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Bygone Days
THE "KICK AND PUSH" RAILROAD BY RICHARD F. PALMER The "Kick and Push" Railroad Prattsburgh, New York by Richard F. Palmer Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. One of the many picturesque little short-lines that once connected the small communities of central New York with the outside world was the Prattsburgh Railroad, nicknamed the "Kick & Push." ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: HOPETON MILLSITE BY Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Hopeton Millsite. Here in the big curve of the Outlet around Sugarloaf once lay a major milling and commercial complex, one of the centers established by the English proprietors who developed the Genesee Country. THE EXPEDITION OF THE MARQUIS DE DENONVILLE BY JOHN G. SHERET Mendon — The Early Years The Expedition of the Marquis de Denonville and Related Matters by John G. Sheret. Over three hundred years ago, much of what is now Western New York State was the scene of contention between France and England. REMEMBER THE OLD FANNING MILL? BY RICHARD PALMER Remember the Old Fanning Mill? by Richard Palmer. Very much a part of a museum collection these days seems to be the fanning mill. They wereas much a part of
THE "PEANUT LINE" OF THE NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD BY JOHN Mendon — The Early Years The "Peanut Line" of the New York Central Railroad by John G. Sheret. January 1, 1853, proved to be an exciting day for the residents of Honeoye Falls when the first train of the newly built Canandaigua to Batavia Railroad arrived in the village. STARTING MODEL T FORDS BY JOHN REZELMAN Starting Model T Fords by John Rezelman Index of articles by John Rezelman. About two hundred years ago, if you wanted to go for a drive in your own vehicle, you climbed aboard and, with that subtle communication of touch between horse's mouth and horseman's hand, you alerted your horse to expect a command and reminded him—"take notice, horse"—that you were in charge. THE CROOKED LAKE REVIEW Index of Issues Current articles are published in the Crooked Lake Review Blog. Articles published in the Crooked Lake Review between May 1988 and July 2008 are indexed below. BURNING SPRING BY JOAN K. HAYWARD Burning Spring by Joan K. Hayward The grandmother of Helen Corser Fox, Town of Bristol Historian, saw from her bedroom window in the 1880s the spectacle of the "burning spring." ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: SENECA MILLSITE BY FRANCES Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Seneca Millsite. Yates County got its start here. INDEX TO ARTICLES BY RICHARD F. PALMER Memories of Roseland Park: Go East, Young Man! Brigham Young's Presence in the Finger Lakes, Part I: Montville, Deserted Mourns forBygone Days
THE "KICK AND PUSH" RAILROAD BY RICHARD F. PALMER The "Kick and Push" Railroad Prattsburgh, New York by Richard F. Palmer Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. One of the many picturesque little short-lines that once connected the small communities of central New York with the outside world was the Prattsburgh Railroad, nicknamed the "Kick & Push." ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: HOPETON MILLSITE BY Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Hopeton Millsite. Here in the big curve of the Outlet around Sugarloaf once lay a major milling and commercial complex, one of the centers established by the English proprietors who developed the Genesee Country. THE EXPEDITION OF THE MARQUIS DE DENONVILLE BY JOHN G. SHERET Mendon — The Early Years The Expedition of the Marquis de Denonville and Related Matters by John G. Sheret. Over three hundred years ago, much of what is now Western New York State was the scene of contention between France and England. REMEMBER THE OLD FANNING MILL? BY RICHARD PALMER Remember the Old Fanning Mill? by Richard Palmer. Very much a part of a museum collection these days seems to be the fanning mill. They wereas much a part of
THE "PEANUT LINE" OF THE NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD BY JOHN Mendon — The Early Years The "Peanut Line" of the New York Central Railroad by John G. Sheret. January 1, 1853, proved to be an exciting day for the residents of Honeoye Falls when the first train of the newly built Canandaigua to Batavia Railroad arrived in the village. STARTING MODEL T FORDS BY JOHN REZELMAN Starting Model T Fords by John Rezelman Index of articles by John Rezelman. About two hundred years ago, if you wanted to go for a drive in your own vehicle, you climbed aboard and, with that subtle communication of touch between horse's mouth and horseman's hand, you alerted your horse to expect a command and reminded him—"take notice, horse"—that you were in charge. ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: SENECA MILLSITE BY FRANCES Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Seneca Millsite. Yates County got its start here. ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: HOPETON MILLSITE BY Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Hopeton Millsite. Here in the big curve of the Outlet around Sugarloaf once lay a major milling and commercial complex, one of the centers established by the English proprietors who developed the Genesee Country. SAINT GEORGE, THE SERPENT, AND THE SENECA INDIANS BY DAVID Saint George, the Serpent and the Seneca Indians by David D. Robinson. Saint George and the Dragon had an American Indian counterpart in the boy and girl who are the legendary founders of the Seneca Tribe of Indians in New York State, and in the serpent they slew to savethemselves.
NEW YORK TIMELINE 1815, 1816 BY DAVID MINOR 1815, 1816 New York City / State Timeline from Eagles Byte by David Minor Year-by-year tracing the growth of the early days of the Republic 1815 WAR FADES. A popular slogan several decades back was , "Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came?" THE GREAT IRON ORE ODYSSEY BY DONOVAN A. SHILLING The Great Iron Ore Odyssey by Donovan A. Shilling. The Rochester area is blessed with only a few minerals of genuine economic value. As the vast shallow ocean, which once blanketed this region, slowly evaporated, some large deposits of salt and gypsum (sodium chloride and calcium sulphate) were formed, however they were to the west ofour city.
REMEMBERING THE GENESEE VALLEY CANAL, PART I BY RICHARD PALMER Remembering the Genesee Valley Canal by Richard Palmer Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV Part V, Part VI Part I. Over the years many articles, monographs and voluminous guidebooks trace the history of the Genesee Valley Canal, which, after a long period of struggle, was finally completed to the Allegheny River in 1862—only to last until1878.
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF EBENEZER ALLAN BY DONOVAN A. SHILLING Rochester's Romantic Rogue The Life and Times of Ebenezer Allan by Donovan A. Shilling. There are many stories written in the world of fiction that are absolutely incredible. MEMORIES OF ROSELAND PARK BY RICHARD F. PALMER Memories of Roseland Park Canandaigua, New York by Richard F. Palmer Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. Of all the childhood memories of growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, the visits we frequently made to Roseland Park in Canandaigua are among the most pleasant. THE CHERRY VALLEY TURNPIKE BY RICHARD PALMER The Cherry Valley Turnpike by Richard Palmer. The pioneers poured in from New England in droves after 1800 to settle this new land in upstate New York then known as the "Western Country," and one of the primary paths they followed was the Cherry Valley Turnpike. THE PULTENEY ESTATE DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY BY JAMES The "Alien Proprietership" The Pulteney Estate during the Nineteenth Century by James D. Folts. For most of the nineteenth century much of the land in Steuben County was owned by THE CROOKED LAKE REVIEW October 1988, Issue 7. September 1988, Issue 6. August 1988, Issue 5. July 1988, Issue 4. June 1988, Issue 3. May 1988, Issue 2. May 1988, Issue 1. All articles in all issues of the Crooked Lake Review are posted on the website. We are in the process of adding the images accompanying the articles. MUSEUM SCHEDULES: CENTRAL AND WESTERN NEW YORK histsoc@fltg.net. 10:00 - 4:00, Thursday and Friday. The Museum is located in the Howe House built by Dr. John Quincy Howe. in 1869 on the site of an earlier tavern and tinsmithing shop. The house has an attached two-story privy (3 holes up and 3 down). The Howe's had 7children.
INDEX TO ARTICLES BY RICHARD F. PALMER Brigham Young's Presence in the Finger Lakes, Part II. The Battles of Sodus Point and Pultneyville. The Glory Days of the Munro Estate. Pioneer Times in the Genesee Country. Horatio Nelson Throop. Pioneer Times in Oswego Recalled. Traveling between Auburn and Geneva, 1825. When Salt Was A Substitute for Money. The Era of the Drover. BURNING SPRING BY JOAN K. HAYWARD The phenomenon of Burning Spring in the town of Bristol, Ontario County, New York, has been noted for over 330 years. In August, 1669, Robert Cavelier de La Salle, an intrepid 26-year-old French explorer, accompanied by Jesuit priests, visited the Seneca Indian village of Ganagaro (near Victor, New York). Father Rene Galinee wrote: "In orderto
STORIES OF MT. WASHINGTON: CHAPTER 1 BY MARTHA AND BILL Chapter 1. We start our story of the settlement of Mt. Washington at the Town of Wayne end of the mountain with Ephraim Sanford. Ephraim Sanford came to the heights of Mt. Washington in 1793, the same year that Wm. Aulls and his son Thomas came to Pleasant Valley. Ephraim was a Revolutionary War veteran and a devout Baptist. JOSEPHINE GRISWOLD CAPRON BY BETH B. FLORY Beth B. Flory. When Josephine Griswold Capron wrote The Old Mill in 1936, she was 64 and had been teaching school in Naples since 1913. She retired at the mandatory age of 70 and died ten years later, in 1952. Always interested in family and local history, she was a member of the Ontario County Historical Society and was Naples correspondent ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: HOPETON MILLSITE BY Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Hopeton Millsite. Here in the big curve of the Outlet around Sugarloaf once lay a major milling and commercial complex, one of the centers established by the English proprietors who developed the Genesee Country. REMEMBER THE OLD FANNING MILL? BY RICHARD PALMER Remember the Old Fanning Mill? by Richard Palmer. Very much a part of a museum collection these days seems to be the fanning mill. They wereas much a part of
TOBACCO FARMING AND TOBACCO BARNS IN LINDLEY, NEW YORK BY Tobacco Farming and Tobacco Barns in Lindley, New York 1864 to 1949 by Catherine M. Pierce The Guidelines for the Local Historian published by the New York State Department of Education states “The Local Government Historian is both an advocate for historic preservation and a resource to his or her appointing authority on questions relating to history and preservation—to identify historic MARGARET WOODBURY STRONG AND HER MUSEUM OF FASCINATION BY Thus on September 9th, 1920, at the little church of St. Ann's-on-the-Rocks, a young woman of 23 became Mrs. Margaret Woodbury Strong. Following a New England honeymoon the newlyweds returned to Rochester. There, at 270 Culver Road, Margaret's proud parents had purchased and fully furnished a new home as a wedding present. THE CROOKED LAKE REVIEW October 1988, Issue 7. September 1988, Issue 6. August 1988, Issue 5. July 1988, Issue 4. June 1988, Issue 3. May 1988, Issue 2. May 1988, Issue 1. All articles in all issues of the Crooked Lake Review are posted on the website. We are in the process of adding the images accompanying the articles. MUSEUM SCHEDULES: CENTRAL AND WESTERN NEW YORK histsoc@fltg.net. 10:00 - 4:00, Thursday and Friday. The Museum is located in the Howe House built by Dr. John Quincy Howe. in 1869 on the site of an earlier tavern and tinsmithing shop. The house has an attached two-story privy (3 holes up and 3 down). The Howe's had 7children.
INDEX TO ARTICLES BY RICHARD F. PALMER Brigham Young's Presence in the Finger Lakes, Part II. The Battles of Sodus Point and Pultneyville. The Glory Days of the Munro Estate. Pioneer Times in the Genesee Country. Horatio Nelson Throop. Pioneer Times in Oswego Recalled. Traveling between Auburn and Geneva, 1825. When Salt Was A Substitute for Money. The Era of the Drover. BURNING SPRING BY JOAN K. HAYWARD The phenomenon of Burning Spring in the town of Bristol, Ontario County, New York, has been noted for over 330 years. In August, 1669, Robert Cavelier de La Salle, an intrepid 26-year-old French explorer, accompanied by Jesuit priests, visited the Seneca Indian village of Ganagaro (near Victor, New York). Father Rene Galinee wrote: "In orderto
STORIES OF MT. WASHINGTON: CHAPTER 1 BY MARTHA AND BILL Chapter 1. We start our story of the settlement of Mt. Washington at the Town of Wayne end of the mountain with Ephraim Sanford. Ephraim Sanford came to the heights of Mt. Washington in 1793, the same year that Wm. Aulls and his son Thomas came to Pleasant Valley. Ephraim was a Revolutionary War veteran and a devout Baptist. JOSEPHINE GRISWOLD CAPRON BY BETH B. FLORY Beth B. Flory. When Josephine Griswold Capron wrote The Old Mill in 1936, she was 64 and had been teaching school in Naples since 1913. She retired at the mandatory age of 70 and died ten years later, in 1952. Always interested in family and local history, she was a member of the Ontario County Historical Society and was Naples correspondent ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: HOPETON MILLSITE BY Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Hopeton Millsite. Here in the big curve of the Outlet around Sugarloaf once lay a major milling and commercial complex, one of the centers established by the English proprietors who developed the Genesee Country. REMEMBER THE OLD FANNING MILL? BY RICHARD PALMER Remember the Old Fanning Mill? by Richard Palmer. Very much a part of a museum collection these days seems to be the fanning mill. They wereas much a part of
TOBACCO FARMING AND TOBACCO BARNS IN LINDLEY, NEW YORK BY Tobacco Farming and Tobacco Barns in Lindley, New York 1864 to 1949 by Catherine M. Pierce The Guidelines for the Local Historian published by the New York State Department of Education states “The Local Government Historian is both an advocate for historic preservation and a resource to his or her appointing authority on questions relating to history and preservation—to identify historic MARGARET WOODBURY STRONG AND HER MUSEUM OF FASCINATION BY Thus on September 9th, 1920, at the little church of St. Ann's-on-the-Rocks, a young woman of 23 became Mrs. Margaret Woodbury Strong. Following a New England honeymoon the newlyweds returned to Rochester. There, at 270 Culver Road, Margaret's proud parents had purchased and fully furnished a new home as a wedding present. THE CROOKED LAKE REVIEW Made up bunks for all and room to spare. Switched on the arc light and the common crew improved our minds for an hour, while the Captain Sat on deck watching the moon (only) come up. At 10, when "taps" was sounded at Science Camp-- we turned in and awoke much refreshed at 5:20 am. Soon had hammocks slung. STORIES OF MT. WASHINGTON: CHAPTER 1 BY MARTHA AND BILL Chapter 1. We start our story of the settlement of Mt. Washington at the Town of Wayne end of the mountain with Ephraim Sanford. Ephraim Sanford came to the heights of Mt. Washington in 1793, the same year that Wm. Aulls and his son Thomas came to Pleasant Valley. Ephraim was a Revolutionary War veteran and a devout Baptist. HANDSOME LAKE: A NEW RELIGION FOR THE SENECA BY JOHN H. MARTIN Handsome Lake was a Seneca warrior who sought a new approach for the traditional religion of his people. It was the small meeting of the Religious Society of Friends in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who helped the Indians acclimate themselves to a European style of living and farming. Not only in New York, but in the South and in the new Westthe
ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: HOPETON MILLSITE BY Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Hopeton Millsite. Here in the big curve of the Outlet around Sugarloaf once lay a major milling and commercial complex, one of the centers established by the English proprietors who developed the Genesee Country. ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: SENECA MILLSITE BY FRANCES His daughter Lament married Richard Smith's son Avery. William and Arnold Potter followed the Friend into the wilderness from Rhode Island, securing a parcel of land on the Outlet's north bank. They built a sawmill downstream from the Friend's Mill and planned to build a grist mill as well. The Lee family arrived in the area about 1790. THE "PEANUT LINE" OF THE NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD BY JOHN The Peanut Line had its genesis at a meeting, held in Lima, NY, on March 4, 1851, relative to the construction of a six-foot gauge railroad from Canandaigua to Niagara Falls, a distance of ninety-eight and one-half miles. (Author's Note: The gauge, the distance between the rails, was changed from six feet to the standard four feet, eightand
REMEMBERING THE 19TH-CENTURY GREAT LAKES SAILOR BY RICHARD Remembering the 19th-Century Great Lakes Sailor by Richard F. Palmer. The bravery and the reckless daring of the average nineteenth-century lake sailor was proverbial and many a A GLIMPSE AT CLINTON'S DITCH BY RICHARD PALMER A Glimpse at Clinton's Ditch The First Trips 1819 - 1820 by Richard F. Palmer Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. Hidden beneath the gnarled branches of an ancient willow, in a well-grazed pasture just west of the little village of Montezuma, is a unique bit of canal history long since forgotten. MEMORIES OF ROSELAND PARK BY RICHARD F. PALMER Richard F. Palmer. Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. Of all the childhood memories of growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, the visits we frequently made to Roseland Park in Canandaigua are among the most pleasant. To us, Roseland was an airy place along the tree-shaded shoreline of the lake where "us kids" were free to do what we wantedand
THE PULTENEY ESTATE DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY BY JAMES James D. Folts. For most of the nineteenth century much of the land in Steuben County was owned by subjects of the British crown. Sir William Pulteney, John Hornby, and Patrick Colquhoun, or their heirs employed local agents to manage and sell their property. The land office on the south side of Pulteney Square was a local landmark. THE CROOKED LAKE REVIEWCROOKED LAKE INNCROOKED LAKE NYCROOKED LAKE HOUSE NYCROOKED LAKE HOUSE FOR DINNERCROOKED LAKE INN NEW YORKCROOKEDLAKE NY REAL ESTATE
Index of Issues Current articles are published in the Crooked Lake Review Blog. Articles published in the Crooked Lake Review between May 1988 and July 2008 are indexed below. BURNING SPRING BY JOAN K. HAYWARD Burning Spring by Joan K. Hayward The grandmother of Helen Corser Fox, Town of Bristol Historian, saw from her bedroom window in the 1880s the spectacle of the "burning spring." INDEX TO ARTICLES BY RICHARD F. PALMER Memories of Roseland Park: Go East, Young Man! Brigham Young's Presence in the Finger Lakes, Part I: Montville, Deserted Mourns forBygone Days
MEMORIES OF ROSELAND PARK BY RICHARD F. PALMERCANANDAIGUA WATER PARKROSELAND AMUSEMENT PARK CANANDAIGUA NYROSELAND CANANDAIGUA NYROSELAND WATERPARK CANANDAIGUAROSELAND WATERPARK CANANDAIGUA NY Memories of Roseland Park Canandaigua, New York by Richard F. Palmer Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. Of all the childhood memories of growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, the visits we frequently made to Roseland Park in Canandaigua are among the most pleasant. JOSEPHINE GRISWOLD CAPRON BY BETH B. FLORY Josephine Griswold Capron by Beth B. Flory. When Josephine Griswold Capron wrote The Old Mill in 1936, she was 64 and had been teaching school in Naples since 1913. She retired at the mandatory age of 70 and died ten years later, in 1952. THE EXPEDITION OF THE MARQUIS DE DENONVILLE BY JOHN G. SHERETTOTIAKTON VILLAGE OF THE SENECA Mendon — The Early Years The Expedition of the Marquis de Denonville and Related Matters by John G. Sheret. Over three hundred years ago, much of what is now Western New York State was the scene of contention between France and England. HORATIO NELSON THROOP: HIS LIFE AND INVENTIONS BY JAMES Horatio Nelson Throop His Life and Inventions by James Van Cleve The following account of Throop's life was found by Richard Palmer.The account is from "Reminiscences of Early Steamboats, Propellers and Sailing Vessels on Lake Ontario and River St. Lawrence," an unpublished manuscript by James Van Cleve, Lewiston, NY, 1877, p 145. HENRY A. WARD BY ROBERT G. KOCH, PART ONE Henry A. Ward by Robert G. Koch Part Two, Part Three Part One. Henry Augustus Ward sprang from a prominent and wealthy Rochester family in 1834, the year of the city's incorporation. STARTING MODEL T FORDS BY JOHN REZELMAN Starting Model T Fords by John Rezelman Index of articles by John Rezelman. About two hundred years ago, if you wanted to go for a drive in your own vehicle, you climbed aboard and, with that subtle communication of touch between horse's mouth and horseman's hand, you alerted your horse to expect a command and reminded him—"take notice, horse"—that you were in charge. MARGARET WOODBURY STRONG AND HER MUSEUM OF FASCINATION BYTHE MUSEUM OF PLAYMARGARET STRONG MUSEUM ROCHESTER NYMARGARET WOODBURY STRONG MANSIONSTRONG NATIONAL MUSEUMSTRONG PLAY MUSEUM Margaret Woodbury Strong and her Museum of Fascination by Donovan A. Shilling The Silver Spoon. An attractive young woman lived at 96 Lake Avenue just across from John Charles Woodbury's family home at THE CROOKED LAKE REVIEWCROOKED LAKE INNCROOKED LAKE NYCROOKED LAKE HOUSE NYCROOKED LAKE HOUSE FOR DINNERCROOKED LAKE INN NEW YORKCROOKEDLAKE NY REAL ESTATE
Index of Issues Current articles are published in the Crooked Lake Review Blog. Articles published in the Crooked Lake Review between May 1988 and July 2008 are indexed below. BURNING SPRING BY JOAN K. HAYWARD Burning Spring by Joan K. Hayward The grandmother of Helen Corser Fox, Town of Bristol Historian, saw from her bedroom window in the 1880s the spectacle of the "burning spring." INDEX TO ARTICLES BY RICHARD F. PALMER Memories of Roseland Park: Go East, Young Man! Brigham Young's Presence in the Finger Lakes, Part I: Montville, Deserted Mourns forBygone Days
MEMORIES OF ROSELAND PARK BY RICHARD F. PALMERCANANDAIGUA WATER PARKROSELAND AMUSEMENT PARK CANANDAIGUA NYROSELAND CANANDAIGUA NYROSELAND WATERPARK CANANDAIGUAROSELAND WATERPARK CANANDAIGUA NY Memories of Roseland Park Canandaigua, New York by Richard F. Palmer Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. Of all the childhood memories of growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, the visits we frequently made to Roseland Park in Canandaigua are among the most pleasant. JOSEPHINE GRISWOLD CAPRON BY BETH B. FLORY Josephine Griswold Capron by Beth B. Flory. When Josephine Griswold Capron wrote The Old Mill in 1936, she was 64 and had been teaching school in Naples since 1913. She retired at the mandatory age of 70 and died ten years later, in 1952. THE EXPEDITION OF THE MARQUIS DE DENONVILLE BY JOHN G. SHERETTOTIAKTON VILLAGE OF THE SENECA Mendon — The Early Years The Expedition of the Marquis de Denonville and Related Matters by John G. Sheret. Over three hundred years ago, much of what is now Western New York State was the scene of contention between France and England. HORATIO NELSON THROOP: HIS LIFE AND INVENTIONS BY JAMES Horatio Nelson Throop His Life and Inventions by James Van Cleve The following account of Throop's life was found by Richard Palmer.The account is from "Reminiscences of Early Steamboats, Propellers and Sailing Vessels on Lake Ontario and River St. Lawrence," an unpublished manuscript by James Van Cleve, Lewiston, NY, 1877, p 145. HENRY A. WARD BY ROBERT G. KOCH, PART ONE Henry A. Ward by Robert G. Koch Part Two, Part Three Part One. Henry Augustus Ward sprang from a prominent and wealthy Rochester family in 1834, the year of the city's incorporation. STARTING MODEL T FORDS BY JOHN REZELMAN Starting Model T Fords by John Rezelman Index of articles by John Rezelman. About two hundred years ago, if you wanted to go for a drive in your own vehicle, you climbed aboard and, with that subtle communication of touch between horse's mouth and horseman's hand, you alerted your horse to expect a command and reminded him—"take notice, horse"—that you were in charge. MARGARET WOODBURY STRONG AND HER MUSEUM OF FASCINATION BYTHE MUSEUM OF PLAYMARGARET STRONG MUSEUM ROCHESTER NYMARGARET WOODBURY STRONG MANSIONSTRONG NATIONAL MUSEUMSTRONG PLAY MUSEUM Margaret Woodbury Strong and her Museum of Fascination by Donovan A. Shilling The Silver Spoon. An attractive young woman lived at 96 Lake Avenue just across from John Charles Woodbury's family home at MEMORIES OF ROSELAND PARK BY RICHARD F. PALMER Memories of Roseland Park Canandaigua, New York by Richard F. Palmer Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. Of all the childhood memories of growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, the visits we frequently made to Roseland Park in Canandaigua are among the most pleasant. HANDSOME LAKE: A NEW RELIGION FOR THE SENECA BY JOHN H. MARTIN Saints, Sinners and Reformers The Burned-Over District Re-Visited by John H. Martin Table of Contents of Saints, Sinners and Reformers Chapter 3 Handsome Lake A New Religion for the Seneca REMEMBERING THE 19TH-CENTURY GREAT LAKES SAILOR BY RICHARD Remembering the 19th-Century Great Lakes Sailor by Richard F. Palmer. The bravery and the reckless daring of the average nineteenth-century lake sailor was proverbial and many a NEW YORK TIMELINE: 1784, 1785, 1786 BY DAVID MINOR 1784, 1785, 1786 New York City / State Timeline from Eagles Byte by David Minor Year-by-year tracing the growth of the early days of the Republic 1784. The Treaty A GLIMPSE AT CLINTON'S DITCH BY RICHARD PALMER A Glimpse at Clinton's Ditch The First Trips 1819 - 1820 by Richard F. Palmer Index to articles by Richard F. Palmer. Hidden beneath the gnarled branches of an ancient willow, in a well-grazed pasture just west of the little village of Montezuma, is a unique bit of canal history long since forgotten. ALONG THE OUTLET OF KEUKA LAKE: SENECA MILLSITE BY FRANCES Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake by Frances Dumas Index to Frances Dumas's series about mills along the Outlet Seneca Millsite. Yates County got its start here. NEW YORK TIMELINE 1815, 1816 BY DAVID MINOR 1815, 1816 New York City / State Timeline from Eagles Byte by David Minor Year-by-year tracing the growth of the early days of the Republic 1815 WAR FADES. A popular slogan several decades back was , "Suppose They Gave a War and Nobody Came?" THE "PEANUT LINE" OF THE NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD BY JOHN Mendon — The Early Years The "Peanut Line" of the New York Central Railroad by John G. Sheret. January 1, 1853, proved to be an exciting day for the residents of Honeoye Falls when the first train of the newly built Canandaigua to Batavia Railroad arrived in the village. THE PULTENEY ESTATE DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY BY JAMES The "Alien Proprietership" The Pulteney Estate during the Nineteenth Century by James D. Folts. For most of the nineteenth century much of the land in Steuben County was owned by THE MILLS AT COLD SPRING BY JOSEPH E. PADDOCK The Mills at Cold Spring by Joseph E. Paddock. Today, when one drives down the short, narrow Cold Spring(s) Road which in years gone by was called the Soft Water Creek Road, running between the Mitchellsville and Fish Hatchery roads, it is difficult to believe that where it terminates there was an important commercial area in the early days of the settlement of central Steuben County.HOME
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> ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN THE _CROOKED LAKE REVIEW _BETWEEN MAY 1988 > AND JULY 2008 ARE INDEXED BELOW. MONTHLY ISSUES FROM JANUARY 2008 TO JULY 2008 July 2008, Issue No. 150 June 2008, Issue No. 149 May 2008, Issue No. 148 April 2008, Issue No. 147 March 2008, Issue No. 146 February 2008, Issue No. 145 January 2008, Issue No. 144 QUARTERLY ISSUES FROM SPRING 1997 TO FALL 2007 Fall 2007, Issue No. 143 Spring-Summer 2007, Issue No. 142 Fall 2006-Winter 2007, Issue No. 141 Summer 2006, Issue No. 140 Spring 2006, Issue No. 139 Winter 2006, Issue No. 138 Fall 2005, Issue No. 137 Summer 2005, Issue No. 136 Spring 2005, Issue No. 135 Winter 2005, Issue No. 134 Fall 2004, Issue No. 133 Summer 2004, Issue No. 132 Spring 2004, Issue No. 131 Winter 2004, Issue No. 130 Fall 2003, Issue No. 129 Summer 2003, Issue No. 128 Spring 2003, Issue No. 127 Winter 2003, Issue No. 126 Fall 2002, Issue No. 125 Summer 2002, Issue No. 124 Spring 2002, Issue No. 123 Winter 2002, Issue No. 122 Fall 2001, Issue No. 121 Summer 2001, Issue No. 120 Spring 2001, Issue No. 119 Winter 2001, Issue No. 118 Fall 2000, Issue No. 117 Summer 2000, Issue No. 116 Spring 2000, Issue No. 115 Winter 2000, Issue No. 114 Fall 1999, Issue No. 113 Summer 1999, Issue No. 112 Spring 1999, Issue No. 111 Winter 1999, Issue No. 110 Fall 1998, Issue No. 109 Summer 1998, Issue No. 108 Spring 1998, Issue No. 107 Winter 1998, Issue No. 106 Fall 1997, Issue No. 105 Summer 1997, Issue No. 104 Spring 1997, Issue No. 103 MONTHLY ISSUES FROM MAY 1988 TO SEPTEMBER 1996 September 1996, Issue 102 August 1996, Issue 101 July 1996, Issue 100June 1996, Issue 99
May 1996, Issue 98
April 1996, Issue 97 March 1996, Issue 96 February 1996, Issue 95 January 1996, Issue 94 December 1995, Issue 93 November 1995, Issue 92 October 1995, Issue 91 September 1995, Issue 90 August 1995, Issue 89July 1995, Issue 88
June 1995, Issue 87
May 1995, Issue 86
April 1995, Issue 85 March 1995, Issue 84 February 1995, Issue 83 January 1995, Issue 82 December 1994, Issue 81 November 1994, Issue 80 October 1994, Issue 79 September 1994, Issue 78 August 1994, Issue 77July 1994, Issue 76
June 1994, Issue 75
May 1994, Issue 74
April 1994, Issue 73 March 1994, Issue 72 February 1994, Issue 71 January 1994, Issue 70 December 1993, Issue 69 November 1993, Issue 68 October 1993, Issue 67 September 1993, Issue 66 August 1993, Issue 65July 1993, Issue 64
June 1993, Issue 63
May 1993, Issue 62
April 1993, Issue 61 March 1993, Issue 60 February 1993, Issue 59 January 1993, Issue 58 December 1992, Issue 57 November 1992, Issue 56 October 1992, Issue 55 September 1992, Issue 54 August 1992, Issue 53July 1992, Issue 52
June 1992, Issue 51
May 1992, Issue 50
April 1992, Issue 49 March 1992, Issue 48 February 1992, Issue 47 January 1992, Issue 46 December 1991, Issue 45 November 1991, Issue 44 October 1991, Issue 43 September 1991, Issue 42 August 1991, Issue 41July 1991, Issue 40
June 1991, Issue 39
May 1991, Issue 38
April 1991, Issue 37 March 1991, Issue 36 February 1991, Issue 35 January 1991, Issue 34 December 1990, Issue 33 November 1990, Issue 32 October 1990, Issue 31 September 1990, Issue 30 August 1990, Issue 29July 1990, Issue 28
June 1990, Issue 27
May 1990, Issue 26
April 1990, Issue 25 March 1990, Issue 24 February 1990, Issue 23 January 1990, Issue 22 December 1989, Issue 21 November 1989, Issue 20 October 1989, Issue 19 September 1989, Issue 18 August 1989, Issue 17July 1989, Issue 16
June 1989, Issue 15
May 1989, Issue 14
April 1989, Issue 13 March 1989, Issue 12 February 1989, Issue 11 January 1989, Issue 10 December 1988, Issue 9 November 1988, Issue 8 October 1988, Issue 7 September 1988, Issue 6 August 1988, Issue 5July 1988, Issue 4
June 1988, Issue 3
May 1988, Issue 2
May 1988, Issue 1
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