Monday, January 12, 2015

Mysterious Dissapearance of Bainbridge Man - 1946

No Trace Found of Randolph E. Lewis
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 1, 1946
 
No trace had been found Wednesday morning of the whereabouts of Randolph E. Lewis, 35, of Afton [Chenango Co., NY], son of Frank Lewis, Bainbridge contractor, who disappeared Friday forenoon after he had paid off the workers on a construction job in Norwich for the Victory Chain, Inc., according to Sheriff Brookins.
 
Police officials have ben searching for him since Saturday morning when it was reported to them he had disappeared and had not been seen since Friday at 11:30 a.m. in Vera's Diner, Norwich, declared Sheriff Brookins, Wednesday morning.  Nationwide alarm has been sent out, and local officials have been checking every possible clue.  The possibility he may have met with foul play has not been ruled out by police.  His car, with the keys in it, was found parked near the construction job here. 
 
Mr. Lewis is married and has four daughters.  He is six feet, one inch tall, and weighs 219 pounds.  When last seen he was wearing a light brown sweater, light blue corduroy pants, and a light blue shirt. 
 
Mr. Lewis was in service for about two years, and made several trips overseas with the Navy armed guard.
 
R.E. Lewis Still Missing
Binghamton Press, August 1, 1946
 
Norwich [Chenango Co., NY]:  Six days after his disappearance, Randolph E. Lewis, 35, of Afton, member of the Frank Lewis & Sons contracting firm of Bainbridge, is still missing.  Work of city police and sheriff's men has led to no new clues.  As far as is known he has not been seen in the city since Friday morning at 11 o'clock.  There has been some talk about town of forming a searching party and combing vacant lots and fields about the city, but to date this has not been done.  Tuesday, Tracy Doolittle, Afton flier, hired an Aeronca plane at the Mid-State Air Field here and flew over the Chenango River, on the possibility that Mr. Lewis may have met foul play and his body thrown into the river.  This turned up no new evidence.
 
Bainbridge Man, Reported Missing 10 Days, Returns
Binghamton Press, August 6, 1946
 
Norwich:  Randolph E Lewis, Bainbridge contractor, was back home in Afton yesterday 10 days after he disappeared from a construction job here.  Mr. Lewis was the subject of a nationwide search by police authorities.  Last week his father, Frank Lewis, head of the Frank Lewis & Sons constructing firm, offered a $500 reward for information leading to the safe return of his son.  Yesterday morning Mrs. Lewis received a telegram from her husband, sent from Utica, asking her to discontinue activities in his search and asking her to meet him in Binghamton at 3 p.m.  Last night Mrs. Lewis said she met her husband, and that he is now home.  There was no explanation of his disappearance.
 
 
 


Obituaries (January 12)

John Whalen, Jr.
Bainbridge News & Republican, July 18, 1946

John Whalen, Jr., 23, Greene [Chenango Co., NY] farmhand who was shot accidently in the stomach by his brother about one month ago died Sunday in the Binghamton City Hospital.  Mr. Whalen was shot on the morning of June 11 while he and his 16-year-old brother, Edward, were sitting in the kitchen of the Whalen home on the Cobb farm, Greene.  Mr. Whalen was taken in a private ambulance to the hospital where an emergency operation was performed.  His condition was listed as serious at the time.  Hospital attendants, at the time of the accident, said that Mr. Whalen's mother, Mrs. John Whalen, Sr., told them that her sons were sitting in the kitchen and were talking about shooting pigeons. Edward was holding a .22 Caliber rifle, she said, and added that it was pointing at her.  She said she pushed it away and it discharged.  Hospital attendants said Mrs. Whalen told them that Edward did not know the rifle was loaded. 
 
Susan L. Keech
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 15, 1946
 
Mrs. Susan L. Keech, 69, formerly of Harpursville [Broome Co., NY], died Saturday morning at her home in Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY].  She is survived by her husband, Layman M. Keech, of Harpursville; three sons, Rexford Keech, of Mamaroneck, Carl and George Keech, both of East Worcester; a grandson, Harold Keech, of Mamaroneck.   Funeral services were held at the Methodist church in Harpursville Tuesday afternoon.  Burial was in Harpursville cemetery.
 
Margaret F. Dix
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 15, 1946
 
Mrs. Margaret Faigle Dix, of Hancock [Delaware Co., NY], died Monday evening, Aug. 5, at the Binghamton City Hospital.  She had been ill about two years, but death followed a relapse a few days previous to her passing.  Mrs. Dix was born Margaret Faigle, daughter of Henry and Margaret Faigle, on May 14, 1880, at Hiawatha, Pa.  Her husband, Edson R. Dix, passed away in June 1927.  She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Ethel Pritchard, both of Hancock; also by two grandchildren, Sharon and David Pritchard; two sisters, Mrs. Minnie Conrad, of Sherman, Pa., and Mrs. Mary Surine, of Adair, Oklahoma; two brothers, William and Fred Faigle, of Hancock, Star Route.
 
Eugene Bush
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 15, 1946
 
Funeral services for Eugene Bush, 33, formerly of Equinunk, Pa., who died of injuries suffered in an explosion in Miami, Fla., was held in Equinunk Monday afternoon.  Mr. Bush, who was son of Ernest and Rev. Adele Bush, of Equinunk, was fatally burned when a garage in which he was working exploded.  Fourteen other persons were injured in the garage.  The explosion, according to his parents, was touched off when a torch, ignited gasoline in the garage.  The garage was owned by the Royal Palm, Ice Co.  Mr. Bush was employed as a mechanic repairing the company's truck.  The blast occurred Tuesday, Mrs. Bush died in a Miami hospital the next day.  Mr. Bush had left Equinunk about six years ago.  He went to Union, N.J. and was employed in a garage there.  Later he was employed by an airplane firm in Patterson, N.J.  He went to Florida about a year ago.  his wife, Ruth, and two children, Carol Jeanne, 5, and Eugene DeRoy, 2, joined him in Florida about one month ago.  In addition to his parents, wife and children, Mr. Bush is survived by a sister, Mrs. Fred Shultz, of Binghamton. The body was shipped to the Henderson Funeral Home, Hancock.  It then was taken to the home of his parents for the funeral services.  
 
Niels M. Nielson
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 22, 1946
 
Niels M. Nielsen, 71, died Sunday morning at his home, Newton avenue, Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY].  He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Marie Nielsen, of Bainbridge; four daughters, Anna Nielsen, of White lake, S.D.; Mrs. Mattie Cutting, of Sidney; Mrs. Gladys Torrey and Mrs. Emma D. Riley, both of Bainbridge; a son, Hans Nielsen, of Bainbridge; a brother, John O.M. Nielsen, of Deposit; two sisters residing in Copenhagen, Denmark; three grandchildren, also several nieces and nephews.  Funeral services will be held Thursday morning at 10 o'clock with the Rev. Harry Brooks officiating.  the bearers will be:  William Nielsen, Edwin Torrey, Kenneth Riley and Lee cutting.  Burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery [Bainbridge, NY].

William Carroll & Richard Rohn
Bainbridge News & Republican, July 25, 1946

A 49-year-old pioneer aviator, who was attempting to regain his pilot's rating was killed instantly Sunday night with his instructor when their single engine training plane crashed near the Greene Flying Club in Greene [Chenango Co., NY].  The victims are William Carroll, 49, of Greene, who flew with the RCAF in both World Wards, and Richard Rohn, 35, of Greene, club instructor, who was employed as a draftsman at Link Aviation Devices' plant in Hillcrest.  The two-place Fairchild trainer in which the pair was flying crashed about 6:30 p.m. on the Walter Burroughs' farm, which is located across the Chenango river from the airfield.
 

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Post Listing, January 5-11, 2015

Listing of blog postings for the week of January 5-11, 2015

Marriages
Posted January 5, 2015
Roberta E. Dalrymple - Dominick M. August, Jr. (1946)
Lois Rudd - Richard A. Hammond, Jr. (1946)
Thelma Mabel Hobbie - Robert Earl Scofield (1946)
Wilson D. Harpur - Anna Possemato (1946)
Marriage Notices
     C.F. Hornshu - Carrie E. Birdsall (1877)
     Melville Stratton - Hattie McFarland (1877)
     Albert Newell - Mary Ida Church (1877)
     George Hovey - Eva S. Barber (1877)
     Adison Gates - Ada A. Evans (1878)

Posted January 6, 2015
Dr. H.D. Copley - Lina E. Freiot (1879)
Robert C. McEligot - Nanette Pinaid (1946)
Elizabeth Waldron - Donald W. Dixson (engagement, 1946)
Edith Ilean Peters - Donald L. Hall (engagement, 1946)

Posted January 7, 2015
Mr. & Mrs. Fred Whitaker (57th anniversary, 1946)
Helen Chrisfield - Charles Agar, Jr. (1946)
Marriage Notices -  December 1874
     Nelson Bowker - Martha J. Stanton
     E.B. Rogers - Jennie Bateman
     George H. Garfield - Clara A. Crandall
     Augustus P. Slater - Helen L. Clarke
     Byron G. Gale - Adelia J. Clarke
     Mr. Flagg - Emma Loomis
     Elliott Danforth - Ida Prince
     DeForest D. Brooks - Minnie C. Lathrop
     Emory A. Dwight - Hattie Banks
     Frank Tinker - Hanna Jennings
     J.E. Wright - Carrie Hastings
     Richard G. Lyon - Ellen Smith

Posted January 8, 2015
John L. Clark - Emma M. Marshall (1879)
Marriage Notices - June/July 1878
     Stanley P. Field - Jennie Sage
     Charles S. Hart - Hattie A. Church
     Ansel Burr - Emma Stratton
     George I. Hiller - Elma E. Fox
     P. Judson Armstrong - Cora M. Chesebro
     George A. Duell - Libbie M. Niles
     Nathan C. Hunt - Mary Tomlinson
     James C. Jones - Eva m. Levisee
     Elmer Hicks - Janie Page
     Jerome Clark - Hannah McMullen
     Henry W. Smith - Fannie R. Blakeslee
     Orin Rogers - Edna M. Jones
     Edgar C Wilber - Dora B. Jones
     George W. Corey - Lucy A Cooley
     Nelson G. Place - Catharine Amelia Fry
     Charles H. Seeley - Linnie Ostrom

Posted January 10, 2015
Betty Whispell - Donald Baker (engagement, 1946)
Robert L. Wessels - Elsie Fowler (1946)
Uneta Huntley - Alfred Derrick (1946)
Evelyn may Drumm - Lawrence E. Bach (1946)
Vivian Harder - Lewis Dixon (1946)

Posted January 11, 2015
Arthur C. Banner - Mabel Coats (1916)
Otisena Keech - Merton D. Secor (1916)
Irving Patterson - Minnie May Grant (1916)
Charles Ward - Mary Wideman (1916)
Ada Broks Curtis - Clarence R. Hitt (1918)
Mr. & Mrs. A.B. Kirkland (60th anniversary, 1928)

 
Obituaries
Posted January 5, 2015
Susan M. Sayre (Binghamton, Bainbridge, 1915)
Phoebe A. Corson (Hopbottom PA, 1915)
Helen Pike (McConnellsville, 1860)
William Strong Sayre (Bainbridge, 1880)
John Clapp (Binghamton, 1886)

Posted January 6, 2015
Gilbert Freiot (Bainbridge, 1870)
Gilbert Freiot (Bainbridge, 1871)
John Freiot (Bainbridge, 1873)
Dr. Joseph W. Freiot (Bainbridge, NY, 1875)
Maria Eddy Freiot (Bainbridge, 1891)
Helen Freiot (Albany, Bainbridge, 1919)
Otto H. Crooker (Unadilla, 1946)
Ray Dwight Bennett (Windsor, 1946)

Posted January 7, 2015
Death Notices
     Jane Farr (Norwich, 1835)
     James H. Preston (Butternuts, 1835)
     Deacon N. Burgess (Butternuts, 1841)
     Michael Vincent (Bainbridge, 1873)
     John Kipp (Trout Creek, 1873)
     David Beverly (Bainbridge, 1873)
     Mrs. Russell Waters (Coventryville, 1873)
     Gurden Perkins (Oxford, 1873)
     Johnny L. Robbins (Afton, 1876)
     William E. Allen (Grafton, NB, Oxford, 1877)
     Emma R. Bliss (Afton, 1877)
     Ella Bliss (Afton, 1877)
     Isebell Garlick (Afton, 1877)
     Smith Race (Greene, 1877)
     Lucy Gifford (Oxford, 1877)
     Frank Washburn (Sayre PA, Oxford, 1877)
     Saxten Coe (Sidney Plains, 1877)
     Eugene Hall (Sidney, 1877)
     Elizabeth A. Bunnell (Tioga PA, 1877)
     Dexter Hunt (Guilford, 1878)
     Elijah Peake (Delhi, 1878)
     Selah M. Stevens (Stamford, 1878)
     Mrs. Leonard Avery (Bainbridge, 1878)
     Henry Clark (Plymouth, 1904)
     Leon Angell (Rockdale, 1946)

Posted January 8, 2015
Ethan Clarke (Oxford, 1857)
Hon. Dwight H. Clarke (Oxford, 1874)
Eliza Clark (Afton, 1913)
Charles W. Clark (Preston, Sidney, 1923)
Death Notices - 1878
     M. Eliza Bingham (Greene)
     Luman Olmstead (Triangle)
     Elmina Woodward (Coventry)
     Addie Meech (Sherburne)
     Cornelius Kennedy (Sherburne)
     Henry Hamilton (Smithville)
     Louisa S. Clark (Bainbridge)
     Mrs. A. Purdy (Greene)

Posted January 9, 2015
George W. Springsteen (Binghamton, NY, 1881)
Edward T. Hayes (Norwich, 1889)
Rev. Leory C. Hayes (Norwich, 1913)
Mrs. Alvin Hayes (Bainbridge, 1918)

Posted January 10, 2015
Carlton Lathrop (Norwich, 1913)
George S. Hayes (Norwich, 1930)
States DeGroat (Brooklyn, 1946)
Ida LeSuer (Bainbridge, Afton, 1946)
Elmer Johnson (Franklin, 1946)
Mrs. Chester Hunter (Colchester, 1946)
Jason M. Farnsworth (Topsham, ME, Oxford, 1946)

Posted January 11, 2015
Effie E. Kirby (Afton, 1902)
James Rellez Vergason (Afton, 1908)
Henry L. Kirby (Bainbridge, 1914)
Harrison S. Shapley (Earlville, 1918)
Harrison P. Kirby (Norway NY, 1934)
Arthur Theodore Kirby (Sidney, 1938)

 
Miscellaneous
Posted January 6, 2015
Soldier News continued - 1946
     Ruth VanAkin promoted to 1st Lieutenant
     Stewart Cudworth Discharged from Navy
     Frank J. Strasnicsak Discharged from Navy
     Alvin W. Hay6es Takes Part in Atomic Test

Posted January 7, 2015
Bainbridge Central High School, Class of 1946, Part 3

Posted January 8, 2015
William Clark's Run Away Cart (1896)

Posted January 9, 2015
Sherman Mills Fairchild - Inventive Genius (about 1925)

Posted January 10, 2015
Edith Colwell Donates to Farmers' Museum - 1946

Posted January 11, 2015
Miscellaneous Items
     Drought at Bainbridge (1913)
     Sinking of the Laconia, told by Arthur T. Kirby (1917)
     Griswold House - Bainbridge, NY (1947)

Miscellaneous Items

Drought at Bainbridge; Water Sells at Premium
The Norwich Sun, September 15, 1913

Word comes from Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY] that that section of the county is experiencing the driest season remembered by the oldest inhabitants.  Water for use by the village people and the many industries is being pumped into the water mains from wells in the creameries and the sugar of milk factories.  The Susquehanna river is so low that boys wade across it just above the iron bridge and sand and gravel islands may be seen looking both ways from the bridge.  The big Bennettsville creek is entirely dry at the point where the river road crosses it.  A pond on the Maria Saxe farm, two miles below the village, which was never known to be dry before has entirely dried up and a person who investigated Friday, found cracks two inches wide and over one foot deep in the bottom of it.  Years ago this pond was a great place for bullheads and many a boy of the neighborhood has caught fine strings of them.  Several farmers get water from the Cold Spring brook.  Manley Coates draws water also for his stock. at Masonville seven miles from here, a charge of 10 cents a can is being made for spring water.  The dry season, the many frosts last spring and the one last Thursday morning have made it a poor season for the farmer and the gardener. 
 
Miss Maria Saxe, who owns the W.R. Kirby farm, has decided to sell the same and move to St. Louis.  This fine farm previous to its ownership by Miss Saxe had been in the Kirby family over 100 years and is one of the best in the Susquehanna valley.  When it came into the possession of the Kirbys the Indians were still here. The elder Kirby used to tell about loaning the Indians in the morning a five gallon copper kettle to boil salt water, the men returning the kettle the same night with some warm salt in it in return for its use; but the white settlers were  not permitted by the Indians to know the location of the salt spring and to this day it is still a mystery where the Indians found the salt water within one day's distance from the Kirby home, though many men in several generations have looked for it in vain.
 
Laconia Survivor Tells of Sinking
New York Times, March 18, 1917
 
Arthur T. Kirby, a lawyer of Bainbridge, N.Y. [Chenango Co.], who arrived yesterday from Liverpool on the White Star liner Lapland, is the first survivor of the Cunarder Laconia to reach this country with details of the torpedoing of the ship without warning off the Irish coast on Sunday, Feb. 25. 
 
"I was in the music room after dinner," he said, "listening to the record of Madame Butterfly on a talking machine when there was a loud last somewhere in the interior of the ship that sounded just like the blasts that all New Yorkers are accustomed to hear along Broadway.  One man who was drinking a cup of coffee put it down on the table and remarked quietly:  'Well, they've got us this time.'
 
"For a moment no one spoke or moved, as we did not think it was a serious matter.  Then some one in the room laughed in mirthless fashion, and we all went to our cabins to get our lifebelts.  After putting on my big coat and belt I went to the top deck, where I found a place in the last lifeboat to leave the Laconia.
 
"Just then the second torpedo struck the ship and she seemed to drop ten feet into the water suddenly, like an elevator falling. As our boat was being lowered away I saw Captain Irvine and the chief officer walk along the desk aft to the place where a boat had just touched the water.  It was too far for them to reach it from the rail, and they both jumped into the sea.  When we were pulling from the side of the sinking liner I saw Captain Irvine swimming toward a boat that was near by, which he finally reached and clambered aboard with the assistance of its occupants.  There was little excitement after the first torpedo struck the Laconia.  The women seemed a bit nervous, but they were calmed by Mrs. Harris, one of the first cabin passengers."
 
Mr. Kirby said he did not feel at all fearful about traveling back to New York on the Lapland, a British ship, after his experience on the Laconia, because he believed the German submarine commander only got her by accident when he came to the surface to send a wireless message to Berlin or Kiel and saw the liner coming along in the misty moonlight.
 
Another passenger on the Lapland was Captain E.A. Kelly, who descended the gangplank on crutches after serving two years with the French Army Flying corps.  Captain Kelly said he intended to train aviators for the United States Army when he recovered his health.  He did not care to give any details of his experience at the French front, but said his injuries were received at the Somme, where he was hit by a shrapnel fragment in the right leg, which shattered the bone so badly that he will carry three silver plates below the knee for the rest of his life.  He has brought back with him a Vicker airplane, the latest type of aerial machine, which he said he would use in training aviators here for the army.
 
Captain Arthur R. Mills, who was taken from the liner St. Paul in Liverpool seven weeks ago suffering from pneumonia, arrived on the Lapland apparently in the best of health, to take command of his ship again. 
 
James A. Hare, the American war photographer, also returned on the Lapland, bringing a number of pictures taken on the western front for Leslie's Weekly. he described a clever surgical operation which he witnessed in a French military hospital, in which a right arm was restored after being torn from the body by a shell.  The surgeon first attached the arm with tapes and then stitched it to the shoulder, Mr. Hare said.  The arm grew to the body again and the soldier recovered its use and went back to the trenches. 
 
The Lapland brought 171 passengers and 2,000 sacks of mail. 
 
Mrs. A.T. Kirby's Bainbridge Home
Berlin Gazette, September 4, 1947
 
The following is of local interest because the owner of the home described, Mrs. Marjorie Banks Kirby, is owner of the Eagle Hotel and was a former resident here [New Berlin, Chenango Co., NY].
 
Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY]:  The 143-year-old white house at 50 W. Main St., today gives little evidence of the colorful role it played in this village's early history.
 
Yet one of the village's most colorful pioneers, Richard Griswold, made this house his home for nearly  half a century.  Not only was Griswold the area's first dentist, but its jeweler, goldsmith and silversmith.
 
Older residents of this village recall stories their grandparents had told them about Griswold, who always dressed in cutaway coat and stovepipe hat to camouflage his lack of stature.  But his height proved to his advantage insofar as his dentistry was concerned.  The fact that dentistry of the early 19th century was largely confined to extractions insofar as rural areas were concerned explains Griswold's other ventures.
 
The house in which he lived was built in 1804, and at the present time is owned and occupied by Mrs. Arthur T Kirby, who is restoring its colonial atmosphere insofar as possible.  Originally the property was nearer the street than ever.  A prior owner who owned the adjacent property moved the house back in the lot so that its frontage would match that of his own residence.  The structure has a central chimney which services the furnace and three fireplaces. There were spaces each side of the chimney used for bed alcoves.  As originally constructed the house had a porch around two sides of the kitchen and a corner conservatory for flowers.
 
Mrs. Kirby has selected antique furniture which match the period during which the house was constructed  Though not entirely furnished by antiques, the house has much the atmosphere of that period without sacrifice of modern comfort.  A visitor is impressed by the side entry, the plain, but tasteful stairway.  In the living room is a fireplace, and several pieces of antique furniture including a desk and chair and Mrs. Kirby's grandmother's rocker.  The dining room boasts two Haskell and Allen prints, and a 125-year-old cherry sideboard with rare milk-glass handles.
 
 
 


Marriages (January 11)

Banner - Coats
Bainbridge Republican, June 22, 1916
 
Monday evening at 8 o'clock at the home of the bride, Mr. Arthur C Banner and Miss Mabel Coats were married, Rev. AH. Merrill officiating.  They were attended by Miss Evarene Coats, a sister of the bride, and Mr. Edgar Banner, a brother of the bridegroom.  Mr. Banner is a member of Company H New York Volunteers, and has gone with his company to Camp Beckman where orders to proceed to the Mexican border are expected soon. 
 
Secor - Keech
Bainbridge Republican, July 13, 1916
 
Afton [Chenango Co., NY]:  Married July 1st, Miss Otisena Keech of Afton and Mr. Merton D. Secor of Otego [Otsego Co., NY], at the M.E. parsonage, the Rev. I.L. Bronson officiating. 
 
Patterson - Grant
Bainbridge Republican, July 20, 1916
 
The home of Mrs. Nellie E Collar was the scene of a pretty wedding ceremony Wednesday at 12 PM, July 19, 1916.  Rev. Frank James united in matrimony Irving Patterson of New York City, and Miss Minnie May Grant, cousin of Mrs. Collar. After the ceremony the party sat down to a delightful dinner prepared and served by Mrs. Collar.  The bridal couple left by auto for Sidney and New York.
 
Ward - Wideman
Bainbridge Republican, August 3, 1916
 
On last Saturday, July 29, 1916, at 12 o'clock noon, the marriage of Charles Ward of this village [Bainbridge, Chenango Co., NY] and Miss Mary Wideman of Sidney [Delaware Co., NY], was solemnized by the Rev. C.R. Hickok at the M.E. parsonage at Sidney.  The groom, Mr. Ward, is employed by the John Wildt Evaporating milk Co. as night engineer.  He is an industrious young man and well liked by his numerous friends. The bride, Mrs. Ward, is a charming young lady.  The many friends of the young people wish them happiness and bountiful success.  They will make their home in Bainbridge.
 
Hitt - Curtis
The Norwich Sun, October 23, 1918
 
Word was received in Norwich Wednesday morning of the marriage of Mrs. Ada Brooks Curtis and Clarence R. Hitt, both of this place [Norwich, Chenango Co., NY].  The ceremony, which took place on October 22, will be followed by a brief wedding trip to Boston, Mass.  The congratulations of many Norwich friends are extended to both Mr. and Mrs. Hitt.  They will return to Norwich to reside as Mr. Hitt assumes the proprietorship of the Eagle Hotel on November 1.
 
Mr. & Mrs. A.B. Kirkland
60th Wedding Anniversary
The Norwich Sun, October 30, 1928

On October 23, 1928 Mr. and Mrs. A.S. Kirkland of West Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY] celebrated the sixtieth anniversary of their marriage at the nearby home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Ireland and Mrs. J.H. Bartholf had prepared a pleasant surprise for them.  Here they were greeted by their children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, nephews, nieces and the three sisters of the eighty-one year old bride.  After the bride and groom of sixty years were seated at the head of the table, Mrs. Hobart Benjamin led in the singing of "Blest Be the Tie that Binds" and a delicious chicken dinner was served and the wedding cake was set before the bride who was reluctant to mar its beauty with a knife.  After dinner the company assembled in the living room and Mrs. Addie Withey, eighty-six year old sister of the bride assisted in the presentation of gifts and remembrances which were greatly enjoyed and appreciated as were the many which came in the mail.  Time passed pleasantly in song, chat and friendly argument and Mrs. Benjamin sang as a final number "The End of a Perfect Day."
 
Times have changed since Abram Seymour Kirkland and Harriet Benjamin were married at Morris [Otsego Co., NY] sixty years ago [1868] and started on their wedding journey to Steuben county by railroad and stagecoach, returning on the Chenango canal to Norwich, as recalled by the eighty-three year old groom.  [They] really ought to have a ride in an airplane today.  Many of the visitors called on Mr. and Mrs. Kirkland in their own home where they live quietly and happily with their garden and chickens which keep Mr. Kirkland busy when he is not reading or assisting his wife about the house.  His newspapers and periodicals testify to his keen interest in world affairs.  his memory is good and his opinions worth while.
 
Among the guests present were:  Mr. and Mrs. J.H. Bartholf, Howard Bartholf and Harold Hoyt of Sidney;  Mr. and Mrs. Lewis L. Kirkland, Irene, Fred and Ward Kirkland of Bainbridge; Mr. and Mrs. Olin Kirkland of Sherburne Four Corners; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Withey and son, Howard, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Driscoll and son, Vedder, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond McGee and little Phyllis Kolb of Utica; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Warner of New Berlin; Mrs. Addie Withey, Miss Carrie Benington, Mrs. Vinney Lewis, Mrs. Edward Carr, Mrs. Samuel Benjamin, Mrs. William Benjamin and son, Bernard, and Mrs. Hobart Benjamin and son, LeGrand of Morris.

Obituaries (January 11)

Effie E. Cable Kirby
Afton Enterprise, October 2, 1902
 
Effie E., wife of E.G. Kirby, was born in Afton, N.Y. [Chenango Co.,], June 17, 1869, and departed this life at her home on Algerine street, Afton, N.Y, Sunday evening, Sept. 28, 1902.  She leaves to mourn her loss, a husband and three children, Arthur, Margaret and Henry, also a father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Cable, two sisters and a brother.  They feel their loss most keenly, and have the sympathy of the entire community.  Mrs. Kirby was a quiet and unassuming lady, a loving and self-sacrificing wife, an affectionate daughter and sister and an ideal mother.  As a neighbor and friend she was true, and will be greatly missed.  Her funeral was held from her late home and was well attended, her pastor Rev. C.E. Sweet, officiating,  Interment at Bainbridge.
 
She vanished, we cannot say she died,
'Twas a narrow space did Heaven and Earth divide;
So sudden death did come to her,
She did but dream of Heaven, and she was there.
But that she died we only have to show,
The mortal part of her she left below;
The rest, so smooth, so peacefully she went,
Looked like translation through the firmament
 
James Rellez Vergason
1834 - 1908
 
James Rellez Vergason was born in Afton [Chenango Co., NY] March 18, 1834, died Feb. 10, 1908.  He was married March 17, 1859 to Sarah Landers.  Two children were born to them, one daughter who died over four years ago and one son Raymond.  Two granddaughters are left, Mrs. George Skinner and Grace Woods of Bainbridge also a sister, Mrs. E. Holmes of Afton.  Mr Vergason was a kind loving husband and father, a good citizen, a friend that could be trusted in sunshine and in storm. His sickness has been of long duration, over two years of anxiety for his family and patient waiting for himself, but at last the "silver cord is loosened and the golden bowl is broken" and he is at rest  The funeral services were conducted by Rev. B.F. Butler of Binghamton and burial in Glenwood cemetery [Afton, NY].
 
Henry L. Kirby
Bainbridge Republican, July 30, 1914
 
In the south end of the Episcopal churchyard [Bainbridge, Chenango Co., NY] is a new made grave which on Monday was covered and terraced with blankets, pillows and designs of the richest and choicest flowers.  These floral emblems extreme in abundance and beauty followed as a final tribute over the remains of a young man who was buried with one of the most impressive largest gatherings of saddened friends ever  held in this historic churchyard.  The funeral of Henry L. Kirby whose sudden death stirred with deep sorrow the entire community was held in the Episcopal church Monday afternoon at four o'clock.  Rev. Luther L. Weller conducted the services and joined with the vested choir in rendering beautiful hymns.  The casket surrounded by flowers rested before the chancel and as it was borne, preceded by the vested choir in song, from the church out into the cemetery adjoining, there was scarcely a dry eye among the large gathering of people who filled the church and who accompanied the remains to the resting place beneath the evergreens.  Henry L. Kirby was 16 years of age.  He was a favorite among the young people of the village.  He was active, bright and genial, foremost to the pleasures and recreations which interested young people.  He was popular, liked by everyone for there was about him an open, frank and attractive way which commanded attention.  he was a member of the Bainbridge baseball team and a good player and was fond of all out door sports.  One day last week he was taken ill and thinking he could overcome the trouble he kept about and participated in the routine of camp life across the river with his companions.  Later he writhed in pain and next morning he consulted a physician and then appeared symptoms of appendicitis.  An operation was had as quickly as possible when his condition was discovered to be very grave.  He died Saturday evening at ten o'clock living only three days after the operation.  He resided with his aunt, Miss Mary Kirby on North Main street,  his parents, who were Mr. and Mrs. Ned Kirby, having died several years ago.  he was a nephew of Charles R. Kirby, and is survived by one brother, Arthur Kirby, and one sister, Miss Margaret Kirby.
 
Harrison S. Shapley
Victim of Spanish Influenza
The Norwich Sun, October 18, 1918
 
Earlville [Madison Co., NY]:  Harrison S. Shapley died at his home on North Main street Wednesday morning, Oct. 16, aged 30 years.  He was taken ill about two weeks ago with the influenza, which developed into pneumonia.  He has been engaged continuously as a clerk in the Williamson grocery store for over ten years, being engaged at the time of his death with his brother, Harold B. Shapley, in the conduct of that store.  In June, 1918, he was married to Miss Hazel Lyon of Sherburne, who survives, together with his mother, Mrs. Frank D. Morey, one brother, Harold, and two sisters, Zelda and Louise Morey, all of this place. The funeral services will be held privately at the home Friday afternoon and burial made in the Earlville cemetery.
 
Harrison Pliny Kirby
The Utica Observer Dispatch, June 23, 1934

Norway [Herkimer Co., NY]:  Harrison P. Kirby, 83, for the past 38 years a resident of this village, and for 16 years a retired farmer here, died Thursday after a long illness.  Harrison Pliny Kirby was born in the town of Bainbridge, Chenango County, Mar. 29, 1846, a son of Pliny Kirby, whose father was one of the early settlers of the Susquehanna Valley.  He attended the public schools in his vicinity and afterward the Franklin Institute at Franklin, N.Y.  Mr. Kirby as a young man learned the business of farming and followed it until 16 years ago.  In 1870 he went to the State of Washington and after remaining there about five years he returned to New York taking up his residence at Gravesville, in Herkimer County.  About 1893 he made his home in the Town of Norway where he owned the Hill Crest farm.  In politics he was an independent Republican but never held public office.  He was a member of the Baptist Church.  He married Miss Kate Farber of Norway in 1895.  Besides his widow he leaves two sons, Kenneth, Sauquoit, and Pliny, North Gage; a daughter, Mrs. F.H. Comstock, Herkimer, and six grandchildren. 
 
 
Arthur Theodore Kirby
1892-1938
 
Arthur Theodore Kirby of 52 River street, this village [Sidney, Delaware Co., NY], passed away at 12:30 o'clock, Wednesday afternoon, 14th inst. at the Emogene Bassett hospital, Cooperstown, N.Y., a victim of asthma.  He entered that institution the 8th, inst., bronchial pneumonia developed and his demise followed on day above mentioned.  He was born in Afton township [Chenango Co., NY], October 13, 1892, the son of the late Edward and Effie (Cable) Kirby.  Funeral services were conducted from Saint Paul's Episcopal church, Rev. Fr. Leonard W. Steele officiating, Sunday afternoon at 3:00 o'clock.  On Saturday evening, at the home, the Elks service was conducted by members of that order with Theodore Bonney of Norwich in charge.  Interment was in St. Andrews church cemetery in New Berlin [Chenango Co., NY].  Mr. Kirby was a member of Phoebus Masonic lodge of New Berlin, Order of Elks of Norwich, Loyal Order of Moose of Sidney and St. Peter's Episcopal church of Bainbridge.  Surviving are the devoted wife, a daughter, Mary, attending Syracuse University, and a sister, Mrs. Frances Casey of Bainbridge.  As a lad, Arthur T Kirby attended the Bainbridge high school.  In young manhood days he entered the employ of the Casein Company in that village carrying on work in chemistry  Later he went to New Berlin with the Nestle Company milk plant, leaving there to serve as superintendent of Dairymen's League plants in Burke, N.Y., Cooperstown, and Unadilla.  He was united in marriage with Marjorie E. Banks, daughter of Mrs. Jessie S. Banks of New Berlin, and the late honorable Charles L. Banks, on December 8, 1917.  Mr. and Mrs. Kirby came to reside in Sidney ten years ago.  he carried on a milk trucking and general contracting business, locally.  As a chemist, Mr. Kirby was recognized as an authority in the milk manufacturing world.  During the World War, he was summoned to England for a conference.  He sailed aboard the "Laconia" from the port of New York.  Nearing Ireland the boat, which had a small passenger list, was torpedoed.  Mr. Kirby with Floyd Gibbons, the noted war correspondent, a fellow passenger and another passenger made their way to a life saving boat and later reached the coast of Ireland.  others aboard were not as fortunate as this trio, several lives being lost. 
 

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Edith Colwell Donates to Farmers' Museum - 1946

Mrs. M. Colwell Gives to Farmers' Museum
Numerous Items of Historical Importance
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 15, 1946
 
Mrs. Edith G. Colwell, of Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY] has just given to the Farmers' Museum, which is operated by the  New York State Historical Association, Cooperstown [Otsego Co., NY], a group of items which are of unusual interest.
 
An important item for the harness makers and saddlers display at the Farmers' Museum is the certificate of James Donaldson, great grandfather of Mrs. Colwell whose ancestors migrated from Scotland to Ireland and then to Russell Hill near North Sanford, Broome County.
 
The certificate reads "This is to certify that James Donaldson has been regularly admitted a member of the New York Saddler's Society on the 5th Day of November in the year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and Eleven--signed by William Young, President, John B. Ebbets, Secretary."  Above the text is the Saddlers' coat of arms composed of three saddle horses surrounding a shield on which are placed three English saddles. Below is the motto "Our Trust is in God."  Beneath the text is a woodcut of fox hunters and their dogs.
 
For the country store is an early straw bonnet and a fine purple and black printed woolen petticoat worn by Mrs. Nancy Donaldson, of Deposit, around 1855.
 
Mrs. Colwell has given several books for the mid-century school house at the Farmers' Museum.  One is a Troy, New York chap book entitled "Frank and the Kite," published by Merriam & Moore.  Another is "The History of Sarah Brewer, a Poor Orphan," published in New York by O. Scott, 1847, L.J. McIndoe, printer.  For the wall of the country school house, Mrs. Colwell has given a copy of the Declaration of Independence, which was found in one of the oldest houses in Bainbridge, where it had hung until 1929. The house was occupied by Richard Griswold and his family from some time previous to 1836 until 1871.  This copy of the Declaration of Independence was published by Benjamin Owen Tyler, Professor of Penmanship, City of Washington, 1818.


Marriages (January 10)

Baker - Whispell
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 8, 1946

Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Shook, of Tunkhannock, Pa., formerly of 22 Kirby street, Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY], announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Betty Whispell, to Donald Baker, of Tunkhannock, Pa.  Mr. Baker has just returned from serving nearly three years in the United States Army, 22 months of this time being spent in the Pacific Area, and received an honorable discharge with the rank of Technician Fifth Grade.  He is now employed by Endicott-Johnson Corp.
 
Wessels - Fowler
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 8, 1946
 
The marriage of Robert L. Wessels, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wessels, of Guilford [Chenango Co., NY], and Miss Elsie Fowler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl S. Fowler, of Nineveh [Broome Co., NY], took place Wednesday evening, July 24, at 8 o'clock, at the home of the groom's parents.  The Rev. Charles Dempsey, of Binghamton, officiated at the wedding.  Helen Wessels, sister of the groom, and Howard Dempsey, friend of the couple, were the attendants.  The bride chose a nile green suit with white accessories.  Only close friends and relatives attended the ceremony.  A buffet supper was served.  The bride and groom left soon afterwards on their honeymoon.  Both are employed at the American Separator plant in Bainbridge and are making their home in Guilford.
 
Derrick - Huntley
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 8, 1946
 
Uneta Huntley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cass, of Guilford [Chenango Co., NY] and Alfred Derrick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Derrick, of Sidney [Delaware Co., NY] were married Saturday morning in Sacred Heart Church in Sidney with a nuptial mass.  The Rev. John Kavanagh performed the ceremony.  The church was decorated with white regal lilies, white gladioli and white hydrangeas.  Raymond Steigewald of Johnson City, a cousin of the groom was the organist, and Mrs. John McNulty sang "On This Day," "Pavis Angelicus," "Jesus, Jesus, the Very Thought of Thee."  The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, Robert Cass of Guilford, was attired in a white nylon gown with beaded work at the neckline and a train attached form the waistline  She wore a three-quarter length veil, with a beaded crown to match the neckline.  She carried a white prayer book with a white orchid attached and white satin streamers with white buds attached.  Honor attendants were Miss Marian Derrick, sister of the bridegroom, maid of honor who wore a pink lace net gown, matching headdress and carried a bouquet of pink roses, with a blue net and ribbon to match; Cyril Derrick of Binghamton, cousin of the bridegroom, was best man.  Bridesmaids were Miss Arlene Derrick, sister of the groom, who wore a blue taffeta gown with net skirt and a headdress to match and carried talisman roses with a salmon net and ribbon to match, and Miss Eleanor Pogue, who wore an aqua taffeta gown with a headdress to match and carried a bouquet of talisman roses, with a salmon net and ribbon to match.  Ushers were Bernard Bugake, of New Jersey, a cousin of the groom, and Donald Cass, brother of the bride, form Long Lake.  A reception was held at the Sacred Heart parish hall for 100 guests.  Refreshments included a three-tiered wedding cake, trimmed with pink rose buds and a miniature bride and groom.  The hall was trimmed in baby blue and white and pink ramblers.  The bride's gift from the groom was a beautiful crystal rosary, and the white prayer book was a gift from Mr. and Mrs. Edward Derrick.  The bride graduated form Sidney High School and the bridegroom attended Sidney High School and was in the Navy four years in the Philippine Islands and China. The bride occupied the apartment in her parents' home for some time after they moved to Guilford and made many friends, who will extend congratulations.
 
Bach - Drumm
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 15, 1946
 
On August 5 a very pretty wedding was solemnized at the Hancock Baptist Church, when Evelyn May Drumm, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Drumm, of Hancock [Delaware Co., NY], became the bride of Lawrence E. Bach, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Bach, also of Hancock.

Dixon - Harder
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 15, 1946

On Aug. 4, at 12:30 o'clock occurred the marriage of Miss Vivian Harder, daughter of Mrs. Lulu Harder, of Sidney [Delaware Co., NY], to Lewis Dixon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Dixon, of Mt. Upton [Chenango Co., NY]. The wedding took place at Mt. Upton, with the Rev. David Wolfe, of Guilford, officiating. Witnesses were Miss Rita Colter, of Guilford, and Charles Teelon, of Mt. Upton.

 

Obituaries (January 10)

Carlton Lathrop
1831 - 1913
 
Carlton Lathrop
 
The death of Carlton Lathrop, a well-known resident of this place [Norwich, Chenango Co., NY], occurred at his home on Cortland street last week at the age of 82.  The deceased was born in Unadilla [Otsego Co., NY] November 17, 1831, a son of Levi and Patience Rowley Lathrop.  On March 16, 1859, he married Lovisa Norris, of Smithville, and in 1869 they took up their residence in Norwich.  Mr Lathrop was an expert cooper and followed that trade all his life.  For a number of years he conducted a shop on Canasawacta street.  He is survived by his wife and one daughter, Miss Carrie Lathrop, of this place.  The funeral was held from his late home Saturday afternoon, Rev A.R. Burke, of the Broad Street M.E. Church, officiating.
 
George S. Hayes
Norwich Sun, March 14, 1930
 
Funeral services for the late George S. Hayes will be held Saturday afternoon at 2:30 from the chapel of the William Breese Company in this city.  Dr. J.W. Nicholson, pastor of the Broad Street M.E. church, will officiate.  Burial will be made in Mt. Hope cemetery [Norwich, Chenango Co., NY].  Deceased was 77 years of age.  His death occurred Wednesday at the home of his nephew, Benjamin Coombs in North Guilford.  The late Mr. Hayes was the father of Mrs. Charles Newcomb of this city. Another daughter, Mrs. George Button of New Berlin, and two sons, Floyd Hayes of Gloversville and Robert E. Hayes of Binghamton.
 
States DeGroat
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 8, 1946
 
States DeGroat, 63, a cost accountant for many years active in Brooklyn religious and Masonic circles, died Wednesday, July 31, at the home of his brother, Albert DeGroat, at Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY], where he had been a guest.  A resident of Brooklyn for 42 years, Mr. DeGroat, who was born in Beacon, had lived at 358 St. John's Place.  He was a past master of Reliance lodge.  776 F.&A.M., a representative of the State Grand lodge, F.&A.M., and was a deacon of Cadman Memorial Church.  Religious services, which were followed by Masonic rites, were held Saturday at 2 o'clock at the New York and Brooklyn Funeral Home, 187 South Oxford street.  The Rev. Frederick K. Stamm, pastor of the First Congregational Church of Chicago, officiated.  he was assisted by the Rev. Norman Lawton, pastor of the First Baptist Church, of Bainbridge.  For many years Mr. DeGroat was the owner of an automobile accessory business in Flatbush and later served as a cost accountant for a number of manufacturing firms.  He is survived by his widow, the former S. Helen Brown; two sons, Robert and Thomas; two daughters, Mrs. Helen Moacato and Mrs. Elvira Welk; and two brothers, Albert and Marcus DeGroat.--The Brooklyn Eagle
 
Ida LeSuer
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 8, 1946
 
Mrs. Ida LeSuer passed away Monday, July 29, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Smith Judd, East River Road, where she had made her home for the past four years.  She had been in poor health for some time and since early spring had been confined to her room.  Mrs. LeSuer was born in New Berlin [Chenango Co., NY] Mar. 29, 1865, but had lived most of her life in the vicinity of Afton and Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY].  She is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Frances Proutey and Mrs. Smith Judd, of Bainbridge, Mrs. William Pattison, of Brooklyn, and Mrs. Ray Pendell, of Binghamton; and one son, Harry LeSuer, of Afton; 14 grandchildren and 23 great grandchildren; also several nieces and nephews.  Funeral services were held on Wednesday, July 31, at the Fisher Chapel with the Rev. Norman Lawton officiating.  Burial was in Eastside Cemetery, Afton.  Bearers were  Raymond LeSuer and Elwood Gregory, grandsons, and Lawrence and Lyle Demorier, nephews.
 
Elmer Johnson
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 8, 1946
 
Elmer Johnson, 58, of Franklin [Delaware Co., NY] R.D.1, died Monday night of last week in Fox Hospital as the result of injuries received in an auto accident on Route 7B, five miles north of Franklin, the previous Sunday afternoon, when Mr. Johnson stopped his automobile on the highway and Richard Hotaling, of Treadwell, who was proceeding in the same direction, was unable to avoid crashing into the rear of Mr. Johnson's car.  Mr. Johnson was immediately taken to Fox Hospital, where it was found that he had suffered a broken neck and a laceration near the right eye.
 
Mrs. Chester Hunter
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 8, 1946
 
Mrs. Chester Hunter, 45, of Colchester [Delaware Co., NY], died yesterday in Stamford Hospital of burns received last night in an explosion and fire in a friend's kitchen.  Her six-year-old son, Leonard, and Mrs. Frances Mason, of Delhi, also were burned badly, but the hospital said tonight that both were in "fair" condition.  All were guests in the South Kortright home of Mrs. Georgiana Brock.  Hobart firemen said the blaze apparently began when Mrs. Hunter dropped a jar of turpentine, which exploded as it struck a hot wood stove.
 
Jason M. Farnsworth
Bainbridge News & Republican, August 8, 1946
 
Jason M. Farnsworth, of Topsham, Me., age 87 years, passed away on July 2 at the Maine General Hospital, Portland, Me.  Final rites were held Tuesday afternoon at 1 o'clock at 749 Congress street.  Interment in Fort City Cemetery.  Mr. and Mrs. Farnsworth for many years operated and owned a farm just out of Guilford, in the town of Oxford [Chenango Co., NY].  Mrs. Farnsworth wrote friends that Mr. Farnsworth had been in usual good health and was splitting wood and fell over backwards and suffered a broken socket bone.  He was removed to the Maine General Hospital, where a pin was inserted, but it was a hard operation for a man his age.  He lived two weeks and passed away in his sleep the way he always wished to go when his time came.
 
 


Friday, January 9, 2015

Bainbridge Central School, First Grade - 1947

Bainbridge Central School First Grade Classes 1947
"Echo" 1947
 
Mrs. Huth's Class
 
 
First Row (LtoR);   Vaughn Furgison, Walter Presher, Linda Boyd, Shirley Palmatier, Doris Alcott, Margaret Delello, Richard Herrick, Sonja Streigler, Joseph Samsel, Emily  Michel
 
Second Row (LtoR):  Deann Wakeman, Frank Mott, Wilbur Haynes, Jim Stafford, Mrs. Huth, Francis Weeks, Harold McMullen, Billie Mertz, Linda Wade
 

 
Miss Naylor's Class
 
 
First Row (LtoR):  Ben Nelson, Kathleen Purdy, Roberta Black, Mary Louise Sherman, Read Packer, Wilbur Allen, Stephen Flyzik, Patricia Sorenson, Melvin Severson
 
Second Row (LtoR):  Jean Thorpe, Ralph Lowe, Donna Fiske, Gale Pearsall, Betty Macumber, Marion Archer, Keith Moretz, David Mott, Judy Annette, John Scheidegger, Kenneth Parker, DeWitt Niles.
 
Third Row (LtoR):  Robert Lawrence, Judith Lawrence, Monte Stilson, Richard Poltz, Tommy Tuttle, Miss Naylor, Rexford Kelsy, Virginia Bickford, Sandra Herrick, Doris Archer, Ann Rosa, Jimmy Millus.


Sherman Mills Fairchild - Inventor

Sherman Mills Fairchild
Inventive Genius
Millbrook Mirror & Round Table
about 1925
 
 
Sherman Mills Fairchild
 
The experts were stumped.
 
It was back in July of 1917 when the staff technicians of the largest photographic manufacturing plant in the world had evolved an aerial camera for America's fledgling birdmen to employ in taking pictures of the Hindenburg line.  It was a good camera, if only it could be made to function.  The trouble was in the automatic film spacing mechanism.  The long reel of celluloid would jump and overlap, jam and tear.  Every apparent solution, including perforations along the edges, proved abortive in practice.  With urgency a prime consideration, the army officer in charge of experiments wired to Washington for the best camera specialist available.
 
Among the patriotic horde of volunteer specialists which had invaded the Capital following the declaration of war had been a twenty-one-year-old student named Sherman Mills Fairchild.  As an amateur inventor he had devised several novel camera mechanisms, including an automatic flashlight device that permitted the taking of snapshots of moving objects at night.
 
"I can build a better aerial camera than any now in use, one that will be entirely automatic and fool-proof," he told a high officer in the Signal Corps.  "Let me use an electric mechanism and I'll simplify it, too."  The army officer refused to agree to the use of electrical contacts but he told the anxious youth to go ahead and build his better camera.
 
The Armistice was being negotiated before Sherman Fairchild completed his contract, but, so revolutionary and at the same time satisfactory was the new "box" that an order for two more was immediately given him.  He began work on the new machines in a dinky little office, with two draftsmen.  So tiny were the dimensions of the room that when a visitor called, it was necessary for one of the employees to pass out into the corridor before the caller could gain admittance.  That was in 1919.
 
Today, enterprises developed from Mr. Fairchild's camera have offices in principal cities throughout the country, and branch production plants in Dallas, Los Angeles and Grand Mere, Canada.  he has a small, but up-to-date air-craft factory at Farmingdale Long Island, for manufacturing airplanes according to his own ideas.  Over a hundred and twenty-five employees are on his payroll. Whenever you look at an aerial photograph, or reproduction, the chances are ten to one that if the picture was not snapped by one of Mr. Fairchild's flying photographers, it was at least recorded through the lens of a Fairchild camera.  Fairchild aerial picture-taking machines are the official cameras of the United States Army and Navy, the Brazilian and Canadian Governments.
 
At twenty-nine years of age the young man whose genius confounded the experts at Rochester in 1917, is president of five-financially successful companies growing out of the aerial camera.  And still he goes on inventing more and more remarkable devices.  Meanwhile, through the recent death of his father, the late Geo. W. Fairchild, new responsibilities have been heaped on the shoulders of the remarkable young man. He is now administrator of one of the great American fortunes and a director in several nationally known corporations.--Everybody's Magazine
 
[Compiler note:  Sherman Mills Fairchild was born April 7, 1896 in Oneonta, Otsego Co., NY, the son of George Winthrop and Josephine (Sherman) Fairchild.  He grew up in Oneonta and attended Harvard, Arizona and Columbia universities.  He was never married.  He died Mar. 28, 1971 in New York City.  He was an inventive genius, promoter, industrialist and pioneer in many phases of aviation and photography.]


Obituaries (January 9)

George W. Springsteen
Chenango Union, August 25, 1881
 
In memory of George W., son of George and Mary Springsteen, who died in Binghamton, N.Y. [Broome Co.], July 7th, 1881, after a painful illness of three months, aged 24 years.  Whole columns are often written upon the lives of good men of our town, and it seems but just that a little space should be given in our County papers in memory of this lovely boy.  His "sun has gone down while it was yet day."  In the prime and vigor of manhood he has fallen, his work on earth is ended, and he has gone to his reward.  Unable to speak in his last hour, he left no dying testimony.  It seemed that God had need of him in a fairer clime than this.  We mourn when we think of the loss of one so young, We sympathize with the father and mother, and the numerous friends who loved him tenderly, for none knew him but to love him.
 
We weep at the parting clasp of the hand,
As the pale feet press the slippery sand;
They wait for an angel to carry them o'er
To the mansions on the other shore;
And we hush our breath, as if to hear
Sounds of the harpers as they draw near;
A shattered song or dip of an oar.
As the boat glides from life's rugged shore.
 

Edward T. Hayes
 
Another of our old and esteemed citizens has passed away.  Edward T. Hayes died at his residence on South Broad street [Norwich, Chenango Co., NY], on Tuesday afternoon last, in the seventy-seventh year of his age.  For several years past his mental faculties have gradually failed, and his death was not unlooked for.  Mr. Hayes was born in 1813, in the town of Guilford [Chenango Co., NY], near Mount Upton, where his boyhood years were passed.  he served an apprenticeship at piano forte making in Cooperstown, and about fifty years ago established himself in that business in Norwich [Chenango Co., NY], in company with his brother, James, the latter retiring from the firm after about two years.  Soon after the late George H. Lattin became his partner, and the increasing business was conducted by the firm of Hayes & Lattin for several years.  In 1854 George Rider became a partner, and after many changes in the firm name, by the admission of new partners, in 1873 all other partners were bought out, and the firm continued in the name of Hayes & Rider until the business was discontinued nearly ten years since, when what was once a leading industry in Norwich was no more.  In 1868 Mr. Hayes became associated with Mr. Rider in the gas works, retaining his interest therein until his death.  He was identified with the building of the midland railroad, and was one of its charter Directors.  He was a public spirited citizen, of unquestioned integrity, and enjoyed the confidence and esteem of this community.  Deceased was twice married, and he survived both wives.  He leaves two children, Edward Hayes, of this village, and Mrs. Charles T. Marston, of Hartford, Conn.  Funeral services will be held at his late residence, Thursday, at 2:30 P.M.  [Chenango Union, October 24, 1889]
 
Edward T. Hayes, Esq., died at is residence in this village [Norwich, NY], Tuesday evening.  He was born in 1912 near Mt. Upton, where his boyhood days were spent.  He acquired a knowledge of the construction of musical instruments with Utter & Smith, of Guilford, and afterwards with Perse & Utter, of Cooperstown.  Having learned his trade, he located here and in December, 1838, began the manufacture of pianos with his brother James for a partner.  In 1842, Geo. H. Lattin was admitted to the partnership, and remained such until his death, at Summerville, Tenn., in 1863.  In June, 1854, George Rider was admitted to the partnership and the firm was known as Hayes, Lattin & Co.  Upon the death of Lattin it became Hayes & Rider.  Subsequently other changes were made until about 1880, when the firm substantially retired form manufacturing.  The first year Mr. Hayes made four pianos; during the war the firm manufactured six pianos a week and employed forty skilled workmen.  In 1868, Mr. Hayes became associated with Mr. Rider in the Norwich Gas works, which interest he retained until his death  He was one of the original directors of the N.Y., O.&W.  He was public spirited and in 1855 bought a tract of land and layed out Hayes Street, one of the most att4ractive avenues in our village.  He was twice married but survived both wives.  He leaves him surviving a son, Edward Hayes, of this village, and a daughter, Mrs. Charles T. Marston, of Hartford, Conn .  His funeral was attended, Thursday afternoon, Rev H.D. Stebbins officiating.  Interment in Mt. Hope [Norwich, NY].

Rev. Leroy C. Hayes
1845 - 1913
 
Rev. Leroy C. Hayes
 
Rev. Leroy C. Hayes died at his home on Locust street [Norwich, Chenango Co., NY], Monday, aged 69.  He was born in the town of Guilford [Chenango Co., NY], January 11, 1845.  At an early age he became a student in Cazenovia Seminary and was only 19 when he entered the ministry.  He had been pastor of Methodist churches at Plymouth, Sidney and other nearby places in the Wyoming conference and was still a young man when his health failed and he was compelled to give up the ministry.  For 12 years he was school commission of the northern district of Chenango county, and under his progressive supervision the rural school conditions throughout the district showed marked improvement.  He was twice complimented by State Superintendent Andrew S. Draper upon the improved conditons of the schools under his supervision and it was largely due to his efforts that the uniform examinations for teachers were introduced and adopted throughout the State.  Relinquishing his position as school commissioner Mr. Hayes travel extensively through the south and west in an effort to regain his health.  While he was in the State of California he was secretary of the California State Children's Home Society.  For a number of years he was associated with Rev. E.W. Caswell, pastor of the Beckman Hill Methodist Church in New York city, where he remained until four years ago, coming from New York back to Norwich.  The deceased was a prominent Odd Fellow and for two years was grand chaplain of the Grand Lodge of the State of New York.  On May 12, 1863, he married Lydia Bowen, of Rockwell's Mills, who survives him.  Besides his widow, he is survived by one daughter, Mrs. H.E. Meeker of New York city; one brother, Rev. C.H. Hayes, of Binghamton, and one sister, Mrs. Lottie Wheaton, of Salina, Kansas; also two grandchildren, Kenneth and Ellen Meeker, of New York city.  On account of the serious illness of Mrs. Hayes the funeral services were private on Thrusday afternoon, Rev. A.R. Burke officiating.
 
Mrs. Alvin Hayes
 
The community was greatly shocked to hear of the death of Mrs. Alvin Hayes, which occurred in the doctor's office Wednesday morning.  About 11 o'clock she was operated upon for the removal of her tonsils, a hemorrhage took place and she only lived a few minutes.  Mrs. Hayes is survived by her husband and five little boys, the youngest of whom is only a little over a year old and the oldest about 14.  The funeral will be in the Hayes homestead on Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock.  [The Norwich Sun, August 2, 1918]
 
A very sad death occurred Wednesday forenoon at the office of Dr. Danforth in this village [Bainbridge, Chenango Co., NY].  Mrs. Alvin Hayes, who resides one mile above this village, underwent an operation for throat trouble.  The operation was apparently successful, but shortly afterwards a hemorrhage occurred and the patient died in a very few minutes. Her husband was present during the operation and when she died.  Mrs. Hayes had been in impaired health for some time, having endured many sicknesses and having had a severe attack of quinsy, and it was to improve her physical condition and prevent a recurrence of trouble that the operation on the throat was deemed advisable.  The hemorrhage was due to the bursting of a blood vessel which was near the seat of trouble in the throat.  The death of Mrs. Hayes, who was the mother of five young children and who was the center of a wide circle of friends, has caused great grief and the sympathy of the entire community goes out to the family and friends.  Mrs. Hayes was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Finch of this village and since her marriage to Alvin Hayes has made her home on his large and prosperous farm above this village.  She was a prominent member of the Presbyterian church of this village and was a woman of splendid worth and character.  Besides her husband and parents and brother, Austin Finch of this village, five young children survive.  The funeral was held from her late home Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock, Rev. H.D. Smith officiating, and burial in Greenlawn cemetery [Bainbridge, NY].  [The Norwich Sun, August 3, 1918]

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Run Away Grocers Cart - 1896

William Clark's Run Away Cart
Afton Enterprise, May 14, 1896
 
Bennettsville [Chenango Co., NY]:  Last Monday, while Wm. Clark, who runs a grocers cart from Bennettsville through the good sections of our country, was delivering goods at H. Bundy's, his horse became frantic and left Mr. Clark just as he left the wagon to enter the house. The team turning, ran down a lane into an orchard, circumnavigated the field and then came dashing down between the trees barely escaping death and nearly telescoping some unfortunate fruit bearers.  By this time Clark was fully aware of the situation and made an effort to lessen the speed of the "Gypsy" and her mate.  Before, however, he could capture the frightened animals, the cart was upset, causing the grocer to wish that  that 4 gallons of molasses had been left at Bennettsville.  Soon the team was in custody, none the worse for their experience.  "Bill" brought his cart, which consisted of several pieces, home in a lumber wagon.  He thinks that $6 or $8 will pay for the repair work on the wagon, but he does not think that the deformed tinware will help to abate expenses.  Mr. Clark received no injuries and will give the animals another trial soon.

Marriages (January 8)

Clark - Marshall
Bainbridge Republican, January 23, 1879

On Wednesday evening of this week, at the home of the bride, in this village [Bainbridge, Chenango Co., NY], Mr. John L. Clark was united in marriage to Miss Emma M. Marshall, only daughter of Hiram Marshall.  The ceremony was performed by Rev. D.N. Grummon. The bride was very nicely dressed, and we noticed at the reception one or two very elegant presents.  This couple, it seems have wooed since babyhood and Cupid, who no doubt had an idea of his own, has, at last, consummated a union, which, we trust, will never be disturbed in its present harmonies--a union which the friends of both will unite in expressions of congratulation and wishes for their beatific prosperity through all their walk in life.  Among the invited guests were C.M. Priest, L.B. Clark, I.M. Curtis, S.S. Ehrich, Willard Hastings, and yours truly. 
 
Marriage Notices
Chenango Union, July 12, 1883
 
FIELD - SAGE:  At the home of the bride, July 3d, 1883, by Rev. L.C. Hayes, Stanley P. Field, Principal of the Union School at Hamilton [Madison Co., NY], to Miss Jennie Sage, of South New Berlin [Chenango Co., NY].
 
HART - CHURCH:  In Norwich, July 3d, by Rev. L.C. Hayes, Mr. Charles S. Hart to Miss Hattie A. Church, both of Otselic [Chenango Co., NY].
 
BURR - STRATTON:  At the M.E. parsonage in New Berlin, July 3d, by Rev. D.C. Barnes, Mr. Ansel Burr, to Miss Emma Stratton, both of New Berlin [Chenango Co., NY].
 
HILLER - FOX:  At the home of the bride, in McDonough, July 8th, by Rev. Charles Steere, Mr. George I. Hiller, to Miss Elma E. Fox, all of McDonough [Chenango Co., NY].
 
ARMSTRONG - CHESEBRO:  In North Norwich, July 3d, by Rev. W.C. Queal, Mr. P. Judson Armstrong, to Miss Cora M. Chesebro, all of North Norwich [Chenango Co., NY].
 
DUELL - NILES:  In German [Chenango Co., NY], July 2d, by Rev O. Cooper, Mr. George A. Duell to Miss Libbie M. Niles.
 
HUNT - TOMLINSON:  In Sherburne, July 3d, by Rev. A.K. Batcheldor, Mr. Nathan C. Hunt, of Norwich [Chenango Co., NY], to Miss Mary Tomlinson, of Sherburne [Chenango Co., NY].
 
JONES - LEVISEE:  In Sherburne, July 4th, by Rev. A.K. Batcholder, Mr. James C. Jones, of Sherburne [Chenango Co., NY], to Miss Eva M. Levisee, of Traxton [Cortland Co., NY].

HICKS - PAGE:  In Sanford, June 30th, by Rev. A.F. Chaffee, Mr. Elmer Hicks, of Guilford [Chenango Co., NY], to Miss Janie Page, of Sanford [Broome Co., NY].

CLARK - McMULLEN:  In Bainbridge, July 3d, by Rev. D.N. Grummon, Mr. Jerome Clark, of Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY], to Miss Hannah McMullen, of Masonville [Delaware Co., NY].

SMITH - BLAKESLEE:  In Binghamton, July 2d, by Rev. W.I. Judd, Mr. Henry W. Smith, of Scranton, Pa., to Miss Fannie E. Blakeslee, of Afton [Chenango Co., NY].

ROGERS - JONES:  In Afton, July 3d, by Rev. C.A. Stone, Mr. Orin Rogers, to Miss Edna M. Jones, both of Bainbridge. [Chenango Co., NY]

WILBER - JONES:  In Afton, July 3d, by Rev. C.A. Stone, Mr. Edgar C. Wilber, of Masonville [Delaware Co., NY], to Miss Dora B. Jones, of Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY].

COREY - COOLEY:  In Afton, July 4th, by Rev. C.A.Stone, Mr. George W. Corey, of Bennettsville [Chenango Co., NY], to Mrs. Lucy A. Cooley, of Adams, Mass.

PLACE - FRY:  At the residence of the bride's parents, in Sidney Plains, June 23d, by Rev. G. A. Place, Mr. Nelson G. Place, to Miss Catharine Amelia Fry, all of Sidney Plains, N.Y. [Delaware Co., NY]

SEELEY - OSTROM:  In Cannonsville, N.Y., June 27th, by Rev. V.D. Mattlee, Mr. Charles H. Seeley, formerly of Oxford [Chenango Co., NY], to Miss Linnie Ostrom, of Cannonsville [Delaware Co., NY].

 

Obituary (January 8)

Ethan Clarke
Oxford Times, February 11, 1857

In this village [Oxford, Chenango Co., NY], on Sunday evening last, Ethan Clarke, Esq., aged 67 years , 10 months and 8 days.  Mr. Clarke was born in Hopkinton, Rhode Island, and at an early age removed with his father to Brookfield, Madison County, N.Y., where he remained until the Spring of 1821, when he came to Oxford, and has since resided here.  Mr. Clarke was in usual health on Sunday morning, attended Church in the forenoon and returned therefrom exhibiting so far as could be, or was perceived by his family, no signs of the near approach of death--Owing to the sudden rise of the River, the guard bank to the feeder of the Canal, a short distance above the village, commenced giving away about 2 o'clock, P.M., on Sunday, and it was thought best to remove a quantity of flour from the cellar of the storehouse owned by the deceased, and occupied by the firm of J.W. Clarke & Co., of which firm he was a member.  Mr. Clarke with his usual activity and energy, repaired to the storehouse to assist as far as he was able in securing the property.  He was found a few minutes before 3 o'clock, lying between the wall of the storehouse cellar and a cask standing in the cellar, in an insensible state; and was forthwith removed to his dwelling a few rods distant.  His physicians discovered that he had been attacked with a violent fit of apoplexy, in which he remained entirely insensible until about half-past 5 o'clock, when mortality became swallowed up in immortality.  Thus has passed away another of that band of old men, and early citizens of our village who early became identified with its interests, shared and gloried in its prosperity, who will be remembered by the monuments they have reared by their indomitable energy and activity. The works they have left are their best praise, their best eulogy the long continued and uninterrupted respect and affection of our citizens.  Among this band none more conspicuous none more respected, none more deserving than Mr. Clarke.  Always ready and willing to aid with his means, by his counsel and advice, and by his labor in the advancement of all public interests and public improvements, no one has been or will be more missed, no one whose absence will create a greater void.  He was emphatically a useful man,--useful to our village as a public spirited and energetic man,--useful in promoting the good and welfare of society--useful in advancing the prosperity of our schools, and of the Academy of which he was for many years a valuable an efficient trustee, useful in his labor in the giving of his means in his life and his example in building up, sustaining and upholding the church.  With him
 
"Life was real; life was earnest,
And the grave was not its goal."
He fully believed that
"Dust thou art, to dust returned,
Was not spoken of the soul."
 
And though middle age had passed over Mr. C. ere they were sung, how perfectly in him were exemplified those other words of the poet--
"Act--act in the living Present!!
Heart within, and God o're head."
 
His funeral will be attended at his late residence, on Thursday, at 2 o'clock, P.M.


Hon. Dwight H. Clarke
March 2, 1819 - April 17, 1874
 
Judge Clarke died on Friday evening last, at the St. James Hotel in Oxford [Chenango Co., NY], where he had boarded for several years.  He was a son of the late Ethan Clarke, who during a long life was largely identified with the growth and prosperity of the village of Oxford.  Deceased was a brother of Peter W. Clarke, Esq., of this village, and was fifty-five years of age at the time of his death.  We copy from the Oxford Times the following tribute to his memory:  "Judge Clarke on completing his preparatory education, entered the law office of the late James Clapp, Esq., as a student.  At that time the study of the law was far more of an undertaking than it has been of more recent years.  Fitness and aptitude seemed then to be more regarded, and the length of time required to complete a preparation for admission to the bar was much longer than it has been in later times, and more thoroughness in preparation was rigidly required.  It was under the stern discipline existing more than thirty years ago, that Judge Clarke pursued his legal studies and was admitted as an Attorney and Counselor at Law.  Soon after his admission he commenced the practice of his profession with success, in this village, where he has continued to reside until his decease.  His was eminently a legal mind, and by its early cultivation and careful training was well fitted to give its possessor that high rank in the profession which he occupied for many years.  The citizens of this county recognizing his ability, in 1850 made him District Attorney, which office he held for three years, and in 1855 he was elected County Judge.  After a trial of four years in this highly responsible office, he was re-elected in 1859 and continued to discharge its duties until the close of December, 1863, a period of eight years.  In these responsible positions all bore witness to his entire capacity and every one conceded his eminent ability and integrity.  After his retirement from the bench Judge Clarke resumed the practice of the law, and continued therein successfully until the close of his life.  It was, however, in the social and family circle that he was most prized and cherished.  Possessing an easy and amiable temper, a kind and gentle nature, he drew around him friends, devoted friends and admirers from all classes.  Every one found him at all times affable and cheerful, and prepared to enter into their feelings and make himself their friend and their counselor.  In his own family, none more affable and pleasant, none more gentle and kind.  Free hearted and generous to a fault, he was bound to them by ties of no ordinary character, by those ties of love and affection with which few men are able to bind others to them.  In their bereavement they have the deep and heartfelt sympathy of the entire community."  [Buried Riverview Cemetery, Oxford, NY]

Eliza Clark
Afton Enterprise, October 9, 1913

Mrs. Eliza Clark passed away last Monday night, after being in ill health for a long time.  She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Wm. Shellman and Mrs. M.W. Fisher of this place (North Afton) and two sons, Roger Clark of Franklin and George Whitlock of Deposit.

Charles W. Clark
The Norwich Sun, December 17, 1923

Charles W. Clark, aged 65 years died at the county almshouse, Preston [Chenango Co.. NY], early Monday morning.  Funeral services will be held Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock at the funeral parlors of Lawrence & Devine, the Rev. J.H. MacConnell officiating.  Burial will be made in Sidney Center [Delaware Co., NY].  Mr. Clark was a former resident of Afton [Chenango Co., NY].  He had been at the county farm three years.  He leaves a brother, Geo. Clark, of Sidney Center. 

Death Notices
Chenango American, Greene, NY, December 12, 1878

BINGHAM;  In this town [Greene, Chenango Co., NY], Dec. 1st, Mrs. M. Eliza, wife of W.H. Bingham, aged 35 years, 4 months.

OLMSTEAD:  In Triangle [Broome Co., NY], Dec. 6th, Mr. Luman Olmstead, aged 67 years.

WOODWARD:  In Coventry [Chenango Co., NY], Dec. 2d, Mrs. Elmina Woodward, aged 66 years.

MEECH:  In Chicago, Nov. 30th, Mrs. Addie Meech, formerly of Sherburne [Chenango Co., NY].

KENNEDY:  In Sherburne [Chenango Co., NY], Dec. 1st, Mr. Cornelius Kennedy, aged 79 years.

HAMILTON:  In Smithville [Chenango Co., NY], Nov. 12th, Mr. Henry Hamilton, aged 70 years.

CLARK:  In Bainbridge [Chenango Co., NY],  Nov. 29th, Mrs. Louisa S., wife of Luman B. Clark, aged 40 years.

PURDY:  In this town [Greene, Chenango Co., NY], Dec.  10th, Mrs. A. Purdy, wife of Joseph Purdy, aged 70 years.  Funeral at her late residence on Thursday at 12 o'clock.