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Bound Volumes, Hometown History

February 15, 2024

70 YEARS AGO

Violet Marie Bradshaw’s long masquerade as a man exploded dramatically in a criminal court in Columbus, Ohio after a judge sentenced her to the penitentiary for embezzlement. Arrested last summer as Vernon Bradshaw, 35, of Kenova, West Virginia, on a charge of embezzling $2,000 from an ice cream company, Violet served three days in a county jail before release on $1,500 bond. After sentencing at her trial on February 10, a man who identified himself as Patrick Bradshaw, the defendant’s brother, came to court to reveal his sister’s sex. “I was not masquerading,” Violet explained. “I always have considered myself a man”

February 1954

50 YEARS AGO

Faced with one their worst wrecks in recent years, D. & H. Railroad workers are preparing for a massive cleanup operation near Emmons where a 25-car derailment has shut down all traffic on the line. D. & H. Railroad President C.B. (Bruce) Sterzing, Jr., said he hopes to restore traffic movement by tonight. That will depend entirely on when fires in seven 30,000 gallon tanker cars filled with liquid propane burn themselves out. No dollar estimate of damages was available when Sterzing met with newsmen late last night. A train out of Binghamton leaving Oneonta at 4 p.m. picked up speed and was moving about 30 miles per hour when the locomotive crew felt a sharp jolt in the units just to the rear. Twenty-five cars of the 127-unit train and one of its three locomotives derailed. The two remaining locomotives and crew moved beyond the wreckage and called for assistance. A yard engine dispatched from Oneonta pulled the remaining cars out of the area and took them back to the Oneonta yard. A fire started immediately in one of the propane cars and within minutes the fire spread. Soon, searing explosions followed about every twenty minutes and a number of firemen were injured, many of them badly.

February 1974

40 YEARS AGO

The calendar says it is February but the thermometer reading made it seem more like late March over the weekend as unseasonably mild temperatures in the 40s and 50s melted snow and ice accumulated over the winter. The mild weather is expected to continue. National Weather Service estimates for coming days predict highs in the 40s and 50s and lows in the 30s and 40s. Five years ago the February 12th temperature fell to 28 degrees below zero, a record for that date. And, on that date in 1944, a record 11 inches of snow fell on Oneonta in a 24-hour period. Water levels are elevated but no flooding has occurred.

February 1984

30 YEARS AGO

A theological squabble has broken out over an ecumenical conference on women that invoked “Sophia, Creator God,” and used other feminine images of the deity. The conflict reflects attempts to modify pervasively male references to God as “He” or “Father” and to bring out biblical indications that God has “motherly” qualities. United Methodist Bishop Earl G. Hunt says deifying Sophia is an “attempt to reconstitute the Godhead,” and “no comparable heresy has appeared in the church in the last 15 centuries.”

February 1994

20 YEARS AGO

Computer expert Bo Lipari will present a talk titled “Will Your Vote Count? The Challenges of Electronic Voting Machines” at 7:30 p.m. in the new Red Dragon Theater in the basement of Hunt Union on the State University College at Oneonta campus. Lipari will address questions raised about the reliability of electronic voting machines.

February 2004

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Hometown History: March 21, 2024

110 YEARS AGO
An Evening in Erin—A good 550 people of whom 518 were spectators packed Holy Name Hall last evening to the very doors and spent a happy and entertaining three hours in “The Land Where the Grass Grows Greenest.” The whole entertainment was the biggest kind of a success for the church, the performers and the audience, and everyone was happy and good natured. Everything on the program was a hit. Joseph Haggerty with his song replete with local hits struck the spirit of the audience dearly. The pie-eating contest provoked a few gales of laughter, but Miss Murphy was funnier. All were excellent. This St. Patrick’s Day will long be remembered. The proceeds were about $200 and practically the whole amount will go to the new seats.
March 1914…

Hometown History: April 11, 2024

135 Years Ago
The Local News—In excavating the cellar for the Bundy building, a Canadian Sou (coin) was found several feet below the surface. It was well preserved, and though bearing no date, must be very old. L.H. Blend has it.
The organ grinder, as genuine a harbinger of spring as the robin, made his appearance here on Wednesday. He was afterward arrested for cruelty to a boy in his company, but the justice discharged him.
Louise Arnot and company will begin a week’s engagement at the Metropolitan on Monday evening, opening in the popular drama “49.” Miss Arnot is pronounced one of the best actresses ever appearing in Oneonta, and her support is first class. Popular prices: 10, 20 and 30 cents.
There is no better place to form an idea of the number of new buildings now being built in Oneonta can be found than on the hill on the south side of the river. In all parts of the village new houses are seen going up, while the East end looks as though it had the chickenpox, so freely is it spotted with newly built unpainted buildings.
April 1889…

Hometown History: April 4, 2024

50 Years Ago
April Fools’ Day did not go unheralded in Oneonta. A bomb scare in Tommy’s Place on West Broadway forced proprietor Tommy Pondolfino to close his establishment early last night but the promised explosion never happened.
The motive behind the bomb scare, Pondolfino suspects was a late night April Fools’ prank. A waitress at the bar received a call around 10:50 p.m. last night from a man who warned that the bomb would detonate within half an hour. Pondolfino contacted city police who evacuated about 20 customers still in the building.
April 1974…

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.