I was there! We had a crowd with us that day. I can't even describe the eerie feeling when the clock tower which had been a landmark in Northeast Philadelphia for decades began to tilt and then fall into a cloud of brown dust. When we saw the debris cloud rolling directly toward us, we ran as fast as we could. Little did we know that the Twin Towers would be destroyed years later in NYC.
we were there! when we saw the dust cloud rolling toward us, we ran as fast as we could to escape. We had a whole crowd with us that day. I can't describe the eerie feeling when the tower, which had been a landmark on the blvd. for years, suddenly began to tilt and then fall into a brown cloud. It brought tears to your eyes for sure. Awesome! Little did we know that years later we would witness the destruction of the Twin Towers in NYC.
lol i know right... they went through so much trouble.. for just still shots of dust haha. Well Sears used to be super huge and had distribution centers all over the US actually. Most of which are now abandoned or converted into something else.
@garycalgary Lessing J. Rosenwald, the son of Julius Rosenwald who joined with Sears after Roebck left and the president of Sears-Roebuck in the 1930s-50s, lived outside of Jenkintown, a suburb of Philadelphia. There he built his home, Alverthorpe Manor in 1939. He lived there until his death in the late 60s. After he died, his wife Edith donated the 55-room mansion and all 27 acres of its property to the township, who turned the grounds into Alverthorpe Park and the home into an arts center.
Nicely done. Great project.
chuckrowe1070 4 weeks ago
I was there! We had a crowd with us that day. I can't even describe the eerie feeling when the clock tower which had been a landmark in Northeast Philadelphia for decades began to tilt and then fall into a cloud of brown dust. When we saw the debris cloud rolling directly toward us, we ran as fast as we could. Little did we know that the Twin Towers would be destroyed years later in NYC.
moonbunch01 1 year ago
we were there! when we saw the dust cloud rolling toward us, we ran as fast as we could to escape. We had a whole crowd with us that day. I can't describe the eerie feeling when the tower, which had been a landmark on the blvd. for years, suddenly began to tilt and then fall into a brown cloud. It brought tears to your eyes for sure. Awesome! Little did we know that years later we would witness the destruction of the Twin Towers in NYC.
moonbunch01 1 year ago
I did climb on that pile of bricks to get some of those sears bricks and yes I did get hurt but not to bad, GREAT VIDEO ...!!!
TearsForSears 3 years ago
lol all that for 2 seconds of footage
but your explanation was very interesting
if sears was in chicago as their head office why was their distribution business in philadelphia?
garycalgary 3 years ago
lol i know right... they went through so much trouble.. for just still shots of dust haha. Well Sears used to be super huge and had distribution centers all over the US actually. Most of which are now abandoned or converted into something else.
MajinLou 3 years ago
@garycalgary Lessing J. Rosenwald, the son of Julius Rosenwald who joined with Sears after Roebck left and the president of Sears-Roebuck in the 1930s-50s, lived outside of Jenkintown, a suburb of Philadelphia. There he built his home, Alverthorpe Manor in 1939. He lived there until his death in the late 60s. After he died, his wife Edith donated the 55-room mansion and all 27 acres of its property to the township, who turned the grounds into Alverthorpe Park and the home into an arts center.
cool45010 10 months ago
@cool45010 wow that's a plausible explanation and better yet without condescending sarcasm so thank you for the explanation.
I am sure sears did everything to maximize profits like every other business.....
Cheers to you
garycalgary 10 months ago
@garycalgary sure thing
cool45010 10 months ago
Awesomeness.
Pldculebra 3 years ago