Oct. 28: Warwick Drive-In Theatre, Warwick NY

It’s Day 301 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It was time to get back on the  Pennsylvania Turnpike for part of the 2½-hour drive from the Mahoning Drive-In Theater a few miles west of Lehighton PA to the Warwick Drive-In Theatre, just across the border and a couple of miles west of Warwick NY.

The Warwick has a great history, kept up to date, on the About Us page of its web site. The drive-in was built in 1950 by Charles and Mary Finger in partnership with George and Adeline Miller on land owned by Paul and Emma Miller. George and Adeline sold out to Russ and Gloria Eurich. It had one 70-by-40-foot screen and parking for 350 cars. Soon, the Fingers bought out the business from the Eurichs. It was run successfully by the Finger family for 25 years.

The Fingers retired and sold the drive-in to Frank Seeber in 1977. Seeber also bought the property from Miller’s widow, then bought more acreage from her in 1982. Seeber and his wife Ann expanded the drive-in to two screens with two projection rooms. Before 1995, they added a third screen and more ticket selling stations to comply “with the town’s insistence on controlling the traffic and parking situations.”

In 1995, the Seebers retired from the drive-in business and sold the theater and land to Beth and Ernest Wilson as Casey Family Theaters, Inc. “We named the company after our nickname for Cassandra, the youngest of our four children,” Beth told the Warwick Valley Chamber. “She was born on the day we purchased the business.”

Beth’s sister, Laurey Keller, assists with daily operations, and Beth and Laurey’s children have worked at the Warwick throughout the years. Concession manager Joan Damon has been with the theater since the 1970s, before the Seebers bought it. The drive-in converted to digital projection in 2014.

The Warwick is the closest drive-in to Manhattan, about 90 minutes away, and for years was the closest drive-in to New Jersey. I was fortunate enough to catch it on the very last night of its 2017 season. Although it was the Saturday before Halloween, there were plenty of “regular” choices available to watch.

The YouTube video of the day comes from the time of digital conversion. It’s a nice little slice of life at the drive-in.

Miles Today / Total: 105 / 34131 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: American Made / 184

Nearby Restaurant: Some of the best ice cream anywhere can be found at the Bellvale Farms Creamery in Warwick. For the season, I tried their pumpkin flavor, then I added some Black Dirt Blast on a homemade waffle cone. Did you know that with enough ice cream, you don’t need anything else for dinner?

Where I Virtually Stayed: The nicest place to stay in Warwick is probably the Inn at Stony Creek, a restored colonial farmhouse bed and breakfast built in 1840. My room had its own bathroom and good wifi. Breakfast was an amazing homemade experience, so different from the cookie-cutter hotel breakfast buffets. Good stuff!

Only in Warwick: Zen spirituality author and artist Frederick Franck created the Pacem in Terris sculpture garden around a rebuilt old windmill along the Wawayanda River in Warwick. It holds occasional poetry readings and concerts, but it’s nice and peaceful as it is.

Next stop: Circle Drive In Theatre, Dickson City PA.

Oct. 27: Mahoning Drive-In Theater, Lehighton PA

It’s Day 300 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. Thanks to a chunk of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, it took only an hour to drive from the Garden Drive In, up the road from tiny Hunlock Creek to the Mahoning Drive-In Theater a few miles west of Lehighton.

I’ll start with the happy ending. Owner Jeff Mattox with volunteers Virgil Cardamone and Matthew McClanahan run 35mm film on a projector to keep the Mahoning alive. By positioning the drive-in as a retro alternative, they’ve won over a loyal following. This cool, clear night was the start of the final weekend of the season, showing the first four installments of the Nightmare on Elm Street franchise.

I started with conclusion because the Mahoning has seen enough drama for a half-dozen articles, but I’ll try to hit the high points. First, despite what its web site used to say, the Mahoning opened in 1949, not a year earlier. In its March 26, 1949 issue Billboard magazine said that Max Korr “in association with Mitchell Rappeport and others” was just then building the drive-in.

The reference books for 1952 listed the owner as the A. M. Ellis Theatres Co. The (Allentown PA) Morning Call wrote on May 23, 1952 that Mitchell Rapaport had sued the drive-in and A. M. Ellis Theatres Co. Separately, the drive-in had sued Ellis Theatres for interfering with operations. It was a complicated, long story of loans, intertwined businesses, and hiring Max M. Korr Enterprises two weeks earlier to buy and book films.

I’m not sure how that resolved, but I’d guess it had something to do with an auction notice for the drive-in (725 car capacity), its lease, equipment, and name in the Oct. 4 Philadelphia Inquirer. Five days later, The Morning Call wrote it was sold at auction by the Ellis Theater Company to Dr. Joseph J. Humphries and R. C. H. Becker Sr., although Billboard later reported it was sold to Max Korr and associates.

Despite the sale, the Motion Picture Almanacs (often slow to notice change) continued to list Ellis Theatres as the owner through the 1961 edition. The owner for at least the 1963-66 editions was Claude Reinhard, who had founded Palmerton TV Signal Corporation, an early cable TV company.

The Morning Call wrote on Aug 23, 1992 that Amos Theaters Inc. (owned by Joseph Farruggio) had owned the Mahoning since 1981. Its manager was described as “an employee of the Palmerton Telephone Company”. An airport was built adjacent to the drive-in in the mid-1960s, and that was frustrating Farruggio’s desire to add three more screens.

On Aug. 22, 1997 The Morning Call wrote about Farruggio preparing to show adult movies and trying not to run afoul of the Carbon County DA. “He’s shown no movies this year, but now says he’ll play the explicit films two weeks to maintain the drive-in’s 49 years of continuous operation, then close again.” Farruggio said he needed the proceeds to pay overdue taxes. (He eventually backed down and showed Mimic and Copland instead.)

In 1998, the Mahoning opened for only a few weeks because health permits “require the facility to be open at least one night a year.” Farruggio said the drive-in was celebrating its 50th season, which some misheard as 50th anniversary, and that might be the source of the confusion about when it opened.

The next owners I could find were Mike and Deb Danchak; check out WHYY‘s 2013 interview with them and Farruggio, including photos. Also in 2013, as the digital conversion loomed, the drive-in had a misadventure starring a guy who said he fixed up drive-ins but never told me which ones. My story and that guy’s comment can be found here. And it was briefly called the Big Pocono Outdoor Theater that year, and Honda’s Project Drive-In shot some of its footage there.

The Morning Call called Jeff Mattox “a new owner” on October 23, 2014, and that brings us to where we started. My favorite version of the story about the neat way the Mahoning works these days is at Cinepunx, though Freakin’ Awesome‘s take is also pretty good. You can also check out video of this year’s opener at WFMZ, Allentown’s News Leader.

I remember when some drive-in owners said there was no way they could show retro 35mm movies all season. I’m really glad that these guys were able to prove them wrong.

Miles Today / Total: 55 / 34026 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: A Nightmare on Elm Street / 183

Nearby Restaurant: The Red Castle Brewery in Lehighton had me at brewery. The sweet and spicy Asian butterfly shrimp were a nice straddle between fine dining and bar food, and the chicken corn chowder was just great comfort food. Top it with a nicely flavored wheat beer, and it’s a memorable visit.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Once again, the top-rated hotel in town according to Trip Advisor is another Hampton Inn. No one has to twist my arm to visit another nice hotel with dependable, if predictable, amenities. There were cookies at check-in, a clean, comfortable room, and the very good standard breakfast. No surprises, no problems.

Only in Lehighton: According to Roadside America, Stinson the (trademarked) Dinosaur is a skeletal T-rex, nine feet high and 15 feet long, and the brain-beast of Joe Bradley. Stinson is painted bright red (the official color of stroke awareness) and 30-inch versions are available for sale, each cut on a plasma table owned by a stroke victim. Reports are that he sways if you step on his metal feet.

Next stop: Warwick Drive-In Theatre, Warwick NY.

Oct. 26: Garden Drive In, Hunlock Creek PA

It’s Day 299 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It was another day of back highways through the forest as I thread the NY-PA border. This time it took over two hours to drive from the Elmira Drive-In Theatre, just west of Elmira NY, to the Garden Drive In, up the road from tiny Hunlock Creek PA and just across the Susquehanna River from Nanticoke PA.

This drive-in actually opened as the plural Gardens Drive-In Theatre (named for Hunlock Gardens) in July 1952. It was said to have room for 325 cars. It became the singular Garden in February 1954. I wonder whether the name change had anything to do with its amazing neon marquee, which looks about that old.

The drive-in was built by a group of investors headed by Theodore Roosevelt Cragle, who died of a heart attack in December 1955. His son Arthur took over the Garden.

More details emerge from Ronald Hontz’s sweeping History of Sweet Valley PA, written around 2003. Arthur Cragle ran the drive-in until 1986, when he sold it to Nelson and Diane Fey. They operated it until 1990 and passed it down to their daughter, Kimberly Barbacci, and her husband Doug. They’re still the owners now.

Current manager David Hudzik had been the Garden’s projectionist since 1979. Hontz wrote that Hudzik “has been the source for most of the info you read herein.” In 1986 the drive-in converted from in-car speakers to AM radio; they added FM in 1990.

Adjacent to the river, the Garden floods frequently. In June 1972, Hurricane Agnes caused extensive damage with water over the roof of the concession stand. Hontz wrote, “Following that event, Hudzik has gotten the removal of equipment down to a science. A team of five guys can now remove all the valuable items in three hours.”

Hontz wrote that the Garden added a second screen on the southeastern corner of its property in 2002. (The Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, writing much later, said it was in 2000.) At any rate, the drive-in added a second marquee to hold more movie titles around 2004. The main screen area holds about 450 cars now, and the second has room for another 250 or so. They’ve made the change to digital projection, and I’ll bet Hudzik knows how to get that away from flood waters on a few hours’ notice.

The video of the day is from WNEP, Moosic PA’s News Leader. It celebrates the Garden’s May 2012 reopening after a September 2011 flood that was so powerful it ripped the roof off the concession stand.

“We were uncertain after that last flood about what we were going to do,” Doug Barbacci told the Times Leader years later. “It was really folks we got messages from on the internet and on the website or who called and said ‘Hey, if you need any help, we’ll come down.’ People were willing to help shovel dirt and move stuff. Whatever we needed help with, they were willing to do it. It may sound incidental but it was something that made a difference.”

I look forward to seeing that gorgeous marquee lit again, but for now, it’s closed for the season.

Miles Today / Total: 101 / 33971 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 182

Nearby Restaurant: On the way back to Nanticoke but still north of the Susquehanna is a place that’s been around even longer than the Garden, Stookey’s Bar-B-Que. The secret homemade sauce wasn’t what I’m used to, but the meat was as tender as any other good barbecue joint. The pork ribs dinner with baked potato and baked beans was better than many I’ve eaten at twice the price.

Where I Virtually Stayed: The closest hotels to the Garden are a few miles downriver in Wilkes-Barre. The top-rated hotel there according to Trip Advisor is the Hampton Inn. No one has to twist my arm to visit another nice hotel with dependable, if predictable, amenities. There were cookies at check-in, a clean, comfortable room, and the very good standard breakfast. No surprises, no problems.

Only in Hunlock Creek: On the outskirts of Nanticoke is Concrete City, a square of 20 double houses built in 1911 by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad for a few of its workers. Everything including the outhouses was built entirely of concrete. ExplorePAHistory.com reports that despite measures to inhibit moisture absorption, eventually the interior walls dripped with condensation, and Concrete City was abandoned in 1924. The buildings were too tough to easily demolish, so they’re still there now.

Next stop: Mahoning Drive-In Theater, Lehighton PA.