Change flattens Stony Brook's drive-in, humpback bridge

| | Comments (2)

stonybrX00175_9.JPG
Construction equipment demolishes what was the AMC Entertainment movie theater in Springettsbury Township in 2004. Development on the site now includes a retirement home that celebrates the old drive-in also on that site. Background post: Stony Brook Drive-in: 'I saw 'Pulp Fiction' there ...'

The old drive-in east of York, whose land is now covered by a retirement village drew its name from the nearby village of Stony Brook.

Here are some details about that old Springettsbury village, mostly gleaned from the township centennial book (1991) and York Daily Record stories:

-- The village is located where the railroad crossed the turnpike, Lincoln Highway, Route 30, 462 or whatever the road was named at the time.

-- It drew its name drom Stony Brook, a nearby stream flowing into Kreutz Creek.

- The village is located near the site of Camp Security, a former British POW camp, and the Schultz House, York County's oldest residence.

- At the turn of the 20th century, the village bore the normal fixtures that grow up where rail meet road: a store, post office, coal yard, warehouse and about 20 residences.

- Two early York County businesses operated there: Heistand Mill, an early York County gristmill, and a blacksmith shop, noted as the first such establishment west of the Susquehanna.

- John Stover's property near the village boasted a spring of chalybeate water, well-known in its day for its iron-rich mineral content. Water flows from this spring today.

-- The village was known as a tobacco-growing center, the plant thriving on the rich limestone soil.

-- Some reports suggest that turn-of-the-20th century residents considered - but never consumated - organizing Stony Brook into a borough.

-- The appearance of the village changed in 1998 when workers demolished the rusted humpback bridge spanning the trailroad tracks for an estimated 60 years.The bridge left drivers at the top with no view of oncoming traffic. Below the bridge, a block-long residential street was sheltered from heavy traffic.

- At the time of the demolition, about 12,000 automobiles crossed the bridge each day, a bustle not apparent even in the village's heyday 100 years before.


2 Comments

I attended the Stony Brook one-room schoolhouse in 1942. any historical data available regarding that site ?

Phil Lukens

I used to bring my ex-husband to visit york because he used to live there. I seen the stonybrook drive-in 1997,98 and 99. It was then for sale. I had fun dreaming that someday. we would own it. I guess we all need to dream. Even if they never come true. I am sorry to hear it is gone. I use to love just looking at it.

Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.

From our history blogs




Follow me on Twitter

Powered by Movable Type 4.25

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Jim McClure published on October 27, 2007 6:12 AM.

Stony Brook Drive-in: 'I saw 'Pulp Fiction' there ...' was the previous entry in this blog.

Mix 'You know you're a Yorker, if' with oysters. You get... is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.