Advertisement. Advertise with us

HOMETOWN HISTORY

April 8, 2021

Compiled by Tom Heitz/SHARON STUART, with resources
courtesy of The Fenimore Art Museum Research Library

135 Years Ago

Home & Vicinity – On Tuesday evening, George Ingalls of this village displayed a collection of gold coins, consisting of twenty-six one-dollar pieces, four five-dollar pieces, and one twenty-dollar piece, all bright and new.
What was particularly interesting was that the money was paid Mr. Ingalls for his services during the first year of the rebellion and which he has retained ever since.
The committee appointed to arrange a law-and-order league hope at an early day to make public their plan of operation. Since the movement was inaugurated, drunkenness has entirely disappeared from our streets on Sundays, and the dealers evince a disposition to observe the letter of the law – the bars being all closed on the Sabbath. It will be much better for all concerned if no further step is necessary.

April 1886

110 Years Ago

Thursday afternoon of last week, Mr. and Mrs. Rasselas R. Irish died at the home of their granddaughter, Mrs. Frank H. Bresee, at 8 Maple Street. Their deaths, occurring within a little more than an hour of each other, terminated a married life of 67 years. Death was caused in each instance by pneumonia. Each had been heard to express the hope not to survive the other, and this wish was almost literally fulfilled. Mr. Irish was a native of Middlefield and was nearly 92 years of age. His wife, who was Martha Lewis, was a native of Vermont and had reached the age of 85 years. They were married at Fly Creek in the Town of Otsego, which until 1908 was their home, before they came to Oneonta. Though advanced in years Mr. and Mrs. Irish retained a surprising degree of physical strength and mental alertness. They were both great readers, keeping in touch with the progress of the age. They entered into the sports and mirth of younger people with genuine zest. Five of their seven children survive them. Brief funeral services were held at the Bresee residence on Saturday morning.

April 1911

90 Years Ago

Discovery of gas in two large fields during the past year has started one of the greatest booms southern New York and northern Pennsylvania have ever known. Today more than a score of wells are producing a vast supply of gas and hundreds of thousands of dollars have been spent in the development of the two fields. Thousands of acres of farmland, much of which could have been bought for taxes a year ago have been placed under lease. On dozens of locations drills are being hammered into the earth and small towns near the wells are growing. Hotels are jammed and money is being spent with lavish hands. Schuyler County had the first gasser in the boom. Rigs shot up on a dozen locations and the months that followed have witnessed strikes on a score of sites. Approximately 100,000,000 cubic feet of gas can be produced every 24 hours from the Schuyler field.

April 1931

70 Years Ago

Salaries paid Methodist ministers are “embarrassingly low,” according to Dr. H. Claude Hardy, Oneonta District lay leader, speaking at the session of the Wyoming Conference Layman’s Association at Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Dr. Hardy is a retired educator and now the director of public relations at Hartwick College. He expressed the hope that Methodist ministers will get adequate compensation and salaries as generous as those paid by other denominations. “It is a challenge to Christian people to see that the preachers are well paid,” Hardy said. “As long as I am a lay leader I’m going to talk about it and do something about it.”

April 1951

50 Years Ago

The canoe season opened with a big splash for the Knu Knuts, an area canoeing club. Monte Smith of Richfield Springs and Dr. Leon Wiggins of Oneonta were at Westfield River, Massachusetts last Sunday for the annual open boat 12-mile White Water Race. They placed first in the event. Will Siegfried, also of Oneonta, competing in his first downriver wild water race placed second in the novice kayak race. Siegfried and his father have been on several cruising trips with Dr. Wiggins and Monte Smith.

April 1971

30 Years Ago

Mediation Services, Inc., of Oneonta, has received a grant of $10,000. The funds come from interest earned by lawyers’ accounts in New York State. Mediation Services, Inc. mediates civil disputes in Otsego County and is an independent, not-for-profit organization. The mediation services provided are neutral and confidential and offer parties a convenient problem-solving alternative to remedies within the justice system. Other services include conflict management and mediator training. The present officers are Fred Ermlich, president; Richard McVinney, vice-president; Nettie Jean Scarzafava, secretary; and David Ashe, treasurer. Newly appointed board members are Dr. Art Dauria, Lucy H. Pantaleoni, and Detective Sergeant Carl Shedlock. Mediation Services, Inc. receives partial funding from the United Court System of New York State and must raise a substantial amount through local contributions.

April 1991

20 Years Ago

Oneonta’s downtown developer Jeff House is working to fill unused building spaces and clean-up alleys and side streets in the business sector. In December, House reported a “large increase” within the last year and a half of office spaces being used on second and third floors in downtown buildings.
He has been working with City Clerk James R. Koury to post vacancies on the city’s website. House also developed a brochure that lists available business support services in Oneonta. The city’s recent initiative to clean up Water Street is moving forward with the creation of a garbage collection area under the ramp of the parking garage. House said that Water Street is now clear of the assorted dumpsters that once crowded the area.

April 2001

Posted

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Related Articles

Hometown History: February 22, 2024

40 Years Ago
The computer is going to summer camp. James LeMonn, a spokesman for the American Camping Association said his organization’s “Parents Guide” for 1984 lists 180 camps with computer instruction programs. The fad started about two years ago, he said. “We view it as a temporary phenomenon,” LeMonn said. He pointed out that camps providing foreign language classes were very popular in the 1950s. When schools started including more complete language programs, the camps faded. He predicts the same thing will happen with computers. LeMonn said there are a handful of camps operated by computer manufacturers where each camper has a terminal and there is intensive instruction. For most of the camps, the computer instruction is but one of many opportunities offered. Computers notwithstanding LeMonn said the prime purpose of camping remains unchanged: “The real focus is group-living in the out-of-doors.”
February 1984…

Hometown History: 02-29-24

110 YEARS AGO
Within the past few months many of the pool rooms, lunch rooms, cigar stores, candy stores, and public places of the like in Oneonta have been operating slot machines, candy cards, cigar boards and numerous other devices in which a man might get a whole lot for a nickel or a dime, but the majority of players would be more likely to get nothing. The operation of such devices is in direct violation of the law and, at various times, the police department have made efforts to eliminate them from the city but without complete success owing in a measure to a lack of interest on the part of the judiciary. Within the past few days all places in the city operating such devices have been visited by the police and their owners notified to remove the same and keep them removed, lest they be punished under the provisions of the law.
February 1914…

Hometown History: March 7, 2024

90 Years Ago
As part of a concerted temperance education drive by the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, nine copies of the recently published “Syllabus in Alcohol Education” have been placed in schools here, it was announced yesterday. These were distributed at the request of local teachers. Copies of this syllabus are much in demand throughout the country, said Mrs. Lula C. Walker of this city, the New York State W.C.T.U. vice-president, and copies are being distributed at the rate of 1,000 a week.
March 1934…