Month: May 2019
Vases stolen from Laurel Hill Cemetery recovered; guilty party to be prosecuted
Hundreds helped by "Hands Across the Street" program
258 people stood in line at Vision Church this morning to receive free food from the “Hands Across the Street” program. The food, which included various flavors of Baskin-Robbins ice cream, chicken tenders, and cake, was donated by Americold in Mountville and is estimated to have helped 644 people in the households of those who signed up, according to organizer Lori Flick. The program is almost 100% volunteer.
Ken Kramer and son Jan of JanMichael’s Art and Home Store provided the truck, and with the help of several volunteers, loaded up half a dozen skids of food in Mountville, and unloaded them in the church parking lot at 291 South 4th Street. Those receiving food were not required to show identification or proof of income.
“Hands Across the Street,” which is overseen by Columbia’s Presbyterian Church, also partners with the Sunsnappers and the Lions Club to help the community. The church leases the building on South 4th, where a downstairs shelter capable of housing 25 people is located. The shelter operation is estimated to cost $70,000 and is funded through donations.
"HANDS ACROSS THE STREET" TO DISTRIBUTE FREE FOOD THIS MORNING (THURSDAY, MAY 30) AT 9 AM AT VISION CHURCH, 291 SOUTH 4TH STREET
Five pallets of food will be distributed to anyone. No income restrictions apply. No identification needed. All are welcome.
“Hands Across the Street” partners with Sunsnappers and the Lions Club to provide food to the community.
Columbia's Flying Ace: Lieutenant John Knox MacArthur
Columbia History – Did you know?
Did you know a World War I flying ace was born in Columbia? It’s true. Columbia’s Flying Ace, Second Lieutenant John Knox “Mac” MacArthur, who was credited with six aerial victories and was his squadron’s first ace, was born in Columbia, Pennsylvania on January 14, 1891. His family lived here for a time and attended Columbia Presbyterian Church, where he was baptized.
Knox received the Distinguished Service Cross for extraordinary heroism in action near Luneville, France on June 13th 1918. According to theaerodrome.com MacArthur and three flying companions, “outnumbered and handicapped” by their presence behind German lines fought “a large group of enemy planes, bringing down or putting to flight all the attacking party while performing an important mission.”
He became the 27th Aero Squadron’s first ace after scoring his fifth victory on July 17, 1918.
On July 20, 1918, MacArthur and two other pilots were forced down when they encountered a storm during a mission. Newspaper reports in 1919 claim MacArthur died in a German prison camp. However, his Wikipedia entry states that he was wounded and captured by the Germans and taken to hospital where he died of his wounds. He was 27 years old. MacArthur is buried in the Wilmington and Brandywine Cemetery, Wilmington, Delaware.
MacArthur was awarded the French Croix de Guerre and was made a chevalier of the French Legion of Honor.
[Photo provided by James R. Settle II]
In more recent years, “The Scribbler,” a regular column in Lancaster Newspapers, laid out information on MacArthur that was discovered by Robert Kramer of Columbia. According to the article, John Knox MacArthur was the first son of Charles P. and Mary W. MacArthur. The family lived at 303 Chestnut Street and attended the Columbia Presbyterian Church at 360 Locust Street, where John was baptized. They later moved to Harrisburg and then Buffalo, New York.
John became a civil engineer like his father, then enlisted in the US Army Air Service in Buffalo during World War I. After being shot down on July 20, 1918, MacArthur reportedly died in a German Hospital on August 9. At the time this article was published, Kramer was trying to find more information about the local years of John Knox MacArthur.
[Thanks to James R. Settle II for discovering this story.]






















