Sunday, March 31, 2013

The Last Day of March



- and the end of "Women's History Month."

I wish I had known ...


Anna Cleveland James
1875 – 1954

She had been born in New Orleans, but after the death of her mother, Kate Collins Cleveland, in1885, Anna was sent here, to Waterville, where her father, William Fiske Cleveland, had grown up.  Her grandfather was George Cleveland who, like his older brother, William, was a physician in the community.  Her father’s sister, Alice, and her husband, Hermon Clarke, took Anna into their home and the little girl went to school at the Academy on the corner of White and Academy (now Barton Avenue) Streets.


The Clarke home, which originally stood on Stafford Avenue, was moved to East Bacon Street in the late 1920s to make room for the new school building. It - or at least the front half of it -  is now the first house on the north side, the residence of the Carentz family.

After high school, Anna went on to college in the Midwest and studied dramatic performance and theater. She made her stage debut in Los Angeles. After spending several years on the West Coast she then moved back east to continue her career on Broadway.


Anna Cleveland c. 1919

She appeared as a leading lady in many stage productions including “So This is London,” produced by George M. Cohen.

In 1912,  during those years of her early success, she set an endurance record for the first woman to fly a Wright Brothers Bi-plane, staying aloft for 37 minutes.

In August, 1912,  the Waterville Times reported that “Mr. Harry Atwood, the world renowned air man, will be in Waterville about 1 October for the purpose of further instructing Miss Anna Cleveland and the art of aviation. Miss Cleveland arrived in Waterville on Monday to be the guest of her uncle, Hermon Clark. She’s here for only for a short time and expects to return to Boston to complete her engagement as leading lady with the Lindsey Morrison stock company, which has been playing a summer engagement in that city. At the end of six weeks the actress will return here for a few weeks’ rest and about October 1, Harry N. Atwood will come to this place with his biplane to complete the series of lessons which were begun in the spring in the vicinity of Boston. Miss Cleveland is said to possess wonderful nerve and her experiments in the air thus far have been delightful experiences. Mr. Atwood’s presence will attract a good deal of attention.  It is expected that the lessons will take place from the Waterville golf links. (Located on “South Street,” now Osborne Avenue.)



Harry N. Atwood.

(Might one dare suspect that Miss Cleveland's interest was not solely in flying?)

She later bettered her own record by another three minutes, but when she learned of the death of another aviatrix in an airplane crash, she gave up what she once thought might have been her new career.


In 1917 or 1918 she purchased what was then called “The Eastern Star Home” and renamed it “Illahee.”

Originally built as his residence by Col. William Osborn, it served as The Eastern Star Home for only eight years, from 1908 – 1916,  before the organization decided to establish a new facility at its present location in Oriskany, New York.

In July, 1918, it was reported in The Waterville Times that “the Sanger Cornell study club will hold its annual picnic on Thursday in the Grove at the Illahee, formerly the Eastern Star home, where one of their members Miss Dell Lyons, resides.” In addition to running a "rooming house" and entertaining many of her friends from the theater, Anna was the hostess at many popular charitable and community events and some of Waterville’s older residents may yet remember getting all dressed up to attend children’s picnics held in "the grove" every Summer.

In 1919 Anna was featured in the silent film, “Stream of life,”  which, The Waterville Times noted, “was shown in Waterville courtesy of Miss Cleveland." The editor wrote that "Miss Cleveland and her husband, Mr. W. W. Belknap, leave next week for Boston, where they will open a new theater for an engagement of several weeks. In January they expect to go to British Columbia, and possibly into Alaska, where films are to be made during the season of the deepest snow. Returning in the spring they will open a studio for making moving picture films, to be located in Oneida County.”

But the Belknaps were suddenly divorced and Anna then married Harry B. James in July of 1920.  He was well-known in shipping and banking circles, but died less than a year later. From his obituary in The Waterville Times, June 10, 1921: "Mr. James married Anna Cleveland of this village in July 1920, who, with a little son, Cleveland, and a daughter, Anna, survives."

In 1923, Anna was appearing on stage in Newark and entertaining  at Illahee when she was at home in Waterville.  From The Waterville Times, January, 1929, "Mrs. James has closed Illahee for the winter and moved into her apartment on  Stafford Avenue.” In 1929,  “…  friends from Long Island are spending summer visiting at Illahee.“ She also must have kept a residence in New York, because The Waterville Times noted that in December of 1932 she had “… returned from NY with her daughter to open Illahee for holidays. Her son, Cleveland, joins them for vacation from … Military Academy.”

Times were not always rosy, however, and it was announced in The Waterville Times that the Sheriff would hold a tax sale of land on Berrill Avenue belonging to Anna Cleveland James on May 1, 1934.

Somehow, obviously, funds were raised and the property continued to belong to Mrs. James (or her family) because in Sept 20, 1934, “Illahee opened as tea room. Mrs. James will be assisted by Mary Daniels.” A group of local ladies “met there for Contract bridge followed by a delicious luncheon.”

In 1937 Anna Cleveland James bought her childhood home, the former residence of her aunt and uncle, Alice and Hermon Clarke, on East Bacon Street. (Alice had died in 1911 and Hermon two years later.) In July of that same year, it was noted in The Waterville Times that "Mr. and Mrs. Baronig Baron and little daughter Baronette have opened their home, Illahee, for the summer."  The Barons were divorced in 1941.

Sometime around 1940, Anna took up residence in an apartment in what is now the Swanberg Home. Living there at the same time were the Fleischmann family, which included Paul and his sister Anne (Fleischmann) Ingersoll.  Paul remembered knowing Anna and that when her daughter came to visit she brought her children, Baronette and James, with her and that they were fun playmates.  He also recalled hearing beautiful music – young Anna playing the piano in her mother’s apartment.

Anna Cleveland James died in 1954 in Queens, New York, at the age of 79.



*****************


The first reference to Illahee as “the Baron Apartments” is in 1947.
From The Watervillle Times, August 1947: "Baronig Baron, president of the Broadtop Mining Company, Riddlesburg, Pennsylvania, will be the guest speaker at the weekly dinner meeting of the Waterville Rotary Club. His topic will be 'The Future of Coal.' " He was then described as a "resident of Waterville and owner of large real estate holdings in this locality." 
The Baron Apartments were purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Patrick McDonnell in 1971. Since then, there have been several owners and it is now the residence of Rita and "Red" Mack.


During one of the recent summertime gatherings of “old timers”  -  “Once Upon a Time in Waterville”  -  Mr. Jack Youngs recalled that the daughter, Anna, “was a beautiful girl!” and Mr. George Kelley, who grew up on East Bacon Street,  said that he remembered Baronig Baron driving a long, open car and speaking with a Russian accent.


*******


Not long ago a Collins genealogist researching Anna’s mother’s family found my references to the aviatrix / actress on the internet and wrote: “Anna is really an intriguing person to research. She seems to have been a genuinely attractive, charismatic, talented person, but also somewhat of an adventuress -- and definitely had a tendency to glamorize and exaggerate her past!“

Fact or fancy, I still wish I’d had the chance to listen to her tell her stories - she must have had so many to tell!


Interesting note:  Anna’s daughter was also a pilot and flew for the Women’s Airforce Service Pilots (WASPS) in World War II. Her second husband had been a pilot in the Pacific for five years during the War.




Saturday, March 30, 2013

Saturday Special


ANNOUNCEMENTS

*****************

WCS MARCHING BAND 

SATURDAY FROM 9:00 - NOON
at
Nice 'n Easy in Sangerfield!

*****************


TONIGHT AT THE LEGION
Route 20, east of Sangerfield.

9:00 - 1:00

"Stage Band"

*****************

Thursday, March 28, 2013

It's Garbage Day
34 degrees at 5:30 a.m.

The YNN Weather Forecast:

"A Bit Unsettled Through Friday, Warming up for Easter!

Tonight will be variably cloudy and chilly with scattered snow and rain showers.  Lows will be in the 20s and lower 30s.

Scattered rain/snow showers will become more isolated throughout today with highs ranging from the low to middle 40s.  A few rain/snow showers stay in the forecast Friday as well as those below average temperatures.

High pressure regains control by Saturday allowing for more sun and drier weather. Out ahead of an approaching cold front, temperatures look to be more seasonable with highs closer to 50 degrees on Easter Sunday."



*****************************************

Today is Maundy Thursday



To read about the day's history and its significance, please click HERE.

******************************

Yesterday
I only took one picture worth posting!


The Geese are back!!!

************

There was some pot-hole patching going on in the Village, but I missed the activity.

Also, when I stopped at Merri-Rose Florist, Diane threw her hands in the air exclaiming that "Everything's already gone!"

Well - not EVERYthing, really, because there were still some pretty arrangements and plants on tables, shelves and in the coolers, but a great many of the items had delivery tags on them!

Lots of people will be happy!





*********

Tonight's Family Movie at the Library


The movie starts at 6:00 p.m. but please come ten minutes early if you want popcorn!

*****************************

There is NO SCHOOL on Friday.

******


The Annual Good Friday Community-wide Service 
to “Carry the Cross” 
through the village of Waterville. 

The event will begin at 10 a.m. at the United Methodist Church, continue to the Harding Nursing Home and onward to other churches in the village, ending at St. Bernard’s Roman Catholic church on Stafford Avenue. 

This is the 45th year of this tradition and all are welcome.

*********************

(and the famous Mac-n-Cheese)
at the American Legion on Route 20.
4:30 - 7:30  -  Take-outs Available.


*********************


Easter Egg Hunt
sponsored by the Waterville Rotary Club


Starts at Noon on Saturday at Hardings.

*********************

FOR THE RECORD


*****


To All of You!

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

It's Recycling Day
28 degrees and dry at 5:30 a.m.


The Weather Forecast from YNN: 
"Flurries/Showers Today, A Bit Unsettled Through Friday

We have a few scattered rain/snow showers around along with breezy conditions. Temperatures are expected to be below average once again, topping out in the 40s.
An area of low pressure centered well off to the north and east will provide us with just enough moisture to keep the overall weather pattern unsettled for the remainder of the work week. Scattered rain/snow showers Thursday will become more isolated throughout the day with highs in the low 40s. A few rain/snow showers stay in the forecast Friday as well as those below average temperatures.
High pressure regains control by Saturday allowing for more sun and drier weather. Out ahead of an approaching cold front, temperatures look to be more seasonable with highs closer to 50 degrees on Easter Sunday."



********************************

IN THE NEWS

Front Page Headlines from
THE WATERVILLE TIMES

‘One ... Oh, Two Heartbeats’
Cast Rolled Another Winner
Meeting On Crops Set
Tax Help Available
Election Results

To read more, please click HERE.

*****

"Outdoor: Fewer Trout this Season but Plenty Remain."
- from the Observer-Dispatch.

********************************

Here and There


New wreaths on the doors of the Waterville Historical Society
welcome visitors on Wednesdays from 10:00 - 4:00.


Out at Alcott's  .....


...............  the displays are dazzling!

(I'll visit the gals at Merri-Rose, today.)

******


The fields in Hanover are nearly bare - again.


Roads are bare, too, and the Marshall Highway Department has been filling in potholes! (Thank You!)


Surprise!  I slowed down to see if the pair of Canada Geese had returned to the small pond beyond Jack Prior's home on Madison Street and, instead of Geese, saw one, two... yes: THREE Great Blue Heron! (I just couldn't get a clear view of the third, but it was there!)

********************************

IN THE MAIL


 "Thank You!" 

 - from Vicky Sabol on behalf of the Food Pantry 

"to the many community organizations who support the Food Pantry throughout the year.  Through their generosity we are able to serve families in Waterville, Deansboro, Oriskany Falls, and North Brookfield.  
In January we served: 44 households and 
in February it was 31.   
Translated into meals,  this was 1224 and 1365 respectively.  

As a reminder, we are located in the rear of the Schoolhouse Apartments and are open from 3 to 4:30 on Mondays, unless a federal holiday.  We serve anyone in need.

If you would like to donate ....

"  -  we always need the usual staples, but also appreciate toiletries such as shampoo, toothpaste and brushes, shampoo, as well as dish soap, toilet paper.  Monetary gifts help us stretch our buying power by purchasing from the Food Bank of Central New York.  

"Products can be brought to the food pantry during our open hours.  
Checks made out to the Waterville Food Pantry can be mailed to our treasurer, Susan Edkins, 390 Tower St. or Vicki Sabol, 235 Osborne Ave. "

*******




A (very lucky) blog reader who just received this Sterling Silver spoon as a gift wonders if anyone has ever seen another like it or knows where it was made and when.

(No: it is not from Waterville, Maine, and no - it is not for sale!)

********************************

SPECIAL EVENTS

Today at the Library
The Book Club meets at noon to discuss the book and see the movie, "The Good Earth," by Pearl S. Buck.


********************************

Tonight at the High School
National Honor Society Induction at 7:00

********************************

Later tonight.


Full Worm Moon – March 27  

Actually, the moon was technically "full" a little earlier this morning, but Jeff Reynolds took this "full moon" photo at around dusk, yesterday.



Thanks, Jeff!

*******************

Have a great day, everyone!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Monday morning update




**************

It's Garbage Day
30.4 degrees at 5:00 a.m.

The Weather Forecast from YNN as of Sunday afternoon: 

"Few Flurries Possible Monday, No Big Warm Ups Ahead
As to systems to our south push northeast, look for clouds to increase overnight. We may be just close enough to be scrapped by the northern edge of the precipitation shield Monday afternoon. If we do see any precipitation it'll be in the form of light flurries for areas south of the thruway.
The next several days look to be pretty uneventful around CNY. Temperatures through the end of the work week will be slightly below average, but nothing like we saw this past week. There will be nuisance type lake enhanced flurries and snow showers, especially Wednesday as an upper level disturbance tracks through.

It's a ways out, but the Easter weekend forecast looks to be in good shape. Temperatures will moderate to near average levels with dry weather expected."





****************************




Passover begins at sunset Monday evening.

***********


It was a Wonderful Show!

CONGRATULATIONS EVERYONE!


And, once again, Jody Hildreth gives us a wonderful show of photographs - about 300 of them!



Thank you Jody!

****************************

Elsewhere .....

Robins, Red-winged Blackbirds and Daffodil Sprouts!
YAY!

************************

It snowed again on Friday night - about 6" of sticky stuff that wasn't really enough for good snowmobiling .....


............  but was perfect for building snowmen,


..... like this six foot tall fellow down in "Dicksville" ....


......... a smaller snowman and his buddy, "Snoopy," crafted by the Mincy Family Sculptors on White Street .......



........... and this amazing Beach Bunny, complete with "shades" and a beach umbrella, lounging on a lawn on West Bacon Street!

Cool!

*************

IN THE MAIL

- from Lynne Tuttle Matteson, remembering when her parents and then her brother and sister-in-law, Gary and Jo Tuttle, lived in the small building next to the Osborn home - the one that had been built by Benjamin White and then made into a studio for Albert Bierstadt. 


She wrote:  "I was working in White Plains at the time so never actually lived there, just stayed when I came home to visit. I remember one thing that I liked about it was that it was so bright and pleasant.  My Dad passed away in Sept of 1959 and my brother and his wife (Gary and Jo Tuttle) moved in with my Mom. They were the last ones to live there.  They moved when they were going to demolish the houses. The little house was donated to the Legion* but they had to move it.  The house was held together with pegs and fell apart when they tried to move it. I talked to Gary and he also said that it was the oldest house in Waterville.

"I don't think any of my family knew that it was an artist's studio.  All I knew was that Chuck Woodhouse owned it. He had most of the front lawn dug out for his liquor store (now Merri-Rose Florist.) There were only a few feet of lawn before it dropped off so we only used the back door.  It had a nice sized living room and kitchen, a bedroom and bath downstairs. There was a shed off the kitchen that led to the very small backyard.
 I don't remember the upstairs at all, even though I must have slept there when I was home to visit.  Gary told me there were two large rooms up there. I do remember that the staircase was at the end of the living room."

*The late Hilda Barton purchased it hoping that it could be preserved.

That's the first description I've ever read of the building - it must have been larger than I thought it was.  I'm grateful to Lynne for  sharing her recollections!

*************************

COMING EVENTS

There are no special events at the Library, today,
nor any at the School or on the Village Calendar.

Events for Tuesday

At the Library

6:30 p.m.
"The DeClutter Coach"
Get ready for that Spring Clean feeling… 
The Declutter Coach will be back with tips on getting things cleared out and organized.
She'll start with a talk, then be available to sign her new book "DeClutter Your Life Now!"

***

Kids' Book Club
6:30 p.m.


1st - 3rd Grade | Sign Up
Contact: Amanda Briggs    315-841-4651    amanda@watervillepl.org 

****************

Knitting Group
7:00 p.m.


*******************************

WCSD Board of Education Meeting
6:30 p.m.

*******************************

PLANNING AHEAD


Good Friday annual community-wide service 
to “Carry the Cross” 
through the village of Waterville. 

The event will begin at 10 a.m. at the United Methodist Church, continue to the Harding Nursing Home and onward to other churches in the village, ending at St. Bernard’s Roman Catholic church on Stafford Avenue. 

This is the 45th year of this tradition and all are welcome.

********

Good Friday Fish Fry
at the American Legion
4:30 - 7:30 -  Takeouts Available.

***********************

The Annual Waterville Rotary Club


will take place at Noon on Saturday at Hardings'.

********************************

I will be on an extended "history hunt," tomorrow, and may not blog on Tuesday morning, but I'll be back at the usual time on Wednesday morning, for sure!

Have a great day, everyone!


Thursday, March 21, 2013

It's Garbage Day.
16.5 degrees and clear at 6:30 a.m.

The Wednesday afternoon forecast from YNN: "Tonight will be very cold with scattered snow showers and lake snow continuing east of Lake Ontario.  Lows will be in the teens to around 20.  More of the same is expected on Thursday, although with a piece of upper level energy swinging in later in the day, scattered snow showers will pick up in coverage by evening.  Highs will be close to 30 degrees.

Friday will feature plenty of clouds, unseasonably chilly temperatures and scattered snow showers.  Highs will be in the 30s. This area of high pressure will bring quiet, but still chilly conditions for Saturday with highs in the upper 30s.

Unseasonably chilly weather looks as though it will stick around through the end of the month."




****************************

Here & There



When I went to Municipal Hall to vote on Tuesday, I spent some time enjoying more of Skip Foppes' amazingly refurbished photographs on display in the lobby.  There are four scenes that I'd never seen before.
I'm not going to show you any close-ups, here - but if you can, please go and see them for yourself!




More Winter to clean up!


But more flowers have bloomed on doorways!
Above, at Jill Getman's on West Bacon Street.


At the Falks' on Putnam .....


..  and at the VanDenbergh home in Forge Hollow.


It was sunny one minute and snowing the next!


Several times, I slowed down to watch pairs of Killdeer fling low over fields of corn stubble. It almost seemed that they were looking for the nests that they had begun to build before the snow covered the ground.

From the Cornell Lab of Ornithology: "A shorebird you can see without going to the beach, Killdeer are graceful plovers common to lawns, golf courses, athletic fields, and parking lots (as well as cropland around Waterville.) These tawny birds run across the ground in spurts, stopping with a jolt every so often to check their progress, or to see if they’ve startled up any insect prey. Their voice, a far-carrying, excited kill-deer, is a common sound even after dark, often given in flight as the bird circles overhead on slender wings."  

*********************************************

SPECIAL EVENTS

Today at the Library
Pajama Story Time at 6:00 p.m.

Ages 3-7 | Sign Up
Come in your pj's for Easter stories, crafts and snacks!
 Contact:  Amanda Briggs    841-4651    amanda@watervillepl.org 

***************************

Today at 7:30 p.m. in Deansboro

The Marshall Historical Society
 “Faces from Madison County,” 
by Madison County Historian Matt Urtz.


*******************************


Saturday from 8:30 - 1:30 at the Municipal Hall.

*****

FOR THE RECORD




***************************************

Women I wish I had known ....... Part III

Rosalie Osborn Ludlow Bierstadt. 
1841 – 1893.

Whereas Genevie Brainard and Charlotte Buell Coman‘s names have become well known because they themselves determined what they wanted to do and did whatever it took to get it done – Genevie with her history of the 146th and Charlotte with her painting – it seems that Rosalie Osborn Ludlow Bierstadt did neither!  


She was born into a wealthy family, she was very beautiful, and she was married twice -  to two of the most famous men in America!  Had they lived in the late 20th century, surely Robin Leach would have found them perfect subjects for the television series, “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous!”

Rosalie was born in Waterville in 1841 in a fine brick residence that had been built by her grandfather, Amos Osborn, in 1811. Both he and her father, Amos O. Osborn,  a lawyer, were among the most successful in the village and nothing was spared in her upbringing.


The Osborn residence was located on the slight knoll where the Waterville Post Office and Dollar General now stand.

She was only eighteen when, in 1859,  she married her first husband, Fitz Hugh Ludlow, whom she met at a health resort in the Catskills.  Although sickly, he was already an acclaimed young writer, famous in both America and Great Britain for his semi-autobiographical novel, “The Hasheesh Eater,” and by the mid 1850s he had become highly prominent in New York society. 
After a lengthy honeymoon trip to Florida, the couple returned to New York where she was described by members of the literary circle in which the Ludlows both took an active part as both "very beautiful and very flirtatious."

A few years later, her husband was hired as writing companion to Albert Bierstadt the most celebrated American artist of the day, on a lengthy trip to the “great Northwest” to explore possible rail routes.  During their travels, Fitz Hugh told Bierstadt more and more about his beautiful wife and the more the artist heard the more intrigued with her he became.  Perhaps infatuated with this woman whom he had never met, Bierstadt named a mountain in one of his paintings “Mount Rosalie.”  In the meantime, Rosalie was either entertaining or being entertained both in New York City or at her parents’ home in Waterville.


"Storm in the Rocky Mountains - Mt. Rosalie"

Upon Ludlow and Bierstadt’s return to the East Coast,  Ludlow, disturbed by rumors of his wife’s unseemly behavior during his absence, turned again to his use of hasheesh and the marriage began to deteriorate.  To make a long story short,  Bierstadt stepped into the picture and in 1866 Rosalie divorced Ludlow and married Bierstadt in a ceremony at Grace Episcopal Church, here in Waterville. They sailed immediately for a two-year honeymoon in England and Europe!  There, they were received as international socialites: in London, they met Queen Victoria; in Paris, Bierstadt received the Legion of Honor; in Rome, the couple visited composer Franz Liszt.

Returning to America, the Bierstadts visited Niagara Falls, and also spent time in New Hampshire‘s White Mountains and in Waterville where Bierstadt painted in a studio that his father-in-law had made for him in an older building on the property – a simple structure built by Benjamin White around 1792 and said by some to be the oldest building in the community - and where they entertained lavishly, once hiring the new "Putnam Hall" and inviting friends for an Oyster Supper on New Year's Day.

In 1871, the Bierstadts went to California, staying for two and a half years.  They stayed primarily in San Francisco, and were much sought after socially.  In 1876 they were guests of honor at a large costume ball in Ottawa, Canada, where Rosalie was photographed elaborately costumed in black velvet and lace as Mary Queen of Scots.


Later in 1876 Rosalie made her first visit to Nassau, and, citing declining health, spent more and more time there, making the Bahamas her Winter residence returning to the Bierstadts’ mansion on the Hudson or the Osborn homestead in Waterville during the Summer.


Malkasten - Irvington-on-Hudson.

Over time she became increasingly frail and died in Nassau in 1893 at the age of fifty-two.  Described by the editor of the Waterville Times, "She was a woman of rare beauty and sweet disposition," she is buried in the Waterville Cemetery in the Osborn family plot.

*****

One of Rosalie's lifelong hobbies was that of collecting autographs. In 1940 her autograph album was described by her niece, Rosalie Osborn Mayer, as containing  signatures and even small notes or poems by such famous people as: Admiral Farragut, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, John Greenleaf Whittier and William Cullen Bryant, Ralph Waldo Emerson and John Pierpont, Oliver Wendell Holmes and letters from Horace Greeley – to name just a few.  

Missing from the collection are the signatures of two very famous men: those of Fitz Hugh Ludlow and Albert Bierstadt.


 Have a good weekend, everyone!