Archive for July, 2015

“She thinks she missed the train to Mars… she’s out back counting stars….”























“Stars” – HUM (1995)

(22 Photos)

Hiding in amongst the trees at the top of the Taylor Road hill in East Cleveland– The abandoned Warner and Swasey Observatory, just four miles southeast of its original parent home, the then, Case School of Applied Science (Case-Western Reserve University.)

The Observatory was designed in 1918 by the Cleveland architectural firm of Walker and Weeks and The Warner & Swasey Company  completed construction of the building in 1920.   On October 12th of that year, world renowned astronomer Dr. W. W. Campbell, the Director of the University of California Lick Observatory, gave the key note address at the observatory’s dedication.

The building included a small library, a darkroom, a transit room, an office and one bedroom. The observatory also housed two Riefler astronomical regulator clocks, two four-inch transits, and an extremely sensitive zenith 9.5-inch refractor telescope, built by the Warner and Swasey Company of Cleveland. The entire Observatory, including all equipment, as well as the cost of construction of the physical structure, was donated to the Case Institute of Technology by Trustees Worcester R. Warner and Ambrose Swasey, of the Warner and Swasey Company.

As the need for expansion of facilities and new equipment became evident, additions to the Observatory were graciously provided by Warner and Swasey. In 1940, the building of en entire new wing to the Observatory was completed. Included in this expansion was a new library, a teaching lecture hall, and a new Warner & Swasey Company-manufactured 24-inch Burrell Schmidt telescope, housed in a new dome (pictured below.)

By the 1950’s, city-light evening sky “noise” made it necessary for Case to develop a new facility and relocate the housed telescopes and other equipment, in order for the school to maintain the highest levels of scientific integrity.  The new facility– the Nassau Astronomical Station, was built in 1957 on 281 acres of land in Montville Township in Geauga County, thirty miles to the east of the Warner and Swasey Observatory. The Burrell Schmidt telescope was transferred to this site, and was replaced with a 36-inch telescope that was used primarily for viewing by the public. In 1980, The Warner and Swasey Observatory was closed permanently, and the original zenith telescope was transferred to the Euclid Avenue main campus of Case-Western Reserve University, where today it is housed and in-use in the University’s Albert W. Smith Building.

The old observatory was sold and has changed ownership hands a few different times since Case managed the facility, and although every attempt has been made to board-up entrance points inside… graffiti artists, area gangs, historians, photographers and urban explorers have all found their way to the interior of the building. Picture number 20, from the top, of the photos I have taken and posted here– the empty window frame– was my magic doorway into the fascinating storied past of the Warner and Swasey Observatory that still stands at the top of a hill in East Cleveland.

Above photos taken July 3, 2015

The 24-inch Burrell Schmidt telescope manufactured by the Warner & Swasey Company, pictured here at the Warner and Swasey Observatory. Photo courtesy of the Cleveland Memory Project and the Michael Schwartz Library at Cleveland State University.


“…’round here we always stand up straight… ’round here something radiates…”

“Round Here” – Counting Crows (1993)

An outdoor sculpture garden in the Health Career Programs wing of Cuyahoga Community College Western Campus in Parma, Ohio. In this sector of the College, facilities for Diagnostic Medical Sonography, Electroneurodiagnostic Technology, Nuclear Medicine, Radiography, Mammography, Polysomnography, Veterinary Technology and Physicians Assistant Programs are housed.

Photo taken July 15, 2015


“…lost between tomorrow and yesterday… between now and then…”


“Do it Again” -The Kinks (1983)

The Tatra Savings & Loan Company Headquarters building, at the corner of Woodhill Road and Sophia Avenue, in Cleveland’s east side Kinsman neighborhood, was built in 1925.

Serving Cleveland’s Slovak population since the institution’s inception in 1909, it was named for the Tatra Mountains in Czechoslovakia.

With changing city demographics, Tatra was renamed the State Savings & Loan Company in 1946, and in 1952 the Headquarters were relocated to the eastern Cleveland suburb of South Euclid. The building most recently has been home to the Pentecostal Apostolic Church Of The Resurrection.

Photos taken June 18, 2015


“…where no one asks any questions… or looks too long in your face…”

“Darkness at the Edge of Town” – Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band (1978)

On the west bank of the Cuyahoga River– A building on Scranton Road in the industrial Flats of Cleveland, Ohio.

Photo taken May 21, 2015


“Oh it were sweet to think… that May should be ours again…”













“In May” – Poem by Paul Lawrence Dunbar (1913)

(13 photos)
At 750 E 88th Street, on a parcel of land– a section of the 270 acres donated to the City of Cleveland by oil tycoon and philanthropist, John D. Rockefeller– the City’s Rockefeller Park Greenhouse in all of it’s splendor. Completed in 1905, the greenhouse has been free and open to the public year-round throughout the decades. Visitors to the park enjoy lush indoor and outdoor gardens of many varieties. A quiet and colorful place to spend a lunch hour on a warm day in the month of May.

Photos taken May 7, 2015