Dec. 4: The Bar-Ann Drive-In, Portage PA

It’s Day 338 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. There sure are a lot of drive-ins clustered close together in Pennsylvania, and that’s a good thing. On this day, it meant that my drive was less than a half hour from the Silver Drive In in Johnstown to The Bar-Ann Drive-In in Portage.

The Bar-Ann is a rare example of a drive-in where I know more about its early ownership history than more recent years. Part of that was the consistency of that early ownership. George Wasko owned and operated the Bar-Ann from its opening through 1994, the year before he passed away at the age of 82.

I’m not sure when the Bar-Ann opened. Wasko’s obituary said it was 1954, but a 1985 article in the Altoona Mirror said “Wasko has owned the Bar-Ann since its construction in 1955.” A 1991 article in the Mirror said that the idea for the theater “came to Wasko in 1955 after a vacation trip”.

The occasion of that June 1991 Mirror article was the happy reopening of the Bar-Ann after it had been closed for the 1988-1990 seasons while Wasko battled cancer. Reminiscing about the inspirational trip in 1955, he said “I had heard so much about this (outdoor theater stuff). We went up to Canada and saw it and we said, ‘This is it!’ And we opened a drive-in.”

Wasko picked a 13-acre wooded tract on a hill, built a 40×80-foot screen, cleared out nine acres of viewing space, and installed in-car speakers. He named the drive-in after his two daughters, Barbara and Peggy Ann.

When Wasko had recovered from his cancer scare, the townspeople of Portage urged him to reopen the Bar-Ann, so that’s what he did. At the time he had planned to run it for two more seasons.

There followed a couple of decades where I’m not sure what happened. In 2013, the Bar-Ann advertised in the Mirror to drum up votes for Honda’s Project: Drive-In. Owner Don Gawel told The Tribune-Democrat, “I’m just doing what I have to do to keep our little piece of history alive here. We don’t have much of a choice.”

The Bar-Ann got in the middle of a spat the following winter about its sign which happened to be in the middle of an alleyway. The Portage Township supervisors noticed that it was a liability to have the sign where it had stood for 58 years and sued the owners to get it removed. A Change.org petition with over 3000 supporters laid out the drive-in’s perspective. Fortunately, the supervisors came to an agreement in April 2014 with the drive-in, as reported in the Mirror, to move the sign to the side of the alley and to provide sufficient liability insurance to cover it. Once that issue was cleared up, the Bar-Ann converted to digital projection, and it’s been going strong ever since.

The embedded YouTube video of the day comes from WJAC, Johnstown’s News Leader, quickly showing off that new digital projector.

The drive-in had closed for the season after Labor Day weekend this year. I’m glad it will be back in the spring.

Miles Today / Total: 17 / 38732 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 199

Nearby Restaurant: Half-hidden in an alleyway is some fine Italian cuisine. Nonna T’s Cucina serves up plenty of pizza, but there’s a lot more in its little restaurant. I had the chicken parmigiana with a salad and garlic rolls. I love garlic rolls.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Google said that some of the closest hotels to the Bar-Ann were back in Johnstown, which meant that I went back to the Hampton Inn for the pleasure of two nights in the same hotel. There were still plenty of cookies and coffee available at check-in. My comfortable room had all the modern amenities. And breakfast was the Hampton standard with plenty of hot protein choices to keep me going on increasingly cool mornings.

Only in Portage: Just five miles northeast in Lilly, there’s a monument to the night of April 5, 1924 when Lilly’s residents repelled 400 armed KKK marchers. As reported by the Discovery PA blog, “Armed with few firearms and fire hoses the townspeople rioted against the Klansmen being in their home and successfully drove them out. … The story made national headlines about how the small town stood up and took action against them.”

Next stop: Carrolltown Hi-Way Drive In, Carrolltown PA.

Dec. 3: Silver Drive In, Johnstown PA

It’s Day 337 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I continued my tour of western Pennsylvania, driving a little more than an hour from the Evergreen Drive-In Theater in Mount Pleasant to the Silver Drive In in Johnstown.

The Silver opened in 1950. At least, that’s what a mural at the Silver says, and I can’t find any reason not to believe it. A note in the July 8, 1950 issue of Billboard magazine said that “Maurice Fruhlinger, for many years manager of the Met Theater, Baltimore, … will manage the soon-to-be opened Silver Drive-In”. The 1952 Theatre Catalog listed it in nearby Windber, owned by Maurice Fruhlinger and Louis Hanna. It stayed with the Hanna Theatre Service through the early 1970s when County Amusement acquired it. And that’s most of what I could find of the Silver’s early years.

The modern story of the Silver begins when Rick Rosko reopened the drive-in in 2005, according to a story in The Tribune-Democrat of Johnstown. (Drive-Ins.com says that it closed in 2003.) In 2008, the drive-in survived when Richland Township supervisors rejected a zoning change for a commercial development. Continental Properties of Menomonee Falls WI had wanted to put up a strip mall there.

In 2013, the Silver joined dozens of other drive-ins in trying to land a free digital projector from Honda’s Project: Drive-In. Rosko told The Tribune-Democrat that the buzz about rallying to save the Silver had improved the drive-in’s visibility. “I’m tickled to see that. It’s increased business, too. We’re seeing more people at night than we had been earlier this summer,” he said. “At the end of the day, when the dust settles, it’s going to be a real positive for us no matter what.”

Sure enough, the Silver didn’t win a projector but Rosko was able to fund the digital conversion internally in April 2014.

In 2015, Rosko grappled with Richland Township again in trying to start a flea market on the Silver’s grounds. He worked out a deal where vendors would all need separate licenses if they sold their goods “on consignment” with the Silver collecting all the receipts to turn in to the township the next day. “When you’re only doing something once a week – and its outdoors – its hard to have people to sign up in advance,” Rosko told The Tribune-Democrat.

The Silver’s Facebook page had been neglected for four years, (update: they sent me an email a few months later to say that they post regularly but delete those posts quickly to avoid confusion), but I’m happy to say that it made a fresh post in October 2017 to say See You In The Spring. Even though the drive-in was dark this night, it was nice to know that it’ll be back soon enough.

The embedded YouTube video of the day is another dreamy vignette by Stuffthats Gone. I wish I knew how they got the poles to wobble like that.

Miles Today / Total: 56 / 38715 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 199

Nearby Restaurant: I found yet another regional restaurant chain I hadn’t tried. Hoss’s Steak & Sea House has some great choices for entrees, but what I really needed was a trip to its great soup and salad bar. Fortunately, it came with my ribeye steak, filling my belly with all the nutrition and roughage I’d need for days.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Looking around the hotel choices in Johnstown, I balanced cost against the benefits of each … who am I kidding? I went to the Hampton Inn. There were plenty of cookies and coffee available at check-in. My comfortable room had all the modern amenities. And breakfast was the Hampton standard with plenty of hot protein choices to keep me going on increasingly cool mornings.

Only in Johnstown: Over in Windber, home of the the Silver’s founding manager, there’s a graveyard of old trolley cars. According to The Vintage News, they were collected by Ed Metka, a retired civil engineer with a passion for streetcars, who worked for the Army Corps of Engineers and who once fixed them. From the photos, many of them are in really bad shape, but the 2016 article said that Metka has been in talks with a number of East Coast cities that have started to revisit the idea of streetcars.

Next stop: The Bar-Ann Drive-In, Portage PA.

Dec. 2: Evergreen Drive-In Theater, Mount Pleasant PA

Aerial view of a full house at the Evergreen Drive-In

Photo from the Evergreen Drive-In Facebook page

It’s Day 336 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. Just when I thought my drives were short, this one was shorter. It took barely 15 minutes to drive from the Comet Drive In just south of Connellsville PA to the Evergreen Drive-In Theater in Mount Pleasant PA.

The drive-in opened as the Ruthorn in June 1947. That was probably pronounced roo-thorn (not rut-horn) because the name was a portmanteau of its two owners: Donald J. Ruth and Robert M. Thorn. During the winter after the 1948 season, it was renamed the Evergreen. Since Ruth eventually became the sole owner, my guess is that the name change signalled the end of Thorn’s participation.

Ruth ran the Evergreen until he passed away in 1961. His widow sold the drive-in that off-season to Homer and Rita Michael. Box Office magazine wrote in April 1962, “The Michaels … have modernized the Evergreen, first with a complete fresh paint job, including screen resurfacing, and also with installation of new in-car speakers.”

In 1998, Homer Michael, a former police officer, put out the word that he wanted to sell the Evergreen. Joe Warren, who had operated the Greater Pittsburgh Drive-In in North Versailles until it closed in 1997, was looking to get back into the business after a year off. The deal closed that off-season. Warren installed a newer projection system and reopened the drive-in in June 1999.

Warren told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in July 1999 that he was looking to add at least one more screen as soon as he could. “We have to if we want to survive,” he said. The Evergreen’s history page says that two additional screens were added after the 2001 season.

The Morning Call caught up with Warren in 2016. They said he will tell you he was ‘born into’ the business and will show his birth certificate listing his home as a New York drive-in as proof. “I was born in New York where my family was building a drive-in,” he said. Warren made the digital conversion in 2014, and the Evergreen appears ready for several more decades of entertainment.

Even though it’s a Saturday night, on this first weekend of December, the drive-in had been closed for the season for several weeks. It’s nice to know that it’ll be back next spring.

Miles Today / Total: 11 / 38659 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 199

Nearby Restaurant: Time once again for some great barbecue, this time at Gorky’s Smokin’ Grill. For a late lunch, I ordered a full rack of ribs with cornbread and baked beans and swapped out Kansas City sauce with Gorky’s to see which I would prefer. With a cold beer or two to go with it all, I definitely didn’t need to eat again for the rest of the day.

Where I Virtually Stayed: There aren’t a whole lot of hotels in Mount Pleasant, but there’s a Holiday Inn Express less than a mile from the Evergreen, so that seemed like a pretty smart choice. There were cookies and coffee waiting at check-in. My comfortable room had the full set of modern amenities including a Keurig coffee maker. And the hot breakfast in the morning included those addicting HIE cinnamon rolls. Good stuff!

Only in Mount Pleasant: Just north of town, there’s a historical marker commemorating the Morewood Massacre. According to ExplorePAHistory.com, it reads: On April 2, 1891, at the nearby Morewood Mines of the H.C. Frick Coke Co., sheriff’s deputies killed these strikers; two more died later. These were among some 16,000 workers striking for higher wages in the coke region. Thousands of mourners attended the funeral of the original seven victims, who were buried in a mass grave in St. John’s Cemetery, Scottdale.

Next stop: Silver Drive In, Johnstown PA.