Now Playing in Baltimore: Saturday, June 6th, 1972

(The Baltimore Sun, 6/6/1972)

Posted in 1970s, Decades, Films | 1 Comment

The Peabody Book Shop: One for the books… Or Not.

The Peabody Book Shop was ‘a place where respectable people could come for a sandwich and a glass of beer.’

By Mary K. Zajac (Style Magazine, Sept/Oct 2009)

Come in,” the sign above the basement door at 913 N. Charles St. invited. “Visit our Famous Beer Stube serving Cocktails – Beer – Food.”

There’s no counting how many Baltimoreans descended the dingy stairwell into the Peabody Book Shop and Beer Stube to share a beer at the communal wooden tables, hear poetry read aloud, participate in sing-alongs or watch as the Great Dantini performed his magic tricks. But everyone who passed through, it seems, has a story to tell, and one rarely about books.

My father still talks about one evening when he saw film star Veronica Lake and another when crooner Rudy Vallee walked in (he was in town performing at one of Baltimore’s theaters). Cockeysville resident Morry Wexler (father of Style senior editor Laura Wexler) recalls glimpsing his future wife, Trudy Ricker, there for the first time (though they didn’t actually meet until later). This was in the 1960s, when the Peabody was in the hands of the formidable Rose Boyajjian Smith Pettus Hayes (the lady loved— or perhaps didn’t love— her husbands), who owned and ran the two-story brick storefront at 913 N. Charles from 1957 until she died in 1986.

“Rose Smith [as she was once known] was a tough lady,” Wexler remembers. “She could deal with people. If she wanted to she could have picked them up by the seat of the pants and thrown them out.”

A 1968 Baltimore magazine article describes Rose as “an amiable but hard-headed woman with Streisand-like features” who tried hard to maintain the Peabody’s original aura of conviviality, if not the book inventory. Wexler remembers bachelor nights with friends at the Peabody when the proprietress would usher pretty female patrons to the long community tables where he and his friends were drinking. It was that kind of chummy place.

Founded by Austrian immigrant Siegfried Weisberger and his brother Hugo, the Peabody started life as a bookshop around 1927. When Hugo Weisberger died in 1931, Siegfried, who with his circular framed glasses, bow ties and inky mustache bore a slight resemblance to Groucho Marx, maintained the business, keeping the bookshop stocked with the kind of inventory he thought was important: an esoteric collection of art books, literature (in French, German and English), music and medical texts. In 1933, he transformed the building’s garage into a beer cellar as “a place where respectable people could come for a sandwich and a glass of beer,” he recalled in a 1974 article in The Alternative magazine. “Beer and books go together like balls and bats,” he opined in another publication.

Over the years, Weisberger’s “respectable” clientele included medical students, Peabody students, out of town visitors, and most famously, H.L. Mencken, with whom Weisberger was known to share conversations and glasses of beer (it was also rumored that F. Scott Fitzgerald drank there once— but then he drank at a lot of places). There was food, including sausages made by Weisberger himself, and there was nearly always music, especially singing, led from the upright piano that sat snug against one of the paneled walls.

Continue reading “One for the books” at Style Magazine.

Posted in Baltimore Babylon, Baltimorons, Beer, Dining, H.L. Mencken, Nightspots, Vices | Tagged , , , , , , | 22 Comments

Towson Priest Busted With Pants Down in Adult Theater

Father Stew was stewing in his own juices sans pants at Bush River Books & Movies in Abingdon

By Evann Gastaldo (Newser.com, 1/23/2012)

Father Mark Stewart Bullock went from priest at the Church of the Immaculate Conception to creepy guy standing around pants-less in a porn shop, Baltimore cops say. Police say they responded to complaints of indecent exposure and found Bullock, nude from the waist down, inside a movie theater at the store. He has since been removed from duty at his church, the Baltimore Sun reports.

Bush River Books & Video Snack Bar (WBAL-TV)

Bullock was on a couch, “his pants completely off,” according to a police report; he “was not wearing any underwear and [was] exposing his penis” in a public area. He was arrested and charged with indecent exposure. The Baltimore Archdiocese removed Bullock’s “faculties to function as a priest and initiated an investigation to learn more about the incident,” reads a letter to parishioners.

Was Father Stew a "Birds" fan?

Related Stories:

Posted in 2010s, Baltimorons, Crime, Towson | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The Original Flagpole Sitter (Alvin Aloysius “Shipwreck” Kelly)

Shipwreck Kelly Standing On Pole, May 1932. © Corbis Images

1929: `Shipwreck’ Kelly inspired 20 Baltimoreans to engage in what Cosmopolitan termed `competitive imbecility.’

By Frederick N. Rasmussen, (The Baltimore Sun,11/20/1999)

It was perhaps the last giddy excess of the Jazz Age when, during the summer of 1929, Baltimore for some unknown reason became the flagpole sitting capital of America.

During one week in 1929, the city had 20 flagpole sitters (17 boys and three girls), who were no doubt influenced in their lofty pursuits by the famed Alvin Aloysius “Shipwreck” Kelly.

Earlier that summer, Kelly, who called himself the “Luckiest Fool on Earth” and who was credited with starting the craze of flagpole sitting that swept the nation, had established a record by sitting on a flagpole for 22 days and six hours above New York’s Madison Square Garden.

Shipwreck Kelly

In June, Kelly arrived at Baltimore’s Carlin’s Park where he promptly mounted a 60-foot flagpole and sat for 45 days. He managed to survive a horrific heat wave and strong thunderstorms before coming back to earth.

“The top of a flagpole is the only safe place for a married man to be,” he told The Evening Sun.

Kelly, who was a popular writer on dieting and fasting, explained his dining habits in the interview.

“While up on the pole I eat mainly liquid food, but manage to get away with a solid meal every day or two,” he said.

He also confined his daily ablutions to what he called a “sailor’s bath” but promised reporters that he would continue to “shave while in Baltimore.”

“I did a turn of flagpole sitting here when the business was its best. The late Harry Van Hoven sponsored, and we put on a great show. They had a `Keep Kelly Awake Club,’ and the members used to come out at night and raise a racket just to keep me from sleeping,” he told The Evening Sun in a 1942 interview recalling his Baltimore engagement.

Baltimore Mayor William F. Broening called the local epidemic of flagpole sitting that followed Kelly’s Carlin’s Park triumph a demonstration of “the old pioneer spirit” and said it showed “the grit and stamina so essential in life.”

Cosmopolitan Magazine countered by calling it “competitive imbecility.”

Continue reading “The Original Flagpole Sitter” at The Baltimore Sun.

Related Links

Posted in 1920s, Baltimorons, Pranks | Leave a comment