill, but Sure to Kill works too. It can be intimidating to first-timers, that's for sure.
ReplyDeleteThe only disappointing thing about the link is that they take more extensive photos of some of the churches. For instance, their favorite, Our Lady of Hope, has an amazing grotto that was recently uncovered in the lower church, but they somehow missed photographing it.
Anyway, glad you will find it interesting.
As it so happens this past month I've been learning about the evolution of church architecture. I flipped through all those pictures and I can now tell what architectural style each one is in. That was enjoyable. I wonder if someone has done similar for New York City churches.
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