Three reports on Philadelphia’s Sewage Treatment Project, 1911-1914
November 11, 2023
Without sewage collection and treatment, the city would be unlivable.
Without sewage collection and treatment, the city would be unlivable.
These scrapbooks, first published on PhillyH2o, are now easier to read and are searchable by keyword.
A classic page from my old website, documenting my first sewer walk in 1997, now updated with a fresher look and new photographs.
Manayunk has changed dramatically in the past 100 years, but the view from the bridge is still spectacular.
Putting the water woes of a modern city in perspective
A video recording of an illustrated talk given by Adam Levine in 2023 to the Historical Society of Frankford.
James Walter Phillips (1860-1938) was an engineer who worked more than 40 years for the Bureau of Surveys in Philadelphia’s Department of Public Works. He ultimately rose to head the Grade Crossing Removal Division, in charge of removing dangerous street-level railroad crossings, which was usually accomplished by building bridges over the streets to carry the […]
Covering water pollution and the silting of the river bed, both these reports were eahed of their time.
Three articles from 19th-century almanacs reveal many lost landscape features, including streams, islands, and ferry crossings.
A story from the Sixties that was too good not to share, about an event organized by Ira Einhorn.
The Schuylkill Navigation Company maintained a system of canals, locks, dams and slackwater pools that followed the river from coal country in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania down to the Fairmount Dam and locks in Philadelphia. The system, built in the second decade of the 19th century, is now defunct, but pieces of its infrastructure still exist. […]
That “every picture tells a story” is an old cliché. But for me, after years of examining and cataloging thousands of photos as the archivist for the Philadelphia Water Department, I have found this cliché to be mostly true.