HOSPITAL PART 3: SOUTH MAIN STREET
January 6, 1983
PIX #1 - The city parking lot, part of the area involved
in last week's and today's articles, where Kieffer's Racket Store
and many other businesses list- in today's article was located.
PIX #2 - Dr. William Leonard's office and Fostoria
Hospital was located at 312 and 314 S. Main St. from about 1909
until Fostoria City Hospital came into existence.
PIX #3 - Kitchen's House of Music as in the same building
where Plus I Lounge is now. Peter's Flower Shop was there before
Kitchen's.
PIX #4 - KENNETH KITCHEN
Author's Note: Last week we returned to South Main
Street to take another look at the history of business places and
people of that era, and in more depth presented the story about
Frank Kieffer's Racket Store. The series con- tinues today.
Space was not available last week to include an important
photo, taken in the 1960s which provides an overall view of the
area which will be covered in today's article. In that photo readers
can see the city parking lot. Busi- ness rooms in frame buildings,
similar to the one shown in last week's arti- cle, once existed
there. I do not know if there were separate buildings or just one
divided into separate rooms.
A "team" of "old timers"--Joe Blaser, a resident of
that area for many years; Chet Kieffer, Doris (Kieffer) Clark and
your author--have been exchanging opinions about the old buildings
and the rooms and I am not sure any of us are positive whether there
was one or more buildings and if there were three or four business
rooms. The old directories also leave room for doubt. Therefore,
I decided to just list the merchants as the directories showed them
by years.
Here are the listings for the businesses in the area
south of the corner fil- ling stations mentioned last week to the
first alley, 1909 through 1938.
No. 304-- George H. Hufford, confectionary; Clara
B. Kennedy, restaurant; J.C. Fayes, South End Restaurant; Legion
Barber Shop; Fred A. Saliers, barber; "Ma" Ziefler's Restaurant.
At the latter restaurant, you could get an excel- lent lunch for
25 cents and a nice cut of homemade pie for 10 cents.
No. 306--R.S. Blaine Confectionary and Newsstand;
Ira Johnson, barber; George B. Baker Restaurant; Frank Jackman,
Second Hand Store.
No. 308--Elmer Wagner, plumbing; D.F. Arthur, electrician;
Cecil A. Fellers, New & Second Hand Store; Church of God; Clarence
P. Werner, restaurant; Aaron J. Peter, sheet metalwork; Holman's
Cafe, Chaney's Lunchroom.
No. 308 1/2 -- Owl's Hall; George H. Hufford, residence;
D.F. Arthur, resi- dence.
No. 310--Kieffer's New York Bargain Store, later called
Kieffer's Racket Store.
No. 312--Flechtner & Emerine Meat Market; Earl Green
Confectionary; Fostoria Produce, G.E. Beigh, proprietor; A&P Team
Company; W.H. Weaver and J.H. Mor- ton, photography, phonographs
and picture framing.
Between the last business room (No. 312) and the only
other building which still exists from the early part of this century,
there was a house (No. 314). The one photo shows it with an addition
built on the front later. That house is where I was born in 1905
and lived for about three year until the death of my father, George
E. Krupp, in 1908. He was a barber by trade and worked in the barbershop
in The Hays Hotel.
Sometime after 1908, Dr. William Leonard purchased
the property, built on the front addition for the practice of medicine
and opened the first hospital in town, Fostoria Hospital (No. 316).
That hospital continued until about the mid to late 1920s when Fostoria
City Hospital came into existence. Then Leonard moved his office
to his home at the southwest corner of North Main and High streets.
By that time, the old hospital as well as all of the other business
properties in that area, had been demolished.
Even though I was only three (approximately) when
we moved from the house at No. 314, I can remember many things from
that period of time in my young life.
Carnivals were generally held on Crocker lot, east
of our house, bounded by Poplar, Crocker and South streets. Whenever
a carnival was showing there, I could look out of a rear, second-story
room window and see the ferris wheel, merry-go-round and other sights.
My first ride on a merry-go-round was at that time and I got sick
from the motion.
When my father died, I remember an aunt holding me
in my arms and viewing the body. I also recall how he often stood
in front of the coal heating stove in winter warming his back and
the time I climbed a fenced area in back and went to meet dad coming
from work.
I tell those personal incidents to inform readers
that very young minds are already funtioning and impressionable.
No one in later life told me of my remembrances related above. At
one time when I was grown, I asked my mother about them, and she
confirmed those incidents.
Leonard's Fostoria Hospital was located just north
of what is now the Plus 1 Lounge. An alley separted the hospital
from the businesses described earlier in today's article.
When Plus 1 Lounge is now was once Kitchen's House
of Music (No. 318-322) shown in another photo, provided by Mrs.
Kenneth Kitchen, 893 Cory St. Mr. Kitchen who died in 1960, was
well known as a musician and teacher of instru- mental music in
this area. He had studios in Bowling Green, Findlay, Tiffin, Fostoria
and Pittsburgh, Pa., in which lessons were given on the Hawaiian
steel guitar, Spanish guitar and the accordion.
I asked Mrs. Kitchen how her husband became a musician
and teachers.
"Well, his father had an old guitar which let him
strum around on as a boy... I guess it just came natural for Kenneth...
he had music in him," she said.
Mr. Kitchen took a few lessons at the Honolulu Conservatory
of Music in Toledo and also taught there before he started in business
for himself. He also played engagements on the radio back then.
When the Kitchens moved to Fostoria in 1939, their
first studio was on Perry Street next to Edwards Dry Cleaning. It
was in about 1954 that they bought the building on South Main Street
where the Plus 1 is now and established Kitchen's House of Music,
shown in the accompanying photo.
In Pittsburgh, Kitchen had two studios, one in the
north and one in the south parts of the city.
There are probably many readers who will remember
Mr. Kitchen as he appears in the photo, taken at the time he was
active in this area.