Fall 2015 Messenger - Greene County Historical Society
Transcription
Fall 2015 Messenger - Greene County Historical Society
The Messenger Fall 2015 MEMBERSHIP NEWSLETTER OF THE G R E E N E C O U N T Y H I S T O R I C A L S O C I E T Y, I N C . Heritage Craft Fair Oct 4 In this Issue Remembering our friend and longtime Trustee Harvey Durham Letter from the President Greene County Historical Society Board of Trustees Dear Members & Friends: AS AN HISTORICAL ORGANIZATION we often do a great deal with events that happened 100, 200 or 300 years ago. This past summer we have dealt with a more recent time period. Do you remember your father, or grandfather or an older neighbor who used a hand pushed cultivator? A wooden handled one with a big wheel and several times used to cultivate the garden. How about a scythe? The long handled wooden type with small handles and a blade at the bottom. How about a grinding stone? In order to sharpen the blade of the scythe, or other cutting items, a grinding stone wheel was a common item on farms and in garages. And what barn, garage or freight business was not equipped with several blocks and tackles used to hoist heavy items? Greene County was once a major fruit farm area and what Hurlihey’s drink do apples become? Cider! And Drug Store how do you make cider? With a press! Phone All these items were common ones over 60 Booth years ago and now they are in our collections thanks to recent contributors. As a more local memory, how many of you remember Hurlihey’s Drug Store on Reed Street in Coxsackie? A druggist, with a soda fountain, and other retail items for sale, Hurlihey had a specially made wooden pay phone booth in his store for his customers. We now have that phone booth in our collection. Did you happen to use that phone booth? Please keep this letter in mind as you begin to go through your garage, attic or are cleaning out a neighbor’s or relative’s house. Items that once were commonplace but now are rare could be donated to the Greene County Historical Society. I will say it again: “If we don’t begin to work to deal with some of the items of the past fifty years or so, they may not be preserved for future generations.” Joseph Warren, Chairman Robert Hallock, President Jim Planck, Vice President David Dorpfeld, Treasurer Thomas Satterlee, Financial Secretary Ann Hallock, Recording Secretary Christine Byas Robert D’Agostino Karen Deeter Wanda Dorpfeld Rick Hanse Stefania Jozic Emily Dorpfeld Kunchala Matthew Luvera Richard Muggeo Dennis O’Grady Barbara Spataro Judee Synakowski Staff Shelby Mattice, Bronck Museum Curator Jennifer Barnhart, Operations Manager Linda Hunt, VRL Librarian Jason & Amanda O’Donnell, Caretakers The Messenger Published Semi-annually by The Greene County Historical Society, Inc. PO Box 44, Coxsackie, NY 12051 The Bronck Museum: 518.731.6490 Vedder Research Library: 518.731.1033 http://www.gchistory.org/ Jennifer Barnhart, Editor David &Wanda Dorpfeld, Copy Editors Contributors Christine Byas, David Dorpfeld, Wanda Dorpfeld, Ann Hallock, Robert Hallock, Shelby Mattice Sincerely, Bob Hallock, President, Greene County Historical Society, Inc. Apple Cider Press FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 2 Beecher Scholarship Winner from Coxsackie-Athens High School, was awarded the 2015 Raymond Beecher Scholarship. Christopher’s article was on the importance of the ice harvesting By Christine Byas industry along the riverfront towns in Greene County. He THE GREENE COUNTY included detail about the harvestHISTORICAL SOCIETY established ing process, the dangers involved the Raymond Beecher Scholarship in 2007 to honor Dr. Raymond Beecher’s 90th birthday. Each year it is awarded to a Greene County high school senior based on an article on local history. In the spring of 2015 two students submitted applications for this prestigious $1,000 scholarship. As I read through each local history article I couldn’t help but be impressed by the research completed by both students. Each made extensive use of the resources at the Vedder Research Library at the Bronck Museum. After much deliberation by members of the Scholarship Christopher Welch, Committee, Christopher Welch, Beecher Scholarship Winner New Board Member AT THE 2015 ANNUAL MEETING of the Greene County Historical Society, Matthew Luvera was nominated to serve as a new trustee. Matt was born and raised in Catskill; attended St. Patrick’s Parish School and graduated from Catskill High School. He received an Associate’s Degree in Science from Columbia-Greene Community College, a Bachelor’s Degree in Elementary Education from SUNY New Paltz, and a Master’s Degree in Education from the College of St. Rose. Matt has been a fourth grade teacher at Catskill Elementary School for over twelve years. Community service has always been important to him. He has been a volunteer at the Matthew 25 Food Pantry in Catskill since 2010. He is part of the Town of Catskill Republican Club, serving as President from 2013 to 2015, and the Chairman of the Town of Catskill Republican Committee since 2013. He served his church community at St. Patrick’s Church as an altar server, youth leader, religious education teacher, Director of Liturgy and Music, as well as current member of the Knights of Columbus Council #572 and Greene County Knights of Columbus Assembly #2253. Currently, he is an organist at Sacred Heart Church in Cairo, organist at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in West Camp and cantor at St. Anthony’s Friary in Catskill. He has been involved in his school community at Catskill FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 3 and the eventual decline of the industry. Christopher commented on the delivery of ice by the iceman saying, “Icemen were entrepreneurs, owning a family business; run by several family members including fathers, brothers and sons, immensely similar to the concept of the milkman.” From his research it is clear he has gained a deeper understanding of how vital this industry was to the economies of the towns along the Hudson River. Congratulations go out to Christopher, his parents and the Coxsackie-Athens Central School District. I would like to encourage Greene County senior high school students to submit an entry for next year’s 2016 Beecher Scholarship. Maybe there is some family history that might suggest an interesting topic. Your research is guaranteed to increase your knowledge of the beautiful and interesting area in which we live. Elementary School as a professional practices committee member, past-chairman of the school discipline committee, past building representative for the Catskill Teachers Association, member of the district technology committee, and currently the extracurricular advisor to the Business Club and Yearbook Club. Remembering Harvey Durham ON JUNE 10, 2015, our dear friend and GCHS Trustee Emeritus Harvey Durham passed away. Harvey served on the GCHS board for 25 years and was just recently named a Trustee Emeritus. He and his wife Kathleen came to work as volunteers in the Vedder Research Library where they both worked faithfully for many years particularly with the files of photographs. Harvey also helped at the Bronck Museum where he served on the Museum Committee for many years, helped at events and assisted with school tours. Harvey and Kathleen were staunch supporters of the Society and generous contributors to saving the 13 sided barn. He took loving care of the interior exhibits in the barn Harvey with his wife Kathleen volunteering at the Vedder Research Library. cleaning out the annual collections of black walnut hulls left by the squirrel visitors. Harvey worked closely with Ray Beecher to author one of our best selling publications "Around Greene County and the Catskills." He was an excellent amateur photographer and often presented slide shows of his photos from Greene Harvey and Kathleen were staunch supporters of the Society. They were the driving force behind saving the 13-sided barn. They particularly enjoyed being docents in the barn at the events. Pictured above, Harvey describes the construction of the barn to a visiting fourth grade school group from Coxsackie/Athens. County sites at Annual Meetings and other locations around the county. President Bob Hallock said, “Harvey is in the same category as the late Raymond Beecher and Olga Santora - people who were willing workers that gave their all to the Society.” We will miss him dearly... Just a few of the comments on the GCHS Facebook page on Harvey’s passing. He will be missed by many. FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 4 Ask Shelby Q. Was Pieter Bronck a “Farmer”? A. In the Spring Messenger I said that it was more likely that at any time prior to the Bronck family’s arrival at Coxsackie Pieter would have bartered for the food his family needed, but what about after their arrival at Coxsackie? Establishing farming in the North American colonies in the 1600s would not have been easy even for those who had farmed in Europe. Holland, which imported almost all its grain from the Baltic area, hoped that New Netherland would be able to produce significant amounts of grain. Concept and reality are often at odds. There were several challenges, beginning with the climate. The first European settlers to come to America arrived in the middle of what climatologists call the Little Ice Age. Between the late 1300s and the early 1800s the northern hemisphere experienced an extended period of unstable weather marked by extreme changes in temperature and precipitation. There were years without summers, frost killed crops in July. The extended periods of rainy weather during the Little Ice Age devastated grain crops. Then there were the considerable differences between farming the old established fields of Europe and the newly clear cut forest floors in the colonies. Several of the tradition- Education Programs al European grain crops refused to grow or produced such poor yields that most colonial farmers began to rely on Native American corn as their basic grain crop. Shortages of oxen and horses in the colonies impacted the amount of land that could be planted, hindered the proper preparation of the land for planting, and led to shortages of manure for fertilizer. Finally there was the fact that farmers from Holland were primarily dairy farmers, not well acquainted with grain farming on either side of the Atlantic. European crops, livestock and the landscape of the American colonies would need to undergo serious modification before European style agriculture could be successful in America. As a general matter farming, at least during the Dutch colonial period, was far from successful, and there were times when the colony could not provide sufficient food for its own population. So where does this leave Pieter Bronck? There is only one brief report of Pieter working in his fields. Even so, this might indicate that of necessity Pieter, a lifelong sailor, was trying his hand at farming. The distance from the market at Beverwijck and Pieter’s difficult financial condition probably forced him into what is called subsistence farming. Indian corn may have been his crop of choice it was relatively easy to grow and well suited to his land and skill level. For the period between the family’s arrival at Coxsackie in 1663 and Pieter’s death in 1669 there is no surviving documentation which offers any firm answer to this question. But by 1680 Pieter’s son Jan had purchased the machinery for a gristmill which would seem to indicate that the family or the neighborhood was now producing sufficient amounts of some kind of grain to warrant the expense of building a gristmill. Larry T omp W ay.” The kins discussed coln in his book L book is e th n Windha eo m, Ashla a photographic “Out Windham wski spok o k a n y S nd, Pra tour of Henson ctor Leo ttsv vil r Re-ena for sale le from 1890-19 ille, Maplecre Civil Wa st and at the V 4 Train. edder R 5. The book is Funeral esearch availab le Library for $29.9 FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 5 5. The Bronck Museum 2015 Fall Special Events Calendar EACH YEAR as summer draws to a close Bronck Museum begins its preparations for the autumn, the season of abundance on an early American farm. It is entirely understandable that rural Americans chose the fall as a season of celebration. Farm kitchens were bursting with fresh food. The mellow sun of late summer was ripening the field corn. Apple trees were groaning under the weight of fat red apples. Bees left the farm’s rye straw bee skeps to visit the last blossoms of the flower garden and then patrolled wild spaces to seek the remaining golden pollen of the season. The sale of field crops provided extra income and farm women purchased sugar and spices in preparation for the coming holidays. Fall mornings grew chilly and the cider mills grew busy. The cellars and attics were close to bursting. As November waned and the sun grew cold and pale the butchering would begin. Bronck Museum’s special events calendar too is a celebration of the affable sociability and abundance of autumn in the Hudson Valley. The last of the 2015 Bronck Family at Home programs “Busy with the Bees” will be held on Sunday, September 13th. Dick Muggeo our bee keeper will make full use of the museum’s newly installed demonstration bee hive to tell the story of the bee keeping, and its importance on the farm. Autumn in the country was a time to sell whatever you had in abundance and buy those things you needed for the winter ahead. The Bronck Museum Heritage Craft Fair, on Sunday October 4th continues this venerable fall tradition. Crafters offer their goods, from pumpkins to pottery, aprons to apple jelly, wool to whatnots, honey to hand towels candles to maple candy. Add great live music, mulled cider, grazing sheep and horse drawn wagon rides and you have a delightful way to spend an early autumn afternoon. Sad to say not all events can be a celebration. On Saturday, October 24th the Bronck Museum offers visitors the opportunity to observe the rituals of a traditional Dutch funeral. Shutters closed, the house is dark and still, the departed waits on the stiffening board before a cold fireplace. The sin eater hovers beside the open door awaiting the clang of the bell and the solemn procession to the nearby Bronck burying ground. One of the most popular of all Bronck Museum’s special events is the season’s last. The Chilly Willy Winter’s Eve weekend will be held on November 14th and 15th . It is fair to say that early Americans were frequently “party people” even the pious Pilgrims were open to hosting a big celebration for the neighbors. As late autumn approached Dutch colonists expected to host and be hosted by family and friends during a season of celebrations stretching from midNovember to early January. Bring your mittens, put on your jacket, stroll past the Lucy bundle step through the Dutch door and back in time more than three hundred years. Join a costumed guide to experience the celebration of the nearly forgotten holidays of Martinmas, St. Nicholas Day and St. Lucy Day. The Bronck houses will be decorated with the bounty of field and forFA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 6 est fashioned into ancient symbols, old legends will be told, and traditional sweets will be served. The Chilly Willy Winter’s Eve weekend is a great way to begin your own holiday celebration. As autumn comes to the beautiful Hudson Valley we can truly say that the best is yet to come at the Bronck Museum. 2015 GCHS Fall Schedule of Events Spet 10 Boarding Houses & Resorts in the Towns of Greenville, Freehold & Durham, presented by Don Teator & Mary Lou Nahas. Vedder Research Library, 7pm Sept 13 Bronck Family at Home Getting Things Done, “Busy with Bees,” Explore beekeeping and the uses of bee products in the early American household. Tours begin at 1pm & 3pm, Adults $7, Members/Children $3.50 Oct 4 Heritage Craft Fair, exhibit & sale of traditional American crafts, live music, food, silent auction, wagon rides. 12–5pm, Free Oct 15 Ronald Dombrowski’s book on Palenville, Vedder Research Library. 7pm Oct 24 A Great Sorrow, An early American funeral. Tours begin at 4pm, 4:45pm & 5:30pm, Adults $7, Members $3.50. Nov 5 Baseball during World War II, Vedder Research Library. 7pm Nov 14 & 15 Chilly Willy Winter’s Eve Tours, cold season tour with costumed guide. 11am, 1pm & 3pm each day, Adults $8, Members $4 New Exhibit Mr. Duncan’s Meat Wagon A NEW EXHIBIT is currently under development at the Bronck Museum. The exhibit will showcase a meat wagon owned by Sylvester L. Duncan of Greene County. S. L. Duncan of Scottish and Irish descent was born in 1850 and lived in the South Cairo-Leeds area, where his shop was located. He married Sarah Cooke, circa 1894, and had 2 sons and 2 daughters. He died in 1916 and was buried in the Cairo Cemetery. Other members of the Duncan family lived in this area and were Above: Sylvester L. Duncan with his meat wagon. This picture was taken on Second Street in Athens. This meat wagon will be featured in the new exhibit. It was donated to the Society by Emily Carl Slocum in 2004. Right: An early line drawing of the layout of the new exhibit. The meat wagon will be in the center of the exhibit with reader rail up front for visitors. Bottom: A view of the text on the reader rail. It will contain biographical information on Mr. Duncan’s life and meat business. In addition, there will be questions on either side of the rail that visitors can then flip up to see answers underneath. FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 7 involved in separate meat businesses. The horse-drawn wagon featured in the exhibit was used to deliver beef and lamb to cash customers in Athens from his meat market. It appears that Mr. Duncan promoted his business mainly by “word of mouth” since no advertisements have been found in the newspapers of the period. The wagon was donated to the Greene County Historical Society by Emily Carl Slocum in 2004. The exhibit is scheduled to be in place by the end of this Museum season. The meat wagon will be the center of the exhibit with a life size figure of Mr. Duncan standing in front. Also, a reader rail will be installed up front for visitors to view some fun questions and answers. Civil War Sesquicentennial Outstanding Performance Award REGINA DALY was awarded a certificate of appreciation for her outstanding performance in connection with Greene County’s Sesquicentennial Commemoration of the American Civil War. Ms. Daly compiled and edited a series of four books that summarized newspaper reporting as it appeared in three Greene County Newspapers; the Catskill Recorder and Democrat, the Catskill Examiner, and the Windham Journal. This work took countless hours of her time and resulted in a comprehensive record for those interested in how the war was reported in our local papers. In addition, each year throughout the four year commemoration, special Memorial Day ceremonies were held in different parts of the county. Ms. Daly helped in the planning for these events and always appeared at them in period dress. Other events also occurred during the period which she supported and on occasion gave talks about aspects of war. In one case she played the role of Greene County diarist Elizabeth Miller who wrote extensively about her reactions and feelings about the war and death of Abraham Lincoln. One of Ms. Daly’s greatest achievements during the commemoration was the organization of five Civil War Battlefield Bus Trips. These trips to Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland and Virginia have received great reviews and some people have attended every one. Lastly and most importantly, Ms. Around the County Zadock Pratt Museum Fundraiser LAST YEAR the Zadock Pratt Museum held it’s first Annual Honoree Fundraiser. The fundraiser was held to benefit the museum and move them towards their ten year goal in bringing the museum back to full restoration after the flood waters of Irene. Daly has asked that all profits from the sale of her books and the bus trips be designated for the refurbishing of a Civil War Battle Flag. The 2nd Annual Honoree Benefit will take place on Saturday, October 17th in the Club Room at Windham Mountain. The museum is proud to announce that Greene County Historical Society Trustees Robert and Ann Hallock and Trustee Emeritus Charles Schaefer will be honored at this year’s event. FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 8 2015 Annual Meeting and Volunteer Recognition Event New Acquisitions Cataloged at VRL July - December 2014 • Journal 40th Annual Athens Street Festival July 12, 2014 (from Stanley Whitbeck) • Genealogies - Elisha Smith/Reuben Pulver (from Wayne W. Wright) • 2 scrapbooks & misc material - Greene County Visiting Nurses/Health care (from Doris Vedder) • Research material; stationery (from Bodil Donald) • Poster “Major William Plimley August 11 and 12, 1984” Memorial Celebration (from Thomas & Joan Satterlee) • Framed map 1881 Catskill Mtns. Van Loon; Framed Engraving after Thomas Cole - Catskill Mountain House; Directory Boarding House 1881; Book - American Journal of Science Vol 19-20 1880 (from David Sherman) • The Swedish American Historical Quarterly April 2014 (from Shelley Olson) • Books - History of Minisink Region/The Mohawk Valley/The Firekeeper; GCHS Home Tour 6/6/2009; Calendar - Athens Bi-centennial; Newspaper clippings (from Anonymous) • Files from Mabel Parker Smith; Files from Lester R. Smith, Material from Barbara Rivette (from Barbara Rivette) • Industrial Site Survey of Greene County (from Robert Hallock) • Book - Picturesque Catskills R.L. DeLisser 1894; Newspaper Catskill Daily Mail March 16, 1972 (from Audrey Toolan/Frances Monaghan) • Book - The Barent Jacobsen Cool Family Benson, Richard (from Julia C. Moore) • 23 color glossy photographs of Greene County; Bicentennial 2003; Romance Map of the Hudson River Valley (from Susan Wathens) • Photographs and slides - Palenville parade & Butterfly Museum Durham (from Robert Harrison) • The Book of Knowledge/The Children’s Encyclopedia (from Doris H. Jenkins) • Disc of Pratt Museum Fundraiser October 18, 2014 (from David Dorpfeld) • 54 b/w photographs of Leeds Bridge 1936-1937 (from Roger Lane) • Book - Out Windham Way Tompkins, Larry; Pamphlet - 3rd Annual Wall of Honor Gala (from David Dorpfeld) • Binder on Cape Cod Canal Chief Engineer Derke Mulder (from Wanda Traver) • Binder including information on Worthy Tolley trial, ancestral summary of Kathryn Hallenbeck Newman, Assessment Roll Athens 1912 (from Kathryn Hallenbeck Newman Schongar) • “Patent Map of Greene County” (from Forrest King) • Greene County’s Good News Letter and envelope August 3, 1942 (from Robin Smith/Mary Alice Lacy Pardee) • Christmas Card - Rip Van Winkle House 2014 (from Marilyn & Robert Carl) • Book - Ordinary People, Our Blakeley and Mierow Families in America, 1635-2013 (from Brian L. Blakeley) • Booklet on early New York (from Barbara Spataro) • Booklet - Lyman Treman, Lawyer - Statesman (from David Dorpfeld) • CD - Images for Dombrowski presentation at Researching New York Conference, November 20, 2014 (from Harrison Hunt) • Copy Inscription from gravestones at Lexington, NY (from Wayne Wright) • Medallion - 125th anniversary Greene County Bancorp Inc. (from Thomas & Joan Satterlee) • Book - Legendary Locals of Greene County (from David & Wanda Dorpfeld) THE GCHS ANNUAL MEETING AND VOLUNTEER RECOGNITION EVENT was held at St. Luke’s Church in Catskill this past May. At the event, President Bob Hallock and Trustee Wanda Dorpfeld did an interpretation based on the Civil War diary of New Baltimore resident Elizabeth Miller. After the presentation many of our volunteers were then recognized for their contributions to GCHS. FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 9 Greene History Notes When Uncle Sam Lived in Catskill By David Dorpfeld, Greene County Historian Reprinted from newspapers in Greene County the week of July 21, 2014 THE CITY OF TROY, NEW YORK claims Samuel Wilson (1766 – 1854), the man who became one of our national symbols – “Uncle Sam.” In downtown Troy there is even a statue of him and he was buried in a modest grave in the city’s Oakwood Cemetery. What many people may not know is that Sam Wilson lived in Catskill for a time and that we can lay claim to him in a modest way. To many Americans, the image of Uncle Sam is merely folklore, an image that is used for propaganda to increase nationalism and instill patriotism. The man the image is based on was born in Massachusetts. In 1789, he and his brother Ebenezer left Massachusetts and went to Troy in search of work. By 1793, Sam and his brother had amassed enough money to open a meatpacking company called E&S Wilson. They built a slaughterhouse on the Hudson River which they used to ship meat to New York City and other stops along the way. Andrew Bittner writing in the Summer 2011 “Greene County Historical Journal” says the following: “In 1805 E&S Wilson’s Meatpacking Company had two larger slaughterhouses and was slaughtering 150 heads of cattle per day and employing 100 men. The company continued to develop but the true turning point in Uncle Sam Wilson’s life came at the onset of the War of 1812.” As the oft told tale goes, there was a government requirement that meat-packers stamp their names on the barrels of food they were sending to the troops. Besides being a meat-packer, Wilson also worked as an inspector for meat packed by Elbert Anderson. Inspected barrels of meat were stamped “E.A.-U.S.,” for Elbert Anderson and the United States. When one of Wilson’s workmen was asked the meaning of the letters, he said they stood for Elbert Anderson and Uncle Sam Wilson. Henceforth, the nickname for the United States has been attributed to Sam Wilson. The most iconic image of Uncle Sam appears on a World War I recruitment poster where he is encouraging citizens to join the army with the words “I WANT YOU FOR U.S. ARMY.” So, how can we lay claim to Uncle Sam Wilson? Our claim arises from the fact that between 1817 and 1822, Wilson left Troy for a time helping his brother Nathan run a meat packing business in Catskill. After his brief time in Catskill, he moved back to Troy where he died on July 31, 1854 at the age of 88. Today the bridge that carries traffic on Bridge Street over the Catskill Creek is named in his honor and the house he lived in still stands on West Main Street. This is the same house where Martin Van Buren, our eighth president, married Hannah Hoes in 1807, but that is another story. David Dorpfeld’s column, Greene History Notes, appears weekly in the “Daily Mail,” “Windham Journal” and “Greene County News.” FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 10 Windows on History Update Your Help is Needed! THE WINDOWS ON HISTORY CAMPAIGN has supported the historic restoration of the Bronck Houses over the past 5 years including the following: • Building new shutters for the 1663 House; • Rebuilding the north wall of the 1690 House; and • Restoration of the northwest corner of the foundation of the 1738 House. The 2015 efforts will be directed at the three windows in the north gable of the 1738 House including installation of three new windows into the timber frame of the house and restoration of the brick units under those windows. Handcrafted bricks have been obtained for the work. We antic- Please support the following businesses that support the Greene County Historical Society GCHS Business Friends & Supporters The Bank of Greene County Box 470. Catskill, NY 12414 ipate that the work will be started in September and be finished before winter. These windows, which are between 20 to 35 feet above the lawn, have been witnesses to 277 years of history including the Coxsackie Articles of Association; the sending of food stuffs and other supplies to the troops in the American Revolutionary War; and the establishment of Greene County. Please contribute to “Windows on History” when you receive the latest Campaign literature. It is only with your help that the Society can maintain and operate the Bronck Museum. Bavarian Manor Country Inn & Restaurant 866 Mountain Ave. Purling, NY 12470 Black Horse Farms 155 Fountain Flats Rd. Coxsackie, NY 12051 Braine Building & Restoration 13 Brick Row Athens, NY 12015 C.A. Albright & Sons LLC 13640 Rt 9W Hannacroix, NY 12087 Chalet Services, Inc. 3206 Route 81 Surprise, NY 12176 Coxsackie Antique Center 12400 Rt 9W West Coxsackie, NY 12192 Dimensions North Ltd 112 William St. Catskill, NY 12414 George’s Electric & Plumbing PO Box 151 New Baltimore, NY 12124 Greene County Septic Cleaners, Inc. PO Box 29 Climax NY 12042 Hilscher & Hilscher, Attorneys at Law 2 Franklin St. Catskill NY 12414 Hinterland Design 1 Mansion St. Coxsackie, NY 12051 Robert Ihlenburgh, PLS 451 E. Allen St. Hudson, NY 12534 Max S. Wood Equipment 11945 Route 9W West Coxsackie, NY 12192 National Bank of Coxsackie 3-7 Reed Street Coxsackie, NY 12051 North River Research 155 Edison Timmerman Rd. Cairo, NY 12413 State Telephone Co. 46 Reed Street Coxsackie, NY 12051 Washington Irving Inn 6629 Rt 23A Box 275 Hunter, NY 12442 The three windows in the north gable of the 1738 house will be restored in the next phase of the Windows on History campaign. FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 11 Williams Lumber & Home Centers 6760 Route 9 Rhinebeck, NY 12572 Trading Post to Open for Craft Fair WE’RE ONCE AGAIN looking for items to sell at the Trading Post on the grounds of the Bronck Museum. The store will be open during the Heritage Craft Fair on October 4th. Please drop off any donations to the Bronck Museum during regular Museum hours. Donations can include glassware, dishes, pictures, knick knacks, etc. No clothing, please. Thank you for your support. Chilly Willy Winter’s Eve Tours Nov 14 & 15 Non-Profit Organization US Postage Paid Newburgh, NY 12550 Permit No. 1491 Fall 2015 Greene County Historical Society, Inc. c/o T. Satterlee 164 High Hill Road Catskill, NY 12414-6411 Return Service Requested GCHS Beecher Award Winners EACH YEAR, the society presents the Beecher Award, named in honor of our late benefactor and pillar of the society Raymond Beecher. The award is a silver bowl and is given to someone who has made a significant contribution to the society over an extended period of time. At the 2015 Annual Meeting of the Greene County Historical Society it was presented to Jean M. Bush and Kenneth E. Mabey. Jean and Ken have been involved with the Historic Register Committee since its inception. The committee, the brainchild of Raymond Beecher, was established in 1990 for the express purpose of identifying sites of cultural value in the history of the county. The culmination of Jean and Ken’s efforts, along with those of Natalie Daley’s and other members of the committee, was the publication of the book “Historic Places in Greene County.” Jean and Ken have also been active for decades in many other society programs. Jean M. Bush and Kenneth E. Mabey receive Beecher Award FA L L 2 0 1 5 M E S S E N G E R PAG E 12
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