Geneva Anniversary - Geneva Township Ohio
Transcription
Geneva Anniversary - Geneva Township Ohio
Geneva Anniversary Happy Birthday Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 1 Join us in Celebrating Geneva Township 200th Anniversary City of Geneva 150th Anniversary A Gazette Newspapers Publication Geneva Township, City of Geneva to celebrate birthdays with a year of events BY GABRIEL McVEY Gazette Newspapers GENEVA – The City of Geneva’s sesquicentennial and Geneva Township’s bicentennial will be commemorated in a dual celebration May 21, but the celebrations will be a yearlong event with events scheduled throughout the year to celebrate Geneva pride – township and city. The main event – so to speak – will be May 21 and 22 at Memorial Field to celebrate the joint birthdays of Geneva Township and the City of Geneva. The schedule for the two-day bicentennial/ sesquicentennial is as follows: Saturday, May 21 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. - Kiwanis Pancake Breakfast at United Methodist Church 1 p.m. - Parade from downtown to Memorial Field 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. - Rides, crafts, car show vendors and concessions at Memorial Field 2 p.m. - National Anthem and flag raising by Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #6846 2:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Children’s games 2:45 p.m to 5:45 p.m. - Music by The Kingpins 3:00 p.m. - Magic show by The Great Brad 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Roast beef dinner at Park Street Christian Church 5:45 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. Music by the H2O Band Sunday, May 22 1:00 p.m to 6:00 p.m. Rides, crafts, vendors and concessions at Memorial Field 1:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. Music by the Geneva High School Jazz Band 2:15 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. Music by Mark Carr – an Elvis impersonator 3:45 p.m to 6:00 p.m. music by Larry, Daryl, Daryl and Sheryl The May 21 and 22 celebration does not, however, mark the end of the party. Events throughout the year will continue to celebrate and commemorate Geneva Township and Geneva City. On June 11, Geneva Public Library will hold a Geneva History Expo from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. In addition to contributions from the library archives, residents are encouraged to bring items of historical significance to the area and discuss them with attendees. July 23 and 24 is Art Weekend in Geneva, and the Community Barn Quilt will be unveiled at 43 E. Main St. Plans are in the offing to retouch and unveil murals throughout the city in an effort aimed at beautification and promoting Geneva pride. Geneva Area High School will hold a pep rally Aug. 25 to celebrate the new school year and Geneva pride with the Geneva High School marching band parading through the city, followed by a bonfire at the parade route’s end at Geneva High School. August is also slated for an outdoor meal called “Dinner on Broadway,” where the city will close down North Broadway and set up tables, allowing guests to dine outdoors. On Sept. 9-11, Christ Episcopal Church is commemorating its own sesquicentennial and will IMAGE SUBMITTED BY GENEVA TOWNSHIP FISCAL OFFICER TONY LONG Pictured is a proof of the joint sesquicentennial/bicentennial challenge coin commemorating the dual anniversaries of Geneva Township and the City of Geneva. The coins are still available for sale at $10 a piece. host a tour of sites in Geneva related to its long history in Geneva. Nov. 11 will see a Veterans Day event in cooperation with both the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars. Dec. 10 is the date of the “Run for the Beard” – a fundraiser starting at Kiwanis Park. Those who can’t or won’t grow a beard are permitted to wear a knitted chinwarmer or false beard for fun. Commemorative challenge coins with the seals for the City of Geneva on one side and Geneva Township’s on the reverse for $10 and wooden nickels with the same seals will be available for free at the May 21 and 22 celebration. The challenge coins will be available throughout the year so long as interest continues. Geneva Anniversary 2 DEDICATED TO THE HEALTH OF OUR COMMUNITY Past, present and future 1-866-UH4-CARE (1-866-844-2273) UH150.org © 2016 University Hospitals Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Geneva Anniversary 3 Bartholomew family members settled Geneva Township BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave Each human being has a longing to be remembered for something. That job of what that is often falls to the historian, who sifts through the details of the person's life in hopes of finding that golden nugget. In the case of the Bartholomew family of Geneva and Harpersfield townships, there are many details and accomplishments through which to sift. Theobald and Elizabeth Bartholomew are usually recognized as the first permanent settlers of what would become Geneva Township. They arrived in 1805, and between their children, Theobalt's siblings, nieces and nephews, would do much toward the divine admonition to "fill the earth." Along the way, they chose some history-making spouses. Meet Theobald and family The Bartholomews in America go back to a Palatine immigrant, Johan (1710-1777), who purchased land in Germantown, Pa., in 1730. While a clerk recorded his nationality as Dutch, the family tradition states that they were French Huguenots who had fled to Switzerland because of religious persecution. Johan's name was Anglicized to John and he was naturalized in 1740. Court proceedings of that event show that he chose to "affirm" rather than swear, in keeping with the Biblical command. John Bartholomew moved from Pennsylvania to New Jersey in 1743 and to the New York colony in 1770, where he came to know Col. John Harper, whose son, Alexander, would migrate to the Western Reserve. His wife, Dorothy, also was from Palatine and never learned to speak English. The couple had 16 children, 12 of them boys. Perhaps the large family had something to do with the language difficulty between the spouses. Survivors One of these sons, Theobald "Tewalt" Bartholomew, and his wife, Elizabeth (Brewer), migrated from Charlotte, Schoharie County, N.Y., to Geneva in 1805. Their residence was on the South Ridge, a short distance west of where Cowles Creek crosses the road. This places their land in the area of Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Described as a man of small stature but great courage, Theobald was born in Germantown, Pa., around the year 1731, and married Elizabeth Dec. 1, 1768. He died, in Harpersfield Township, in 1827. Theobald lived an adventurous life prior to coming to Ashtabula County. He fought in the French and Indian War before mov- Pictured on the cover is a 1926 panorama of Geneva. The photo is courtesy of Carl Feather of the Wave and Geneva City Manager Doug Starkey. Geneva Anniversary A Gazette Newspapers Publication Publisher Emeritus..........................John Lampson President/Publisher.........................William Creed Senior Editor ................................Stefanie Wessell Page Design..............................................F. Hilger Editorial Office 46 W. Jefferson St., Jefferson, Ohio 44047 440-576-9125 • Fax: 576-2778 Toll-Free: 1-800-860-2775 E-mail: gazette@gazettenews.com ing to the Charlotte Valley with his father. The family suffered great losses during the Revolutionary War, having their house and barns burned. In 1778, Theobald and his family were taken prisoners by Mohawk Chief Joseph Brant and his warriors. By then, most of his neighbors had found refuge in the Schoharie Fort, upon which Brant intended to make a surprise attack the following morning. Brant released Theobald and his family upon the condition that he not go to the fort. Ignoring Brant, Theobald and his wife carried their two babies and walked 28 miles through the snow to the fort. The couple arrived just in time to warn of the impending attack and thereby avert a massacre. His father and family lived in the fort, almost as prisoners, for three years. During his service in the Revolution, Theobald killed an Indian who had been picking off the soldiers assigned to a night picket at the fort. For several successive days, a picket was found tomahawked and scalped at his post every morning. When it came his friend's time to pull duty, Theobald insisted upon switching places. His backwoods experience was put into play when he noticed one of the bushes moving in the darkness; the culprit was planning yet another sneak attack. Westward In 1805 Theobald and his family migrated from Charlotte, Schoharie County, N.Y., to the South Ridge in Geneva Township. Other family members had established a beachhead here in prior migrations: Theobald's sister was Elizabeth Harper, wife of Col. Alexander Harper, who was the first settler in what would become Harpersfield Township. They arrived in 1798; Daniel Sr. (1771-1814), Theobald's nephew, followed his aunt to Harpersfield Township in 1800. They came by sled along the Lake Erie shore, which was typical for those migrating to the Western Reserve. "They removed from the Charlotte Valley by sleds drawn over the snow; after reaching the future site of PHOTO COURTSEY OF CARL E. FEATHER Buffalo they made the ice on Lake Erie their highway, and on the 4th of March, 1800, made a landing in Ohio," stated a history of the family attributed to an entry in a family ledger. Five years later, Theobald and his family would follow the same route. According to one account, they barely made it to Geneva before the ice started to break up. They settled on the South Ridge (Route 84), just west of the point where Cowles Creek intersects the byway. In the next three years, they were joined by others from Harpersfield, N.Y., including Mrs. James Morrison, Sr., and the households of Dr. Nathan B. Johnson, Abram Webster, Noah Cowles, Levi Gaylord and John Ketcham. Another war Jacob Bartholomew (1775-1825) , one of Theobald's two sons, arrived in the Western Reserve in 1806. He showed a strong interest in the militia and was commissioned a colonel in the early days of the War of 1812. Jacob commanded the Third Regiment, frontier service, made up of soldiers recruited from Ashtabula and Geauga counties. It was the first company from this area to go to the war. The list of Geneva and Harpersfield men who served in that war indicate that Jacob recruited from within the clan. Abraham, John B. (Jacob's older brother) and Samuel Bartholomew served in the company. Axed at breakfast Samuel Bartholomew (1785-1822) deserves special mention. The son of Joseph and Lena (Desey) Bartholomew, he was born in Schoherie County, N.Y., and died in Harpersfield Township at the age of 36. While Samuel survived his service in the war, life on the home front with his three children and wife, Susannah (Atkins) was more treacherous. While Samuel was eating breakfast on a January morning, Susannah approached him from behind and whacked him with an ax. According to the court document, the ax, valued at two dollars, was used to deliver several blows to the back part and side of her husband's head, "striking one mortal wound of the length of five inches and of the depth of two inches and one other mortal wound on the left side of the head in the temple of the said Samuel of the length of five inches of the depth of two inches." The document notes that Samuel did "there instantly die" from the wounds. Thus, with the county just 11 years old, its common pleas court had its first case of a wife killing her husband. The jury of inquest returned a verdict of willful and premeditated murder. However, the trial went in Susannah's favor; she was acquitted on the grounds of insanity as a result of her attorneys' skillful work. Those attorneys were Robert Harper and S. Wheeler. Robert was a son of Alexander and Elizabeth (Bartholomew) Harper and the builder of Shandy Hall in Harpersfield Township. His choice to represent Susannah seems odd, considering that she was accused of murdering his cousin. Perhaps he felt there were extenuating circumstances that justified taking the case. Elisha Whittlesey and R. Stone were attorneys for the defense. Little is known of Susannah (Susan) Atkin(s), the ax-wielding wife. She was born in Roughton, England, about 1780 and died in Kingsville Township in 1870. She and Samuel had three children: Diana, Aaron and Diantha. The 1860 Federal Census places her residency as Kingsville Township, confirming a note in the "Record of the Bartholomew family: Historical, Genealogical and Biographical," by George Wells Bartholomew. His note states "Susannah Atkins, an excellent woman, who becoming insane, killed her husband in (Harpersfield), 24 Jan. 1822, and died at the Ashtabula Infirmary." Dancing in the candlelight One other wife of a pioneer Bartholomew deserves recognition as part of this visit. She is Betsey Lamont See BARTHOLOMEW pg 19 Geneva Anniversary 4 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Geneva’s Ransom E. Olds was automotive pioneer BY MARTHA SOROHAN Gazette Newspapers GENEVA – Born in 1864, automotive pioneer Ransom E. Olds would be amazed at today’s cars, with keyless ignitions, automatic braking, and the ability to drive themselves. These technological wonders, however, appear no more futuristic than did Olds’ first steam car, built in 1894, or his first gasoline-powered car, built in 1896, back in the day. Olds, a Geneva native, was the son of Pliny Fiske and Sarah Whipple Olds. His father was a blacksmith and pattern-maker. Olds did not grow up in Geneva, however, as the family moved to Cleveland when he was a boy, and eventually settled in Lansing, Mich. The Olds family was of English ancestry. Olds founded the Olds Motor Vehicle Company in Lansing in 1987, but he told it two years later to Samuel L. Smith. Renaming it the Olds Motor Works, Smith became president and moved the company to Detroit. Olds remained vice president and general manager. Olds may have produced the first electric car. It was among the 11 prototype vehicles he built by 1901, cars with steam, gasoline and electric engines. Olds was unique in that he is believed to be the only American automotive pioneer to produce and sell at least one of each type of car. Things did not run smoothly for Olds. But his “Curved Dash” runabout became well-known as the only one of his models that did not burn when the Olds Motor Works factory burned to the ground in 1901. That prompted Olds to put that model into production, since he had had 300 Curved Dash orders prior to the fire. The car sold for $650, equivalent to about $18,489 today. Contrary to popular thought, the Curved Dash runabout, and not Henry Ford’s Model T, was the first mass-produced automobile. Olds sold 600 of the model in 1901, 3,000 the next year, and 4,000 in 1904. Olds left the Olds Motor Works, and formed the R.E. Olds Motor Company, after Smith’s son came into the business. The two clashed so frequently that Smith removed Olds as vice presi- Celebrate with custom-made banners With the help from Conrad Signs, the City of Geneva and Geneva Township are able to offer custom-made birthday celebration banners with your company or family name for the light posts downtown Geneva. The cost is $125. Your custom banner will be given to you in December after being displayed downtown Geneva. Don’t wait long to respond by calling Doug Starkey at the City of Geneva, 4664675, or Sue Ellen Foote at Geneva Area Chamber, 466-8694, to reserve a banner. There are only 28 banSUBMITTED PHOTO ner brackets downtown. Sample of a 150th banner. dent and general manager. But Olds changed the name to REO Motor Car Company for fear of a lawsuit from Olds Motor Works. REO Motor Car Company introduced in 1915 its light motor truck, the REO Speed Wagon, considered the ancestor of the modern pick-up truck. Production ceased in 1953. The success of this vehicle earned REO one of the betterknown manufacturers of commercial vehicles prior to World War II. By 1936, REO had eventually shifted its complete focus to trucks, and ended automobile production. Olds Motor Works was purchased by General Motors in 1908. General Motors retired the Oldsmobile brand in 2004, after a 96-year production run. Olds’ influence exceeded that of the auto industry. In 1906, he organized the Capital National Bank, which later became the Lansing National Bank and Michigan National Bank. He was involved in the organization of the Michigan Screw Company and Atlas Drop Forge, both in Lansing. In 1931, he financed the Olds Tower in Lansing, which remains the city’s tallest building. It has been renamed the Boji Tower. In 1913, he purchased 37,547 acres of land by the northern part of Tampa Bay, Fla., and developed the area as “R.E. Olds-on-the-Bay.” It later came to be known as the city of Oldsmar, with 13,000 people in Pinellas County. Olds also became involved in politics, serving as a Republican delegate from Michigan’s 6th District at the 1908 Republican National Convention, which nominated FILE PHOTO Ransom E. Olds William Howard Taft for president. Most interesting, however, is that Olds built a turntable for his garage at his elaborate Queen Anne-style mansion in Lansing. The turntable meant that he did not have to put his car in reverse when he left the next morning. The mansion, incidentally, was eventually torn down for I-496, which was named for Olds. Olds’ next house in Ann Arbor, Mich., is open for public tours. In 1946, Olds was inducted into the Automotive Hall of Fame, an American museum founded in 1939 that is part of the MotorCities National Heritage Area. A brief history of Geneva When Ashtabula County was organized, Harpersfield Township included all the territory within its limits plus Trumbull, Hartsgrove and Geneva townships. But in May 1816, a small group of settlers just north of Harpersfield Village decided to withdraw from Harpersfield Township and, at a mass meeting and at the suggestion of Levi Gaylord, named their new community Geneva, after the beautiful little town of Geneva, New York. These first settlers included, first, Theobalt Bartholomew of Charlotte, N.Y. In 1805, he left the craggy, rock-laden soil at the foot of the Catskills to arrive several months later on the South Ridge road near the west bank of Cowles Creek. Here he and his family made their home as the first settlers within the limits of Geneva. The next settler was Elisha Wiard, who came from Connecticut, a young, active and industrious man who made considerable improvement in the land just a quarter of a mile north of the Bartholomews. Then in 1806, James Morrison Sr. and Levi Gaylord came from Harpersfield, New York. Levi was to start the first neighborhood industry, a tannery and boot making shop. The next to settle on the site of the present South Ridge and on the banks of the creek were a Dr. Nathan B. Johnson and Noah Cowles (the creek was to be named for Mr. Cowles). Then in 1808, Eleazer Davis improved land for a farm. During the next seven years, 15 families came to the little settlement, among them being Squire B. French, John Ketchum, John Jacob and Benjamin Bartholomew, the Reverend Jonathan Leslie, Samuel Quinton and Abisha Lawton and Truman Watkins. In the vicinity of the now North Ridge were Samuel Thompson, Norman Webster, and Harvey S. Spencer. Geneva’s first election was held in 1816 at the dwelling house of Loren Cowles, the vote totaled 25 at the polls. The first listing of taxable property netted 26 cabins and 98 head of cattle. From these first settlers, the town of Geneva is established and flourishes. Pioneers from the eastern seaboard states, hearing tales of Ohio’s fertile soil, arrived daily in this area coming in oxcarts, some on horseback and many in foot. With the completion of the Erie Canal in 1820, the introduction of steamboats and the increasing number and size of lake shipping added to the attraction of the lake for settlement. In the early years the south ridge (Route 84) was the main road. It was here the first frame school house was erected in 1821. Prior to this building, the children had attended a log school house built in 1808 and before that had been taught in the homes of the first settlers. By 1829, Geneva was spreading from the south ridge to the north ridge (Route 20), so in this year of 1829 a post office was started on the north ridge much to the delight of Geneva residents, for up to this time they had to go to Harpersfield for their mail. About 1834, S.S. Tuller opened a hotel on West Main St. (Route 20) The population in 1840 had grown to 1215. In 1850, Romanzo Spring established the pioneer drug store. In 1852, the Lake Shore railway came from Cleveland through Geneva to Ashtabula. In 1866, on a bright day in June, the settlement of Geneva became an incorporated village with Dennis Thorp the first mayor. The first newspaper was established in 1866 with H.H. Thorp as proprietor and Warren P. Spencer as editor. In 1868 the community felt there was a need for advanced education, a tax levy was proposed and passed making it possible for the building of the Geneva Normal School. In 1958, the “Village” ceased to be and Geneva became a “City” with a new charter system of government and a city manager elected to office. The first city manager was Robert C. Salisbury. Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Geneva Anniversary 5 A creek runs through it Cowles Creek instrumental in township’s, village’s growth BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave Cowles Creek rambles through the valley that is a stone's throw from the edge of my backyard. It is an inconsequential stream, a thin, black line on the county map; a few inches deep, several feet wide, often muddy and as sluggish as the old black Lab retriever that shares the house with me and my wife, Amanda, on the south end of Geneva City. If I were to follow this stream northward, it would take me on a rambling journey under the South Ridge, through Kiwanis Park, under the Norfolk Southern tracks and into the heart of the city. Great effort has been expended on taming this creek and its tributaries and thereby minimize the possibility of flooding from them during a spring thaw or copious rainfall. And so, for much of its tour of the city, the sides of the Cowles Creek channel is laid up with stone, block and concrete. Ju s t e a s t o f Gr an t Street, it is joined with a lesser stream from the south, whose origins are near the Interstate. This stream flows under the shortest covered bridge in the United States, West Liberty Street, before joining its eastern cousin and continuing the waters' pilgrimage to the aquatic lord of this landscape, Lake Erie. The creek parallels North Broadway for much of its journey to the lake. Its final turn is just south of where the Castaway nightclub once stood. If you use the paved bike trail along the lakefront west of the resort town, you cross Cowles Creek near its junction with Lake Erie. Depending on the state of the sandbar at this juncture, the flow can be broad and sluggish or narrow and rushing. In the early days of Geneva Township, this area was an estuary, similar to the one at Arcola Creek, several miles to the west. The backed-up water created a lake of several acres and economic opportunity. Boat rentals were offered and fishermen dropped their lines in the pool from them. More than one postcard was produced depicting the idyllic spot known as "Chestnut Grove" or simply Cowles Creek. Cowles connection Its name comes from an earlier settler of Austinburg Township (the headwaters have numerous branches in both Saybrook and Austinburg towships). Big Brook, arising in the southwestern part of Saybrook Township, joins two small branches from Austinburg Township to form the creek. Cowles is a fine, respected name in these parts; a good old New England moniker, and should one run across a member of this family, it is important to correctly pronounce it as "Coles" rather than "Cow'ls." Deacon Noah Cowles was among the first to settle in Austinburg Township, arriving two years after the original party, led by Judge Eliphalet Austin. They first put their New England axes to the ancient trees on June 5, 1799. Cowles' homestead was near one of those streams that feed the creek that wanders through Geneva. A Norwalk, Conn., native, Noah Cowles swapped an established farm in New England for wilderness in the Western Reserve. His plan was to build a gristmill and he came prepared for the task with a band of husky hired laborers and millwrights, a supply of nails and mill irons. He chose Mechanicsville as the site for this venture, and during the summer of 1801, seven hired men and Cowles built the necessary dam. That fall, the Grand River flooded, swept away part of the dam and left the mill isolated in the stream. Undaunted, Noah Cowles announced to his neighbors that he would pay $1 a day to any man who would come to Mechanicsville and help him PHOTO COURTSEY OF CARL E. FEATHER salvage the project. Thirty men, coming from up to 20 miles away, answered the call. These men literally worked up an appetite, eating a whole cow in a week's time. Cowles sent a man to Youngstown, 60 miles away, to secure a barrel of pork for the crew. It cost him $50. Noah's wife became ill, and the best medical advice the couple could obtain was that wine might help improve her condition. There being no vineyards, let alone wine, in this wilderness, a man by the name of Roswell Stevens was hired to travel by foot to Pittsburgh and bring back a gallon of wine on his back. The wine and transportation cost $16. It was the first in a long string of expenses associated with his wife's illness, which would eventually claim her life in 1809. Meanwhile, Noah Cowles amassed a pile of debt and he never recovered financially. Some time after 1808 Noah Cowles moved to Geneva Township and what would become the Village of Geneva (1866) and the City of Geneva (1958). His house was on the spot where R.B. Munger would later build his home on North Broadway, a short distance north of the railroad tracks. Before moving into that settlement, Cowles broke land along South Ridge. Uncle T. Walt Cowles' neighbors along the South Ridge included Theobalt Bartholomew, who arrived in what was then Harpersfield Township, in 1805. Bartholomew was from Charlotte, New York. He had been a soldier in the frontier and border warfare that came with the Revolutionary War and was held in high esteem by his fellow settlers. Known as Uncle T. Walt, Bartholomew was worn out from a life of work and soldiering by the time he reached the Western Reserve. Nevertheless, whenever there was a community log cabin raising, Uncle T. Walt would show up to do his part, which was mostly to manage the supply of whiskey. According to a story written by Alice Bliss in 1968, Uncle T. Walt officiated as the "slop commissary," who made certain that "none might suffer for want of the fashionable and of course favorite beverage" as the workers cut the timber and raised the cabins using only their brawn and crude tools. When one looks with wonder upon the accomplishments of these hardy settlers, it is wise to keep in mind that whiskey played as much a role as sweat and raw human strength. Other settlers to the South Ridge in the early 1800s included Elisha Wiard, James Morrison Sr., and Levi Gaylord. The latter filled important political posts in the Reserve. The land that would become Geneva Township was split out of Harpersfield Township in 1816. The township was officially detached March 22, 1816; election of township officials occurred shortly thereafter, and Noah Cowles, Jacob Bartholomew and Levi Gaylord were elected as "judges." Naming rights While the creek got Cowles' name, the township, village, city and village on the lake was named in honor of Geneva, N.Y., a lovely town in the Finger Lakes region. Appearing before the Ashtabula County Commissioners on March 22, 1816, with the petition to create a new township out of Harpersfield, Levi Gaylord Sr. was asked to name the new entity. He did not hesitate. "Geneva," Gaylord said, because it was the nicest town in New York State that he had passed through on his journey to Ashtabula County. Levi Gaylord was himself an amazing subject. He was more commonly known as "Major Gaylord." He had served directly under the command of General George Washington during the Revolutionary War and exited the war penniless and unable to afford so much as a meal, let alone the tools to practice his trade, manufacturing leather and shoes. The Connecticut native came to Ashtabula in 1806 and settled on the South Ridge just east of the Saybrook Township line. He was elected county commissioner in 1812 and made clerk of the board. In October 1817 he was elected a representative in the Ohio Legislature. His territory covered much of the lakeshore from Pennsylvania to Sandusky. Traveling on horseback See COWLES pg 21 Geneva Anniversary 6 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Brian Anderson: Hometown ballplayer BY BYRON C. WESSELL Gazette Newspapers GENEVA - Brian Anderson was born April 26, 1972, in Portsmouth, Virginia. Anderson later moved to Geneva, Ohio, where he went to Geneva High School. He was a four-year letterman in baseball, a three-year letterman in golf and a two-year letterman in basketball. After high school, Anderson attended Wright State University to play baseball. While at Wright State, Anderson racked up dozens of awards and honors. He leads the school with 37 wins and tied for fifth with 23 complete games. He had a career earned-run average of 2.23 in 290.1 innings while at Wright State. He was league Player of the Year in 1992 and league Pitcher of the Year in both 1992 and 1993. Anderson was a first-team, all-league selection in both 1992 and 1993. He was an All-Tournament selection in both 1992 and 1993 as well. He was an All-American third team selection in 1992 and All-American first team selection in 1993. He was an Academic All-American Selection in 1993 and ABCA All-Regional selection in both 1992 and 1993. Anderson was elected into the Wright State Hall of Fame in 1998. Anderson holds the second lowest Earned run average in a season at 1.14 in 95 innings during the 1993 season. His 98 strikeouts that season are 4th best all time. He also holds the third most strikeouts during a season in 1992 with 110 strikeouts and an 11-3 record. He went 10-1 during the 1993 season. Wright State as a team were conference champs in both 1992 and 1993. Anderson played for four Major League Baseball teams, including the then California Angels, the hometown Cleveland Indians (twice), the World Series-winning Arizona Diamondbacks and the Kansas City Roy- als. Anderson attempted a comeback with a fifth MLB team when he signed a minor league contract with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays but was unable to overcome his injury. Anderson finished his MLB career with an 8283 win/loss record with a 4.74 ERA and 723 strikeouts. Anderson went 13-13 in his first three years of major league action with a 13-13 record and a 5.46 ERA. He was then traded by the Angels to the Cleveland Indians for Jason Grimsley and Pep Harris. Anderson had a successful couple of years with the Indians with a record of 7-3. He was also on the 1997 play-off roster. Anderson debuted for the California Angels on Sept. 10, 1993. His final MLB appearance was May 8, 2005, for the Kansas City Royals. Anderson has had a pair of significant draft days in his career. He was the third overall pick Clubs of Geneva: Platt R. Spencer Historical Society in 1993 to the California Angels. Anderson was in a draft class that included future All-Stars Alex Rodriguez (first over-all), Billy Wagner, Derek Lee, Chris Carpenter, Tori Hunter and Jason Varitek all in the first round. Darren Dreifort selected by the Los Angeles Dodgers was the second overall pick, Wayne Gomes to Philadelphia and Jeff Granger to Kansas City rounded out the top five. Interestingly enough, Marshall Faulk was selected in the 43rd that year by the California Angels but did not sign. Anderson's other important draft day was when he was selected second overall in the 1997 expansion draft by the Arizona Cardinals. He became teammates and part of a rotation with Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling. In 2001, Anderson would be part of the World Series-winning Arizona Diamondbacks team. It also marked the fastest an expansion team had went on to win a World Series. Anderson helped Arizona reach the World Series by making two different appearances in the opening series against the St. Louis Cardinals where he pitched a total of four Brian Anderson innings, only giving up a run, while striking out three. Anderson then pitched three and 1/3 innings of relief in the next series against the Atlanta Braves to earn the win. Albie Lopez started on the mound for the Diamondbacks, but gave up two runs in the first two innings. Arizona elected to go with Anderson out of the bullpen and he came through by only giving up one run over the next three and 1/3 innings. The Arizona bats proved to be the difference as wel,l roughing up Atlanta Register now to participate in May 21-22 celebration at Memorial Field BY STEFANIE WESSELL Gazette Newspapers SUBMITTED PHOTO Although newer on the local scene, members of the Platt R. Spencer Historical Society celebrate the memory of a Geneva Township icon, Platt R. Spencer, born in 1800 and buried in Evergreen Cemetery, Geneva. Known as the “Father of American Penmanship,” he was also the founder of the first U.S. business schools. Information and artifacts about Spencer are found in the Western County Courthouse, the Geneva Library Archives and the Jennie Munger Gregory Museum. For more information, contact Treasurer Phillip Schmidt at (440) 466-6414. GENEVA - Individuals, groups or businesses are invited to register now to participate in the two-day Birthday Celebration on May 2122 at Geneva Memorial Field. For only $20, businesses or non-profit groups may have a table, display, game or give-away during the event. A space for crafters is $50. The regular space is 10' x 10’. Participants must bring their own tables and chairs. The event will take place on 1-9 p.m. Sat- urday, May 21, and 1-6 p.m. Sunday, May 22. Set up is from 10 a.m. to noon. Groups, non-profit organizations, local businesses and crafters are welcome to participate in this event. All participants taking part in the Geneva City 150th and Geneva Township 200th Birthday Celebration must provide a copy of their certificate of insurance. For an application, contact the City of Geneva at (440) 466-4675 or the Geneva Area Chamber of Commerce at (440) 466-8694 with any questions. FILE PHOTO Starter Greg Maddux for six runs (four earned) in only three innings to win the game 11-4. Anderson suffered a tough loss in game 3 pitching against New York Yankees starter Roger Clemens. Anderson gave up two runs on five hits in 5 1/3 innings. Facing a Yankees lineup consisting of Chuck Knoblauch, Derek Jeter, Paul O'Neill, Bernie Will i ams, T i n o M ar ti n e z , Jorge Posada, David Justice, Scott Brosius and Alfonso Soriano. Another milestone in the game Anderson pitched was the fact that President George W. Bush threw out the first ceremonial first pitch. It marked the first time a sitting President threw out the World Series pitch since Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956. Anderson had one career home run in 255 Major League at bats. The home run came in the 1999 season, while playing for Arizona. Anderson needed Tommy John surgery and was out of baseball in 2007, but filled in sometimes as a broadcaster for the Cleveland Indians on SportsTime Ohio. He also went on to do some color analyst for Tampa Bay and also an assistant pitching coach. Then in 2011, he began as the Rays full-time TV analyst. Geneva Anniversary Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 7 Platt R. Spencer: Father of ‘Spencerian’ penmanship BY MARTHA SOROHAN Gazette Newspapers GENEVA – Platt Rogers Spencer was not born in Geneva, but he died there May 16, 1864, and was buried in Evergreen Cemetery. His birthplace was East Fishkill, N.Y., on Nov. 7, 1800. Spencer is best known as the “Father of American Penmanship.” The “Spencerian” style of penmanship bears his name. According to research by the Ashtabula County District Library, Spencer lived most of his life in Geneva. His family moved to Jefferson, then largely unsettled, in 1806, after the death of Spencer’s father. He was just five years old. Spencer loved to write. Because paper was so hard to come by, he wrote on birch tree bark, sand, ice, snow and fly-leaves of his mother’s Bible. Spencer began teaching his method of penmanship at the age of 15, a year before he began working as a clerk and a bookkeeper. From 1821 to 1824, he not only taught what was known as “common school” and wrote up merchants’ books, but studied in law, Latin, English literature, and penmanship. Unfortunately, Spencer abused alcohol, which prevented from entering college to prepare for the ministry. Instead, he moved to Jericho, N.Y., where he founded the Spencer Seminary in a log cabin. He then returned to Ohio to teach. Perhaps the most significant personal achievement of Spencer’s life was overcoming alcohol abuse. Afterward, he was elected to public office and served for 12 years as county treasurer. Instrumental in collecting the early history of Ashtabula County, Spencer became active in anti-slavery movements and advocated universal liberty. Spencer is believed to have developed his unique script from various existing scripts of the first half of the 19th century. Taught after 1840, Spencerian script – used in the logos of Ford Motor Company and Coca-Cola — consisted of an “ovalbased” style that could be written quickly and legibly to aid business and personal correspondence. Spencer’s first publications of penmanship were “Spencer and Rice’s System of Business and Ladies’ Penmanship in 1848.” Because it was so easy to learn, the penmanship style soon caught on and was taught in common schools to students from elementary through college levels. Historians write that Spencerian died too soon to realize the great success of his penmanship style, but his sons continued their father’s mission North Broadway burns BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave It started at the rear of Charles Crane's Drug Store, in an oil shed. A night watchman at the Forest City Electric Co. heard a crash, then saw the blaze. "Fire! Help! There, I've given the alarm on you, you —!" shouted watchman Baker, who first assumed that an intruder had slammed the door of the shed, thus the crash. It was Aug. 19, 1892. What followed could have been a gag for a Buster Keaton comedy. The night man at the engine house failed to fasten the brindle firmly and the horse-drawn engine was disabled when it swerved and crashed into a telegraph pole. The call for help went out to Cleveland, Ashtabula and Painesville. Owners of the IC. Chamberlin and Sons, Turner and Goodrich, and Harvey Gould stores opened their stores and began carrying out merchandise that otherwise would have perished in the flames. "Anxious men rushed in half-dressed, and pale women and frightened children stood by helpless and heavy-hearted. All were alike, powerless to stop the fire, but all tried to save property," noted a newspaper account. An hour into the tragedy, fire lapped at the rear of the Sinclair saloon, a frame building across the street. Some believed that the fire was secondary to the original blaze. Whatever the source, it spread quickly north, all the way to the LS&MS tracks. "North Broadway is a desert," noted the newspaper. With a second front opening up, firefighters, working with but one hose, watched the flames engulf the frame buildings on East Main. The new Tyler block appeared to be threatened, as did the Munger Block and the business district around the handsome soldiers and sailors monument. But the village got a break during the mayhem. The wind shifted to the north, and a special train that left Ashtabula at 2:42 a.m. reached the village in just 15 minutes. Firefighters aboard that train went to work, and were soon joined by the Painesville Fire Company, which saved buildings northwest of the monument and the Ford and Tibbits Block. By daybreak, The Cleveland Fire Department was on the scene as well, providing "splendid service" with their horses and engines. There were serious injuries, but no deaths. The loss was estimated at $100,000, and only half of it was insured. The North Broadway business district was rebuilt on this site, but using brick rather than wood for the structures' walls. of establishing Spencerian schools with the specific purpose of teaching Spencerian script. Graduates of those schools started replicas abroad. The distribution in 1866 by Spencer’s sons of their father’s unpublished book, “Spencerian Key to Practical Penmanship,” established the script as an American handwriting standard. The multi-volume New Spencerian Compendium was completed in 1886. During America’s “Golden Age of Ornamental Penmanship” (1850 to 1925), Spencerian penmanship was considered the standard American writing style for business correspondence. Though it became more and more elaborate over the years, it remained the business standard until the typewriter was widely adopted as the prime method of business communication. Another professional achievement of Spencer’s was his founding of American business colleges. He combined his work of teaching with penmanship, which was used to keep business records and lectures. Spencer delivered his final lecture before a business college in Brooklyn, N.Y., in the winter of 1863, and gave his last course of lessons in a business college in New York City. Spencer did see Spencerian students found Bryant & Stratton College more than 160 years ago. The business college has expanded into 50 U.S. cities and still thrives. Closer to home, Spencer opened schools in Geneva, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh. The name of the East Geneva Rural School was changed to Platt R. Spencer School in 1937. It is located at 755 Austin Road. Ultimately, the Spencerian script – used in the logos of Ford Motor Company and Coca-Cola — was replaced in primary schools with the simpler Palmer Method, developed by Austin Norman Palmer. However, Spencerian script has enjoyed a resurgence in academic use by FILE PHOTOS Platt Rogers Spencer Pictured is Platt R. Spencer’s signature. charter schools and homeschoolers because it has been recognized by the International Association of Master Penmen, Engrossers and Teachers of Handwriting, an international association for practicing and preserving the arts of calligraphy, engrossing (copying or writing in long-hand) and penmanship. Founded in 1949, IAMPETH is the largest penmanship organization in the world dedicated to helping people improve their lettering and artistic skills. The Platt R. Spencer Papers are located at the Newberry Library in Chicago as well as the Spencer Archival Room of the Ashtabula County District Library’s Geneva branch. GRIFFITHS Fine Furniture & Appliances STORE-WIDE SALE ON FURNITURE & APPLIANCES!! GENEVA 56 N. Broadway 466-1171 Mon & Thurs 8:30-8 Tues, Wed & Fri 8:30-5:30 Sat 8:30-5 ASHTABULA 3410 N. Ridge E. 998-5711 Across from Ashtabula Mall Mon-Thurs 9-8 • Fri 9-6 Sat 9-5 • Sun noon-5 Geneva Anniversary 8 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Ellen Spencer Mussey: Pioneer in the field of women’s rights to legal education BY STEFANIE WESSELL Gazette Newspapers GENEVA - Many people in the Geneva area are familiar with Platt R. Spencer, the originator of Spencerian penmanship. Lesser known locally, but a historical figure in her own right, is Ellen Spencer Mussey, his daughter. Mussey was born on May 13, 1850, in Geneva, Spencer’s tenth child. Mussey, a lawyer and educator, is known for being a pioneer in the field of women's rights to legal education. As a young girl, between the age of 12 and the time of her father's death, when she was age 14, Mussey was an assistant at his penmanship school, the Spencerian Business College. Upon his death, she attended, but did not graduate from, several allfemale seminaries — the Lake Erie Seminary, Rockford Seminary and Rice's Young Ladies Seminary. To pay for her tuition and board, Mussey taught penmanship, according to information taken from her biography in The Founding of the Washington College of Law: The First Law School Established By Women For Women. In 1869, at the age of 19, Mussey moved to Washington, D.C. to lead the women's division of the local branch of the Spencerian Business College, which trained young women for government work. She attended her first women's suffrage meeting soon after moving to Washington. On June 14, 1871, she married General Reuben Delavan Mussey ("R.D."), a well-connected Washington lawyer. The Musseys were active in Washington society and attended parties at the White House. General Mussey conducted a solo law practice and served as an adjunct instructor at Howard Law School following the Civil War. While Mussey enjoyed discussing her husband's law cases with him, she, nevertheless, as a newlywed, believed it inappropriate for women to practice law, instead accepting the prevailing belief that men and women should occupy separate spheres, according to her biography. Despite this belief, Mussey ran her husband's law practice while he was ill with malaria between 1876 and 1878. “Following his recovery from malaria in 1878, R.D. asked Mussey to continue working in the law practice. Initially, Mussey refused, still believing it inappropriate for women to practice law. She eventually agreed to practice with her husband and they worked together for 14 years until his death in May 1892. Mussey, who was 42 at the time of R.D.'s death did not remarry, rather she assumed full responsibility for running the law practice,” her biography reads. Her biography reveals that, because Mussey had not become a member of the Washington bar dur- ing the 16 years that she had worked in her husband's law practice, upon his death she was required to become a member in order to maintain the law practice. “Since graduation from law school brought automatic admission to the bar, Mussey sought admission to the law schools of Columbian College and National University in 1892 as a means to join the bar. Both schools were exclusively male at the time and rejected Mussey on the basis of her sex,” her biography reads. “A knowledge of law is essential for everybody, man and woman alike.” —Ellen Spencer Mussey’s statement appearing in “Washington College of Law Founded by Women,” Washington Evening Star (1921), on file with the D.C. Public Library Sally Spencer, Mussey's sister-in-law, brought Mussey's plight to the attention of Judge MacArthur, formerly Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. MacArthur arranged for the Washington bar examiners to waive the written examination requirement for Mussey, which at the time, was the only alternative to receiving a law school degree as a means of entering the bar. In March 1893, Mussey passed an oral bar examination, which was administered in her home and was admitted to the bar. In Feb. 1, 1896, Mussey and her colleague and friend, Emma Gillett, opened the first session of the Woman's Law Class. The class had an enrollment of three: Delia Sheldon Jackson, Nanette Paul and Helen Malcolm. Within a few years, the program had expanded and several prominent Washington, D.C. attorneys were brought in for assistance. Although Mussey and Gillett had not initially aspired to establish an independent law school, when Columbian College refused their request to take on the women they had educated for their final year of education - on grounds that "women did not have the mentality for law” they decided to establish a co-educational law school specifically open to women. In April 1898, the Washington College of Law (now merged with American University) was incorporated in Washington, DC as the first law school in the world founded by women. Ellen Spencer Mussey Gillett and Mussey then went on to found the Women's Bar Association of the District of Columbia on May 19, 1917. Mussey was elected its first president. The WBA was one of the first organizations for FILE PHOTO women lawyers in United States. In 1919, Mussey also helped to found the National Association of Women Lawyers. Mussey died on April 21, 1936, in Washington, D.C. Clubs of Geneva: Blue Star Mothers Kenisee’s Grand River Camp & Canoe RV Sales & Service 4680 Rt. 307 East, Geneva, OH 44041 • 1/4 mile south of I-90, 1 mile east of Rt. 534 146 Wooded Acres on the Beautiful Grand River Daily, Weekly & Seasonal Camping • Wifi Available 440-466-6320 • www.keniseegrc.com • Wooded Pull-thru Sites • Secured Gates • 4 Swimming & Fishing Lakes • Cedar Lodge • Grill & Spit Under Pavilion • Planned Activities, Game Room • 3 Playgrounds • Pavilion with Kitchen Available for Company Picnics & Reunions *Subject to change SUBMITTED PHOTO Blue Star Mothers of America, Inc. was organized around the U.S. during World War II, starting in 1942. Geneva, Ohio, Chapter 57 has been serving veterans, active military and the community for decades. Members Linda Humphrey and Bev Endress recently received their 25-year pins. For more information, contact Treasurer Bev Endress, 440-466-4018. Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Geneva Anniversary 9 Edward S. Ellis – dime novelist, historian and Geneva native shaped popular youth literature in the 19th and 20th centuries BY GABRIEL McVEY Gazette Newspapers GENEVA – During the summer of 1860, as the presidential election that would touch off the American Civil War was entering its final stretch, the publishing house of Irwin P. Beadle & Co. in New York received a manuscript from a young author in Red Bank, New Jersey, entitled “Seth Jones; or, The Captives of the Frontier.” Beadle published the novella as number eight in its new “Dime Novels” series aimed at the newly literate adolescent boys audience. It’s a melodrama set in the American West that would be familiar ground to modern audiences who’ve been inundated with what were then novel tropes: a harsh environment, hostile natives, implacable foes, noble savages, damsels in distress, a lantern-jawed hero who, while reluctant, kills the villain without hesitation and rides off into the sunset. The 20-year-old author was Geneva-born schoolteacher Edward S. Ellis, and his first novel established an almost lifelong relationship between Irwin Beadle and his various publishing firms over the years. Ellis wrote dozens of dime novels – mostly set on the frontier but also incorporating some fantasy and science fiction elements that were fairly new and eagerly devoured Clubs of Geneva: Geneva Camera Club SUBMITTED PHOTO The Geneva Camera Club received proclamations from Geneva City Council in 2005 and again in 2015 as they celebrated 55 and 65 years as a club which shares its love of photography. Founding member, Eloise Fleming (middle front) was feted on her 100th birthday this year. The Geneva Camera Club held its first meeting on March 16, 1955. The all-male group held its first meetings on the second floor of a building on West Main in downtown Geneva. Later, the group met above the former Western Auto Store on S. Broadway. The owner of the store, Jack Rosebrugh, was a club member. Another founding member was Paul Fleming who remained a member until his death in 1997. His wife Eloise is still a member. The first president was Roy C. Patterson. In the beginning the wives went to meetings to socialize with the other wives and to serve refreshments. Eventually, many of them also became photographers. The club meets on the third Wednesday of the month at the United Church at 75 S. Broadway, Geneva, at 7 p.m. by a newly literate class in the U.S. – adolescent boys. Innovations in printing over the previous generation made mass publication of cheap books a possibility and the dime novel moniker comes from the fact these books were really only a dime a piece – which, while not nothing, would amount to a bit under $3 a piece today. Not out of reach for a 12-year-old boy who’d done his chores and wanted to escape to a place of high adventure. Ellis was born April 11, 1840, in Geneva, Ohio and lived there until he was six years old, when his father moved house to New Jersey. Ellis spent the rest of his life and career living in New Jersey and spent his early career splitting his time between teaching school – eventually overseeing the State Normal School in Trenton – the official teachertraining school for the State of New Jersey – before his success publishing what we’d now call young adult fiction allowed him to devote himself full time to writing. Ellis and Beadle published – or republished – many of Ellis’ novels under pen names. The reason for this is not well understood and some historians speculate there may be Ellis novels no one is aware of because they were retitled and republished by rival firms pseudonymously as a way to generate profits illegally. Ellis and Beadle successfully sued at least one rival firm for this reason. Ellis’ pen names often incorporated military titles into them, and while he never served in the military, his son was a West Point graduate who served in the GENEVA AREA CHAMBER of COMMERCE www.genevachamber.org U.S. Army and later taught mathematics at the military academy. Ellis was best known for the ‘Deerfoot’ series of dime novels published under his own name by Beadle. The Deerfoot series was popular before and after Ellis’ lifetime and was fairly wellregarded and widely read by boys interested in Westerns until the 1950s. Ellis switched to nonfiction later in life and published a number of histories, biographies and profiles under his own name until his death in 1916. His ‘Great Nations’ series was serialized and widely popular, giving profiles of countries such as Spain, Russia or France for example and paralleling their rise to, and fall from, greatness. Ellis was part of a movement to popularize fiction and wrote tales of high adventure and even in the budding science fiction field, “The Steam Man of the Prairie” tells the story of a mechanical, steam-powered man – what Czech playwright Karel Čapek would later term a “robot” – something relatively novel for readers at the time. Ellis died June 20, 1916, while vacationing in Maine and was survived by his second wife, a son and three daughters. Bring in this coupon & receive 20% OFF P.O. Box 84 866 East Main St. Geneva, Ohio 44041 Phone: 440-466-8694 Fax: 440-466-0823 FILE PHOTO Edward S. Ellis Your Total Bill THE LOFT AT INDIAN CREEK • 440-466-8512 Sun 11am-1am, Mon-Wed 4pm-1am Thurs 11am-1am, Fri-Sat 11am-2am The Loft at Indian Creek 4720 Lake Rd. E, Geneva • 440-466-8512 Geneva Anniversary 10 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Freeman Thorp: American painter of political figures BY STEFANIE WESSELL Gazette Newspapers GENEVA - If you ever take a visit to the U.S. Capitol, keep an eye out for paintings by Freeman Thorp, an American painter who painted portraits of many notable people, such as Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses Grant, William McKinley, and James Garfield; Generals William T. Sherman, Robert E. Lee and Philip Sheridan; and Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase Born in 1844 in Geneva, Thorp was noted for his portraits of political figures, most of them completed by him in Washington, D.C. Also notably, during his time in Geneva, Thorp worked to help runaway slaves make it safely to the last post of the Underground Railroad before entry into Canada, according to his biography on Heritage Auctions. Thorp’s artwork involving presidents began right in Geneva. Thorp idolized Abraham Lincoln, learning about him through newspaper articles about him as a young lawyer from Illinois. After Lincoln was elected, the Inaugural Train was going to pass through Geneva on Feb. 15, 1861, on the way to Washington, but not stop there. “Even so, the young Thorp took his sketching materials along with him to watch the train carrying his hero pass by. As fate would have it, the train suffered a breakdown and had to spend some time in the town for repairs. Lincoln, ever the people's man, appeared on the rear platform to greet the residents. [Thorp] managed to get within a few feet of him and sketched the president- elect, listening as best he could while trying to get the lines around his mouth just right. This was his first sketch of Lincoln,” his biography reads. Soon after the Civil War broke out, Thorp, though only 17 and lacking his family's permission, enlisted in Company D of the 2nd Ohio Cavalry. Ulysses S. Grant selected Thorp and another soldier to carry an important secret missive to Secretary of War Stanton in Washington from the camp in Tennessee. The two carried out the dangerous mission, riding 1,000 miles on horseback, much of it through enemy territory. “Stanton asked him if there was any favor he could grant to pay back his bravery. Thorp was aware that Abraham Lincoln was going to be at the Gettysburg battlefield on Nov. 19, 1863, so he asked that he be allowed to attend and get as close as possible to the president. The favor was granted and young [Thorp] found himself (once again) about ten feet away from the president as Lincoln delivered his immortal Gettysburg Address. This was his second sketch of Lincoln,” his biography reads. After leaving the service in 1864, Thorp was offered an officer's commission but decided instead to take over a photo studio specializing in color tinting and to work on the side in painting oil portraits. In 1870, at age 26, he was made an honorary member of the Berlin Society of Artists. The next year, several members of congress along with President Grant arranged a little loft right in the Capitol dome for Thorp to use as a portrait studio. In 1872, Grant commissioned him American Electric LLC “Let Us Remove Your Shorts” to paint portraits of every member of his family. Thorp was given permission to sit in on legislative sessions in order to paint portraits of the statesmen "in action." In 1873, the respected History of Country Artists listed the still youthful Freeman Thorp as "standing securely in the front ranks of American artists." Thorp also became involved in Ohio politics in the 1870s. His excellent oratorical skills led him to his heroism in the Cincinnati Riots. “His work as a portrait artist to the ‘rich and famous’ of the period continued. No less than seven presidents sat (or stood, in Lincoln's case) for him: Lincoln, Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Cleveland, Harrison, and McKinley. By his own count, he painted more than 600 portraits for public display: army generals (Sherman, Sheridan), celebrities (Horace and favorite sons. It has been estimated that Thorp painted at least one governor of all the forty-eight states in existence during his lifetime. Montana alone has dozens of his works hanging in their state capitol and other buildings. The capitol of Texas at Austin also has at least one of his paintings.” In the mid 1890s, Thorp moved his family from Ohio to the Lake Hubert area of Minnesota. In 1920, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution and a Joint Committee was directed "to engage an artist of reputation and ability to paint an oil portrait of the late Abraham Lincoln, former President of the United States, and to place the same in the Senate wing of the Capitol Building, at a cost not to exceed $2,000." Several weeks later, the committee authorized payment of $2,000 to Freeman Thorp for his portrait of Lincoln. The elderly Thorp traveled to Washington for the unveiling, also attended by Lincoln's son, Robert Todd Lincoln, who commented, "It's more like father than any likeness I have ever seen!" Thorp described in a letter to the Joint Committee on the Library the intensity with which he had observed Lincoln: “I studied him very carefully and thoroughly from life just before his inauguration, and later at the White House and at Gettysburg when he made his famous address, sketching him, making a descriptive delineation such as artists use, memorizing his expression and how he looked when animated.” Thorp believed that these observations allowed him to create an accurate portrait of the president, and that “it would be impracticable for any future portrait painter who had not known him in life to put the real Lincoln on canvas.” This particular Lincoln portrait still hangs in the Senate wing of the Capitol, one of eight (the most of any American-born artist) of his portraits in the Capitol and the only portrait of Lincoln there. Thorp passed away in 1922. Farm work dangerous, necessary FILE PHOTO Freeman Thorpe painted this portrait of Abraham Lincoln in approximately 1879. become head of his party and Speaker of the House. He helped spearhead fellow Ohioan James A. Garfield's nomination for president and worked toward his election. In 1883, as a Cavalryman and Commanding Officer of the 5th Ohio National Guard, Thorp earned his promotion to colonel and was later given a special commendation for Greeley, Andrew Carnegie, ‘Buffalo Bill’ Cody), cabinet members (Dallas, Forward, Morton), congressmen (Colfax, Blaine, Sherman, Conkling, Thurman, Logan), and even the Senate Doorkeeper Captain Isaac Bassett,” his biography reads. “Not only did he paint the Washington elite, but he also toured many states painting governors In the countryside south of Geneva, men and women toiled on farms and in orchards to provide food for the region. This was dangerous work, with an accident always just a misstep away. For example, in the summer of 1928 a Harpersfield Township woman, Mrs. Henry Hubbard, had several sleepless nights as she worried about developing lockjaw. Mrs. Hubbard was working on a hay wagon, with workers tossing hay onto it from both sides, when a pitchfork got too close to her and penetrated her leg. The rusty fork, encrusted with germs, could have been source of tetanus. All she could do was wait. Meanwhile, a Cork farm wife struggled with lingering damage from being kicked in the face by a mule. Twenty stiches were required to mend the hole in her head, 10 of them inside her mouth. The intact teeth were re-aligned by the kick, pushing them inward to her jaws. Provided by Carl E. Feather of the Wave For All Your Beauty Needs! Joe Ortiz Shirley Lehmann, Manager 625 E. Main St. Geneva, OH 44041 Tel: (440) 466-1894 Fax: (440) 466-4948 Email: joe@americanelectricoh.com Web: www.americanelectricoh.com 30 East Main Street, Geneva (440) 466-5013 License #OH 31067 152 South Broadway, Geneva OH 440-466-5851 1-877-672-5678 northwest.com Northwest Bank is Member FDIC Happy Birthday Geneva! Geneva Anniversary Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 11 Remember the Angels and Dick Devil? BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave Dick Devil and The Angels. That's who sings "Remember Me" and "I'm Going to Buy a Parakeet" on a Twilight labeled 45 rpm record. Dick was Richard Ales, who recorded several records released by Twilight. In 1949, he released "Broken Hearted," his second record, which had a fairly good response from DJs and record buyers. Ales wrote and sang the song. In the 1960s, Richard Ales teamed up with four girls from Geneva to record "Remember Me," Richard's first 45 rpm, on the flip side of "I'm Going to Buy a Parakeet." The latter is a novelty tune in which a guy who is down on his luck says he's going to buy a parakeet. You can listen to the song here. Both were written and sung by Ales, who lived in Mechanicsville. He was a graduate of Austinburg High School, Navy veteran and Kent State-Ashtabula student. Jim Ales, one of Richard's sons, does an open mike show at the Grand River Manor, which is paternal grandfather and grandmother owned. His interest in music comes from his father, who died in January 2005. Jim saved as many of his father's records as he could, and he was at the Vinyl Party at the Lodge and Conference Center on Feb. 6 to play a few of those records and talk about his father's career in music. When Richard Ales recorded his second record, "Broken Hearted," he went to New York City and hired a band to record it with. The recording was made the morning of Sept. 28, 1958, at Region Sound Studios. The flip side is "All My Love." A newspaper article in the Geneva Free Press of February 1959 stated that Ales' record was selected as the record of the day on the "Specs" Howard show. Akron station WCUE chose it as one of its 10 records for the "Tips on Hits" show. Ales' told a reporter that his first record, "A Sweetheart's Song," was a "complete flop." Dick Haffa, who had a group called the Haff Tones, also recorded one of the songs Dick Ales wrote. It was released on the Twilight label with a Denny Pasqualone song on the Dominic ‘Mickey’ Sanzotta: Helped win Western Reserve’s first and only bowl game before heading to NFL BY BYRON C. WESSELL Gazette Newspapers PHOTO COURTSEY OF CARL E. FEATHER Crime spree hit city in 1953-54 Geneva Village had a problem with mischief makers in 1953, so much so that the new mayor, Joseph P. Mallone, listed reducing crimes and offenses committed by minors as the number one goal of his administration. Among the vandals' targets was the city's sewage treatment plant. Youngsters were digging under the fence to gain access to the plant, where they faced series injury, even death, if they were to slip into one of the sewagefilled tanks, which were 10 feet deep. Nevertheless, it was reported that "young vandals" had dropped a skimming tool into one of the tanks, requiring the staff to drain the tank in order to retrieve it. On March 30, 1954, it was reported that vandals broke three plate glass windows and several smaller ones over the weekend at Geneva-on-the-Lake at Cook's Steak House and The Barn. A window in the Allen apartments above the billiards room and two small windows in Madsen Donuts had been broken, as well. In another theft incident, property worth nearly $1,000 was taken from a North Center home in late March 1954. Missing was a cash register worth $350, an accordion worth $400, woman's wrist watch worth $110 and $50 record player. The gang was broken in May. Eight teenagers were rounded up and the admitted to a string of crimes: Breaking and entering "in the night season" the Nash Garage, Al's Snow White Bakery, Lake Erie Milling, Madison and Ashtabula Skyway theaters, gas station on Route 84, Miller farm, Benjamin farm and two Ashtabula businesses. Stealing automobiles. Daytime thefts at Rees Drug Store, Penn Auto Supply, Von Beseler's and Al's Snow White Bakery. They also knocked down 30 to 40 mailboxes, burned a hay stack on Clay Street out windows at The Barn and other GOTL properties, tore out phones and broke windows at the drive-in theaters. A considerable quantity of stolen merchandise was recovered. Some of the crimes were committed under the influence of alcohol, believed to have been obtained from a licensed distributor. Provided by Carl E. Feather of the Wave flip side. He teamed up with four girls from Geneva in the 1960s and called them The Angels: Carole Ann Phillips Wright of Jefferson and Joyce Dennington, Ruth Proster and Lynn Magerscak. All are still alive and two of them were able to meet Jim at The Lodge and Conference Center at GOTL during a record show in February 2016. GENEVA - Dominic Franklin “Mickey” Sanzotta was born April 28, 1921, in Geneva, Ohio. Sanzotta went to Geneva High School and graduated in 1938. Sanzotta went on to play college football at Western Reserve, which is now called Case Western Reserve University. He played for the Western Reserve Redcats from 1939-1941. Around this time, there was a four-team rivalry between BaldwinWallace, Case Tech, John Carroll and Western Reserve. The games’ attendance got so big that some of the games had to be played at Cleveland Municipal Stadium or League Park. The winner of these games received the Douglas S. Campbell Trophy. The inaugural winner in 1933 was Case Tech. However, Western Reserve went on to win eight of the next nine years, including 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1940, 1941 and 1942. In 1941, Sanzotta was co-captain with Paul Hudson. The team went on to win Western Reserve’s first and only bowl game in the 1941 Sun Bowl. The Red Cats defeated Arizona State 26-13. Western Reserve went up 7-0 in the first quarter of that game, but Arizona State answered with two second quarter touchdowns to take a 13-7 lead into halftime. The Red Cats rallied to score 19 unanswered points in the second half to win 26-13. Sanzotta was selected by the Detroit 775 S. Broadway Ave. • Geneva, Ohio 44041 (440) 466-0696 RC Cars • Planes • Boats • Trains See Us For New Christmas Ideas! Hours: Tuesday-Saturday 10-7 • Closed Sunday & Monday www.toynhobbyhq.com Lions in the 4th round (30th overall) in the 1942 NFL Draft. That year, he led the Lions in rushing with 268 yards on 71 carries. The 3.8 yards per rushing attempt was good for seventh best in the league. He then missed the 1943-1945 seasons while serving in the Navy during World War II. During his time in the Navy, he played for the Naval Air Technical Training Center Raiders football team in 1943. Sanzotta returned to the Lions after his service in 1946 and ran the ball six times for 72 yards. He had a long of 51 and averaged 12 yards a carry that year. Sanzotta finished his professional career with 340 yards on 77 carries for a 4.4 average. He also had seven career receptions for 35 yards. In 1942, he passed the ball 15 times, completing four for 45 yards. Sanzotta also saw a little bit of time on defense, as in 1942 he started five games and had a pair of interceptions. In 1946, he started two games on defense and recovered a fumble. He also experienced both kick and punt returns during his career. He returned five punts for 46 yards in 1942 and two punts for 41 yards in 1946. Also in 1946, he returned two kicks for 40 yards. He also had a punt under his belt as in 1942 he punted the ball for 42 yards. Sanzotta was elected to the Western Reserve Hall of Fame on April 4, 1986. He passed away Jan. 21, 1999, at the age of 77. COPE FARM EQUIPMENT, INC. Please see us for your tractor parts & service needs. Nancy Younessi, Manager 4057 St. Rt. 307, Austinburg, Ohio 44010 Phone: 440-275-2200 • Fax: 440-275-6651 Email: austinburg@copefarm.com The Local People You Know... The American Brand You Trust Geneva Anniversary 12 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Now an eyesore, shop was Geneva traditions: Platt R. Spencer School All-Classes Reunion innovative 60 years ago Some would call it an eyesore, a bit of blight along the otherwise booming Route 534 corridor, aka South Broadway. But sixsided, protruding front, tacked onto a rectangular house, are clearly from a different era. Indeed, sixty years ago the newly built Beatty Florist building was hailed as an original, clever design that its owner, Harry, aka Pete, Beatty tailored to his business. The idea of the six sides was, primarily, so motorists and pedestrians along South Broadway could see a good view of the store's merchandise regardless of the direction they were traveling. The shop sold pottery, 200 Commerce Place, Geneva, OH :: 440-466-1770 ASHTABULA COUNTY’S PREMIER ASSISTED LIVING When living alone is no longer an option... ceramics, metal planters, greeting cards, garden and home fertilizers and "garden clubber needs." This was in addition to the floral business, which had been housed in the original store that was at the rear of their home at 346 South Broadway. Beatty designed the building with help from Charles Hill. "The display windows in the sexigon (sic) are so arranged so the contents in the windows are visible to persons going either north or south. The workshop is in the basement and the office is elevated at the rear of the shop," noted a Feb. 16, 1955, newspaper article in the Geneva Free Press. "The roof is so designed to do away with drippings from rain or snow, Mr. Beatty said. The roof is constructed so all water is drained down two pipes, which run through the interior of the building into the storm sewer." Beatty also designed the front of the structure so the door and small strips of windows on each were one piece that could be removed in the event large equipment, such as a cooler, had to be moved into the building. The new shop had a consulting room where customers could view pictures of floral arrangements. Both fresh flowers and potted plants were available. Beatty's shop also provided telegraph service. A tradition of the floral shop was to present a plant to the family of each baby born at Geneva Memorial Hospital. Provided by Carl E. Feather of the Wave FREE LOCAL CALLS MEETING ROOM FOR 100 WIFI • FREE MORNING COFFEE SELECT ROOMS FEATURE REFRIGERATORS & MICROWAVES At I-90 (Exit 218) and St. Rt. 534 1715 S. Broadway, Geneva, OH 44041 440-466-1168 • 800-466-8356 motel6.com and a nursing home isn’t the answer. SUBMITTED PHOTO Platt R. Spencer School All-Classes Reunion, a yearly event at Geneva Township Park, gathers alumni from all the high school classes from 1938-1961 when the school included 1st-12th grades. The school consolidated with Geneva City and Austinburg in 1961 to become Geneva High School. Spencer School, located on route 20 east of Geneva, became Spencer Elementary and when it was torn down, Geneva Platt R. Spencer Elementary replaced it on Austin Road. CENTRAL HARDWARE 44 SOUTH BROADWAY • DOWNTOWN GENEVA • GIVE US A CALL 466-3928 Geneva’s Go-To for Your Everyday Needs Since 1936! Housewares • Tools • Gifts • Electrical • Lawn & Garden Holiday Decor • Plumbing • Screen & Window Repair • Paint Knife Sharpening • And MORE! Open 7 Days a Week! CALL TODAY FOR A TOUR! 440-466-1770 ww w.sanctuaryofgeneva.com centralhardware Happy Birthday, Geneva! Geneva Anniversary Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 13 Geneva woman served as missionary to China during war BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave Gertrude Cone rode up Broadway from the train station, and marveled at the beautiful sight of Geneva’s Main Street. She declared it “the most beautiful in the world.” “That’s the way it looks to you when you come from a country that is war torn,” Cone told a reporter. It was June 1944, and Cone was returning to her native Geneva after a sevenyear absence. Her work as a missionary teacher with the Methodist Church had taken Cone to China, where she endured multiple hardships due to that nation’s war with Japan. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Cone of West Main Street, Geneva, Gertrude first went to China in 1927, shortly after graduation from Ohio Wesleyan University. In addition to teaching and caring for children, Cone was in charge of missionary funds sent into the nation by the church. Thus, when Communists took control of China and many of the missionaries there fled the nation, Cone stayed behind to ensure there would be funding for others who chose to stay. During her furlough in 1944, Cone found it difficult to adjust to the security of a nation whose land had not been visited by enemy aircraft. Whenever she heard a private or commercial aircraft overhead, her natural response was to think of them as the enemy. In China, she and the students watched as 31 Japanese war planes went up against eight American fighters in the sky above their village. One of the Japanese planes was shot down and crashed nearby. Moonlit nights were particularly difficult as the warriors took the skies. Rest, and food, were hard to come by. While in Shanghai to have dental work, Cone’s home in Nanchang was bombed by the Japanese. All of her possessions were lost except what she had taken with her in a small suitcase. A train she was riding on in China came under attack by ground forces who entered the cars. She was the only woman on the train. The passengers left the cars and sought protection while the raid occurred. Cone taught in small communities, which reduced the likelihood of being attacked. “We had to move four times in four years to keep ahead of the Japanese troops,” she told a reporter in 1944. “We had everything packed, ready to move if necessary, and some of us did leave for a while, but the enemy troops were only in the rice fields gathering more food and left again, so we returned to the school. That’s about as close as they came to us, except when we were bombed or machine gunned.” As the years of war stretched on, inflation and scarcity of food became huge issues. Cone told of rice cost- ing $1,600 for a 100-pound quantity. Safety pins cost $50 each. The country had no butter, milk or white potatoes for years. Once a month, students received a dish containing vegetables and a little meat, but often there was no meat at all. When she went to China, it was to work with high school students, but war changed her assignment. She worked at the refugee camps where 8,000 to 10,000 refugees were fed in one month. “It’s pitiful to see these same people return after a few months,” she told the reporter. “They have absolutely nothing left and have sold everything they own, including their children, in order to get money to buy food.” The housing situation was so critical that Cone ended up living in a Buddhist temple with floors of dirt overlaid with boards. A huge hole was in the roof of the temple; below it was a well for collecting the water when it rained. It took 29 days of travel for Cone and another missionary heading back to the United States to get to their destination. They often traveled sitting on their baggage in the back of an open truck. “There is absolutely no gasoline for use in China, and trucks and vehicles are run with charcoal or alcohol. The fumes are almost unbearable when you are cooped up in the front of the trucks,” she told the reporter. “We rode on just anything, damp salt bags, hard wooden boards and in trucks that had no seats at all.” There were natural hazards, as well. In 1939, flooding hit China and Cone was caught in Tienstsin at the Methodist Mission when the wall of water roared into the streets and flooded the mission building. Cone returned to China after her visit to Geneva in 1944. The next six years, conditions worsened under the Communists, although the few acquaintances back home learned little of it due to censorship of the letters coming out of China. She lived in Peking, where she was reunited with Laura Schleman of Lakewood, another missionary from northeast Ohio. Cone eventually returned to Nanchang, Kiangsi province, and resumed teaching English and music at the Baldwin Girls School. The Communists Stop By for Your Map of Local Attractions From Vine to Wine 1850 Austinburg Rd., Austinburg, OH 44010 440.275.3202 | VisitAshtabulaCounty.com blocked her funding and Cone was forced to scrounge for food for herself and the students. With conditions unbearable and her body racked by a mysterious pain, in 1949 Cone applied for an exit permit. It took a year to process that permit. Severely dehydrated and malnourished, Cone arrived in Hong Kong as a breathing skeleton. She died two days later; the pain was cancer spreading through her body. She was laid to rest in a cemetery in Hong Kong. Her 1944 visit back to Geneva was her last, and one can imagine that it also was the last time she enjoyed the fruits and grains and meats of this land. By 1950, her parents also were gone from Geneva, and her nearest relative was an aunt, in Texas. #AshtabulaCounty FOLLOW US Geneva Anniversary 14 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Archie Bell’s life rings with success Geneva man was esteemed drama critic BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave The archive is neither dusty nor secretive. Just walk down the hall to the south end of the Geneva Public Library, take a right and ask archivist Mary Schneider if you can view the Bell collection. Or simply go to the Lodge and Conference Center and learn about the famous Archie Bell by viewing the display and video in the lobby. Bell (1877-1943) has been called the "Dean of the Midwest" newspaper critics of drama and music. He was born in Geneva and received his education from the public schools. During high school, Bell worked for the Geneva Free Press, which baptized him into the world of journalism. He saved his earnings from the newspaper job and, after graduation, made a trip to Europe. Back in the U.S., Bell was hired at the age of 20 to be a secretary to B.F. Bower, the publisher of Cleveland World. There was little to do on Saturdays, so Bell, bored and restless, asked for a news reporting assignment. He was given one that would test his mettle and grit: There had been rumors floating around of an epidemic, news of which was being suppressed by officials. The others writers in the newsroom snickered as the novice agreed to take on what appeared to be an impossible story to crack. Bell got the story and it landed on the Sunday edition front page. When Bell returned to work on Monday morning, he'd been made a staff writer. He rose quickly through the ranks despite not having a college degree. Bell was promoted to Sunday editor and, shortly thereafter, managing editor. : n e h W r e Rememb Bower thought Bell would do well as a drama critic, as well, and he took on that task. Merger of the World and News in 1905 gave Bell yet another opportunity; he was named drama and literary editor of the expanded publication. Five years later, he joined the Plain Dealer as a drama and music critic, moved to the Leader four years later and came full circle to the News in 1917. Bell dabbled in other work, as well. He was publicity director for the Hippodrome Theater and managed the U.S. tours of Olga Nethersole, a famous English actress. His connections to both the bright and rising stars of stage, screen and music is well documented in the scrapbooks that are part of the library's collection. The books' fragile, black paper hold dozens of publicity photographs that were autographed for Bell during his career. They include photos of Will Rogers, the famous American humorist and film star; Yehudi Menuhin, the great violinist; and Ernest Schumann Heink, perhaps the most famous contralto of the early 20th century. Schumann Heink deserves special attention. A German Bohemian, she eventually adopted the United States as her home. She supported the U.S. troops during World War I and had three sons who served in the U.S. Navy: Walter Schumann, Henry Heink and George Washington Schumann. Another son, August Heink, was a merchant sailor for Germany and was pressed into the German submarine service. He was killed defending his country. Ernestine traveled throughout the nation entertaining troops and raising money for the war effort during WWI. She PHOTO COURTSEY OF THEARCHIVE ROOM OF GENEVA PUBLIC LIBRARY Archie Bell as a young man. formance, she and Bell came back to Geneva to visit. Their stops included Mount Pleasant Cemetery, where the Bell family is became a contralto voice against war and its horrors. In 1919 Schumann Heink came to Cleveland to do a benefit concert. Prior to the evening per- See BELL pg 18 When you want the very best... P roud to get my start with Russ and Don Horner in Geneva, Ohio at Horner Tractor. Thanks for the memories! — Dana Harju President, Bortnick Tractor Sales TRACTOR SALES, INC. Serving you since 1954 (440) 594-3216 6192 Warren Rd. NE, Cortland, OH 44410 (330) 924-2555 5042 Center Road, Conneaut, OH 44030 www.bortnicktractorsales.com Frank Latin, Owner 7279 N. RIDGE ROAD, MADISON FRANK’S AUTO BODY & RESTORATION INC. 440-428-2700 • fab1@windstream.net Sunday, July 31, 2016 2016 s Vehicle Show Arrive t s u M en Betwe pm 1 10am- Food Vendor CAR/TRUCK/BIKE SHOW DJ, 50 /50 Raffle Chines , e& Silent Auctio n Benefiting Local Cat & Dog Shelters 10 am - 5 pm Admission: Donation of Cat or Dog Shelter Items and/or Monetary Donation Trophies & Awards presented at 3:30 pm Dash Plaques & Goody Bags to First 150 Entries 7279 N. Ridge Rd., Madison, OH 44057 (1 mile east of SR 528 on US 20) Questions: Call 440-223-9128 OR Email: fabshow@hotmail.com Website: www.franksautobody.org Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Geneva Anniversary 15 Nordyke brought pro baseball to city BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave In 1898 Geneva residents could watch Cleveland's American league team go up against Geneva's baseball team without having to travel outside their community. In the above photo, Lou Nordyke is shown in his Tacoma Tigers days. Nordyke is just to the right of the gentleman in a suit. Get the full description at http:// oldtimerbaseball.com/c_Tacoma_Tigers.html. The Cleveland team's visit was arranged by Lou Nordyke, who was born in Iowa but lived in Geneva before heading to the West Coast. Nordyke (1876-1945), had a short (1901-1914) but memorable career in the American Major League. His connections to the league were used to bring the Cleveland team to Geneva for a friendly game at least once a summer. Nordyke played for the St. Louis Browns in 1906 before being sold to the Tacoma Tigers of the Pacific Coast League. He also played for the Spokane Indians. In 1909 Nodyke rejoined the Indians and won the league's batting championship. According to a 1928 Geneva Free Press article, Nodyke was famous for being able to snare the misdirected pitches. He played first base, and the second baseman, Perle Casey, was known for throwing erratically. One day, after Casey had made several bad throws, Nordyke chastised him and told him to throw the ball right. And Casey replied, "Never mind, I'm making you famous." Ironically, an arm injury put Nordyke out of the league. He operated an apple farm, worked as a bank security guard and railroad agent, all on the West Coast. He died in California PHOTO COURTESY OF MARC H. BLAU COLLECTION of a heart attack and was In the above photo, Lou Nordyke is shown in his Tacoma Tigers days. Nordyke is just to the right of the gentleman cremated. in a suit. Reach For The Stars Carol’s Corner Child Care & Learning Center Now Enrolling Child Care 6 Weeks To 12 Years & Preschool Inclusive 82 Eastwood Street, Geneva, OH 440-466-7040 564 Kiwanis Park Dr. GENEVA 466-4291 Stop by and see Ron or Cindy for all of your monument needs! CELEBRATING OUR 30TH YEAR! carolscornerchildcare.com “Still your hidden choice on the hill” “This institution is an equal opportunity provider.” www.beldingmonuments.com Geneva Anniversary 16 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Interurban served city Congratulations on Your 150th! from The Behm Family BEHM F A M I LY F U N E R A L H O M E S Geneva, carved out of wilderness, was far from an isolated city. While the town originally began to develop at what became known as “North Center,” the coming of the railroads in the early 1950s shifted the commercial district to the south. And when the Nickel Plate brought its line along the lakeshore some 20 years later, the railroad tracks would come to define to city’s commercial district. In the late 1800s, yet another set of tracks came through Geneva, those of the Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula, or CP&A, Interurban. Powered by electricity, the interurbans were about 100 years before their time. They provided convenient, relatively green connections between the lakefront cities; it’s been said you could ride from Geneva to New York City on the series of interurbans and have to jump off onto a highway or hitchhike for only one short stretch. The line stared with runs between Willoughby and Cleveland in July 1896. By August, the bridge over the Chagrin River had been completed and the line had reached Painesville. When the line reached Geneva and Ashtabula, it opened up the Geneva-onthe-Lake resort to more visitors from the west while giving residents another means of travel to Cleveland. The CP&A was quickly doomed, however. The automobile made it more convenient to travel the lakefront by highway, although the roads and congestion on them made the travel miserable. By 1926 the interurban was out of business. For decades thereafter, oldtimers who had worked on the line gathered in Willoughby or Painesville for a reunion. Some of the cars ended up as diners. One of these was in Geneva and was used as a diner into the 1950s. The most famous of the CP&A cars was the Josephine, which was President Henry Everett’s personal touring car. He named the dark-green/ gold-trimmed car after his wife. It had a smoking room, observation room, kitchen, stateroom and toilet. Soft rugs covered the floor, and curtains and dark- green drapes provided privacy. The car, built in 1903, burned while being painted in 1909. Provided by Carl E. Feather of the Wave Soldiers and Sailors 175 S. Broadway Geneva, OH 26 River Street Madison, OH 440-466-4324 440-428-4401 FILE PHOTO www.behmfuneral.com The Soldiers and Sailors monument is one of Geneva’s most recognizable landmarks, and it highlights Civil War veterans. Honoring the fallen veterans of the Civil War, the monument is 31 feet by three inches from the bottom of the base to the top of the eagle. It is made of Ohio sandstone and weighs 20 tons. The figures of the soldier and sailor that flank the monument are made of bronze and stand six feet, four inches from the pedestal and weigh 1,000 pounds each. An inscription at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument reads: “In memory of the boys who saved the union in 1861-1865.” The monument originally was dedicated in 1880. Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Geneva Anniversary Geneva had piano orchestra BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave Long before cell phones, tablets, Facebook and downloads, people had to make their own music, which involved learning how to play an instrument. The piano was one of the most popular, and in Geneva in the 1930s, there were at least 22 relatively accomplished adult females who could play the piano well enough to form an orchestra. It was called the Geneva Piano Symphony, a group of 13 pianos under the direction of Helen Foster Lewis, a piano teacher. This group, billed as the world's only 13-piano orchestra, played concerts throughout the region in 1940. All of the pianists were from Geneva and surrounding towns, and most of them were married women. The ensemble had 22 players; a few were substitutes brought along just in case. "Miss Lewis, slight, gray-haired and energetic, leads her orchestra in the Stowkowski manner, without a baton. While beating time her hands and fingers are usually in the position they might assume on the keyboard," noted a newspaper story. "You got to be tough. It's not because the players are women, but because the piano is a percussion instrument," Miss Lewis told a reporter. "When it's a question of hitting something at exactly the right time or in unison you have to be much closer to perfect than if you are blowing a horn." The pianos were not all heard at once throughout the composition. Lewis' idea was to have different pianos play the parts normally taken by other instrument sections, such Geneva resident goes off to war age 72 Geneva resident Hugh Kilday left his Maple Avenue home and headed for New York City in July 1943, in response to a request from Uncle Sam. The retired sailor was needed in the Merchant Marine service. He had held a government engineer's license since 1899, and he was showing up for service as first assistant engineer aboard a U.S. Maritime Commission ship. "They need trained men ... It takes too long to train these young fellas to that extent. That's why they are taking an old fella like me," he told a reporter. He arrived in the U.S. from Scotland in July 1890, at the age of 19. The sea journey gave him a taste for sailing and he worked on the Great Lakes for five years before becoming a salt water sailor. He worked on the American Line mail boats between New York and England. He moved to Geneva in 1918, but spent much of his time away from home due to working in steel and paper mills in Michigan and Middletown, Ohio. Before responding to the call for engineers, he worked at the tube mill of American Fork and Hoe. A mandatory physical exam showed Kilday to be in excellent health, health that he attributed to having a fine wife and consuming lemon juice every day, and a bit of beer now and then. He had crossed the ocean 50 times, but said he was ready to do another 50 if it meant defeating the Axis. Hugh Kilday survived the war and lived another decade after heading off to New York. He died March 19, 1953 and is buried in Evergreen Cemetery. Adam D. Green Certified Tinter 6 of our best six-inch subs, now in made-just-for-you meals, for just $6, every day. Black Forest Ham Sweet Onion Chicken Teriyaki Italian B.M.T.® Tuna Meatball Marinara Turkey Breast Geneva I-90 & Rt. 534 its numbers was particularly skilled at the color, shading and nuances of meaning, notable in Rachmaninoff's prelude in G, Minor, Oopus 23, No. 5, in the five preludes by Heler, Opus 81, and in Von Weber's Momento Capriccios, Opus 65. It must be added, however, that regal numbers like Wagner's Tannhaeuser' march and Liszt's powerful, sweeping Hungarian Rhapsodie, No. 2, found the ensemble wanting in arrangement, scope and power." Another Erie newspaper columnist wrote "Helen Foster Lewis, the conductor, is truly charming and she so very gracefully directs the musicians. She was wearing bright red with brilliants, contrasting the blue-gray satin of the others. We were e n c h a n t e d w h e n they See PIANO pg 23 Busy “B” Rental at Bilicic’s Busy Mart Happy Birthday! FROM HARPERSFIELD 291 E. Main St. Geneva, OH 44041 440.466.0858 Special Events Tents • Tables • Chairs • Keg Coolers “NO BUFF TOO TUFF, NO SHINE TOO FINE” IN BUSINESS SINCE 1998 . Convenience Grocery . OHIO LOTTERY . Sunday Beer & Wine at State Minimum Prices Window Tint Lifetime Guarantee • Residential & Commercial Tint • Auto Cleaning & Detail • Headlight Restoration • Minor Scratch Removal 440-466-9202 440-466-9917 1026 S. Broadway as strings or horns, in an orchestral arrangement. The group formed in 1936. Miss Lewis said she got to thinking about how many good pianists there are in the world but how seldom they are heard. So she rounded up 14 women who had better-thanaverage playing ability and, with six second-hand pianos, began practicing. Their first concert in Geneva was such a success, they gave an encore performance in the evening and made enough money to purchase eight new pianos. The director and musicians were a first-class act. The pianists wore evening gowns of ice blue satin trimmed in red sequins. Miss Lewis' gown was red and heavily sequined. In what must have been quite daring for Geneva in 1940, the gowns were designed without sleeves or backs, but they had skirts so full they hid the piano bench and most of the pedal work. The group played in the Cleveland in the winter of 1940. Their concert included works by Chopin, Grieg, Haydn and Rachmaninoff. In Erie, Pa., they gave a concert in November 1940. A reviewer stated: "The group, 13 pianists dressed in silver gowns, at 13 pianos for most of 17 • Windshield Replacement we’ll beat any price! SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! . Picnic & Fishing Supplies • Ice & Bait Phone: 440-466-9111 Fax: 440-466-7222 Rt. 534 & I-90 • Harpersfield, Ohio Open: Mon. - Sat. 7am - 11pm, Sun. 7am - 10pm info@busybrentalsgeneva.com www.BusyBRentalsGeneva.com Geneva Anniversary 18 Geneva’s famous no-hitter BY CARL E. FEATHER Originally published in The Ashtabula Wave http://ashtabulawave. org The morning of June 12, 1880, Geneva resident Lee Richmond did not go to bed until 6:30, having gone to his university class' supper the night before and playing a class baseball game at 4:50 a.m. that day. Deprived of food and sleep, at 11:30 a.m. Richmond boarded a chartered train that took him to Cleveland, where he would accomplish something even greater than earning his diploma from Brown. Richmond was pitcher for the Worcester Worchesters, a New England baseball team that had just joined the National Baseball League and signed Richmond for the salary of $2,400. The game in Cleveland that afternoon was an important one for Worcester, and Richmond did not disappoint his employer. He pitched a perfect game, and Worcester beat Cleveland 1-0. "The Clevelands were utterly helpless before Richmond's puzzling curves, retiring in every inning in one, two, three order, without a base hit," wrote John R. Husman for the Society for American Baseball Research. It was, for both Rich- mond and the sport, the perfect game. One writer called it "the most wonderful on record," another called it "unprecedented," because as Husman notes, the term "perfect game" was unknown. Until Richmond came along, there was no need for an adjective to describe the phenomenon. Richmond, who was always modest about his accomplishment, was quick to give credit to the Happy Anniversary from Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 fielders and the catcher, Charlie Bennett. But in the baseball record books, it is Richmond's honor to have pitched the sport's first perfect game, just 50-some miles from his hometown of Geneva. Ashtabula County born and reared, Richmond was the son and grandson of Baptist ministers. He was the youngest of nine children born to Cyrus R. and Eliza Richmond. Although he was born in Sheffield BELL buried, and lunch with Bell's relatives still living in Geneva. Bell wrote numerous books, most of them based upon his explorations of foreign lands during the summer months, which he frequently took off for travel. He also wrote fiction, such as "The Clevelanders: An expose of high life in the Forest City." Bell's notebooks, kept while he sailed to exotic destinations like Palestine, Egypt and the Caribbean, are illustrated with colored-pencil drawings and contain the notes that would be the meat of his books. He donated these materials to the Geneva Library's archives. Township on May 5, 1857, the family soon relocated to Geneva, where J. Lee attended the public schools and spent most of his childhood and youth. They lived in the church parsonage at 337 West Main Road. His father served the Baptist congregation in Geneva and lived out his years in the city after retirement. Little is known of J. Lee's early years in See NO HITTER pg 23 From page 14 Archie Bell suffered from a heart condition that worsened in his middle years. In the early 1930s, he retired from the newspaper business and settled into an anonymous, quiet life in an apartment on the east side of Cleveland. He died in 1943. Bell's grave at Mount Pleasant Cemetery is a simple one, surrounded by those of other family members. There is no indication on his headstone that he was an accomplished critic, world traveler and author. His scrapbooks, writings, journals and copies of his columns remain safe in the archives. Copies were made for the exhibit. PROUD MEMBER OF THE GENEVA COMMUNITY SINCE 1946! 440-466-4470 www.raymondbuilderssupply.com 4680 N. RIDGE EAST • GENEVA, OH 44041 PHOTO COURTSEY OF THEARCHIVE ROOM OF GENEVA PUBLIC LIBRARY Archie Bell as a later in life. Geneva Anniversary Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Early Factoies of Geneva 19 THE HOME OF HOME EQUITY A home equity line of credit makes a lot of sense. You get a low interest rate, extra funds for college, home improvement, or paying off bills. PHOTO COURTSEY OF CARL E. FEATHER NO CLOSING COSTS! Introductory Rate 1 BARTHOLOMEW Bartholomew, wife of Jacob, the War of 1812 officer. Betsey was the daughter of John and Elizabeth (Sullivan) Lamont, who first appear in Ashtabula County historical records circa 1807. They lived in both Geneva Township and Harpersfield Township. The trials of war and captivity, the grief of losing a son to the bullet of a British soldier or Native American warrior, transformed Lamont into a shrewd, sarcastic, indolent man who struck fear into the hearts of his neighbors. It was said that Lamont was a wizard who wielded power over nature itself. "If the leaven failed to rise and a heavy loaf resulted, the unlikely house- wife charged John Lamont with the misfortune. Did the alkali and grease show less than their usual affinity and fail to combine as soap, it was bewitched, of course, and John Lamont bore the blame," wrote Charles S. Simonds in a narrative he wrote for the Historical and Philosophical Society of Ashtabula County. Simonds claimed that John Lamont could even put a spell on the rifles of his neighbors, so their hunts would be unfruitful. In an effort to combat that, the hunters concocted bullets made from Spanish coins to add silver to the ammunition. Only a resident by the name of Tiffany seemed to have any powers over old Lamont. From page 19 Lamont's daughter, Betsey, seemed to inherit a bit of her father's power over nature, or at the very least, his eccentricity. According to Laura Rosamond White, who wrote a series of articles about Geneva's pioneers for the Cleveland Leader 100 years ago, noted that Betsey was the township's first landlady – that is she rented out a room in their log cabin, built in 1830 on the ridge. "(She) was noted for her ability to dance with a candlestick and lighted candle poised upon her head," White reported. "She could pursue this pastime for hours in the midst of many dancers with the candle flame shining undisturbed like a star above her brow." Current Rate 3 Andover .99%Bank .50% Annual Percentage Rate* FIRST 12 MONTHS Annual Percentage Rate* Prime Rate as published in The Wall Street Journal on March 14, 2016 *Rates effective as of March 14, 2016 and are subject to change. Subject to credit approval, your rate may be higher, not all applicants will qualify for advertised APR. Rates include .25% preferred rate reduction with auto debit from an Andover Bank checking product. Owner occupied primary residences 1st or 2nd lien positions only. Maximum 80% loan to value ratio. Minimum new loan amount of $10,000, maximum loan amount of $200,000. After the Introductory Period, the variable rate Line of Credit (LOC) will adjust monthly to The Wall Street Journal US Prime Rate. Minimum APR of 3.50% after introductory period, maximum APR of 18.00%. 15-year loan with a five year draw and a ten-year repayment period. Minimum draw amount of $100. Repayment period with monthly payments of 2% of the outstanding balance. Making only minimum payments may result in a final balloon payment due. No closing costs. $50 annual fee waived the first year. Prepayment penalty of $350 if LOC is paid and closed within three years of note date. No prepayment option available. Property insurance and current property taxes are required; flood insurance may be required. Consult your tax advisor regarding deductibility of interest. Andover Bank A Better Way... Andover Bank A Better Way... Call us today or apply online! 844-259-5473 OHIO Andover • Ashtabula • Austinburg • Conneaut • Geneva Madison • North Jefferson • South Jefferson PENNSYLVANIA Albion • Cranesville • Erie • Edinboro • West Springfield www.andoverbankohio.com Geneva Anniversary 20 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Christ Episcopal Church in Geneva celebrates 150 years GENEVA - The Christ Episcopal Church congregation was formed on Sept. 13, 1865. Among the first members of the church vestry (leadership council) was Platt R. Spencer, who served as secretary. Lacking a building, the congregation first met at Reid Hall at Park Street and South Broadway (the site of the old Post Office.) It wasn’t until 1892 that the cornerstone was laid for the present church, which was then located at the corner of West Main Street and South Eagle. The lot was purchased for $800 and the church constructed for $8,000. A fire in a nearby laundry nearly destroyed the building in 1901, but it was restored and reopened for services in 1905. Flooding plagued the church for years and, in 1941, the building was moved up the hill to its current location at 66 S. Eagle St. It must have been a sight. The building wasn’t driven up the street; it was rolled on logs behind the Eagle Street properties. The building was also turned 180 degrees from how it sat at its previous location. Christ Church added a Wicks pipe organ in 1949 (which was restored in 2016) and parquet flooring from the old Severance Mansion in Cleveland Heights in 1961. More than 5,000 blocks of wood flooring were removed from the mansion and carefully reassembled at the church by the men of the parish. The church has retained many of its original leaded glass windows, cathedral ceiling and carved oak altar and pews. Celebrating 150 years The congregation of Christ Church is marking their milestone anniversary with a homecoming weekend on Sept. 9-11, 2016. There will be a potluck dinner on Friday night, with an open mic session featuring the younger members of the SUBMITTED PHOTOS Christ Episcopal Church is located at 66 S. Eagle St. in Geneva. parish (and any who would like to join them.) On Saturday, the church is hosting a reenactment of the church’s history in the community, complete with costumed docents, carriages and refreshments. On Sunday, Christ Church will host a celebration worship service, with the Rt. Rev. Arthur B. Williams Jr. officiating. Christ Church and the community Today, the Christ Church community is made up of around 35 families. The church’s nickname, “The Little Church with the Big Heart,” has 772 South Broadway Geneva 440-361-4041 Across from giant eagle never been more apt. Each June, the church hosts nearly 100 children from around the county for a week-long Vacation Bible School and the Christ Church prayer shawl ministry has comforted scores of people all over the United States in its brief two-year history with hand-made shawls and hats blessed by Christ Church Priest in Charge, the Rev. Dr. C. Thomas Jackson. Other church outreach programs include supporting the Geneva Food Pan- See EPISCOPAL pg 22 3208 State Road Ashtabula 440-998-2772 in edgewood plaza 5.99 - 7” ANGUS Steak Americano Meal! $ +tax LIMIT 2 3.75 $ Hot Buttered GN-375 7” Cheesesteak TM Only valid at 772 South Broadway or 3208 State Rd. Not valid with any other offers or discounts. Expires 6/19/16. NO LIMIT 5.95 ANY 10” Sandwich $ GN-595 Make it a meal $2.50* more * With Pepsi Only valid at 772 South Broadway or 3208 State Rd. Not valid with any other offers or discounts. Expires 6/19/16. No coupon needed. Limited time only! NO LIMIT 3.95 $ ANY 7” Sandwich Only valid at 772 South Broadway or 3208 State Rd. Not valid with any other offers or discounts. Expires 6/19/16. NO LIMIT 5.95 GN-595M ANY 7” Meal * * With Pepsi Only valid at 772 South Broadway or 3208 State Rd. Not valid with any other offers or discounts. Expires 6/19/16. LIMIT 2 LIMIT 2 11.00 $ $ GN-395 GN-11 2- 7” Sandwiches & 2 - reg. Potato Waffer® Fries Only valid at 772 South Broadway or 3208 State Rd. Not valid with any other offers or discounts. Expires 6/19/16. 7” - $25 / 10” - $30 +tax +tax GN-FP7 GN-FP10 Only valid at 772 South Broadway or 3208 State Rd. Not valid with any other offers or discounts. Expires 6/19/16. MR. HERO COMING SOON: 1746 West Prospect in Ashtabula! Geneva Anniversary Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 COWLES to Columbus in the late fall was a miserable trip for a man of 57 years. His reprieve came when he was appointed treasurer of the county in 1818, an office he held until once again being elected an Ohio House representative in October 1820. "Probably no man ever lived in northern Ohio who was more venerated and beloved," notes his biographer in the "Williams Brothers History of Ashtabula County." Gaylord was a peacemaker, a friend of emancipation and temperance and of "gentle demeanor." He and his wife, Lydia, were married 64 years and died within one month of each other. At that time, death had not visited the immediate family for more than 40 years and eight of their children, and their families, attended the funerals. Water power There were pockets of settlement throughout the new township. One GAZETTE NEWSPAPERS From page 5 was along the west side of Cowles Creek, probably in the area of North Broadway where Noah Cowles settled. Another was in the area of North Myers Road. Still another was on the lakefront, where the abundance of white oak, poplar and other hardwoods, along with access to transportation on the lake, led to early industries -- timber exporting, limestone importing/burning, furniture building and boat construction (on Indian Creek). Cowles Creek was among the players in this industrial boom. Near the lakefront, kilns were dug out of the clay along the stream's bank and used for reducing the limestone to lime. The lime went into the plaster and mortar that literally held together the early homes of the township. In what would become the City of Geneva nearly 150 years later, Cowles Creek was harnessed with a series of at least seven dams between East Main and a North Broadway farm. Originally known as Mills Corners, the City of Geneva is the product of both roads and Cowles Creek. The first road to encroach upon this place was a north-south route that linked Lake Erie to Windsor. That road has been dated to as early as 1804 and was the forerunner of North and South Broadway. In 1815, the east-west road that would become Route 20, was surveyed. When Center and the North Ridge roads intersected, the genesis for a town was created. But both investment and residency were slow to come. Predictably, the water supply brought a tannery, cooperage shop, distillery and grist mill. But by 1840, the population at the corners was still only a dozen or so families. The coming of the railroad would change all of that. 21 Publisher of your community newspapers since 1876 AWARD-WINNING COMMUNIT Y NEWS! With our local features, sports, shorts, headline stories, and editorials, there is something to suit every taste. Please Check the Newspaper of Your Choice o Jefferson/Ashtabula/Geneva...Gazette o Conneaut .................................Courier o Andover/Orwell o Lake County ............................ Tribune name ............... The News _________________________________________________________ name___________ address_______________________________________________________ city_________________state______zip ____________________________ home ph_______________work ph _________________________________ One Year Subscription……… $30 Out of County ……………… $46 *Credit Card Orders, Call (440) 576-9125 GAZETTE NEWSPAPERS • P.O. Box 166 • Jefferson, Ohio 44047 Web and Sheet Printing Business Forms Brochures Calendars Catalogs NEW! Envelopes Self Canning Station Rubber Stamps Continuous Forms Newsletters Letterheads Can Your Own 32oz Beer! Check out our growler systems & craft brews! LARGE WINE SELECTION! ALL BEER & CIGARETTES AT STATE MINIMUM (440) 466-7130 119 N. Broadway • Geneva, Ohio 44041 Special Advertising Products Magnetic Signs Postcards Flyers Yard Signs Banners Business & Marketing Promotional Items Magazines Newspapers Business Cards 46 West Jefferson St. Jefferson, Ohio 44047 (440) 576-9125 x110 1-800-860-2775 Free Local Delivery! Professional Design Services Wedding & Graduation Invitations Raffle Tickets Black & White and Color Copies FREE CONSULTATIONS with our commercial printing representatives Geneva Anniversary 22 Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 Geneva Township Geneva Township, Geneva City to EPISCOPAL honors bicentennial mark anniversaries all year long PHOTO BY GABRIEL MCVEY A small group of volunteers and Geneva Township residents gathered in chilly, blustery weather at the north end of Geneva Township Park on April 23 to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the township's foundation. Township resident and organizer of the small event Kari Wetzel said she wanted to organize something specific to Geneva Township distinct from the joint Geneva City/ Geneva Township celebrations ongoing throughout the year. “It's just a small gathering – just having a little celebration,” Wetzel said. “The actual anniversary is in March, but the first township trustees meeting was in April.” In this photo, Geneva Township Board of Trustees Chairman Timothy J. Mills cuts a bicentennial birthday cake as organizer and township resident Kari Wetzel and 534 CIC President Tony Long look on. —May 21-22 - Two-day bicentennial/sesquicentennial at Memorial Field. —June 11 - Geneva Public Library will hold a Geneva History Expo from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. In addition to contributions from the library archives, residents are encouraged to bring items of historical significance to the area and discuss them with attendees. try, collecting items for area veterans in need and reaching out to and supporting teen moms in the community. Christ Episcopal Church is part of the Diocese of Ohio. They welcome anyone and everyone to From page 20 join them for worship services each Sunday at 10:30 a.m. For more information about the church or its anniversary events, contact the church office on Tuesdays or Fridays at (440) 466-3706. —July 23-24 - Art Weekend in Geneva, and the Community Barn Quilt will be unveiled at 43 E. Main St. Plans are in the offing to retouch and unveil murals throughout the city in an effort aimed at beautification and promoting Geneva pride. —Aug. 25 - Geneva Area High School will hold a pep rally Aug. 25 to celebrate the new school year and Geneva pride with the Geneva High School marching band parading through the city, followed by a bonfire at the parade route's end at Geneva High School. —Sept. 9-11 - Christ Episcopal Church is commemorating its own sesquicentennial. The church will celebrate its long history in Geneva. —Nov. 11 - Veterans Day event in cooperation with both the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars. —Dec. 10 - “Run for the Beard” – a fundraiser starting at Kiwanis Park. Those who can't or won't grow a beard are permitted to wear a knitted chin-warmer or false beard for fun. Christ Episcopal Church celebrates its 150th year in 2016 SPECIALIZING IN: • SUV & Truck Accessories • Open, Enclosed, Dump & Equipment Trailers • Hitch Sales & Installation • Trailer Wiring • Trailer Parts & Service • Lift Kit Sales & Installation TRAILER SALES 440 466 -1914 6710 N. RIDGE WEST • GENEVA, OHIO www.richmondtrailersales.com Geneva Anniversary Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 23 NO HITTER Geneva, but he clearly was a dedicated student and athlete. At the age of 16, he enrolled in the Preparatory Department of Oberlin College of Ohio, a college-prep school. During that time he developed both his academic and baseball talents. From Oberlin he enrolled in Brown University, where he was outfielder for the varsity team in his first year, 1876. Of relatively slight build – 5 feet 10 inches and 142 pounds – Richmond made up for any shortage of muscle and bone by using his brain. He developed several curveball techniques delivered from his left hand. Hitters never knew what Richmond would be sending their way. After two seasons as an outfielder for Brown, Richmond was ready to take on the professional baseball scene as a pitcher. His accomplishments in 1879 included taking Brown to the college championship, pitching a professional no-hit game and making a major-league debut when he was paid $10 to pitch an exhibition game for Worchester. The score, 11-0 after seven innings, helped land Richmond a job with the Worcester team, making $100 a month. He played both professional and amateur baseball that year - a PIANO played "Nearer, My God, To Thee, with Barbara McColl, niece of conductor Lewis playing the Hammond Solovox. During that number, candles on each piano were the only means of illumination. Three familiar melodies 'Eddie Duchin style' proved the girls' ability with popular music as well as classical and the sweet strains of the 'Hills of Home,' rhythmic 'Anitra's Dance' and many others were enjoyed by the audience. The group hit a snag when they went to Shore High School, where a reviewer called it a "disappointment" because all of the pianos were of the From page 18 fact that would eventually bring his eligibility into focus - and exceled in both venues. His school's college championship game against Yale that year has been called "one of the great college games of the nineteenth century" by Ronald A. Smith, author of "The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics," notes Husman. Richmond pitched a dream season in 1879, but he managed to top it in 1880 when he signed with Worchester for the season. Worchester was a shortlived franchise, just three years, and it might as well been named "Richmond." Eighty percent of its wins were attributed to Richmond. After the franchise folded, Richmond played for the Providence Grays and Cincinnati Red Stockings. He established more milestones for the game during those brief seasons: Gave up the first grand slam home run; Won 20 games for a last-place team; First left-handed pitcher to win 30 games in a single season. His decline as a lefthanded pitcher was fairly rapid, but Richmond had the foresight to get an education. He set his sights on medicine and graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons University at the City of From page 17 spinet type, "with little sonority in the lower register and limited carrying power." Another concert, at the McDowell Auditorium in Ashland, went much better for the group. Again, the group's rendition of "Nearer My God to Thee" caught the reviewer's ears as the highlight of the performance before 650 member of the Ashland Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. The symphony lasted until at least 1942; a program from a concert given in Columbus, Ohio, recently appeared on eBay. The performance was at Memorial Hall for Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. New York in 1883. He chose Conneaut for his practice, but Richmond soon discovered he did not like medicine. He folded the practice, moved back to Geneva and got a job teaching mathematics and chemistry before accepting a teaching position with Toledo. He taught in Toledo for 32 years and, after retirement, took a job as dean of men at the University of Toledo. He held that job until his death on Oct. 1, 1929, at the age of 72. He is buried in Toledo, a city that embraced and honored him as a celebrity throughout his years there. Richmond's baseball career was short - his last appearance in the major league was with the Boston Red Stockings on Oct. 4, 1886. Yet in the seven years he was involved in the game professionally, Richmond stretched the boundaries of performance and set records that would stand for years, especially for left-handed pitching. In his post-baseball professional life, Richmond was highly regarded as a teacher and, as dean of Toledo, was well known for the compassion he had for young people struggling with challenges. He married one of his for- mer high school students and the couple had three daughters. Richmond had relatives who remained behind in Geneva; as late as 1950 the pitcher's nieces, Elizabeth Sprague and Mrs. Rose Gee, who lived on Park Street, were interviewed by reporters recalling the obscure Geneva resident's accomplishments in the world of professional and college baseball. Crawford Agency, Inc. nting Geneva for Over 70 Ye e s e r p e R y l d ars Prou Jim Crawford • Betsy Deering • Mike Goddard Doug Alvord • James Santiago 55 South Forest St. • P.O. Box 29 • Geneva, OH 44041 Phone: 440-466-1144 • Fax: 440-466-4803 Toll Free: 800-837-1144 www.crawfordinsurance.com Geneva Anniversary 24 HAPPY BIRTHDAY, GENEVA! This year, we celebrate milestones! 2016 is a big year for all of us. As the City of Geneva and Geneva Township celebrate impressive milestones, ACMC is celebrating the opening of Geneva Family Health Center — bringing nationally recognized care right to your neighborhood. Geneva Family Health Center 1028 S. Broadway Geneva, OH 44041 (440) 466-8933 Opening June 2016 ACMC Express Care Mon – Sat, 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Walk-ins welcome! ACMC Express Care provides fast, convenient care — without an appointment — for minor injury and illness, including: • Ear, upper respiratory, sinus and urinary tract infections • Minor bumps and cuts • Seasonal allergies • • • • Skin rashes Insect bites Influenza Ringworm, shingles, impetigo • Simple sprains and strains Week of Wednesday, May 11, 2016 ACMC Family Medicine At ACMC, our primary care providers are dedicated to providing high quality care to your entire family – from infants to seniors. BoardDr. Emily Cheich certified family practice physician Emily Cheich, DO, is welcoming new patients at the Geneva Family Health Center. To schedule an appointment, call (440) 997-6969. ACMC Specialty Care At the Geneva Family Health Center, access to specialists has never been more convenient. You can schedule appointments with the physicians in the following specialties without leaving Geneva: • Cardiology • Orthopaedics • Gastroenterology • Pulmonology • General Surgery • Urology Co-pays at Express Care are similar to a physician office visit. And you do not have to be a patient of Geneva Family Health Center to utilize Express Care. ACMC Laboratory Services Express Care serves patients age 2 and older. Most medical insurances are accepted. Check your insurance policy for coverage and co-pay amounts. Hours subject to change without notice. Visit www.acmchealth.org/expresscare to verify hours. When you need to have blood drawn, you can get it done right at Geneva Family Health Center. Mon. – Fri. 7 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m. until Noon Walk-ins welcome!