Épisodes

  • EPISODE 5.11 REBOOT - Strand Theatre at 100: Hometown History hosts an evening of memory sharing
    Jan 8 2026

    EPISODE 5.11 REBOOT - Strand Theatre at 100: Hometown History hosts an evening of memory sharing at the Appell Center


    Young John Andrews arrived at York’s Strand Theatre early on a Thursday in late August 1925 equipped with a newspaper, a magazine, a lunch box and a soapbox to rest his feet. The Yorker was there about 12 hours in advance of opening night for the brand-new North George Street theatre and silent movie house. His goal was to get a free season pass for a year as the first patron to purchase a Strand ticket. After a day’s wait he met his goal, becoming of the first of thousands to walk under the theater’s marquee in the next century. Here we tell about who performed on the Strand stage, how the venue reflected an ever-changing York County and how the residents rallied twice in the past 50 years to make this glittering place for fun and entertainment.


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    19 min
  • Hometown History Episode 5.7: Hellam Township’s Mifflin House PART 3
    Jul 10 2025

    Hometown History Episode 5.7: Hellam Township’s Mifflin House and its American Revolution, Underground Railroad and Civil War legacy PART 2



    About a decade ago, a developer turned the ignition on plans to demolish Hellam Township’s Mifflin House and build a warehouse on the farm that surrounded it. That, in turn, ignited a grassroots protest that grew into a roaring engine of resistance from preservation professionals and government officials, who saw the historic and cultural significance of this early 1800s stone Quaker home atop a knoll overlooking the Susquehanna. After a compromise, Susquehanna National Heritage Area ended with the prize, and is developing plans of its own for an Underground Railroad center in the old stone house, a Susquehanna Discovery Center in its barn and establishment of a museum of Susquehanna River art on its grounds. Meanwhile, work is underway to understand the property’s Confederate and Union links to the Battle of Wrightsville that raged in the town below. In May, the first members of the public stepped onto the property as part of organized tours of the Mifflin House and its surrounding fields. Hometown History’s Jamie Noerpel and Dominish Marie Miller tell the story of those who made history on this historic land and those telling that story today.

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    11 min
  • Hometown History Episode 5.7: Hellam Township’s Mifflin House PART 2
    Jul 10 2025

    Hometown History Episode 5.7: Hellam Township’s Mifflin House and its American Revolution, Underground Railroad and Civil War legacy PART 2


    About a decade ago, a developer turned the ignition on plans to demolish Hellam Township’s Mifflin House and build a warehouse on the farm that surrounded it. That, in turn, ignited a grassroots protest that grew into a roaring engine of resistance from preservation professionals and government officials, who saw the historic and cultural significance of this early 1800s stone Quaker home atop a knoll overlooking the Susquehanna. After a compromise, Susquehanna National Heritage Area ended with the prize, and is developing plans of its own for an Underground Railroad center in the old stone house, a Susquehanna Discovery Center in its barn and establishment of a museum of Susquehanna River art on its grounds. Meanwhile, work is underway to understand the property’s Confederate and Union links to the Battle of Wrightsville that raged in the town below. In May, the first members of the public stepped onto the property as part of organized tours of the Mifflin House and its surrounding fields. Hometown History’s Jamie Noerpel and Dominish Marie Miller tell the story of those who made history on this historic land and those telling that story today.

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    15 min
  • Hometown History Episode 5.7: Hellam Township’s Mifflin House PART 1
    Jul 10 2025

    Hometown History Episode 5.7: Hellam Township’s Mifflin House and its American Revolution, Underground Railroad and Civil War legacy PART 1


    About a decade ago, a developer turned the ignition on plans to demolish Hellam Township’s Mifflin House and build a warehouse on the farm that surrounded it. That, in turn, ignited a grassroots protest that grew into a roaring engine of resistance from preservation professionals and government officials, who saw the historic and cultural significance of this early 1800s stone Quaker home atop a knoll overlooking the Susquehanna. After a compromise, Susquehanna National Heritage Area ended with the prize, and is developing plans of its own for an Underground Railroad center in the old stone house, a Susquehanna Discovery Center in its barn and establishment of a museum of Susquehanna River art on its grounds. Meanwhile, work is underway to understand the property’s Confederate and Union links to the Battle of Wrightsville that raged in the town below. In May, the first members of the public stepped onto the property as part of organized tours of the Mifflin House and its surrounding fields. Hometown History’s Jamie Noerpel and Dominish Marie Miller tell the story of those who made history on this historic land and those telling that story today.

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    9 min
  • Hometown History EXTRA with Pete Miele
    Jul 2 2025

    About a decade ago, a developer turned the ignition on plans to demolish Hellam Township’s Mifflin House and build a warehouse on the farm that surrounded it. That, in turn, ignited a grassroots protest that grew into a roaring engine of resistance from preservation professionals and government officials, who saw the historic and cultural significance of this early 1800s stone Quaker home atop a knoll overlooking the Susquehanna. After a compromise, Susquehanna National Heritage Area ended with the prize, and is developing plans of its own for an Underground Railroad center in the old stone house, a Susquehanna Discovery Center in its barn and establishment of a museum of Susquehanna River art on its grounds. Meanwhile, work is underway to understand the property’s Confederate and Union links to the Battle of Wrightsville that raged in the town below. In May, the first members of the public stepped onto the property as part of organized tours of the Mifflin House and its surrounding fields. Hometown History’s Jamie Noerpel and Dominish Marie Miller tell the story of those who made history on this historic land and those telling that story today

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    22 min
  • Hometown History EXTRA with Greg Halpin, 5.6
    Jun 1 2025
    Greg Halpin - A retired fire chief shares the history of firefighting, the rebirth of the Police Museum, and his efforts to document lock-ups around the county.
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    14 min
  • Almshouses, prisons, orphanages: York County’s commitment to community care in the 1800, 5.6
    Jun 1 2025
    Episode 5.6 In the 1800s, York County grew up as a community. The county provided an almshouse and hospital for children, poor people and disabled adults. The Ladies Aid Society supported soldiers and the York County community in the Civil War. York Hospital formed to host patients needing overnight care. The Children’s Home of York formed as an orphanage to care for families disrupted by the deadly Civil War. A new county prison went up, a place designed to keep the county safe. Most of these organizations - pillars of compassion or places to keep people or the community safe - operate today to help form, reform, and enhance the community in York County.
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    26 min
  • Hometown History: Fighting Frenchman Lafayette’s brief visits left long legacy in York County, 5.3
    Apr 21 2025

    The Marquis de Lafayette’s spent less than a week total in his visits to York County, but his legacy marks our landscape: the sculpture outside the Gates House, a former men’s club, a street near York’s oldest park and the name of the nicest banquet room at WellSpan Park. In the February episode of Hometown History, Jamie Noerpel and Dominish Marie Miller tell about this French nobleman who came alongside America’s quest for independence in the American Revolution.

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    16 min