Philadelphia Max 80

Philadelphia Max 80




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Philadelphia Max 80
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Horticulture and Landscape Architecture
625 Agriculture Mall Dr.
West Lafayette, IN 47907
765-494-1300 ​​
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Reference #18.24fc733e.1654114799.59d32d7e




From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chief executives of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

^ Alexander Taylor and Joseph Turner
refused election to the office of mayor.

^ After Attwood's first term, Anthony Morris II was elected mayor, but fled to avoid taking office. Attwood was elected to a second term three days later.

^ Jump up to: a b c d Died in office.

^ John Mifflin, Alexander Stedman, and William Coxe refused election.

^ Samuel Mifflin refused election.

^ William Coxe and Daniel Benezet refused election.

^ When the American Revolution began, the state abolished the city government, including the office of mayor.

^ John Barclay and George Roberts declined election.

^ Wharton declined reelection to a third term in 1800.

^ As the Federalist Party collapsed in Pennsylvania, many Philadelphia politicians, including Inskeep, identified themselves as "Federal Republicans".

^ Wharton declined reelection to a sixth term in 1811.

^ Resigned to become the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

^ Jones was a Democrat elected with the support of the Know Nothing party.

^ In 1854, the entire county was consolidated into the city, and the mayoral term was extended to two years.

^ Conrad was a Whig elected with the support of the Know Nothings.

^ In 1861, the mayoral term was extended to three years.

^ In 1887, the mayoral term was extended to four years. Mayors could not serve consecutive terms.

^ Blankenburg was elected on the Keystone Party ticket with the support of the Democrats.

^ During Samuel's first term, the prohibition on consecutive mayoral terms was removed.

^ Under the City Charter of 1951, the mayor is limited to two consecutive, four-year terms.

^ Resigned to run for governor.




^ "Mayors of Philadelphia" . Phila.gov . Retrieved 2016-02-19 .

^ Jump up to: a b John Thomas Scharf, Thompson Westcott, History of Philadelphia, 1609–1884 , Lippincott, Phila., 1884.

^ Committee of Seventy's Historical List of Philadelphia Mayors Archived 2007-03-10 at the Wayback Machine

^ Jump up to: a b c "Timeline: A look back at Philly's mayors" . Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved 2018-03-12 .

^ Jump up to: a b c Philadelphia 2012 .

^ Jump up to: a b c Young 1898 , pp. 206–207.



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The mayor of Philadelphia is the chief executive of the government of Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , [1]
as stipulated by the Charter of the City of Philadelphia. The current mayor of Philadelphia is Jim Kenney .

The first mayor of Philadelphia, Humphrey Morrey , was appointed by city founder William Penn . Edward Shippen was appointed by Penn as first mayor under the charter of 1701, then was elected to a second term by the City Council . Subsequent mayors, who held office for one year, were elected by the city council from among their number.

No compensation was paid to the earliest office-holders, and candidates often objected strongly to their being selected, sometimes choosing even to pay a fine rather than serve. In 1704 Alderman Griffith Jones was elected but declined to serve, for which he was fined twenty pounds. In 1706, Alderman Thomas Story was similarly fined for refusing office. In 1745, Alderman Abraham Taylor was fined thirty pounds for refusing the mayoralty; Council then elected Joseph Turner , who also refused and was likewise fined. [2] Others who refused election included Richard Hill (1717), Isaac Norris (1722), John Mifflin and Alexander Stedman, while William Coxe pleaded illness (1758), Samuel Mifflin (1761), William Coxe and Daniel Benezet (1762), and John Barclay and George Roberts (1792). Robert Wharton declined in 1800 and 1811, amid serving for 14 one-year terms, making him the most-often-elected (16 times, including refusals) and longest-serving (14 years) mayor of Philadelphia. [3]

In 1747, at the request of retiring Mayor William Attwood, Council resolved to institute an annual salary of 100 pounds for the office. [2] Nevertheless, that same year, Anthony Morris secretly fled to Bucks County to avoid being notified of his election to the mayoralty. When after three days he could not be located, a new election had to be arranged, and Attwood was re-elected to a second term.

Beginning in 1826, Council could elect any citizen of Philadelphia to the mayoralty. From 1839, mayors were elected by popular vote. If no candidate won a majority of the popular vote, then the joint Councils (Select and Common) would decide between the two leading candidates. John Swift was the first mayor to be elected directly by the people in the 1840 election.

The length of the term of office was extended to two years in 1854, to three years in 1861, and to four years in 1885. Further, The Act of 1885 prohibited mayors from succeeding themselves. [4] The restriction was lifted in the 1940s allowing Bernard Samuel to run for re-election. In 1951, the city's Home Rule Charter established a two-term limit for mayors. [4] The term limit is consecutive, not lifetime.

The mayorship of Philadelphia has been held by Democrats since 1952, with the only Republican in recent memory coming close to winning the position being Sam Katz , who in 1999 was less than half a percentage point away from being the first Republican mayor of Philadelphia elected in over 45 years.

  Democratic (16)
  Democratic-Republican (4)
  Federalist (6)
  Keystone (1)
  National Republican (2)
  Republican (19)
  Whig (5)



Cranky Man's Lawn
Green & clean, venting my spleen

Hole #5 on the Waterway Links at Arrowhead CC
USMC jets pass in tribute the memorial on Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima
Trolley Car Diner Mt. Airy, Philadelphia
Lyndon B. Johnson takes The Oath of Office
A tribute to the only reason I ever watched a Sixers game
George Washington appointed Jefferson the first U.S. Secretary of State
OK … Here’s a pic. Use your imagination.
Zamperini as an Olympic-class runner for University of Southern California
Mr. Zamperini still resides in Torrance, CA at the extraordinary age of 96!
Admiral “Fighting Bill” Halsey on a Victory poster
Leahy, left, and King, top right, in conference with Generals George C. Marshall, right, and Henry “Hap” Arnold, top left
Admirals King, top left and Leahy, behind FDR, at the Yalta Conference in June 1945
What have I lost? Male red panda weighs up to 14 lbs., and he knows how to relax!
Admiral of the Fleet Chester W. Nimitz at Japanese surrender Behind him stand MacArthur, Halsey and Admiral Forrest Sherman
What will yours look like in Spring ’14?
An intriguing move that simply didn’t work out.
Good luck, Big Guy, wherever you land!
Looking down #2 (Billy Bones) from the green.
Perniciously placed ponds proved problematic (#14 Long John Silver)
15th green (Jim Hawkins) at Spyglass

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Center of this Universe: Ashton & Willits Roads
Frankie Masters, Joseph’s Delicatessen, wiffle ball, Holme Circle, Winchester Swim Club, St. Jerome Church & School, Father Dougherty, 25-minute Masses, “Winchester, Colfax & Narvon lines …”, EJ Korvettes, Crown Cork & Seal, friendly football games, Angus Road, nasty football rivalry, Grant & Ashton, Grant & Academy, John Byrnes GC, the fence along Torresdale CC, Pollock School & playground, softball, FlatIron, chain-link basketball nets, the “Big A”, turtle jungle gym, huge angled sheet-metal slide, Route 20 & 88 bus, Philadelphia Electric Co substation (Ashton), North(east) Philadelphia Airport, Ryerson Road, Ryerson Circle, the 5 & 10 cent store (Willits), Shop ‘n Bag(s), “Free Soviet Jews” (B’Nai B’Rith??), 15-cent burgers at McDonalds (Frankford Ave.), Linden Avenue projects, I-95, Roosevelt Boulevard, Roosevelt Mall, Thomas Holme School, Cannstatters, Father Judge HS, dances in the gym, Cottage Green, the original intersection of Ashton & Willits, Lincoln HS, the football bowl, Thanksgiving football games, concrete roads, Bluegrass Shopping Center, grass median strips, Nazareth Hospital, Pennypack Circle, jungle-themed miniature golf, concrete underpasses (before and after), Shriner’s Hospital, Pennypack Park, beer parties, cops, running, beer-dumping parties, street hockey, Flyers Stanley Cup street celebrations, Holy Family College, Nazareth Academy, girls at Archbishop Ryan/St. Huberts, robin-egg blue police cars (post-’74?), PTC, Crispin Gardens, pee wee football, little league, The Evening Bulletin, newspaper shack on Ashton near Winchester SC … 
(Disclaimer: Dysfunctional memory may result in not-completely-correct recollections. Please feel free to correct any inconsistencies via Leave a Comment/Post a Reply below.)
The Wiffleball Kings January 21, 2013 In "Deep background"
Sister Mary Elephant January 21, 2011 In "Deep background"
Wow….neat. Only thing you missed was the dead end. Good stuff Chrissy
Thanks … which dead-end? Funny how kids remember physical features as memory markers. When I lived in Germantown (birth-10 yo), we would wander – all of 100 yards from our house – to a place we simply called The Crack … because the pavement was buckled and “cracked” by a huge chestnut tree.
Troop 395; Treasure Island Scout Reservation; the little candy store behind Mayfair elementary (where my buddy Billy Seltzer, who was the Captain of the Safety Patrol (I was just a patrolman), and I would go after my shift and drink sodas and eat candy; Hargrave St gang and football behind the houses; buck buck and jailbreak in the streets around Hargrave; Park Guard station in Pennypack Park (Woods)…fishing in Pennypack crick; Greenwood Dairies; Tillie’s Pizza (first pizza I had at around 6 years old was from Tillie’s); my Dad’s name on the Levis’ wall (not NEP, but it had our address on Macon Street); Acme parking lot on the Boulevard (Ken L Ration dog school for my half lab-half setter in the parking lot); Valle’s Steak House (second real job — and I was there for three years!); B bus; Farrell, Pollock, Mayfair, Lincoln; Little City; Merben and Mayfair theaters; the “punk” test; Camp William Penn (1967); YWCA at Holme Circle; Branch Free Library on Cottman; leaving unlocked outside Korvette’s my brother’s English Racer bike he earned selling newspapers…yes, it was stolen; Belcher’s accordion studio; police cars we called “red cars”; Murray the mailman; mowing lawns / shoveling snow ($5 per house); annual summer trek to Atlantic City (Diplomat Motel) or to Ocean City; special occasion dinners at Fisher’s Restaurant (my Mom’s favorite) or at Philip’s (in South Philly; when I was in the Navy, and my ship (Saratoga) went to the shipyard, one night I had dinner at Philip’s and the owner remembered my mom and dad…he gave me a bottle of Brunello gratis…the best). There’s so much more, but specifics will come with the use of spare brain cycles and maybe a couple of Rolling Rocks…
Good stuff … I worked at that Acme on Roosevelt Blvd for 8 years!
Roger…enjoying the other aspects of your erudite blog, as well.
Hi my name is Lynda Master Santaniello … When I found this website, it made my heart not hurt, as much for those who knew of my parents. This is the week we lost them. So many of the memories our softball team, pollock school, Lincoln, Holme circle, joes deli next to our restaurant. So many made me smile this week. It is very hard on our family. Thanks for the memories!
You are most certainly welcomed. Knew your father just to say hello to. Might have met your mother, though I do not remember it. What year did they pass?
1984. It’s been a long time. Too long.
Hi I’m
Lynda Master Santaniello It was so nice to see my name in this memories along with many more … our schools, our softball team, flatiron and so many more memories. This is week we lost both of our parents, and this made me feel good to see these memories. Holme circle lived right down street along with so many others. thank you so much .
Sorry for your losses. Frankie Masters was considered a neighborhood icon back when I was a teen. Good memories.
I remember the miniature golf at Stanwood and the Blvd, the last hole had a seal with a rotating ball. Sink it in the spinning ball and the seal would bark, “arrrh arrh.arrh — free game, free game !” or similar.
Then I d go to KFC nearby and have some hamburgers for 25 cents each which they’d inexplicably wrap in clear plastic.
Then take the bikes back home riding in the brick gutters along holme ave.
Which Bob is this? Sounds like a typical Saturday afternoon back in the ‘70s! That the 1970s …
Harry W. – I remember when FLATIRON played at CONNIE MACK STADIUM for their home games in the seaboard coast league. Teams from CT,NY,NJ,DE,VA.GA,FL,NC,SC,LA,TE,OH,IL,MO, and TX. – FLATIRON drew more fans than the Phillies did back then for home games at CONNIE MACK.
FLATIRON A.C. SOFTBALL – In the 60’s,70’s and into the 80’s they were unbeatable as they won league titles every year. They played the best teams in the entire country and came out on top. THE GREAT GEORGE ULMER was their top pitcher. Many games he would have 19 or 20 K’s. BIG GEORGE was clocked at 110 to 120 miles an hour. In one regional tournament GEORGE pitched 5 no hitters and fanned 101 out of 105 hitters. The entire team was the class of the leagues they played in.They played as great as their uniforms looked and they looked awesome.
IN THE EARLY 70’S MY DAD TOOK ME TO SEE FLATIRON PLAY CARLINGS BEER OF BALTIMORE . THEIR PITCHER WAS CHARLIE SLAVINGS WHO WAS 66-0 AT THE TIME .GEORGE ULMER , FLATIRONS PITCHER STRUCKOUT 20 OF 21 OF CARLINGS BATTERS. FLATIRONS CENTER FIELDER BOB MILLER THREW OUT A GUY AT FIRST BASE IT WAS UNREAL,WHAT AN ARM.FLATIRON WON THE GAME 1-0 ON A LOU CATALINE DOUBLE IN THE BOTTOM OF THE 7TH INNING . THEIR WERE ABOUT 10,000 PEOPLE AT MAX MYERS PLAYGROUND. I WAS 12 AT THE TIME AND I’LL NEVER FORGET IT, THANKS DAD.
Hi! I am the Bob Miller that you mentioned. George was the greatest!
MY DAD TOOK ME TO SEE THE CLEARWATER BOMBERS PLAY FLATIRON .THE PITCHERS WERE GEORGE ULMER AND BILL MASSEY FOR THE BOMBERS. I NEVER SAW A 100 MPH PITCH UNTIL THAT GAME . THE BOMBERS WON BOTH GAMES 5-2 AND 2-0 IT WAS AWSOME.
I left NE Philly for South Florida in late 1979. My friends down there were baffled by my “aggressive” driving. But impressed with my skills.
They have no idea what the Blvd does for driving skills. Frankfort Ave, Torresdale Ave. Old Delaware Ave……12 lanes of cobblestone, railroad tracks and vehicular anarchy. I also learned to ride a motorcycle on these roads and had a job under the Girard Point Bridge. Everyday rush hour….95, off at Allegany (95 didn’t go all the way through yet…remember that?), Packer Ave back onto 95, off at the airport and back roads to a tug and barge dock. I was 18.
When I taught my kids to drive we did a loop. Out of Holland, through Langhorne up 95, 95 to Taylorsville and then 532 back home. Once they mastered that it was 95 down into Philly, Cottman or Girard and back. But the real test was the Blvd. Langhorne to Adams and back.
5 very competent drivers, they can all out drive a Dominican taxi driver down Broadway.
Now…..Dinosaur Lake. Let’s see a show of hands. BTW, it’s still, there minus the dinosaurs. Napoli Village Pizza on Torresdale. The Hatcheries. Byberry…and it’s tunnels. Road grit encrusted pretzels handed to you by a guy that roaches ran away from. Whalers from Burger King. Pantry Pride. Fights, one on one, no posses, no homeboys…and the matter was settled.
Decatur Rd drag racing for those afraid of Front St. Hanging onto bumpers in the snow. Bad weed. Good weed. Cops who knew the difference. Keg parties in t
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