Constitutionally, bankruptcy is a federal matter. Try contacting the
National Archives and Records Administration Northeast Region
referencing the New York Federal Court Records for bankruptcy.
National Archives and Records Administration
Northeast Region
New York City
201 Varick Street - 12th Floor
New York, NY 10014
fax (212-401-1638)
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-----Original Message-----
From: A LISTSERV list for discussions pertaining to New York State
history. [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of NYHISTLED
Sent: Monday, December 03, 2007 10:46 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [NYHIST-L] Hyde Hall and 1880s bankruptcy
Posted by request.
--Moderator, NYHIST-L
* * * * * * * * * * * *
The research team at Hyde Hall in Cooperstown, the state's least-known
and best documented National Historic Landmark and New York State
Historic Site (see website, in need of post-season updating, but
generally very good) is used to having most questions answered by our
incredible archive (materials from 1704 until 1966, the full range of
Clarke family history in New York, fully indexed, housed by Cornell
University Kroch Special Collections Library) has drawn a frustrating
blank:
The late 1880s bankruptcy proceedings against George Hyde Clarke,
involving property liens and debts of over $1 million -- among the, if
not the, largest bankruptcy in the country to date (that's what we've
heard, per contemporary newspaper reports, but haven't figured out how
to confirm)-- must be documented in some courts archive, but we can't
figure out where. The properties were scattered throughout Central New
York and down into the Hudson Valley, but his lawyers were in Utica
and Cooperstown; Oneida and Otsego counties claim not to have the
records.
Anybody have any idea where we should look next? Anyone want to help
us explore this? We have a mix of excellent and determinedly diligent
volunteers working on this, led by the chief of our seasonal
interpretive staff, Larry Smith.
Please post to the list, or reply to [log in to unmask] with
questions, information or comments.
And if you haven't been here lately, come to Hyde Hall next time you
get a chance -- LOTS of new fantastic "new" (original to house, from
the too-long-stored collections) things on exhibit as the restoration
nears completion. Tell the guys at the Park Gate (enter through
Glimmerglass State Park) that you are heading up to Hyde Hall, and
they will not charge the beach/campground admission fee.
Thanks very much.
Alice Smith Duncan
Hyde Hall executive director
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