Newsletter - Cortland County Historical Society
Transcription
Newsletter - Cortland County Historical Society
THE BULLETIN Cortland County Historical Society Mindy’s Musings Volume 7, Issue 2 May 2014 Inside this issue: President’s Corner 2 From the McGraw Historical Society 3 Attic Treasure Sale 3 Those Who Served 4 Membership Renewal 4 What was the Reason 5 Port Watson Never Became a Reality I love visiting the zoo. For years, I have watched the tigers and snow leopards at Rosamond Gifford Zoo in Syracuse grow from baby to adult. (I have the photographs to prove it!) At the zoo, I find myself relaxing, enjoying the fresh air, and becoming one with my surroundings. As a museum person, I like to think of zoos as museums with a living, breathing, and eating collection. Zoos make me happy. September 8, 2011, First day the baby tigers were on display at Rosamond Gifford Zoo So do museums and now I know why. Recently, I read a blog post from the American Alliance of Museums describing their many benefits. We all know museums boost local economies through employment and tourism. It turns out; museums are also good for the individual’s well-being. A Norwegian University for Science and Technology study cited on the blog found that museum visits decrease anxiety and lower the risk of depression. Other studies have found that museums decrease feelings of loneliness, reduce stress, and have the same boost to one’s well-being as receiving a pay raise. This has been my experience at zoos and museums. Special points of interest: • Check out the insert for upcoming special events. • Reminder: August 5, bus trip to Glimmerglass Opera House to see “An American Tragedy”. • A Dollhouse Holiday will be back, contact Tabitha if you have a Dollhouse you are interested in loaning for the show. As friends of the Cortland County Historical Society, you are well aware of the benefits of supporting your museum and research center. So, the next time you have friends or family visiting from out of town, give them a healthy alternative by bringing them for a tour of the Suggett House Museum. It will make you both feel great! If you want to read more about the benefits of museums, you can read the entire post here: https:// www.freelancersunion.org/blog/2014/03/26/ museums-good-for-you-happier-community/. October 1, 2012, How they October 1, 2012 Just over 1 year grew! later Page 2 The Bulletin President’s Corner “Have you ever wondered…..?” By Edmund A. Hart Have you ever wondered what a relative, one who had died before you were born and one that you had been told you looked like, was really like? I have. Central Fire Station The building is 100 this year! My Uncle Edmund Graham, my namesake, was that relative for me. Edmund, my mother’s older brother, was killed in a train-car collision between Groton and Moravia when he was 19. Mom was 14 and their younger brother, Don, was 11. As you can imagine, it was devastating for the family, especially for my Grandfather and Grandmother Graham. Ed had been a good student, a popular 4-H Club member and an excellent young farmer by virtue of having grown up working side by side with Grandpa Graham on their South Cortland farm. By the way, the new Walmart superstore and the hillside behind it are now what was once a large portion of the farm’s grazing and crop land. The house and barn were across the road on the west side of route 281. I am fortunate that I have received a number of family photos, articles and verbal accounts about Uncle Edmund from my mother, Helen Hart. They have been important to me in trying to imagine what his personality might have been like and what kind of relationship I might have had with him. Because of this history I’ve been drawn to looking deeper into my family genealogy on both sides as well as that of the family history on my children’s maternal side. It is amazing what the digital age and an inexpensive computer now allows us to discover with relative ease (pun intended). In a single fascinating find, I discovered that one individual, who I had never heard spoken of before, had been a resident of the Elmira Reformatory. At the date of the census that listed him there as a resident he was married and would have been 20 years old. My point to all of this, a snippet of family genealogy, is that it’s easy to do and it is very rewarding. There are do’s and don’ts to follow so as not to get off on the wrong family “track” but the process is easy to pick up on and there is help to be had. At the Cortland County Historical Society’s Kellogg Memorial Research Center there is research assistance available to get you started. There is no need to feel obligated to anything if you would just like to stop in to check out the center and perhaps get some information. For instance, a membership comes with free assisted research time. Believe me, that alone is a really great deal! Besides genealogy we have records on Cortland County real estate, businesses and industries, the civil war, famous residents, books by past and present day local authors and much, much more. Working Too is available for purchase. Check us out! You’ll become fascinated….and perhaps your family historian. $20.00 Have a great Spring! President Ed Volume 7, Issue 2 Page 3 From the McGraw Historical Society The McGraw Historical Society's Local History Room will reopen on Saturday May 17, 10 am- noon after being closed for the winter. The room will also be open on Tuesdays, 2-4 pm along with Saturdays through November 8. Visitors are invited to see displays of photographs, postcards, toys, dishes, McGraw Box Company silverware boxes, scrapbooks and other artifacts relating to the history of our village. A portable post office stand circa 1875, and a drum, which may date back to the early 1800s, have been donated and are on display. History Room in McGraw Programs for June-Nov. are being planned and will be posted on our website mcgrawhistoricalsociety.com. and in our May newsletter. The Local History Room is located at the rear entrance to the Lamont Memorial Free Library and is handicap accessible. We welcome visitors! Display at the McGraw Historical Society Attic Treasures Sale Our fundraising committee is busy preparing for the annual Attic Treasures Sale (formerly known as the Pale Pachyderm Sale). While we have collected items over the year, we are always looking for more items. So when the spring cleaning bug hits you, feel free to drop by Cortland County Historical Society with items that you wish to donate to our sale. All we ask is that you do not bring in textbooks, clothing, or cookbooks! Donations are accepted year round, and are tax deductible to the full extent of the law. The sale will be this fall, an exact date will be announced in the August Newsletter! 151 HELP WANTED VOLUNTEERS Cortland County Historical Society is looking for volunteers for various tasks around the historical society. If you are interested, please contact Tabitha at (607)756-6071. Two of our Jacob Impson Coverlets on loan at The History Center of Tompkins County as part of their Historic Coverlets Unwrapped exhibit. Page 4 The Bulletin Those Who Served The Publications committee is actively seeking stories of Cortland County Veterans to include in our upcoming publication “Those Who Served”. This will be the fifth volume in our Remembers Series and we depend upon the submissions of local residents to make this book a tribute to those who have served. A guide is available with questions to get you thinking and direct your writing at CCHS, stop by 25 Homer Avenue, or e-mail us at [email protected] and we will be glad to forward one on. Our 2015 calendar will also feature Those Who Served, so any pictures that you have to contribute should be brought by, and we can scan them for immediate return. Membership Renewal Thank you to our new and renewing members! Leonard and Linda Cohen Sandra Attleson James and Michele Ball Ed and Kathy Beardsley G. Fred Beaudry III Charles B. Bernheim Jeremy Boylan Karin Burgess James Carrington Jean Caughey Mary Louise Congdon Elaine M. Contento Barbara Corlis James Cornwall Mark Curran Patricia Davis James and Jan Dempsey Maria Dillingham Purcell Yvonne Divak Mary Donovan Jean Edwards C. Ashley and Beverly Ellefson Suzanne Etherington Barbara Ferris Robert and Jean Fryer Tom and Toni Gallagher Doyle Glover Elsie Gutchess William J. Haight Nancy Hansen Lewis and Judy Heath Rhoda Jones Margarette Kabanuk Mary Ann Kane Robert D'Addario and Ms. Kate O'Connell Patrick Kiernan Kent and Sharon Klanderman Lynne Lash Erling Maine Thomas and Lynn Meldrim Pamela Poulin Judith Pribula Leonard and Eleanor Ralston Don and Carol Reed Robert and Norma Rhodes Norma Riley Patti Riotto Kate Rodgers Barbara Ryan Merton Sarvay Frances Shearer Charlotte Smith Sheldon Richard Sickmon C. Jane Snell Sharon Stevans Randi Storch Martin Sweeney William Tei Philip and Diane Tennant Rosemary Theisz Dorothy Troike Deborah Van Auken Ronald and Wilma Van Dee Mrs. Brian and Teresa Wallace and Family Russell Wanish Malcolm and Margaret Watrous Dennis and Amy Wells Harry J. Weston Kevin and Carrie Whitney Kenneth and JoAnn Wickman Paul and Elizabeth Yesawich Volume 7, Issue 2 Page 5 What Was the Reason Port Watson Never Became a Reality? By Nancy Garvey Many local residents have heard of Elkanah Watson and know that he was connected to the name of Port Watson, but who was this man? It is also often stated he owned land in Cortland but never lived here. He is described in many historical accounts as a promoter but he was much more than that, if one connects this descriptor with one who advocates causes to enhance personal wealth. It would seem that Elkanah Watson was a visionary and enthusiastic participant in the newly independent United States of America and embraced the opportunities that he imagined were available to the willing who would explore, observe, record, visualize and work on the possibilities of developing the new nation. Elkanah Watson was born in 1736 in Plymouth Massachusetts and died in Port Kent, New York on Lake Champlain in 1842. He traveled widely in Europe transporting and delivering documents to such notables as Benjamin Franklin. He explored the interior of the country including the interior of New York State (the interior of New York was at that time everything west of Albany). He was a meticulous diarist who recorded in detail his observations which included maps, who he saw and who he met as well as his impressions of those encounters. His letters were extensive and included such notable individuals John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Philip Schuyler, Robert Fulton and Robert Morris. His travels in Europe had exposed him to the utilitarian purposes which canals can be implemented for. He saw the possibilities for trade and transport if the rivers of this country could be made navigable to the “interior”. His meticulous observations and recordings included the locations of obstructions such as rocks and other impediments to navigation. He met and discussed with George Washington the prospect of opening the rivers of Virginia to such activities2. He was not a politician, never ran for office, and avoided political party activity with one exception. Watson explored the Mohawk valley extensively beginning in 1788, he was accompanied by some members of the first families of Albany (Jeremiah Van Rensselaer, Stephen N. Bayard and General Philip Van Cortlandt) he eventually wrote a History of the Western Canals in 1820, 30 years after the expedition. Watson’s original report was circulated in 1792 among the prominent citizens of Albany and articles were submitted to the newspapers in and around the capital extolling the benefits of the construction of the canal from Albany to Lake Ontario and was supported by Governor George Clinton. A bill was introduced into the State legislation to remove obstructions to western navigation and northern navigation. “Goldsbrow Banyer, Esq., and Elkanah Watson were appointed by the directors to explore, lay out, and direct the prosecution of the western canals”. 2 Subsequent disagreement with the Director of the canal company General Schuyler and diminishment of the pivotal role played initially in promoting and planning the canal precipitated Watson not being reappointed to the commission. Soon after this Elkanah Watson purchased a farm and moved to Port Kent on Lake Champlain in 1807.Prior to 1800 Watson handled 17,000 acres in Onondaga County alone, most of which were purchases of the military tract. There are records in Cortland County of 48 separate sales, ranging from $100.00 to $800.00. Elkanah Watson planned a port at the confluence of the two branches of the Tioughnioga as the most desirable location. He had land surveyed for streets and house lots North to South, first to eighth, and East to West with four named streets Nott, Tillotson, Washington and Pennsylvania, with two additional streets added later, Jenkins and Cherry. In the center of the village where a bridge crossed the west branch a space was reserved for a square. Access to the south and to Cooperstown was the plan for major transport routes. He also owned property in the present towns of Cincinnatus, Cuyler, Homer, Marathon, Preble, Scott, Solon, Taylor, and Truxton. By 1805 Watson had sold 30 lots and assigned another 66 to his agent Henry L. Seward, at the price of $60.00 to $80.00 for 15 acres. He showed two merino sheep on the town green to his neighbors who were fascinated. This initiative in turn gave impetus eventually to a nationwide movement toward community information exchange of agrarian advances and techniques. Finally Watson is credited with being the father of County Fairs throughout the State of New York and the entire nation. He was the catalyst in the formation of Agricultural Societies throughout the country.2 Elkanah Watson a man of boundless imagination and energy who had no desire to politically control the developments which he so skillfully nurtured and who seemed to thoroughly enjoy the prospects of promoting commerce and information in the newly formed nation.2 References 1.Bobbe’, D, (1962) DeWitt Clinton.Port Washingon, L.I. N.Y. : Ira J. Friedman, Inc. 2. Flick, H.M. (1958) Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Political Science, Columbia University, New York, N.Y. 3. Watson, W. C. Ed. (1856) Men and Times of the Revolution; Memoirs Elkanah Watson. New York: Dana and Company, Publishers. Non Profit– Org US POSTAGE PAID C ORTLAND C OUNTY H ISTORICAL S OCIETY Cortland, N.Y. 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