Dec. 21: Point Drive-In, Northumberland PA

Point Drive-In marquee and back of one screen

Photo from the Point Drive-In Facebook page

It’s Day 355 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. On an ugly, wintry day of driving, I was glad it only took about a half hour to go from the Pike Drive In Theatre in Montgomery PA to the Point Drive-In between Northumberland and Mechanicsville PA.

The Point opened under a different name. The June 21, 1952 issue of Billboard wrote “Harold E. Bell opened his new 250-car Arrow Drive-In near Danville, Pa.” Later that year, Billboard noted that the drive-in had installed “new high-intensity lamps”, perhaps to increase its capacity. By 1955, the Motion Picture Almanac listed the Arrow at 400 cars, owned by “Bell & Kipp Bros.”

An October 1, 1957 ad in the Hazleton Standard-Sentinel for the Australian adventure film Walk Into Hell mentioned the Point Drive-In in Danville, the first reference I could find to its new name. The MPA, frequently slow to notice changes, updated its listing by 1959.

The next solid information I could find was in an article in the Winter 2005-2006 issue of Spectrum magazine, hosted at Archive.org. It interviewed current owner Dave Renn about the 1970s and 1980s when the Point showed some X-rated movies. “There was very low overhead,” Renn said. “They needed only one person to run the projector and one for the concession stand – people rarely got out of their cars.”

The Point stopped showing adult films after the 1987 season. Owner Joe Farruggio, whose Sportservice Corporation had purchased the Point some time before 1980, then transformed the Point from single to triple screen and added FM stereo sound.

Renn apparently told the Drive-In Theater Adventures blog in 2015 that he had owned the Point for 27 years, which is only a little off from the Spectrum article, which said he “took over” in 1990.

In October 2014, Renn held a Jackalope music festival to raise money to finance the conversion to digital projection, according to The Daily Item of Sunbury. Something must have worked, because the Point outfitted its first digital projector in June 2016, and its movie listings this season suggest it found a second. On the other hand, it was still raising money in early October 2017 for a third digital projector.

The Point closed for the season at the end of October. I’m glad it promised to reopen next spring.

Miles Today / Total: 30 / 39436 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 200

Nearby Restaurant: The closest restaurants are all in Danville, and the one I chose for dinner was the Old Forge Brewing Company. Heck, it’s got Brewing right in its name! I had a salad to stay healthy, then dove in to my ribeye steak brushed with beer butter. I don’t know how one would make beer butter, but it sure sounds great. For dessert, I enjoyed a stout float, like a root beer float without the root. Good times!

Where I Virtually Stayed: The closest hotel to the Point is the Pine Barn Inn in Danville. For such a homey-sounding name, it’s a modern-looking place. There was coffee waiting for me. My comfortable room had all the modern amenities. And there’s a full restaurant on-site for dinner and, most important, breakfast. It was a welcome refuge on a cold, drizzly day.

Only in Northumberland: According to Wikipedia, Northumberland was founded in 1772. Its land was purchased from the Iroquois in the first Treaty of Fort Stanwix in 1768, and the village was laid out in 1772. During the American Revolution, Northumberland was evacuated in response to British-led attacks during the Big Runaway in 1778, and was only finally resettled in 1784.

Next stop: Laurel Drive-in, Hazleton PA.

Dec. 20: Pike Drive In Theatre, Montgomery PA

It’s Day 354 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I-80 is still there and I got to see more of it this day, driving over an hour and a half from the Super 322 Drive-In Theatre in the unincorporated community of Woodland PA to the Pike Drive In Theatre in Montgomery PA.

The Williamsport Sun-Gazette reported on Oct. 30, 1952, “Three city men have started construction of a modern, 800-car theater on the Montgomery Pike. They are Harry J. Miele, Harry L. Nixon and Benjamin Pulizzi. Mr. Miele said the theater being built at an estimated cost of $135,000, will open about April 1. Clearing work on the land, about 12 acres, started last week.” It opened on April 16, 1953, showing Son of Paleface.

Strange that he wasn’t mentioned in the 1952 newspaper article, but Billboard magazine reported a little after the fact on April 18, 1953, “Charles Collins and his partners are about ready to open the Pike Drive-In near Montgomery, Pa.” Both the Theatre Catalog and Motion Picture Almanac during those times listed Collins as the first owner.

After that, the only ownership information I could find was in those MPA annual lists. John Shade was listed as the owner in the 1961 edition. The Sportservice Corporation, which ran at least a couple dozen drive-ins in Indiana, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, owned the Pike in 1976-82. Somebody named G. Tomka was the listed owner in 1984, and J. Farruggio closed out the MPA lists in 1986-88. That was probably Joe Farruggio, known to have owned the nearby Point and converted that drive-in from one screen to three.

According to the official history page at the Pike Drive-In web site, it also expanded from one screen to three “in the 1990’s”. HistoricAerials.com photos suggest that happened in the early 1990s, so maybe that was more of Farruggio’s work.

From that point, I’ve got nothing until the current owner arrived. According to his LinkedIn page, Joe McDade bought the Pike in March 2006. In 2014, he started showing retro horror movies to raise money for digital projectors for his three screens, a story described by the embedded video of the day from WNEP, Scranton’s News Leader. That station also had a nice video report in September 2016 about the positive results of the digital conversion, which had covered two screens by that point.

The Pike closed for the season in October. I’m glad it promised to reopen next spring.

Miles Today / Total: 93 / 39406 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 200

Nearby Restaurant: The Station House in Montgomery is another good example of an unassuming small-town restaurant, across the highway from the railroad tracks, with good comfort food. I stopped in for dinner and had a couple of grilled pork chops with veggies and a baked potato. What a friendly place!

Where I Virtually Stayed: Google said the closest hotels were just up the road in Williamsport. Just to prove I’m not a slave to the Hampton Inn, and to save about $35, I chose the Comfort Inn in town. There were cookies and coffee waiting at check-in. My comfortable room had all the modern amenities. Breakfast included meat, eggs and waffles. And best of all, I still had that extra cash in my pocket when I left.

Only in Montgomery: Just south of town in Allenwood is Clyde Peeling’s Reptiland, a specialized zoo that has what you would expect and more. The room full of parakeets is an interesting attraction, as is the chance to feed a tortoise. There are komodo dragons in an extensive habitat. And there’s original art for sale, painted by the creatures on display.

Next stop: Point Drive-In, Northumberland PA.

Dec. 19: Super 322 Drive-In Theatre, Woodland PA

It’s Day 353 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. Thanks to the miracle of I-80, it took me less than an hour to drive from the Moonlite Drive-In Theatre just west of Brookville PA to the Super 322 Drive-In Theatre in the unincorporated community of Woodland PA.

After a few weeks of drive-in web sites with inaccurate history pages or limited history pages or no history pages, it was so nice to find the Super 322. Its history page is fairly thorough, and every detail I’ve found independently checks out. Here’s what it says, along with my parenthetical comments.

The Super 322 Drive-in Theatre was opened on May 26, 1950, built by the Theodore Grance Outdoor Theatre Co. Ownership changed hands a few times (although Grance was still listed as the owner in the 1966 Motion Picture Almanac) until being bought in the 1970s by Royer and Favuzza from the Bellefonte area. (Probably Frank Royer and Joseph Favuzza, both linked to the Midway Drive-In in Mifflintown.) They made improvements including AM radio; the Super 322 was Pennsylvania’s second drive-in to add an AM radio sound system. The removal of external speakers increased capacity (from 600 cars, according to old reference books) to about 650 cars. In the 1980s, FM stereo sound capabilities were added.

After working for over 20 years at the theatre, Bill Frankhouser, together with his wife Barb, purchased the Super 322 (from “Mr. Favuzza” in 2001, according to a 2013 article in GANT Daily). They have also made improvements including a new marquee complete with a colorful neon sign. In 2001, the Super 322 Drive-in Theatre was granted eligibility to be listed in the National Register of Historic Places by the Pennsylvania Museum Commission. In 2005, one the original neon signs was back in use after being restored. It features pink neon. The entrance lights have been replaced as has been the entire fence at the back of the field. The ramps have all been graded and re-shaped so you can enjoy the best view of the big screen. The ticket booth was replaced in 2010. The Super 322 opened for the 2014 season in digital, having the projector holding the record for the brightest light on the planet!! (End of self-history.)

I wish that every drive-in’s history page was as thorough as the Super 322’s. A 600-car lot was unusually large for a rural drive-in in the 1950s; I wonder why Grance and company built it that big. Also, there were a surprising number of “Super” + Highway number drive-ins listed in Pennsylvania. I wonder what was up with all that?

The Super 322 closed for the season in September. I’m glad it promised to reopen next spring.

Miles Today / Total: 48 / 39313 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 200

Nearby Restaurant: The closest restaurant to the Super 322 is Gio’s BBQ, and it would be worth visiting even if it weren’t so close. I had a platter with chicken and pork, but I especially enjoyed the BBQ baked beans. And the French fries were an excellent way of transferring more dipped sauce into my mouth.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Google said the closest hotels were in Clearfield, and one of those was a Hampton Inn, so that was the end of that deliberation. There were cookies and coffee at check-in, and possibly all day. At some point, I had to go to my king bed room, which had all the modern amenities. Breakfast in the morning was the typical high Hampton standard. Same old (good) stuff.

Only in Woodland: Over in Clearfield, Denny’s Beer Barrel Pub has a tradition worthy of Roadside America. Pretty much in the middle of nowhere, with little publicity, Denny’s has “the World’s Largest Burgers”. In 1998 Denny Liegey introduced “Ye Olde 96er,” which is nine pounds altogether, six of it beef. Guinness calls it the “largest hamburger commercially available,” and their certificate hangs prominently in the dining room. Competitive eaters have another name for it: “the Holy Grail of the burger world.”

Next stop: Pike Drive In Theatre, Montgomery PA.