Five Minute Histories: Edmondson Village Shopping Center

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  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2024
  • Did you know Edmondson Village Shopping Center was purposefully made to look like Colonial Williamsburg? Join Johns and lifelong Edmondson Village community member Lashelle Bynum to look back at the history of the iconic shopping center. Maybe this Five Minute Histories video will conjure up memories of window shopping at Hochschild Kohn's or picking up some paint from Fisher’s Hardware or even splurging on a treat from Arundel Ice Cream Co. Thanks for watching!
    This is our series called "Five Minute Histories." We record short videos about different historic places all over Baltimore and post them on our Facebook page, UA-cam channel, and website. For more information or to become a member of Baltimore Heritage, check out: baltimoreherit...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 51

  • @karentwiggsagisi3704
    @karentwiggsagisi3704 Рік тому +3

    I loved hearing Lashelle sharing her memories! She got me thinking back to my experiences growing up in Hamilton.

  • @theOlLineRebel
    @theOlLineRebel 11 днів тому

    Ah, Anderson Olds. It was still there when my grandparents still lived at Edmondson Ave junction.

  • @gcbwoods
    @gcbwoods 7 місяців тому +3

    Wow! I love these information about Baltimore's history.

  • @aprilsmith8933
    @aprilsmith8933 2 роки тому +10

    Yes, I remember the monkeys as a child. Later on as a teen, I watched an Audrey Hepburn Double Feature at the movie theater: Sabrina and Breakfast at Tiffany's. I did not learn to drive till I was 26 but my driving teacher taught me how to parallel park at the West Side Skill Center parking lot.

  • @theOlLineRebel
    @theOlLineRebel 11 днів тому

    I was saying my mom remembered the monkeys, but I think she worked at Hess! I know she worked at a shoe store but it could have been Florsheim. As it was, she always spoke of this place so fondly, loving the Santa in the Hochschilds and walking with her pals up to it. It was her neighborhood center.

  • @shortliner68
    @shortliner68 2 роки тому +6

    You mentioned it looking like Colonial Williamsburg. The shopping center used to regularly put out a newsletter for the surrounding residents about upcoming events. The newsletter was called "Ye Edmondson Village Crier" with a drawing of a colonial town crier on the front page. They always referred to the Village as "Ye Village". We lived within walking distance of Edmondson Village from 1955 to 1979. Whenever a Disney, Jerry Lewis, or some other comedy movie would be playing at the theater, kids would be lined up down the block on Saturday afternoons waiting for the box office to open. And it was just kids! Parents didn't have to worry about letting their kids go to the Village theater alone back then. When we first moved near the Village in 1955, the bowling alley still employed pin boys to clear the dead wood and reset the pins. When you finished bowling you tossed a coin down the bowling lane as a tip for the pin boy. In the Spring, the Village had their annual fair with rides, game booths, and other entertainment. My mother did her main grocery shopping at Food Fair and I'd usually get my haircut at Hess on a Saturday while she was there to grocery shop. There was also a community center that sponsored events like sock hops back in the '50s. My older teen sisters went to a couple of those hops with boys in their class at Gwynns Falls Park Junior High. Lots of memories about "Ye Village"...

  • @fields1336
    @fields1336 Рік тому +4

    👍👍👍😎😎😎😎
    Awesome job Miss Lady, your commentary bought flavor to the channel !!!!

    • @niadorian1
      @niadorian1 Рік тому +1

      Thank you glad you Njoyed !!

  • @carolkowarski2376
    @carolkowarski2376 2 роки тому +7

    K. Katz & Sons was a menswear and shoe store - high end. My father was the manager and I spent a lot of time in Edmondson Village and the library.

  • @bubblewrappedmemories
    @bubblewrappedmemories Рік тому +3

    Westview was my childhood place:)

  • @rckrtcrg1246
    @rckrtcrg1246 2 роки тому +8

    Thanks for this, lots of memories from Edmondson Village. My first haircut, all my shoes were from Hess, the movies and bowling, and the Pratt Library. But maybe my favorite highlight was at Christmastime when the trees along the road were all lit and the beautiful village backdrop made the scene worthy of a greeting card.

    • @shortliner68
      @shortliner68 2 роки тому +3

      I remember Hess had a drinking fountain for dogs outside near the monkey window. A sign called it the "Hess Dog Bar". I hated getting my hair cut but watching the monkeys kept my mind occupied while getting clipped.

  • @jimdevilbiss9125
    @jimdevilbiss9125 2 роки тому +2

    We came from Frederick many times a year to shop in that area. The best time was the Christmas window demonstration’s they were just magnificent. As you said times have changed and I miss it.

    • @darrellyelity3648
      @darrellyelity3648 Рік тому

      Too bad you can’t still come to Edmondson Village to Shop, because you would get robbed.😂

  • @PRR4800
    @PRR4800 2 роки тому +3

    Excellent video. Thanks to both of you for this

    • @niadorian1
      @niadorian1 2 роки тому +3

      Thank you, glad you liked.. Lashelle

    • @PRR4800
      @PRR4800 2 роки тому +2

      @@niadorian1 I was born in Baltimore City and our first rental flat was in Uplands. Great memories.

  • @PorkSoda101
    @PorkSoda101 2 роки тому +2

    I remember being told about Catherine Cesnik & the story of her there.

  • @bryanb2014
    @bryanb2014 3 місяці тому

    I used to work at the Giant near Edmondson, used to eat at Kimmy's Soul Food and Popeye's.

  • @bubblewrappedmemories
    @bubblewrappedmemories Рік тому +2

    Speaking of Edmondson Ave., can you do a video of "the Arundel"? My mother worked there before working at the SSA in Woodlawn. This was back in the early 1960s. Thank you as always!

  • @craigsartstuff-craiglhaupt
    @craigsartstuff-craiglhaupt 2 роки тому +6

    I do remember the monkeys, sometimes that was the only reason our family drove there so I could see the monkeys

  • @billybarnett2846
    @billybarnett2846 Рік тому

    Where the Popeye's is at used to be a thrift store in the 70s. Where the Hecht's was located another department store had taken over and I think it closed in the late 70s. I felt safer back then compared to now.

  • @taloisi
    @taloisi Рік тому +4

    I have heard that this was was the first strip mall in the US. Is this true?

    • @baltimoreheritage1006
      @baltimoreheritage1006  Рік тому +2

      Good question! Not sure if it was the "first strip mall," but it was one of the first shopping centers in the United States. It is also closely
      associated with the nationwide rise in automobile-oriented shopping centers in the post-World War II period.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 26 днів тому

      @@baltimoreheritage1006 Ehhhh… not really. The first strip malls date back to the 1920s, but the 1930s is when they started to flourish. One of the earliest from that decade, called Park & Shop, is in DC and still exists today (there’s a wiki article about it). Of course this was followed by the postwar boom, but postwar is far from the first.

    • @theOlLineRebel
      @theOlLineRebel 11 днів тому

      My mother always said that, it being her beloved neighborhood shopping center. In fact that paper announcement shown, was the exact day she turned 10.

  • @johnmcdade6318
    @johnmcdade6318 Рік тому +2

    Enjoyed this Five Minute History - Are there plans to redevelop? The Purple Line was supposed to have an Edmondson village stop. I hope so.

  • @Binx1364
    @Binx1364 2 роки тому +4

    Any photos of the original mansion?

    • @baltimoreheritage1006
      @baltimoreheritage1006  2 роки тому +2

      Great question--we looked and looked and couldn't find any. Would love it if someone else had any photos!

  • @deborahsaunders7102
    @deborahsaunders7102 2 роки тому +1

    Johns, how about a show on the Towson Plaza Shopping Center?

  • @thomassaehler9038
    @thomassaehler9038 Рік тому +2

    Is the narrator related to the JHU family?

  • @zakiamahasa5037
    @zakiamahasa5037 10 місяців тому

    On what street is the ghost sign

  • @googoo-gjoob
    @googoo-gjoob Рік тому +1

    it wasnt the _buildings_

  • @larrybuchanan7161
    @larrybuchanan7161 2 роки тому +2

    What's up with the Name . . . . Edmondson?

    • @shortliner68
      @shortliner68 2 роки тому +2

      Edmondson Village straddled Edmondson Avenue with the main part on the north side and The Hecht Co. and Hot Shoppes restaurant on the south side. Not sure where the name "Edmondson" originated, whether from a historical person or place.

    • @larrybuchanan7161
      @larrybuchanan7161 2 роки тому +2

      Thank you for getting back 2 me.

    • @marcusjersey9608
      @marcusjersey9608 7 місяців тому +2

      The Word/Name Edmondson originates from Dr.Thomas Edmondson who tho was a doctor,came from such a wealthy family that he never practiced.
      After his death,his heirs sold off part of his estate which became Harlem Park in West Baltimore in the early 1870 s.
      There is a good chance Edmondson avenue is also named after him and that also pre dates this early shopping centre.

    • @marcusjersey9608
      @marcusjersey9608 7 місяців тому +1

      Apologies,Harlem Square was named in 1867,it was Edmondson avenue that was renamed in 1871.