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Bound Volumes

July 29, 2021

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

210 YEARS AGO

With what contempt does the freeman of America glance at the silly attempt of such things as emperors and kings to induce them to join their sanguinary play, which sends thousands in an hour to their long home; while the Americans are infinitely better employed in cultivating their fertile fields and extending their settlements into a vast wilderness, raising flocks and herds of cattle and sheep, and all kinds of grain – making their own ploughs, wheelbarrows and carts, and clothing themselves richly from their own wool, cotton and flax, for the surplus of which the emperors and kings and things in Europe are quarreling for the pre-emption.

July 27, 1811

185 YEARS AGO

At an annual meeting of the Otsego County Medical
Society, held at Cooperstown, on Monday, the 18th of July, 1836, the following persons were elected officers for the ensuing year: Jenks S. Sprague, president; Henry Clark, vice-president; Joseph Carpenter, secretary; Erastus Curtis, treasurer; censors: Menzo White; A.E. Metcalf; John Gray; D.R. Boyce; and Erastus Curtiss; librarian, Erastus Curtiss; library trustees: Sumner Ely; Ariel Spafard; and Alexis Smith; delegate to state society: Alexis Smith.

August 1, 1836

135 YEARS AGO

Local –The special Saturday night train from Albany to Cooperstown has been taken off for the reason that it was not patronized. The first it brought only a servant for one of the hotels. The second trip it was favored with two passengers and the third trip it brought as far as the Junction a passenger for Portlandville. The experiment was a failure too expensive to keep up.
Every year, more or less stone flagging will be laid in Cooperstown. The process has been a slow and tedious one, but this year it is done by a simple machine planned and constructed under the direction of President Lane – two large carriage wheels, taken from a vehicle brought to this village nearly a century ago, a lever, strong chains and iron hooks, all costing less than $20 – and in an expeditious manner, greatly lessening the cost of labor.

July 31, 1886

110 YEARS AGO

Pasquale Favale, an Italian employed by E.A. Potter as a foreman of laborers in the building of the new Bissell camp house just north of Mohican Point, was drowned in the lake Sunday morning. Another of the Italians found Favale’s clothing upon the shore, and upon going out upon the McGown dock, discovered the body lying upon the bottom of the lake in about eight feet of water.
Great excitement prevailed among the Italians, and Linn G. Parshall, who occupies the Hiawatha Camp nearby, went out and removed the body from the water. Amos Bissell and his brothers tried in vain for about an hour to resuscitate the man. The body was attired in an old pair of trousers. A Requiem High Mass was celebrated in the Roman Catholic Church Tuesday morning and burial was made in St. Mary’s cemetery. “Patsy” as he was known was a valued employee of Mr. Potter.

July 26, 1911

85 YEARS AGO

The Hartwick School, a Federal government project at Hartwick Seminary, was closed Monday, after being in operation for about one and one-half years. Thirty-five students who were enrolled are being transferred to a WPA project at Saratoga Springs. The buildings were initially leased by the government for the purpose of establishing a county transient center. Such an institution was conducted there until it was discontinued as the result of protests by a large number of residents in the neighborhood. A plan was then conceived to open a school at which young men with a desire to gain training along vocational, business and other practical lines, might have the advantages otherwise denied them. At times there have been as many as 125 students on the rolls and instruction has been provided to two or three times that number. Despite the lack of federal funding to continue, the life of the school has been prolonged for six months through the efforts of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, wife of the President.

July 29, 1936

60 YEARS AGO

The first annual Fenimore School of Horsemanship Junior Horse Show got off to a sunny start Sunday morning at Fiddlestick Farm, Whig Corners, and continued under sunny skies until the close of the last class. Thanks to the indefatigable efforts of Suzanne Cove, the show manager, the recently enlarged dressage arena was ready for its debut, and that of its maiden dressage horses and riders. Suzanne herself gave an excellent demonstration of dressage on the Fenimore School’s “National Velvet.” Gordon Auchincloss announced the various movements of Miss Cove’s demonstration ride. Major Robert H. Dygert, of Rochester, judged the classes and critiqued each rider. Class winners were the Misses Melody Root, Carol Ann Parshall and Susan Swatling.

July 26, 1961

35 YEARS AGO

A letter penned by President Ronald Reagan and addressed to the Glimmerglass Opera on the occasion of the company’s performing William Schumann’s “Casey at the Bat” reads in part: “A baseball fan here at the White House – there are many of us – has been taking liberties with (Earnest Lawrence Thayer’s poem) Casey at the Bat, and I take the liberty of passing it along to you – ‘Oh! Somewhere in this favored land the sun is shining bright; the band is playing somewhere, and somewhere hearts are light; and somewhere families fill their lives with happiness and mirth; And that somewhere is Cooperstown, where baseball found its birth.’”

July 30, 1986

20 YEARS AGO

Bassett Healthcare has joined leading healthcare institutions in New York and throughout the U.S. in cooperation with the National Cancer Institute and the Southwest Oncology Group in the largest ever cancer prevention study. The study will focus on whether two dietary supplements, Vitamin E and Selenium can protect against prostate cancer. More than 32,000 men at 428 sites across the country will participate in the study which may take 12 years to complete. (Ed. Note: The study reached inconclusive results in 2009 and was canceled).

July 27, 2001

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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

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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.
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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.