I was disoriented! The Steamtown Mall and associated parking deck, as well as Steamtown NHS itself, are indeed on the left side of the photo, which is the south side of Lackwanna Ave. (the view in Frank's Google map photo is looking west). If you click on the image and go to the Google map page you can pan around the entire avenue on both sides and better understand the layout; you can actually see a sliver of the parking deck between (behind) two corner buildings separated by a narrow street.De Soto Frank wrote:Was discussing this with friends this evening, who are native Scrantonians ( I am a transplanted Baltimorean )...Henry wrote:Several blocks on that side of Lackawanna Ave. were demolished some years (15-20?) ago to make way for the Steamtown Mall and a parking deck, which are the newer buildings in the photo, so the sites of the stores referred to are history. There is still viable retail along the avenue.
The South side of Lackwanna Ave (the left side in the photo), between Washington Avenue and Mifflin Avenue (about four contiguous blocks) were razed in the early 1990's, to make way for the Steamtown Mall. I remember the day they imploded those blocks: they chose a Sunday morning, and I was in the choir loft at St. Peter's Cathedral, about two blocks north, for the choral mass (10:30 AM?); we heard air-horns blast the warning, then a few moments later, there was a muffled "boom", and then we felt a shudder as the buildings came down.
The buildings on the North side of Lackawanna Ave were replaced at various times; several of the old mercantile buildings were destroyed by various fires in the 1960's and '70's (Scranton Talking Machine Co. among them), and their sites turned into parking lots.
When the Mall went-up, they also built a new movie theatre at the corner of Lackwanna & Penn Avenues, and connected that to the Mall by an enclosed pedestrian bridge right at the site of Scranton Talking Machine.
There remain some of the grand old buildings from the late 19th / early 20th Centuries along Lackawanna Ave, but some of the best are history... along with the Scranton Traction Company.
Historical footnote: if you are familiar with the George Inness painting "The Lackawanna Valley" (c. 1855/6), the artist's vantage point was on the hillside in the distance of Frank's photo, looking east down Lackawanna Ave. to the Moosic Mt. in the far distance (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:George_Inness_003.jpg --click on the image for a high-res enlargement). The scene depicts an early summer morning in late June/early July, the only period of the year when the sun rises far enough in the northeast to shine on the north side of objects; note the direction of the shadows. Scranton sure has changed in the last 150+ years! BTW, Steamtown is located approximately where the railroad roundhouse stands in Inness's painting.