Anne Kearns’ home in Scranton, Pa., may be on its way to becoming a national landmark.
Kearns raised a family in her gray colonial house on North Washington Avenue in the city’s Green Ridge neighbourhood, living in it for close to 60 years. But the name of the previous family to live there may have an impact on its future.
The two-storey, wood-cladded house was the boyhood home of presidential candidate Joe Biden.
“I think he’s been back 11 or 12 times,” Kearns says.
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Biden lived in the home until he was 10 years old, moving to Delaware in 1953. His family was part of a massive exodus when steel mills closed. Known as “the Electric City,” Scranton has never fully recovered. Today the population is about 76,000, almost half of what it was at its peak.
Anne’s son Chris Kearns lived grew up in the same bedroom as Biden, and has met the former vice president several times. He says he believes lessons learned by Biden at a young age have stayed with him.
“Joe talks about the story of his father coming home to this house, coming up the steps and telling him about losing his job,” Chris Kearns says. “So when you’ve gone through that as a life experience, there’s no other way to understand the people who are going through that now.”