The Red Pepper Riot of Elizabethtown

Did you know one of Lancaster Countyโ€™s most heated political disputes may have been defused byโ€ฆred peppers on a stove?

In Seeing Lancaster County from a Trolley Window, Howard Kriebel recounts a wonderfully strange episode from Elizabethtown in 1843, when the fight over adopting the public school system turned chaotic. The town supported public schools. The surrounding township did not. After a three-foot snowfall disrupted the election, angry voters packed into a small office the next day, tempers rose, and it looked as though the whole thing might erupt into violence.

Then came the unexpected twist. Someone placed red peppers on the hot stove.

A group of men gathered around a steaming pot in a dimly lit room, reacting to the smell, with some covering their noses while others eat. A doorway shows figures rushing outside.

What followed was a room full of hacking, sneezing, coughing, and a rush for the door into the freezing air. The tension broke, the room cooled, the crowd settled, and the school vote was preserved.

It is exactly the kind of delightfully odd local story that makes Seeing Lancaster County from a Trolley Window such a fun read. Now available on Amazon.

Book cover titled 'Seeing Lancaster County From a Trolley Window', featuring a vintage photograph of people seated in a trolley car, published by Conestoga Traction Company.

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