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Member of
 | NSS (24673RL, FE, PH) |
 | Loyalhanna Grotto (6 Honorary) |
 | Pittsburgh Grotto |
Email loyalhanna@aol.com
Tom Metzgar lives in Washington Township, Westmoreland County, where his Scotch-Irish and Germanic ancestors settled during the 1770s.
After graduating from Penn State in 1981, Tom returned to his native county where he lived for awhile on the farm formerly owned and operated by his
schoolteacher parents. He supervises PPG Industries' Corporate Emergency Response Center and the Loss Prevention Associates at PPG's Allison Park
Coatings and Resins Research Center.
During 4-H outings of the early 1970s, Tom became captivated by the Chestnut Ridge caves of the Hillside area of Derry Township. Fortuitously, years
later, he would become enamored of a Hillside caver, Kim Opatka-Metzgar, who became his wife in 1994.
A long-time Pittsburgh Grotto member, Tom is a founding member of the Loyalhanna Grotto. He formerly edited their newsletter and has held every
office except for declining to serve as chairperson. Tom has caved in many parts of the United States, but concentrates on his native Keystone State.
His ideal caving trip consists of bushwhacking into the remote greenbrier-infested flanks of Chestnut Ridge, sweating out a gallon of
perspiration while digging at a sinkhole, breaking through to virgin cave, and documenting the discovery for publication. These one-day "poor man's"
expeditions into the realm of the unknown fulfill his yearning for exploration.
If he's not actually going where no-one has ever gone before, Tom vicariously fulfills his longings for being in other times and places. However, he
doesn't do this by watching television, and in fact he doesn't even own one. Instead, he reads voraciously, often mentally transporting himself back in
time. He regularly adds books, maps, periodicals, photographs, postcards and documents to his extensive collection, specializing in Pennsylvania topics.
Tom is best known in his community as a local historian and genealogist, and has written extensively for local publications. He has volunteered as a board
member and officer of numerous historical and conservation organizations. He recently resigned from nearly all of them in order to concentrate on writing.
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