This image is the cover for the book Forest Hills, Images of America

Forest Hills, Images of America

Aptly named because of its hilly terrain and abundance of trees, the area now known as Forest Hills was a dusty coal mining community in the late 1800s. Centered between two major roads, the Lincoln Highway (Ardmore Boulevard/U.S. Route 30) and the Greensburg Pike, Forest Hills was incorporated in 1919 in order to gain better representation for tax money. Technology put the town on the map with the first commercial licensed radio station broadcast in 1920 and the Westinghouse Atom Smasher, built in 1937. As the borough grew with new houses, schools, and parks, so did traditions such as the Fourth of July celebration at Forest Hills Park and the Bryn Mawr Corn Roast. Many who live in the community are third or fourth generation residents. Using vintage photographs, Forest Hills presents the untold story of this tight-knit community.

Jody B. Shapiro, Joel A. Bloom

It is through the photographs and stories of many of these longtime residents and the cooperation of the borough staff, that Forest Hills native Jody B. Shapiro and her husband, Joel A. Bloom, a Greensburg native, assembled this collection of primarily unpublished photographs.

Arcadia Publishing