Tanglewood Conservatories meets Foxburg Pennsylvania

Posted September 9th, 2009 by Alan and filed in Travels
2 Comments

Harold Better Quartet

Harold Betters, renowned jazz trombonist blasts away with his quartet at the Lincoln Hall in downtown Foxburg Pennsylvania. That’s a 1911 antique Steinway grand that John Burg is playing.

Our recent trip also took us to a small, one-main-street town in western Pennsylvania named Foxburg, which is undergoing a remarkable rebirth.

Foxburg is located at the confluence of the Allegheny and Clarion rivers about an hour and a half north east of Pittsburg. This part of the country was home to the original oil boom in the last part of the nineteenth century and became quite wealthy as a result.

However as oil production moved to the larger more productive fields out west, the birthplace of the American oil industry literally dried up.

Several years ago, Nancy and I had designed and built a large conservatory for someone who had moved back to the area after a very successful career away from his hometown and was now engaged in an almost single handed revitalization project of the entire town of Foxburg. An excellent new restaurant alongside the river, a new Inn on the single main street, a winery, a pizzaria and a quaint antique shop in an old bank building now grace the main street where visitors rent Segue scooters and tour the nearby restored Foxburg estate – with its new conservatory.

The town draws a considerable crowd from all over the region and is quite crowded on weekends. I learned that there was a recent Scottish Festival with traditional clan gatherings, sheep dog trials and dancing! An Art, Wine and Food Festival will be held on October 11th.

The town is also home to the oldest golf course in continuous operation in the country.

The cultural arm of their efforts named the Allegheny Riverstone Center for the Arts purchased and renovated an old library auditorium which became known as Lincoln Hall and has staged an impressive variety of concerts with music from Mozart to jazz to madrigals and include regular visits by members of the Pittsburg Symphony Orchestra.

A really impressive feature of the new hall is a huge old Wurlitzer theater organ that was lovingly restored by Paul McKissick and includes all the associated drums, cymbals, bells and automatic piano. I understand that acclaimed organists from around the country regularly make their way to Foxburg to play on this remarkable instrument. The organ restoration took Mr. McKissick ten years to complete and it is now one of only twelve functioning Wurlitzer theater organs in the world.

Harold Betters, a Pittsburg native, is a remarkable jazz icon having played with the great Louis Armstong as well as Al Hirt, Slide Hampton, Ramsey Lewis and Ray Charles. The night Nancy and I were there, he brought the house down with hits ranging from Louis Armstrong’s rendition of Tenderly to Mustang Sally and Kansas City.

This town is definitely worth a visit if you’re ever in the area or just looking for an interesting weekend getaway. Seeing the great Wurlitzer organ played is by itself worth the trip. Visit their website www.alleghenyriverstone.org for details on upcoming activities and events.

Alan

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2 Responses to “Tanglewood Conservatories meets Foxburg Pennsylvania”

  1. I just came across your blog, it is a very interesting reading what you have here, I enjoyed reading it.

    I look forward to more posts from you.

  2. Dennis Keyes says:

    Alan,
    Jae Brown sent me a link to your blog. I’m thrilled to see that you have featured some of my work on your blog and have provided links to my Vasilis shoe gallery and the RiverStone Estate website. We would very much like to provide a link to your blog and your website on the Riverstone site and our business site as well. If you would be so kind as to provide those to me I will be sure to post them. It would be great to enable visitors to our site to link to yours. My son, his wife, and I have a little start up business spun off from our production of the RiverStone website. We build websites for elite real estate, collections, and exhibitions and provide the photographic and writing services. Even if you have no interest in promoting us on your website, I am certain that you would appreciate the images you will find on our business website; http://www.keyesdesigngroup.com
    I hope that you will have an opportunity to take a look at it. My own personal photography website is a work in progress and soon to be online with nearly 500 images.
    Again, thank you very much for showing us and for your high praise of our work.
    Sincerely,
    Dennis Keyes

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