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Weedville Hotel, Weedville, PA |
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Weedville Hotel, Weedville, PA |
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Weedville Hotel token, author's collection |
Est. 1904 OE - Building constructed: 1933?
Previous bars in this location: None known
Web site: facebook
Reviews: yelp - tripadvisor
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Weedville Hotel, Weedville, PA |
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Weedville Hotel, Weedville, PA |
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Weedville Hotel token, author's collection |
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New Stanley's Lounge, Pittsburgh, PA |
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Stanley's Tavern, Pittsburgh, PA - 1941 Teenie Harris photo via Carnegie Museum |
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The original Stanley's Tavern Teenie Harris photo via the Carnegie Museum |
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The 2nd Stanley's Tavern Teenie Harris photo via Carnegie Museum |
Stanley's was packed even when there was no music playing, but there's no question the music was an attraction. This was especially true on Wednesday nights, when DJ Mary Dee was in the house. "Mary Dudley (born Mary Elizabeth Goode; April 8, 1912 – March 17, 1964), known as Mary Dee, was an American disc jockey who is widely considered the first African-American woman disc jockey in the United States" and (wikipedia) The Nov 4, 1950 Pittsburgh Courier reported that "Station WHOD's queen of the platter pushers has kept entertainment moving for two years at Stanley's Lounge on Wednesday celebrity nights.... In two short years Mary Dee has made Wednesday the big night in town, with headquarters at Stanley's. Mary Dee has become a top goodwill ambassador and she's a real gone girl in every way."
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Pittsburgh Courier, Oct 27, 1945 |
By 1953 Williams would have three clubs, a pool parlor, and a barber shop -- in addition to other business interests -- and employ 27 people. But there were some tragedies along the way. On April 3, 1949, a man named James Cannon, after arguing with Charles Williams in the 61 Fullerton Street club, shot Stanley's brother three times. Charles would die in the hospital on April 22, and the killer remained on the lam for two years before being identified after an arrest in Cleveland. Then in November 1952, another Stanley's night manager named Mario Squire, collapesed after being stuck in the chest with a beer bottle while trying to stop a fight. Finally, Syvella and Stanley would go through what appears to be a rancorous divorce, with Stanley repeatedly going to court to try and reduce his alimony payments as his business profits purportedly declined.
They Wylie block locations would eventually face inevitable extinction via a large, imminent urban redevelopment project, one that would widen streets and add a Civic Arena that would attract an NHL team, but that would also wipe out multiple churches, jazz clubs, restaurants and neighborhoods, ultimately displacing over 8,000 residents and 400 businesses. Williams was rumored to be negotiating a new location in 1954, but when asked about it elided the issue by responding, "The only thing I am interested in is building up my five-cent deal from seven until five every day and introducing Pennsylvania Dutch Beer for five cents less than popular brews. Other than that, you can tell the world, I am not negotiating."
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The New Stanley's Lounge, 1958 Teenie Harris photo |
Links: blog.historian4hire.net
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Penn Brewery, Pittsburgh,PA |
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Karwoski's Tavern, AKA JCK Tavern Pittsburgh, PA |
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Remains of Hook Tavern, Capon Bridge, WV (Photo March 4, 2025) |
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Hook Tavern, Capon Bridge, WV (Pre-fire photo from the Registration Form for the National Register of Historic Places) |
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Former Lee Tuck Lounge Pittsburgh, PA |
Constructed by Christ Gundlefinger in 1891, the building some 2,000 feet south of the Ohio River has contained a saloon at least as early as 1892, and most of the time from that point to as recently as 2015, although you would never guess that from the ramshackle state of the building today.
Leona Tucker purchased the property in 1977, and ran what would become the longest running and last bar, and perhaps the last residents, to be hosted there during its 120 year history of serving drinks. (Leona passed away in 2003, and I do not know how long she ran the bar herself.) The property is currently for sale. At least in its latter years the bar featured black exotic dancers. It was the scene of another tragic death not long before it closed. On Oct 24, 2014 Ronnell Smith was shot and killed by Lonnie Monk and Anthony Jetter he was leaving the bar.
Christ Gundlefinger sought a liquor license even before his new building was finished, but it's not clear if he got one. In any case by the following year John Kalb ran the building, and with no other licensed house on the street in 1892, began operating a saloon on the main floor. From 1898 to 1910 he would be followed by saloon keepers Jacob Haule Jr., his wife Lena Haule briefly after Jacob passed away, a Mrs. H. Schinneller, and Leopold Von Hedemann. In October 1910 Hedemann transferred the liquor license to Herman J. Theil, whose long run as owner would last through prohibition and into the mid 1940s, and would tragically include the murder of his son John, killed in the bar during an attempted holdup.
After some 35+ years as the "H.J. Theil Cafe" and the "Herman Theil Tavern," the bar would be operated in the 1950s by Marie Schram as the "New Steuben Cafe" or "New Steuben Restaurant and Bar." In the 1970s it would be known as the West End Lounge, before fairly long run as the Lee Tuck Lounge, which it remained for almost 40 years.
Despite - and largely because of - its current state of disrepair, and due to its presence between two large, empty lots along our main route from our home to downtown Pittsburgh, I've probably passed this building a hundred times in the three years we've lived in the area - each time wondering about its history. Catching up with the parts of that history cited here only makes me wonder all the more about its stories from over the years.
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Lee Tuck Lounge flier - Sep 15, 2014 |
134 Steuben St, Pittsburgh, PA 15220
Est. 1977 - Building constructed: 1891
Previous bars in this location: Herman Theil Tavern, New Steuben Cafe, West End Lounge