Logan, Philadelphia
Logan | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 40°02′06″N 75°08′35″W / 40.035°N 75.143°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Pennsylvania |
County | Philadelphia |
City | Philadelphia |
Area code(s) | 215, 267 and 445 |
Logan is a neighborhood in the upper
History
The area was once part of the plantation of James Logan, adviser to William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania. Modern transportation formed the community: the Broad Street subway, which opened in 1928, and a thriving network of streetcar and bus routes, allowed development of what was then considered one of the earliest suburban communities in Philadelphia, though the area is considered urban today. The transportation network still provides Logan residents easy access to the rest of the city.
On the East side of Broad St., Logan was a predominantly Jewish neighborhood until the 1960s. 11th Street was a center of commerce with two bakeries, a deli, and a dairy store. West of Broad, the neighborhood was predominantly Irish Catholic in the 1950s to early 1979s.
Broad Street was the main shopping area for Logan, from Windrim to Rockland streets. This area had three movie theaters, The Logan, The Rockland, and The Broad, clothing shops, a hardware store, a shoe store and an ice cream shop, among others.
In the 1970s,
In 1980, the Fishers Lane Historic District was created, certifying 12
Geography
The neighborhood is bordered by the
Demographics
As of the census[3] of 2010, the racial makeup of Logan is 59.7% African American, 29.1% Hispanic, 5.4% Asian, 3.9% white, and 2% from other races. The neighborhood is mainly made up of African Americans and Puerto Ricans.
The population of Logan decreased by 14% between the 1990 and 2000 censuses, in large part because of the razing of numerous row homes in the Southern portion of the neighborhood, which had sunk into the landfill on which they were built. This area today is known as the "Logan Triangle".
Education
Primary, secondary, and higher education
Logan is a part of the School District of Philadelphia.
Elementary schools:
- Birney Elementary School
- Jay Cooke Elementary School
- Logan Elementary
- Thurgood Marshall Elementary
- St. Vincent dePaul School
High schools:
- Central High school (a magnet school)
- Philadelphia Girls' High School(a magnet school)
- Widener Memorial School
- Delaware Valley Charter High School (charter)
Logan is also home to one college: La Salle University, a private, co-educational, Roman Catholic university founded in 1863 by the Christian Brothers religious order. La Salle is located in the northwestern corner of the neighborhood.
Museums
The Stenton is the former home of James Logan, colonial Mayor of Philadelphia and Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. This home has been turned into a house museum.
La Salle University Art Museum is a six gallery museum located on La Salle's campus.
Public libraries
The Free Library of Philadelphia Logan Branch serves Logan. It was built in 1917.[4]
Health care
The principal hospital is
Economy
In the past factories were clustered in a few areas; historically they were diverse, and included Mrs. Smith's Pies on Lindley Avenue and the Fleer Baseball Card Gum Company near 10th Street and Lindley. Four block commercial districts of retailers and neighborhood businesses stretch along Broad Street and the parallel Old York Road.
Transportation
SEPTA buses
The Logan neighborhood has three stops on the Broad Street Line:
- Olney Transportation Center (upper/north Logan) - located near Philadelphia High School for Girls, Widener High School, Albert Einstein Medical Center, Central High School, and La Salle University
- Logan subway stop(mid-Logan) located near Logan's Branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia, Delaware Valley Charter High School, and Cristo Ray High School
- Wyoming subway stop(south Logan) - located near the Stenton Park, Logan Triangle, and Roosevelt Boulevard
Notable people
- Gerard Ebbecke, Chief Traffic Engineer of Philadelphia until his death in 1998 - resided in Logan in his youth
- David Goodis, author of many noir novels of the 1940s and 1950s, including Dark Passage and Shoot the Piano Player
- TLC
References
- ^ Kaufman, Marc. "'Koreatown': From Logan Into Olney." The Philadelphia Inquirer. July 13, 1986. 1. Retrieved on July 31, 2011.
- ^ Philadelphia County Listings on the National Register of Historic Places
- ^ "U.S. Census website". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-01-31.
- ^ "Logan Branch." School District of Philadelphia. Retrieved on October 19, 2012.
- Logan Redevelopment Area Plan. Philadelphia: PA: Philadelphia City Planning Commission, May, 2002.
- 1976 Bulletin Almanac. Philadelphia, PA: Evening and Sunday Bulletin, 1976.
- Finkel, Kenneth, ed. (1995). Philadelphia Almanac and Citizens' Manual (1995 ed.). Philadelphia: Library Company of Philadelphia. pp. 156–170. ISBN 0-914076-89-2.