Advertisement. Advertise with us

BOUND VOLUMES

October 22, 2020

200 YEARS AGO

Dispatch From New Orleans – The fever raging here is equal to the plague of the Barbary States. Not more than one out of ten of the newcomers who have had the temerity to remain here this season, has escaped death and the disease has been uncommonly rapid. From four to six days have been the extent of life after the patient was attacked. The number of deaths for the last week were 146. They died with the black vomit generally, in possession of all their reasoning faculties. The letter gives a gloomy picture of the scenes of distress that have passed under the writer’s eye. What makes it worse is that every season it changes its character, so far as not to be subdued by the same treatment that was successful in a preceding one.

October 23, 1820

175 YEARS AGO

Excerpts from a dispatch from Greene, New York: “I learn that Mrs. Vars is a daughter of Bethel Gray, and been married but a year or two. She had been out near the creek for some purpose and sat down on a log to rest near the mill pond, when they came up behind her, blindfolded her, tied her hands, and then threw her into the pond. Every man, woman and boy has turned out to look for the villains. Such an excitement was never known in this town before. What we are coming to God only knows. This must have taken place about 12 o’clock today. Yours C.S.
P.S. The woman was got out alive, and who the perpetrators are is a mystery, as she did not see them. She says there were two of them, as they talked, and asked one to the other if they should take her and whether she would tell, and the other replied that she would – and let her alone, etc.”

October 25, 1845

150 YEARS AGO

Sad Accident – On Wednesday last, two boys of Mr. S.H. Chapins, aged 10 and 12 years old, and a boy of Peter Edgett, were playing together, having been left at home alone. The older Chapins boy, Charles, went into the house and got a shotgun that was loaded. The Edgett boy, aged 8 years, took the gun and said he took off the cap, and then snapped the gun, when it exploded, the whole charge taking effect in the neck of Harvey Chapins, on the left side, just below the angle of the lower jaw bone, severing the carotid artery on that side, causing almost instant death. A coroner’s inquest was held and a verdict rendered by the jury of “accidental death by a gun in the hands of James F. Edgett.

October 20, 1870

125 YEARS AGO

Local: The channel of Willow Brook has been deepened along its course through the lands of L. Averell Carter, from Lake Street to the lake. G.M. Jarvis and C.R. Burch are confined to their homes by temporary illness. Both have worked too hard for years. Everett T. Grout has entered the Western Union Telegraph Office here to learn telegraphy.
Charles Weeks of Toddsville and L.W. Ackley of Oneonta, under the firm name of Weeks and Ackley, are now bottling the Beaverwick Lager in Cooperstown.
The boatmen along the lake front are taking up their docks and preparing for winter.
The Chestnut Street greenhouse, owned by Mrs. W.H. Russell, has recently been enlarged and improved and is now very complete. A new greenhouse has been added where a large variety of flowers will be cultivated. There is room in Cooperstown for this enterprise to grow.

October 24, 1895

75 YEARS AGO

The following Otsego County men under the jurisdiction of Selective Service Board 403, Cooperstown, have been reported as honorably discharged: Phillip Petrie, Loren Weegar, Archangelo Mogavero, George C. Meade, Leon W. Jastremski, Richard Kraham, Arnold Vibbard, Amos Weaver, Salvatore Sapienza, Edward B. Scott, Gerald Wayne Butler, James Decker, James Derrick, Joseph J. Munford, Jr., Thomas J. Thompson, Frank Smith, Alexander Lee Cooper, Edward P. Gilbert, and Robert Curtis.

October 24, 1945

50 YEARS AGO

Frederick W. Loomis of Edmeston will retire on October 31 as Otsego County Judge and Judge of Family Court after nearly 19 years on the bench. His current 10-year term has a little over four years to run. Governor Rockefeller is expected to make an interim appointment to fill the vacancy. A recommendation for the post is expected to be made by the Otsego County Republican Party. Judge Loomis’s retirement had been rumored for some time, and speculation has been rife as to who his successor would be. Mentioned prominently as possible successors in the $26,000 a year full-time post have been County Attorney Robert A. Harlem of Oneonta, former District Attorney Joseph A. Mogavero of Unadilla and City Court Judge Albert A. Baldo of Oneonta.

October 21, 1970

25 YEARS AGO

Cooperstown Central School senior Jeff Dean was notified recently of his acceptance into the New York State Music Association’s All-State Jazz Ensemble, scheduled to perform at the Concord Hotel, Lake Kiamesha on November 28. The ensemble is an exclusive collection of 20 New York State students who began competition in the spring of this past school year by preparing a written jazz solo for adjudication before a NYSSMA judge. In addition to his solo performance, Dean was also asked to improvise a jazz number and perform a musical selection previously unseen – a process known as ”sight-reading.”

October 22, 1995

10 YEARS AGO

The Otsego Land Trust has announced members of a committee, chaired by Francis Nolan, Hartwick, to explore future public uses of Brookwood Gardens on Otsego Lake. The committee includes former Otsego 2000 Executive Director Martha Frey, Duey Townsend of the Lake & Valley Garden Club, John Davis of the Delaware-Otsego Audubon Society, Meg Kiernan, Otsego Town Supervisor, Otsego County Planner Karen Sullivan, Matt Albright of the SUNY Biological Field Station, Bill Oliver, Wayne Mellor, Doug Willis, and Amanda Savage Mahoney, a descendant of Albany financier James B. Jermaine who once owned the lakeside estate. The Cook Foundation, which owned Brookwood Garden, recently merged with the Land Trust, in part to chart a new course for the property.

October 21, 2010

Posted

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Related Articles

Bound Volumes: April 4, 2024

135 YEARS AGO
Fire—About half past ten Tuesday evening the fire bell sounded an alarm, and at the same moment a large part of the village was illuminated by the flames which shot up from the old barn on the premises of Mr. B.F. Austin, on Elm Street. In it were four or five tons of baled straw and a covered buggy, which were destroyed. Loss was about $200. No insurance. Phinney Hose put the first stream of water on the fire, and Nelson Hose the second, preventing any further damage, and even leaving the frame of the barn standing. Six or eight firemen – vainly appealing for assistance from the able-bodied men running by—dragged the hook and ladder truck to the fire. The hydrants had not been flushed in a long time, and sand and gravel had consequently accumulated in them. One of the companies had two lengths of hose disabled, probably from that cause. The origin of the fire is unknown, but for some time past the barn has been slept in by one or more persons, and it is presumed they accidentally set fire to the straw.
April 5, 1889…

Bound Volumes: March 21, 2024

210 YEARS AGO
On Thursday morning last, between the hours of 3 and 4 o’clock, our citizens were aroused from their slumbers by the alarming cry of fire, which proved to be in the building occupied by Taylor and Graves as a Tailor’s and Barber’s shop, and had made such progress before the alarm became general, that it was impossible to save the building. The end of Messrs. Cook and Craft’s store, which stood about ten feet east, was several times on fire, but by the prompt exertions of the citizens in hastening supplies of water, and the well-directed application of it through the fire engine, united with the calmness of the weather, its desolating progress was arrested, and the whole range of buildings east to the corner saved from impending destruction. The shutters and windows in Col. Stranahan’s brick house, facing the fire, were burnt out; this building formed a barrier to the progress of the fire westward. The Ladies of the village deserve much praise for the promptitude and alacrity with which they volunteered their aid to the general exertions. They joined the ranks at an early hour, and continued during the whole time of danger, to render every assistance in their power.
March 19, 1814…

Bound Volumes: April 11, 2024

210 YEARS AGO
Dispatch from Plattsburgh—A Spy Detected: At length, by redoubled vigilance, in spite of the defects of our own laws, the corruption of some of our citizens, and the arts and cunning of the enemy, one Spy, of the hundreds who roam at large over this frontier, has been detected, convicted, and sentenced to Death. He came from the enemy as a deserter, in the uniform of a British corps, had obtained a pass to go into the interior, visited this place, and was on his return to Canada, in citizens’ clothes, when a virtuous citizen, who had seen him as he came from Canada, recognized and made him prisoner—and notwithstanding arts of one of our citizens (a Peace officer) who advised him to let the fellow go, brought him to this place. He has acknowledged he was a sergeant in the 103rd regiment of British infantry, and calls his name William Baker. We understand he is to be executed this day at 1 o’clock p.m.
April 9, 1814…

Putting the Community Back Into the Newspaper

Now through July 31st, new or lapsed annual subscribers to the hard copy “Freeman’s Journal” (which also includes unlimited access to AllOtsego.com), or electronically to AllOtsego.com, can also give back to one of their favorite Otsego County charitable organizations.

$5.00 of your subscription will be donated to the nonprofit of your choice:

Cooperstown Farmers’ Market, Cooperstown Food Pantry, Greater Oneonta Historical Society or Super Heroes Humane Society.