Easter Decorations on E. Milton Street

Easter Decorations on E. Milton Street

I am not really the right person to tell this story of Easter decorations on E. Milton Street. I do not know the persons who started it or in what year it started. But it is Easter time, and I will leave it up to you to fill in the blanks.

Easter for us in the 1960s as kids meant an Easter basket filled with candy, a 16 oz. solid bunny from Heggy’s, and a trip to Alliance to drive up and down E. Milton Street and look at the Easter decorations. Just like Christmas decorations that are done every year, it was just a given thing that the islands going down the middle of E. Milton would be filled with bright, festive Easter decorations.

I know that during that era, we made the trip every year to go look at them. From a kid’s perspective, you would expect something like this was done in every town and city. Looking back, one can appreciate the amount of planning and work that went into making it all happen.

This trip down memory lane, like many other missing pieces of our childhood, lives on in our minds. Do you have photos in your scrapbooks with images of the Easters of the past on E. Milton Street?

Submitted by Dave McMahon

E. Milton Easter decorations
East Milton Street Easter decorations

Heggy’s Chocolates for Easter

Heggy's in Alliance, Ohio

There probably is not a person born and raised in Stark County that does not have a Heggy’s story. For generations now, people have enjoyed the wonderful variety of confections made by the local candy maker. A holiday package of Heggy’s chocolates is not only welcomed, but as much a part of the holiday season as any other tradition.

For members of the Alliance community, Heggy’s on Main Street was a local landmark and hangout for decades. Jack Sell and his family and employees made sure not only were you well fed, but that your sweet tooth was satisfied and that there was also a bag or box of sweets to take home.

My Heggy’s story starts with the fact that my Dad, Jack McMahon, had his “second” job working at Heggy’s in the evenings. In that period following WWII, it just was an excepted fact that many Americans worked a side job along with their full-time one. By day, my Dad worked as a mail carrier in the Downtown Post Office. Then on some evenings, he went around the corner and worked the counter at Heggy’s. Dad knew Jack Sell long before I was born. They both bowled together for the Heggy’s team on Wednesday nights at the Christopher Columbus bowling lanes. My two oldest brothers had counter jobs along with Dad in the 1960s.

Growing up, there was always Heggy’s ice cream in the refrigerator freezer. It was not there for just every night of the week, but for Sunday evenings, usually when The Wonderful World of Disney came on. What was really neat was that Dad helped make and pack the ice cream. And he usually always had a stash of candy somewhere. In grade school, my lunch bags were recycled Heggy’s bags.

Now the main focus of my story has to do with something that was exclusive to the Alliance location. How many of you remember the donuts at Heggy’s? They were just plain cake donuts, sometimes referred to today as old fashioned. And they came two ways, plain or with powered sugar. We grew up eating those donuts, a lot of them. I never got to see the machine that made them, but from what I had been told it was an old machine. And partly because of that, the inside hole was never true. They always had a ragged edge on the inside hole, and that part would get a little bit crispy. Since the machine was old, it would sometimes have issues. I have heard more than a couple stories mention it was my Dad who fixed it and kept it going over the years.

Some years ago just before his health started to fail, I asked Jack’s son Mike whatever happed to that machine. He said it was left behind at the Main Street store, and fell into disrepair. No more donuts with the ragged inside edge.

Now here is a story that many of you will relate to. Every Easter we would get a Heggy’s chocolate bunny rabbit. Not a small one, and not a hollow one like some candy companies tried to sell you, but a solid, 16 oz. bunny with the big ears. And of course the ears were always the first to go! Easter is almost here…

What is your favorite Heggy’s Story?

Submitted by Dave McMahon