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04:45 PMPCN Tours Glades Pike Winery
05:00 PMPCN Tours Reading Soda Works
05:18 PMPCN Tours Patrick Murphy Pipe Organs
06:00 PMPCN Tours Whitehorse Brewery
06:17 PMPCN Tours Dangelo's Custom Built
06:45 PMWeather World
07:00 PMOn the Issues: Maternal Healthcare Coverage
07:16 PMOn the Issues: PA University Funding Formula

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PA Books: “Sewn in Coal Country” with Robert Wolensky

By the mid-1930s, Pennsylvania’s anthracite coal industry was facing a steady decline. Mining areas such as the Wyoming Valley around the cities of Wilkes-Barre and Pittston were full of willing workers (including women) who proved irresistibly attractive to New York City’s “runaway shops”—ladies’ apparel factories seeking lower labor and other costs. The International Ladies’ Garment […]

PA Books: “John Marshall: The Final Founder” with Robert Strauss

Eighteenth- and 19th-century contemporaries believed Marshall to be, if not the equal of George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, at least very close to that pantheon. “John Marshall: The Final Founder” demonstrates that not only can Marshall be considered one of those Founding Fathers, but that what he did as the Chief Justice was not just […]

PA Books: “Never I Shall Forget These Human People” with Roger Rank

From September 1944 to February 1946, the Reading Army Air Field outside of Reading, Pennsylvania, maintained a camp for German prisoners of war, who served as workers at the air base and on the farms around Berks County. Several of the POW’s were assigned to the base Paint Shop, which was managed by a civilian […]

PA Books: “Frederick Watts and the Founding of Penn State” with Roger Williams

Frederick Watts came to prominence during the nineteenth century as a lawyer and a railroad company president, but his true interests lay in agricultural improvement and in raising the economic, social, and political standing of Pennsylvania’s farmers. After being elected founding president of The Pennsylvania State Agricultural Society in 1851, he used his position to […]

PA Books: “Made Free and Thrown Open to the Public” with Bernadette Lear

“Made Free and Thrown Open to the Public” charts the history of public libraries and librarianship in Pennsylvania. Based on archival research at more than fifty libraries and historical societies, it describes a long progression from private, subscription-based associations to publicly funded institutions, highlighting the dramatic period during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries […]

PA Books: “Biddle, Jackson, and a Nation in Turmoil” with Cordelia Biddle

The first half of the 19th century was an era of upheaval. The United States nearly lost the War of 1812. Partisanship became endemic during violent clashes regarding States’ Rights and the abolition of slavery. The battle between Andrew Jackson and Nicholas Biddle over the Second Bank of the United States epitomized a nation in […]

PA Books: “Armistead and Hancock” with Tom McMillan

In a war of brother versus brother, theirs has become the most famous broken friendship: Union general Winfield Scott Hancock and Confederate general Lewis Armistead. Michael Shaara’s The Killer Angels (1974) and the movie Gettysburg (1993), based on the novel, presented a close friendship sundered by war, but history reveals something different from the legend […]

PA Books: “Harrisburg in World War II” with Rodney Ross

As the nation entered into the throes of World War II, Harrisburg was prepared to answer the call of service. Prideful as a “beehive of industry,” the city was a hub for wartime manufacturing, railroads and distribution. Bond drives attracted celebrities such as Abbott and Costello as locals enjoyed “Coffee MacArthur” and “Doughnuts Doolittle” for […]

PA Books: “Geography, Geology and Genius” with Martha Capwell Fox

This is the first book that tells the story of how a small slice of eastern Pennsylvania became the cradle of the American Industrial Revolution. Pennsylvania was America’s powerhouse in the nineteenth century, supplying the hot-burning, high-energy anthracite coal that ignited the iron and, later, steel industries that transformed the United States. This revolution began […]

PA Books: “Unsung Hero of Gettysburg” with Edward Longacre

Gen. David McMurtrie Gregg (1833–1917) was one of the ablest and most successful commanders of cavalry in any Civil War army. Pennsylvania-born, West Point–educated, and deeply experienced in cavalry operations prior to the conflict, his career personified that of the typical cavalry officer in the mid-nineteenth-century American army. Gregg achieved distinction on many battlefields, including […]

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