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| North East Chamber of Commerce History | North East Community History | Chamber Office Personnel and Board Members |
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| North East Chamber of Commerce History (^TOP^) |
| The North East Area Chamber of Commerce began as an all-male merchant association nearly 40 years ago. The organization functioned in this capacity for two decades. |
| In the early 1980's the Chamber evolved into a Pennsylvania "Main Street" program. With the help of state funding, a Main Street Manager was hired. The Main Street program focused primarily on the needs of the downtown retail businesses. |
| In the early 1990's, the Main Street program, in an attempt to encompass businesses in the entire area, developed into the North East Chamber of Commerce with an executive director and a staff of one. Initially, the Chamber's Board of Directors was not an "active" group, but functioned primarily in an advisory capacity. As the organization grew, ever-expanding list of goals and objectives required that the Board become "active". |
| The Chamber was formally incorporated in 1989. In 1990, the Chamber applied for and received state façade improvement funds. The North East Past Present and Future organization was incorporated as an offshoot of the Chamber to oversee management of those matching grant funds. |
| It was also in 1990 that the Chamber spearheaded an effort to market the St. Mary's Seminary property to Mercyhurst College by pledging $500,000 over five years to that end. |
| The Wine Country Harvest Festival, which began as Wine Country USA in 1982, became the primary function of the Tourism Division of the Chamber in 1991. In 1994, the Board decided to move the Wine Country Harvest Festival to Gravel Pit Park in order to be able to charge an admission and regain solid financial status. The financial success of the festivals has put the Chamber in a sound fiscal situation. With an improved financial outlook, the Chamber has been able to offer a variety of community projects reinvesting in the North East community. |
| The fun-filled weekend offers something for everyone. Building on recent success, the Wine Fest will boast great entertainment, wonderful crafts and artisans, grape stomping, a children's area complete with crafts and face painting and a wealth of exciting fun for people of all ages. |
| The Wine Country Harvest Festival is held each fall during the last full weekend of September. For detailed information visit www.nechamber.org/winefest or click the Wine Fest Information button on this site. |
| In 1999, the Board of Directors was reduced in number to eleven and the office staff rearranged. The Executive Director position was abolished and three part-time positions were established: Community Coordinator, Special Events Coordinator, and Office Coordinator. Each job description covers a separate branch of the Chamber, and yet they overlap during several activities. The system has been very well received by the Chamber members and by the community. |
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| North East Community History (^TOP^) |
Wine Country
North East's claim to this descriptive name is an old one. In 1850 two men with the last names of Hammond and Griffith planted the first vineyard in North East. They suspected that the combination of soil conditions and climate just inland of the Lake Erie shore was right for growing grapes. Their hunch was correct. In 1869 the South Shore Wine Company was formed. Eventually other wineries followed.
Today there are five thriving wineries, thousands of acres of vineyards, and two large fruit processing plants in North East. Grapes are not only a major industry here, but a source of identity for residents and of great beauty for everyone.
Agriculture is a big part of North East. The cherry crop is celebrated each July with our annual Cherry Festival.
During the fall, the smell of sweet grapes ripening on vines mingles with the scent of apples, peaches, and pears from the many orchards in the community. North East public school sports teams have embraced this agricultural heritage: they are known as the Grapepickers.
There are other advantages to North East's location. It is relatively close to three major cities: about 80 miles west of Buffalo and Niagara Falls, 180 miles north of Pittsburgh, 120 miles east of Cleveland and closer to home, 16 miles east of Erie.
It is also close to a major ski resort in New York: Peek 'n' Peak, about fifteen miles southeast of North East.
Another asset: Lake Erie. The community owns a beach with a park that is now the site of a monument to North East's Halli Reid, who became the first woman to swim across Lake Erie, in 1993. the park, names after Reid, features picnic areas, volleyball pit, and playground equipment. A second recreational area has just been acquired on Route 5, by 20-Mile creek, and will be developed by North Easy Township.
A marina is operated on Route 5, east of the borough, providing public and private access to Lake Erie. This is the only protected port between Erie and Barcelona, NY.
If you are a new resident, or a visitor, we bid you welcome. |
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History - 300 Years Ago
In the early 1600's the North East area was covered with dense forests full of game. Lake Erie teemed with fish. The area's residents were a tribe of Indians known as the Eriez. This tribe was peaceful; its name meant "raccoon".
Accounts of the Eriez vary. One 19th-century historian has the first French missionaries arriving in 1626 and naming the Eriez the "Neutral Nations". A modern-day author writes, however, that Europeans never met the Eriez, because a neighboring tribe, the Iroquois, destroyed the tribe in a terrible war. This author has the story of the Eriez being passed to the first white explorers by the victorious Senecas, the Hurons, and a tribe identified in the account as the Neutrals.
Two of the leaders if the Eriez then were Queen Yagowania, who had the role of "the mother of nations", keeper of the peace, ruler of the tribe; and Ragnotha, the Eriez chief of was, who maintained his camp near present-day Buffalo. A dispute arose between Ragnotha and one of the Iroquois tribes, the Seneca. A terrible battle ensued. Ragnotha's warriors - nearly 600 - were killed. Some 16 years later, in 1656, the Iroquois decided to finish the job and killed or scattered the remainder of the Eriez tribe. The Iroquois then possessed the complete south shore of Lake Erie. |
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First Settlers
Pennsylvania, on September 4, 1778, paid 24 Iroquois chiefs $151,640.25 for a portion of land known as "The Triangle", 315 square miles: 45 miles of Lake Erie coast, all of what is now North East Borough and Township, Greenfield, Harborcreek, Greene, Summit, Millcreek townships, the city of Erie, and part of McKean, Fairview, Girard and Springfield townships. |
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North East Township
North East Township was first called Lower Greenfield. But when it was organized, the name North East was given because of its position as the most northeastern township of the original sixteen townships.
North East was the first of the lakeshore townships to be settled. Joseph Shadduck, who came from Vermont, was the first, purchasing a tract in 1794 near the center of the township. George and Henry Hurst, from New Jersey, followed and, with Shadduck, made a settlement. By 1820, the township was 1068 residents; by 1880, it had 2152.
The first school was formed in 1798. in 1814 a log schoolhouse was built and school was taught by Joseph Neeley. The first hotel was the Brawley House, built in 1833. the first bank was formed in 1860 at the corner of Lake and Main Streets.
The Presbyterians formed the first church in Erie County, in North East Township, in 1801. it was formed in the house of William Dundas, which was later converted into Burgett Tavern. Henry Hurst then gave five acres to the Presbytery, which built a log church building on what is now North East Cemetery.
The first road was cut through from Freeport to Greenfield in 1797. |
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North East Borough
North East Borough land was first purchased from the state by a man named Brown, who sold it to an Eastern speculator by the name of Gibson in 1804. in 1808, a tavern was built on the site of what is now Haynes House.
A village formed around the tavern and was called Burgettstown. In 1819 the name was changed to Gibsonville in honor of the speculator, who owned most of the property and who had donated the park in the center of the borough.
On February 27, 1834, the village was incorporated as the Borough of North East. |
| Sources: "North East Past" by the North East Breeze, "History of Erie County, Pennsylvania, 1884" by Samuel P. Bates, and "A Town at Presque Isle" by Mary M. Muller. |
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| North East Chamber Office Personnel and Board Members (^TOP^) |
| Office Personnel: |
Susan Spacht
Community Coordinator |
Jon Cullen
Events Coordinator |
Sherry Gulczynski
Office Coordinator |
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| 2006 Officers and Board Members: |
Robert Brown, President
Brown's Equipment Co. |
Vicki Munger, Vice President
Northwest Savings Bank |
Pat Federici, Secretary
Better Baked Foods |
Carl Gregg, Treasurer
First National Bank of Pennsylvania |
Phil Funk
The Electric Materials Co. |
Peggy Hauser
Grape Arbor Bed & Breakfast |
Denise Newman
Dog-Gone-Its! |
Tim Truitt
North East Marine Services |
Mary Ellen Wensel
Northwest Savings Bank |
Mary Lou Wittman
RE/Max Real Estate Group |
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North East Area Chamber of Commerce
21 South Lake Street
North East, PA 16428
PH: 814.725.4262 - FX: 814.725.3994 EM: info@nechamber.org |
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