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This Is Lower Merion And Narberth

Serving the Main Line Community

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Three Governors Of Pennsylvania Who Lived In Lower Merion

George Earle

Lived on Grays Lane in Haverford. He was elected Governor in 1934.

John C. Bell

Lived on Mansion Lane in Wynnewood. Attended Episcopal Academy, in Merion. Buried at St. Asaphs’s Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd.

John C. Bell Jr.

He was elected as Lt. Governor in 1942. On January 2, 1947,  then-Governor Edward Martin resigned as Governor to become a U.S. Senator. On that same day  Bell was inaugurated as Governor. He held the position until January 21, 1947, when James H. Duff became Governor. 

Notwithstanding his record-breaking brief tenure as Governor, Bell had a long career in public service. He became a member of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 1952, and was Chief Justice from 1961 until he retired in 1972.

John C. Bell’s brother was Bert Bell, founder of the Philadelphia Eagles and former Commissioner of the NFL.

Milton Shapp

Lived at 626 Bowman Avenue in Merion

Unlike Bell, who was never elected, and Earle, who was elected by a razor-thin margin, Milt from Merion in 1970 defeated  Raymond Broderick (he was Lt. Governor at that time) by more than 500,000.

Similar to Earle, Shapp’s neighbors in Lower Merion didn’t do much to help him achieve his landslide win. Broderick carried the township by 2,314 votes, winning 20 of 34 precincts. Narberth was even more solid for Broderick. Shapp did manage to hold Broderick to a tie at his own polling place in Merion.

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Sports

Family Learning To Luge

Want to Try Luge? From Lower Merion, It Starts With a Drive to Lake Placid

I was watching the Luge on NBC over the weekend. I thought it was boring, especially when juxtaposed against the more dramatic events, like curling.  The color commentator kept explaining how each “slider” was doing something slightly better or worse than the others, but to my untrained eye, they all looked the same: feet first, […]

Arts and Entertainment

These Garments Have Been Politically Maligned

Most non-Arabs who wear the keffiyeh do not intend it to be Anti-Semitic in any way. They wear it as an expression of sympathy for Palestinian civilians, support for human rights, concern about war, or identification with a broader cause of national identity and self-determination. In their minds, it is directed toward Palestinians, not against […]

What Does My Fountain Pen Have In Common With The Former Lord & Taylor In Bala Cynwyd?

Both come out of the work of Raymond Loewy and his design firm. Raymond Loewy (1893–1986) helped define what modern America looked like in the mid-20th century. Through his design firm, he worked across an unusually wide range of industries—transportation, consumer products, branding, and architecture—often simultaneously. No one in history is more closely associated with […]

January 16-18: The Philly Pen Show — A Delightfully Analog Experience

f you’re looking for a break from screens, alerts, and endless scrolling, the Philly Pen Show might be the cure—at least temporarily. It’s an unapologetically analog event: pens, paper, ink, and the people who still care deeply about them. Whether you’re a serious collector, someone who misses the feel of writing by hand, or just […]

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