Just a quick test to make sure that the listproc server is running. If anyone receives this message by accident please delete it. Thanks. Tom Ruller NYSARA From [log in to unmask] Wed May 7 23:44:33 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id XAA02746; Wed, 7 May 1997 23:44:30 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.19] (dialup09.roc-tc1.eznet.net [207.50.130.19]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id XAA05625; Wed, 7 May 1997 23:42:04 -0400 Message-Id: <v03007800af96e7d3a74c@[207.50.130.37]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Wed, 7 May 1997 21:17:31 -0500 To: [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: A New York question Cc: [log in to unmask] content-length: 762 I don't know of such a reference; how about someone out there on the list? David Minor >From: [log in to unmask] >Date: Thu, 1 May 1997 17:05:34 -0400 (EDT) >To: [log in to unmask] >Subject: A New York question > >David, > >I have reached the point where I depend on your New York knowledge. So, a >question--- > >Might you know of any book on members of the bar within the State of New York >where I might find details on an attorney from the mid-1800's. > >I have hopes to find some details, biographical, in nature on a Smith Edward >Lane who had offices at 169 Broadway in New York City in 1862; he lived at 8 >Charlton. > >djweber >[log in to unmask] > David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Thu May 8 23:57:01 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mtigwc04.worldnet.att.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id XAA03255; Thu, 8 May 1997 23:57:00 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: from default ([207.147.133.123]) by mtigwc04.worldnet.att.net (post.office MTA v2.0 0613 ) with SMTP id AAA15007 for <[log in to unmask]>; Fri, 9 May 1997 03:57:27 +0000 Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> Date: Thu, 08 May 1997 20:58:52 -0500 Organization: Organized? Hahahahaha X-Mailer: Mozilla 2.01E (Win95; U) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: A New York question References: <v03007800af96e7d3a74c@[207.50.130.37]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit content-length: 747 What about the NY State Bar Association?? Shirley > I don't know of such a reference; how about someone out there on the list? > > David Minor > > >From: [log in to unmask] > >Date: Thu, 1 May 1997 17:05:34 -0400 (EDT) > >To: [log in to unmask] > >Subject: A New York question > > > >David, > > > >I have reached the point where I depend on your New York knowledge. So, a > >question--- > > > >Might you know of any book on members of the bar within the State of New York > >where I might find details on an attorney from the mid-1800's. > > > >I have hopes to find some details, biographical, in nature on a Smith Edward > >Lane who had offices at 169 Broadway in New York City in 1862; he lived at 8 > >Charlton. > > > >djweber > >[log in to unmask] From [log in to unmask] Fri May 9 18:10:36 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from emout17.mail.aol.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id SAA04344; Fri, 9 May 1997 18:10:35 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: (from root@localhost) by emout17.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id SAA07231 for [log in to unmask]; Fri, 9 May 1997 18:11:22 -0400 (EDT) Date: Fri, 9 May 1997 18:11:22 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Question content-length: 364 Dear Sir; I received a copy of NYNY 1820-1824, which was forwarded through the [log in to unmask] list. It is very interesting and I am wondering if I can get back and future issues. I have many ancestors who lived in New York (who doesn't?) and this posting is of great value, I think! Please email me at [log in to unmask] Thank you! Pat Miller Lowell MI From [log in to unmask] Sat May 10 15:41:57 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from Shell.TeleNet.Net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id PAA05923; Sat, 10 May 1997 15:41:56 -0400 Received: from lizard (Dialup185.TeleNet.NET [204.97.153.185]) by Shell.TeleNet.Net (8.7.6/8.6.12) with SMTP id PAA15714 for <[log in to unmask]>; Sat, 10 May 1997 15:44:28 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> Date: Sat, 10 May 1997 15:24:11 -0700 From: Anne & Les Hendrix <[log in to unmask]> Reply-To: [log in to unmask] Organization: Tryon Press X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0C-nnie30 (Win16; U) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: A New York question References: <v03007800af96e7d3a74c@[207.50.130.37]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit content-length: 562 Martindale-Hubble (I am unsure if Hubble is spelled right) is a directory of lawyers in each state. I don't know how long it has been published. The full title is probably something like "Martindale Hubble's Directory of ....." I don't recall that either. I believe West Publishing Company, a publisher of law books, publishes an annual New York Diary with a listing of all lawyers in the state. Again, I don't know how long that's been published. I'd inquire of a law librarian. The state Office of Court Administration operates libraries in most counties. From [log in to unmask] Mon May 12 10:42:18 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from loomis.berkshire.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id KAA07807; Mon, 12 May 1997 10:42:17 -0400 Received: from atlas.berkshire.net ([log in to unmask] [206.72.196.16]) by loomis.berkshire.net (8.8.5/8.7.1) with SMTP id KAA02282 for <[log in to unmask]>; Mon, 12 May 1997 10:45:04 -0400 (EDT) Date: Mon, 12 May 1997 09:48:27 -0500 (EST) From: "Michael D. Bathrick" <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: A New York question In-Reply-To: <[log in to unmask]> Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 1110 There's a several volume book called "Courts and Lawyers of New York" by Alden Chester published around 1925 that may help - Ancestor Publishers (6166 Janice Way, Arvada, CO 80004-5160) has a microfiche copy of volume 3 (7 fiche) for $28.00. Mike On Thu, 8 May 1997 [log in to unmask] wrote: > What about the NY State Bar Association?? > > Shirley > > > I don't know of such a reference; how about someone out there on the list? > > > > David Minor > > > > >From: [log in to unmask] > > >Date: Thu, 1 May 1997 17:05:34 -0400 (EDT) > > >To: [log in to unmask] > > >Subject: A New York question > > > > > >David, > > > > > >I have reached the point where I depend on your New York knowledge. So, a > > >question--- > > > > > >Might you know of any book on members of the bar within the State of New York > > >where I might find details on an attorney from the mid-1800's. > > > > > >I have hopes to find some details, biographical, in nature on a Smith Edward > > >Lane who had offices at 169 Broadway in New York City in 1862; he lived at 8 > > >Charlton. > > > > > >djweber > > >[log in to unmask] > From [log in to unmask] Mon May 12 19:29:48 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from emout20.mail.aol.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id TAA08326; Mon, 12 May 1997 19:29:47 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: (from root@localhost) by emout20.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id TAA25215 for [log in to unmask]; Mon, 12 May 1997 19:30:47 -0400 (EDT) Date: Mon, 12 May 1997 19:30:47 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Civil War Surgeon content-length: 177 I recently discovered one of my relatives was an assistant surgeon during the Civil War. What resources could I use to find out his educational background? [log in to unmask] From [log in to unmask] Mon May 12 21:27:49 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id VAA08570; Mon, 12 May 1997 21:27:47 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.77] (dialup03.roc-tc2.eznet.net [207.50.130.77]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id VAA01163 for <[log in to unmask]>; Mon, 12 May 1997 21:06:27 -0400 X-Sender: [log in to unmask] (Unverified) Message-Id: <v03007800af9cf7855f37@[207.50.130.95]> In-Reply-To: <[log in to unmask]> References: <v03007800af96e7d3a74c@[207.50.130.37]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Mon, 12 May 1997 11:37:59 -0500 To: [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: A New York question content-length: 1083 Shirley, Thanks for the suggestion. Someone else also suggested it and I've already passed the information along. The Albany Law School was also suggested. I appreciate your effort. David >What about the NY State Bar Association?? > >Shirley > >> I don't know of such a reference; how about someone out there on the list? >> >> David Minor >> >> >From: [log in to unmask] >> >Date: Thu, 1 May 1997 17:05:34 -0400 (EDT) >> >To: [log in to unmask] >> >Subject: A New York question >> > >> >David, >> > >> >I have reached the point where I depend on your New York knowledge. So, a >> >question--- >> > >> >Might you know of any book on members of the bar within the State of >>New York >> >where I might find details on an attorney from the mid-1800's. >> > >> >I have hopes to find some details, biographical, in nature on a Smith >>Edward >> >Lane who had offices at 169 Broadway in New York City in 1862; he lived >>at 8 >> >Charlton. >> > >> >djweber >> >[log in to unmask] David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Mon May 12 11:41:17 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id LAA07849; Mon, 12 May 1997 11:41:15 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.95] (dialup21.roc-tc2.eznet.net [207.50.130.95]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id LAA07725; Mon, 12 May 1997 11:32:47 -0400 Message-Id: <v03007800af9cf2a8d007@[207.50.130.102]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Date: Mon, 12 May 1997 11:20:35 -0500 To: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: NYNY 1857-1860 content-length: 16561 <fontfamily><param>Geneva</param>1857 <smaller>Jan 30 =09 Harvey Burdell, a New York City bachelor, is found murdered in his Bond Street home. The case is never solved. =46eb 12 =09 The Agricultural Rooms of Albany's State Geological and Agricultural Hall is dedicated. Apr 7 =09 =46ollowing a survey by the U. S. Coast Survey, Manhattan's underwater boundaries are confirmed. May 1 =09 Elizabeth Blackwell, her older sister Dr. Emily Blackwell and German-born Dr. Marie Zakrzewska found the New York Infirmary for Women and Children, on Bleecker Street in New York City. May 20 =09 Having rented out his house, William Tecumseh Sherman and his family leave San Francisco for New York. June =09 Railroad brakemen across the state strike for $1 a day, followed a week later by engineers and firemen. Jun 16 =09 A riot breaks out in New York City when police captain Walling and his Strong Arm Squad, en route to arrest mayor Fernando Wood for refusing the state legislature's demand to disband the corrupt Municipal Police, run into Wood's defenders. Over 50 people are injured. Wood surrenders when the Seventh Regiment comes to Walling's rescue. July =09 Lawyer Abraham Lincoln and his wife Mary visit New York City, Niagara =46alls and Canada. ** The final arch keystone of Rochester's Main Street bridge is set in place. Jul 1 =09 Rochester stone cutter Patrick O'Rorke enters the West Point Military Academy. Jul 4 =09 =46ederal troops end a New York City gang fight in lower Manhattan, in which eight of the 1,000 participants are killed. Jul 21 =09 Having arrived in New York City via Panama, William T. Sherman opens Lucas, Turner & Company on Wall Street. August =09 =46uture Army captain and author Willard Glazier enters school at Gouverneur. Aug 9 =09 Lecturer-reformer Harriet May Mills is born in Syracuse. Aug 24 =09 New York City's Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company branch fails, precipitating a financial panic. 4,932 U. S. firms will fail. Oct 7 =09 Sherman is instructed to close the New York branch of Lucas, Turner, after the St. Louis home branch closes. He will move to St. Louis, to help close the bank, then apply for an army commission. Oct 31 =09 The Albany water works has taken in $75,550 in receipts for the fiscal year just ending. November=09 Unemployment rises in the state. Nov 15 =09 15,000 unemployed gather in New York City's Tompkins Square Park, parade down to Wall Street. Nov 23 =09 The Collins Line's <italic>Adriatic</italic> sails from New York City. December=09 Sherman leaves St. Louis and travels back to San Francisco, by way of New York, to liquidate Lucas, Turner's remaining assets. City The first passenger elevator is installed in the Haughtwout Department Store. ** Industrialist Peter Cooper founds the Cooper Union school. ** John Craig Havermeyer is named president of the New York Savings Bank. ** Frederick Law Olmsted's Central Park is laid out. ** Paint dealer and Tammany politician Daniel F. Tiemann (Independent) defeats incumbant Democratic mayor Fernando Wood, serves 1858-1860. ** Lithographers Nathaniel Currier and Charles Ives become partners State U. S. Senator Hamilton Fish resigns and Preston King is elected to succeed him. ** The grain elevator at Charlotte collapses. **=20 The State Senate reports that the poorhouse at Angelica is poorly run, with lunatics left unattended and in filthy conditions. They are often flogged. ** Oramel's <italic>Republican Era</italic> ceases publication. ** The state legislature proposes diverting Lime Lake into Ischia Creek, at the cost of $160,000, to provide water for the Genesee Valley Canal. ** Le Roy's Ingham Collegiate Institute is chartered as Ingham University. ** The Medina Police Department is founded. ** The U. S. and the Seneca Indian tribe sign a treaty at Tonawanda in which the tribe repurchase state reservation lands with funds from the exchange and sale of Seneca reservation lands in Kansas. ** The Hudson River steamer <italic>Armenia</italic> gets the first steam calliope. ** The New York Central adds improved snowplows to its rolling stock. ** =20 The National Association of Baseball Clubs, the first league, is formed, playing at the Fashion Race Course, in Jamaica, New York. The rules are changed from the first-team-to-reach-21 rule to a nine-inning format. ** St. Louis and New York City are linked by rail. Albany 1857 expenses of Albany schools total $44,310.10. ** =20 Construction begins on the Albany Industrial School, for vagrant children. Rochester Washington, D. C. nun Sister Hieronymo O'Brien and three Sisters of Charity found St. Mary's Hospital, the city's first. ** The Howe and Rogers carpet manufacturing firm is founded. ** Spring rains wash away the temporary Main Street bridge. Rochester replaces the Andrews Street bridge. ** The Industrial School of Rochester (later the Rochester Children's Nursery) is established at 133 Exchange Street. ** The Rochester Savings Bank is completed. ** =20 Sophia and Hart streets become Plymouth Avenue. ** Rosetta Douglass, daughter of black abolitionist Frederick Douglass, is denied entrance to school. The Board of Education reverses the ban. 1858 =46eb 22 =09 The Cabinet display room of Albany's State Geological and Agricultural Hall is opened to the public. Mar 30 =09 Musical comedy star DeWolf Hopper, known for his Gilbert and Sullivan roles and <italic>Casey at the Bat</italic> recitations, is born in New York City. Apr 2 =09 The state legislature mandates the removal of the county seat of Allegany County from Angelica to Belmont. The execution of the move is held up in state courts for several years. Apr 28 =09 =46rederick Law Olmstead and Calvert Vaux are chosen to design New York City's new Central Park, beating 32 other designs, to win a $2,000 contest. May =09 The clipper <italic>Twilight</italic> makes the year's record New York to San Francisco run - 100 days. ** C. H. Mallory, Connecticut builder of the <italic>Twilight</italic> sees his <italic>Haswell</italic> win theNew York Yacht Club regatta grand prize. May 13 =09 Susan B. Anthony presides over the two-day Eighth National Woman's Rights Convention in New York City's Mozart Hall. The meetings are often disrupted by rowdy men. Jun 29 =09 Panama Canal engineer George Washington Goethals is born in Brooklyn. Jul 20 =09 The New York All-Stars baseball team beats Brooklyn, in the first paid admission game. August =09 Susan B. Anthony places a proposal to provide equal educational opportunities for women before the State Teacher's Convention in Binghamton. Her resolution is defeated. Aug 23 =09 Timothy Shay Arthur's temperance novel <italic>Ten=00=00=07=83hts in a Bar-room</italic>, adopted for the stage by William W. Pratt, opens at New York City's National Theatre. It will become a controversial nation-wide hit.=20 Oct 5 =09 An unidentified arsonist torches New York City's Crystal Palace, destroying the building and $2,000,000 worth of art. Editor and exhibition commissioner Horace Greeley will be arrested in Paris and temporarily put in Clichy prison in an attempt to coerce damages for statuary destroyed in the fire. Oct 25 =09 Senator William H. Seward speaks at Rochester, declares the slavery issue a "irrepressible conflict". =20 Oct 27 =09 Theodore Roosevelt is born in New York City. December=09 The first trains run over the newly completed railroad between New York City and Boston in 7 hours and 7 minutes. Trains are ferried over the Thames and Connecticut rivers. Dec 25 =09 =46uture governor John Alden Dix is born in Glens Falls. City Construction begins on St. Patrick's Cathedral. ** Brooklyn's St. =46rancis College is founded. ** High Bridge, over the Harlem River, loses its charter as a toll bridge. ** The collection of Luman Reed is given to the New-York Historical Society. ** Edward R. Squibb starts a pharmaceutical firm in Brooklyn. ** Matthew Brady opens studios here and in Washington, D. C. ** Mrs. Marshall O. Roberts starts a Ladies' Christian Association prayer group, considered the first U. S. Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA). ** =20 The first Steel-nibbed pens go on sale. State Thurlow Weed prot=E9g=E9 Edwin D. Morgan is elected governor. ** =20 Methodist Episcopal pastor Bishop Benjamin Titus Roberts is ousted by the Genesee Conference at Perry. ** The legislature hires a physician for the state's Indians at $300 a year. ** C. Weickmann establishes the Catholic journal <italic>Aurora</italic> in Buffalo. =20 ** Former Buchanan ally John W. Forney attacks him in a bitter speech in Tarrytown. ** William J. Stillman's painting <italic>ThePhilosophers' Camp in the Adirondacks</italic>. ** =20 The New York Central adds sleeping cars to its trains. ** The New York Central and Erie railroads end their rate war, temporarily. **=20 <italic>Fisk's Family Journal</italic> begins publication, in Troy. Albany This year canal boats deliver 267,406,411 feet of boards, 11,949,700 feet of timber and 67,505 tons of barrel staves, mostly from the northern part of the state. ** The city contains 48 churches. =20 ** The Wash House (Laundry and Cannery) of the Shaker colony at Watervliet is built. 1859 Apr 4 =09 Bryant's Minstrels begins performing Daniel D. Emmett's <italic>Dixie Land</italic>, in New York City's Mechanics Hall. May 12 =09 Susan B. Anthony presides over the Ninth National Women's Rights Convention in New York City, links the slavery cause with that of women's rights. Jun 30 =09 =46rench aerialist Fran=E7ois Gravelet (Blondin),performing before a crowd of 25,000, crosses Niagara Falls on a tight rope. He then crosses again on stilts, blindfolded, pushing a wheelbarrow and carrying a man on his back. August =09 New York City's Infirmary for Women and Children, needing more space, moves from Bleecker Street to Second Avenue. Aug 12 =09 =46. H. Conway's play<italic> Pike's Peak or, The Search for Riches</italic>, opens at New York City's Old Bowery Theater. Nov 28 =09 Washington Irving, 76, dies at Sunnyside, North Tarrytown. Dec 17 =09 George C. Boniface plays John Brown at New York City's Old Bowery Theater in <italic>The Insurrection, or, Kansas and Harpers =46erry</italic>. =20 City Leonard Jerome moves back from Paris. ** Music publisher John Andrews is bought out by Henry De Marsan. ** The approximate date outlaw Henry McCarty (William H. Bonney, Kid Antrim, Billy the Kid) is born. ** Manhattan restauranteur John Taylor buys the Oaks, the Queens mansion belonging to the Lawrence family. In partnership with John Henderson he turns the estate into a horticultural business. The area will become Oakland Gardens. ** Widow Anna Behr Uhl, publisher of the <italic>New Yorker Staats-Zeitung</italic>, marries her assistant Oswald Ottendorfer. ** Former mayor Fernando Wood, now described as a Mozart Democrat, defeatsfellow former mayor and Tammany Democrat William C. Havemeyer, and Republican George Opdyke, to become mayor from 1860-1862. ** Brooklyn bans steam locomotives along Atlantic Avenue by this date. The Long Island Railroad (LIRR) moves its western terminus to Long Island City. ** Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art opens and collector Thomas Jefferson Bryan houses his art collection there. State Governor Edwin D. Morgan is elected for a second term. ** A special burial ground for French and Germans is established in Buffalo. ** The collapsed Charlotte grain elevator is rebuilt. ** =20 California promoter Sam Brannan founds a resort there he calls Calistoga, a word play on "the Saratoga of California". ** During a celebration in Albion a bridge over the Erie Canal collapses. Fifteen of the crowd on the span drown. ** Future Army captain and author Willard Glazier enters the State Normal College at Albany. ** The American Line of steamboats is split in two, with one line continuing between Lewiston, New York, and Kingston, Ontario, and the other partly operating on the St. Lawrence River. ** The New York Central replaces its wood-burning engines with coal burners and puts smoking cars on its trains. Rochester The Main Street bridge gets a pavement of Medina sandstone. ** The city's Liberty Pole, weakened by severe winds, is demolished. 1860 =46eb 27 =09 Lincoln makes his Cooper Union speech in New York City, speaking on slavery and the Constitution's framers. March =09 U. S. Army headquarters in New York orders three columns to operate independently in the Kiowa-Comanche country during the summer: one from =46ort Riley, Kansas; one from Fort Kearny, Nebraska; and a third from New Mexico. Mar 19 =09 Elizabeth Cady Stanton addresses a joint session of the state's legislature on the subject of women's suffrage. Apr 23 =09 The Democratic National Convention meets at Charleston, South Carolina. Among those in attendance is New York State railroad executive Dean Richmond. May 9 =09 The Constitutional Union Party meets in Baltimore, nominating Tennessee's John Bell and Massachusetts' Edward Everett. Dean Richmond attends. Jun 9 =09 <italic>Malaeska: The Indian Wife of the White Hunter</italic>, goes on sale in New York City, the first of Irwin P. Beadle's Dime Novel Series, and the first of the genre, written by Mrs. Ann Sophia Stevens. Jul 1 =09 Inventor Charles Goodyear, 59, dies in New York City. August =09 William Tecumseh Sherman, now a superintendent and professor of engineering at the Louisiana Seminary of Learning and Military Academy, travels to Lancaster, Ohio, Washington, and New York to purchase supplies and 200 muskets for student drills at the school. Aug 4 =09 =46inancier Harrison Durand, brother of lawyer John Ewing Durand, is born in Rochester. Sep 5 =09 Enrico Farini walks across Niagara Falls on a tightrope above the cataract, with a washing machine, does his laundry. Sep 7 =09 Painter Grandma Moses (Anna Mary Robertson Moses) is born in Greenwich, New York. Oct 11 =09 A parade held in New York City for the Prince of Wales draws 200,000 people. Oct 12 =09 A ball is given at the Academy of Music for the Prince of Wales. Part of the temporary dance floor collapses. Oct 13 =09 The Prince of Wales is photographed by Matthew Brady. Nov 7 =09 The William T. Coleman Line's ship <italic>Racer</italic> is launched, to be used for the New York-San Francisco trade. Nov 12 =09 The New York stock market experiences heavy trading and a sharp price drop. Dec 18 =09 Composer Edward Alexander MacDowell is born in New York City. City Matthew Brady opens his National Portrait Gallery on Broadway and Tenth Street. ** James Wrigley begins publishing music on Chatham Street (Park Row). ** A tenement fire on Elm Street kills twenty people. New laws will be soon passed requiring fire escapes. ** The Connecticut-built clipper ship<italic>Andrew Jackson </italic>breaks 1858's New York to San Francisco record, making the trip in 89 days and 4 hours. State The foreign-born population passes 1,000,000 - 498,000 of them Irish and 256,000 German. ** The New York State court of appeals, deliberating in the Lemmon slave case, rules that the state determines the status of all persons in its jurisdiction and can declare blacks to be free men. ** Angelica is made a half-shire town. ** R. P. Smith of Syracuse publishes J. H. French's <italic>Gazetteer of the State f New York</italic>. ** Jonathan Goble, a naval marine on Perry's 1852-1854 voyage to Japan, returns there as the first Baptist missionary. ** Albany's population reaches 62,000. ** The New York Central adds restaurant (dining) cars to its trains. Rochester The Rochester Historical Society is founded. ** The first Italian immigrant arrives in the city, an unnamed laborer. ** Area congressmen advocate ending the trade reciprocity treaty with Canada. =20 ** The city's second Liberty Pole is erected. ** Sixty trains a day leave the city.</smaller></fontfamily> David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Mon May 12 21:27:47 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id VAA08568; Mon, 12 May 1997 21:27:46 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.77] (dialup03.roc-tc2.eznet.net [207.50.130.77]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id VAA01167 for <[log in to unmask]>; Mon, 12 May 1997 21:06:33 -0400 X-Sender: [log in to unmask] (Unverified) Message-Id: <v03007800af9cfe49f66f@[207.50.130.95]> In-Reply-To: <[log in to unmask]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Mon, 12 May 1997 12:11:45 -0500 To: [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: Question content-length: 1117 Pat, At his point most back issues are not generally available but I will add you to the list for future issues. Actually, you lucked out. I used to post the NYNYs to my local bulletin board, but left off doing that, for seeming lack of interest, with the 1820 posting. But now I've been asked to resume them. I'm just beginning to resubmit them from 1820 to the current 1860. You should start receiving them, along with this message, when I go back on line, and I'll see you get future postings. >Dear Sir; > >I received a copy of NYNY 1820-1824, which was forwarded through the >[log in to unmask] list. It is very interesting and I am wondering if I >can get back and future issues. I have many ancestors who lived in New York I think that takes in half of Michigan. >(who doesn't?) and this posting is of great value, I think! >Please email me at [log in to unmask] >Thank you! > >Pat Miller >Lowell MI David Minor pps. Are you a Mr. Pat or a Ms/Miss/Mrs Pat or a none-of-my-business Pat? David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Tue May 13 13:15:13 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from MAIL.NYSED.GOV by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id NAA10021; Tue, 13 May 1997 13:15:12 -0400 Received: from DOMAIN1-Message_Server by MAIL.NYSED.GOV with Novell_GroupWise; Tue, 13 May 1997 13:17:06 -0400 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> X-Mailer: Novell GroupWise 4.1 Date: Tue, 13 May 1997 13:15:09 -0400 From: James Folts <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Civil War Surgeon -Reply Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline content-length: 494 There are no relevant records in the New York State Archives, which holds only official New York State government records. I suggest looking for a newspaper obituary (New York State Library holds a huge collection of NYS newspapers on microfilm; phone 518-474-5355, e-mail [log in to unmask]). James D. Folts Head, Research Services New York State Archives Cultural Education Center Room 11D40 Albany, NY 12230 USA E-mail [log in to unmask] Phone (518) 474-8955; Fax (518) 473-9985 From [log in to unmask] Tue May 13 09:57:05 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from conciliator.acsu.buffalo.edu by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id JAA09713; Tue, 13 May 1997 09:57:04 -0400 Received: (qmail 17328 invoked by uid 23037); 13 May 1997 13:58:06 -0000 Date: Tue, 13 May 1997 09:58:06 -0400 (EDT) From: Densmore <[log in to unmask]> To: NYHIST-L <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Lake Ontario Archives Conference, June 13-14, 1997 Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 309 Check out the program for the Lake Ontario Archives Conference, at http://www.ithaca.edu/library/archives/loac Christopher Densmore University Archives University at Buffalo 420 Capen Hall Box 602200 Buffalo, New York 14260-2200 Voice: 716-645-2916 Fax: 716-645-3714 E-Mail: [log in to unmask] From [log in to unmask] Tue May 13 10:58:27 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from genoa.tol.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id KAA09874; Tue, 13 May 1997 10:58:26 -0400 Received: from default (arrow-d14.sierra.net) by genoa.tol.net with SMTP id AA19679 (5.67b8/IDA-1.5 for <[log in to unmask]>); Tue, 13 May 1997 08:03:03 -0700 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> Date: Tue, 13 May 1997 07:59:20 -0700 From: Anne & Peter Bowie <[log in to unmask]> Reply-To: [log in to unmask] Organization: Golden Quill Publishing X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.01 (Win95; I) Mime-Version: 1.0 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: NYNY References: <v03007800af9cfe49f66f@[207.50.130.95]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit content-length: 129 Hi David, Glad you are going to resume NYNY. I printed them out and save them. Anne Bowie Researching: BUCHER, FOWLER, LOOMIS From [log in to unmask] Tue May 13 12:04:05 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from dfw-ix16.ix.netcom.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id MAA09954; Tue, 13 May 1997 12:04:04 -0400 Received: (from smap@localhost) by dfw-ix16.ix.netcom.com (8.8.4/8.8.4) id LAA22868; Tue, 13 May 1997 11:04:34 -0500 (CDT) Received: from nyc-ny41-17.ix.netcom.com(199.35.216.241) by dfw-ix16.ix.netcom.com via smap (V1.3) id sma022840; Tue May 13 11:03:58 1997 Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> Date: Tue, 13 May 1997 11:57:53 -0700 From: "John F. Kovacic" <[log in to unmask]> Reply-To: [log in to unmask] X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: [log in to unmask] CC: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: A New York question References: <v03007800af96e7d3a74c@[207.50.130.37]> <[log in to unmask]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit content-length: 278 The name is Martindale-Hubbel and it has not been published long enough to satisfy the questioner's needs. The same goes for West Publishing. The New York Public Library or the state Office of Court Administration would be your best bet. John F. Kovacic Columbia University From [log in to unmask] Tue May 13 12:16:57 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from freenet.npiec.on.ca by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id MAA09976; Tue, 13 May 1997 12:16:56 -0400 Received: from localhost (pwarwick@localhost) by freenet.npiec.on.ca (8.8.5/8.8.5) with SMTP id MAA05500; Tue, 13 May 1997 12:15:38 -0400 (EST) Date: Tue, 13 May 1997 12:15:38 -0400 (EST) From: Peter Warwick <[log in to unmask]> To: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> cc: [log in to unmask] Subject: Back Issues In-Reply-To: <v03007800af9cfe49f66f@[207.50.130.95]> Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 482 I would like to say that David Minor's history posts should be archieved somewhere. I read them and enjoy them and then delete them to save space, but it would be nice to go to a site and read those I missed or reread ones I've read. They are good and one of the reasons why I continue to remain on this list. Peter D.A. Warwick St.Catharines, Ontario, Canada Bike Through The Garden Of Canada [log in to unmask] writer/researcher URL: http://www.npiec.on.ca/~pwarwick/ From [log in to unmask] Tue May 13 14:19:24 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from bighorn.accessnv.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id OAA10214; Tue, 13 May 1997 14:19:22 -0400 Received: from [205.199.152.24] (ppp042.anv.net [205.199.152.52]) by bighorn.accessnv.com (8.6.12/8.6.12) with ESMTP id LAA27925 for <[log in to unmask]>; Tue, 13 May 1997 11:17:54 +0100 Date: Tue, 13 May 1997 11:17:54 +0100 Message-Id: <v03007805af3dc1c13076@[205.199.152.24]> In-Reply-To: <v03007800af9cf2a8d007@[207.50.130.102]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable To: [log in to unmask] From: Geri Kanner <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: NYNY 1857-1860 cannot read this content-length: 16627 >>>>Print is too small cannot read <excerpt><fontfamily><param>Geneva</param>1857 <smaller>Jan 30 =09 Harvey Burdell, a New York City bachelor, is found murdered in his Bond Street home. The case is never solved. =46eb 12 =09 The Agricultural Rooms of Albany's State Geological and Agricultural Hall is dedicated. Apr 7 =09 =46ollowing a survey by the U. S. Coast Survey, Manhattan's underwater boundaries are confirmed. May 1 =09 Elizabeth Blackwell, her older sister Dr. Emily Blackwell and German-born Dr. Marie Zakrzewska found the New York Infirmary for Women and Children, on Bleecker Street in New York City. May 20 =09 Having rented out his house, William Tecumseh Sherman and his family leave San Francisco for New York. June =09 Railroad brakemen across the state strike for $1 a day, followed a week later by engineers and firemen. Jun 16 =09 A riot breaks out in New York City when police captain Walling and his Strong Arm Squad, en route to arrest mayor Fernando Wood for refusing the state legislature's demand to disband the corrupt Municipal Police, run into Wood's defenders. Over 50 people are injured. Wood surrenders when the Seventh Regiment comes to Walling's rescue. July =09 Lawyer Abraham Lincoln and his wife Mary visit New York City, Niagara =46alls and Canada. ** The final arch keystone of Rochester's Main Street bridge is set in place. Jul 1 =09 Rochester stone cutter Patrick O'Rorke enters the West Point Military Academy. Jul 4 =09 =46ederal troops end a New York City gang fight in lower Manhattan, in which eight of the 1,000 participants are killed. Jul 21 =09 Having arrived in New York City via Panama, William T. Sherman opens Lucas, Turner & Company on Wall Street. August =09 =46uture Army captain and author Willard Glazier enters school at Gouverneur. Aug 9 =09 Lecturer-reformer Harriet May Mills is born in Syracuse. Aug 24 =09 New York City's Ohio Life Insurance and Trust Company branch fails, precipitating a financial panic. 4,932 U. S. firms will fail. Oct 7 =09 Sherman is instructed to close the New York branch of Lucas, Turner, after the St. Louis home branch closes. He will move to St. Louis, to help close the bank, then apply for an army commission. Oct 31 =09 The Albany water works has taken in $75,550 in receipts for the fiscal year just ending. November=09 Unemployment rises in the state. Nov 15 =09 15,000 unemployed gather in New York City's Tompkins Square Park, parade down to Wall Street. Nov 23 =09 The Collins Line's <italic>Adriatic</italic> sails from New York City. December=09 Sherman leaves St. Louis and travels back to San Francisco, by way of New York, to liquidate Lucas, Turner's remaining assets. City The first passenger elevator is installed in the Haughtwout Department Store. ** Industrialist Peter Cooper founds the Cooper Union school. ** John Craig Havermeyer is named president of the New York Savings Bank. ** Frederick Law Olmsted's Central Park is laid out. ** Paint dealer and Tammany politician Daniel F. Tiemann (Independent) defeats incumbant Democratic mayor Fernando Wood, serves 1858-1860. ** Lithographers Nathaniel Currier and Charles Ives become partners State U. S. Senator Hamilton Fish resigns and Preston King is elected to succeed him. ** The grain elevator at Charlotte collapses. **=20 The State Senate reports that the poorhouse at Angelica is poorly run, with lunatics left unattended and in filthy conditions. They are often flogged. ** Oramel's <italic>Republican Era</italic> ceases publication. ** The state legislature proposes diverting Lime Lake into Ischia Creek, at the cost of $160,000, to provide water for the Genesee Valley Canal. ** Le Roy's Ingham Collegiate Institute is chartered as Ingham University. ** The Medina Police Department is founded. ** The U. S. and the Seneca Indian tribe sign a treaty at Tonawanda in which the tribe repurchase state reservation lands with funds from the exchange and sale of Seneca reservation lands in Kansas. ** The Hudson River steamer <italic>Armenia</italic> gets the first steam calliope. ** The New York Central adds improved snowplows to its rolling stock. ** =20 The National Association of Baseball Clubs, the first league, is formed, playing at the Fashion Race Course, in Jamaica, New York. The rules are changed from the first-team-to-reach-21 rule to a nine-inning format. ** St. Louis and New York City are linked by rail. Albany 1857 expenses of Albany schools total $44,310.10. ** =20 Construction begins on the Albany Industrial School, for vagrant children. Rochester Washington, D. C. nun Sister Hieronymo O'Brien and three Sisters of Charity found St. Mary's Hospital, the city's first. ** The Howe and Rogers carpet manufacturing firm is founded. ** Spring rains wash away the temporary Main Street bridge. Rochester replaces the Andrews Street bridge. ** The Industrial School of Rochester (later the Rochester Children's Nursery) is established at 133 Exchange Street. ** The Rochester Savings Bank is completed. ** =20 Sophia and Hart streets become Plymouth Avenue. ** Rosetta Douglass, daughter of black abolitionist Frederick Douglass, is denied entrance to school. The Board of Education reverses the ban. 1858 =46eb 22 =09 The Cabinet display room of Albany's State Geological and Agricultural Hall is opened to the public. Mar 30 =09 Musical comedy star DeWolf Hopper, known for his Gilbert and Sullivan roles and <italic>Casey at the Bat</italic> recitations, is born in New York City. Apr 2 =09 The state legislature mandates the removal of the county seat of Allegany County from Angelica to Belmont. The execution of the move is held up in state courts for several years. Apr 28 =09 =46rederick Law Olmstead and Calvert Vaux are chosen to design New York City's new Central Park, beating 32 other designs, to win a $2,000 contest. May =09 The clipper <italic>Twilight</italic> makes the year's record New York to San Francisco run - 100 days. ** C. H. Mallory, Connecticut builder of the <italic>Twilight</italic> sees his <italic>Haswell</italic> win theNew York Yacht Club regatta grand prize. May 13 =09 Susan B. Anthony presides over the two-day Eighth National Woman's Rights Convention in New York City's Mozart Hall. The meetings are often disrupted by rowdy men. Jun 29 =09 Panama Canal engineer George Washington Goethals is born in Brooklyn. Jul 20 =09 The New York All-Stars baseball team beats Brooklyn, in the first paid admission game. August =09 Susan B. Anthony places a proposal to provide equal educational opportunities for women before the State Teacher's Convention in Binghamton. Her resolution is defeated. Aug 23 =09 Timothy Shay Arthur's temperance novel <italic>Ten=00=00=07=83hts in a Bar-room</italic>, adopted for the stage by William W. Pratt, opens at New York City's National Theatre. It will become a controversial nation-wide hit.=20 Oct 5 =09 An unidentified arsonist torches New York City's Crystal Palace, destroying the building and $2,000,000 worth of art. Editor and exhibition commissioner Horace Greeley will be arrested in Paris and temporarily put in Clichy prison in an attempt to coerce damages for statuary destroyed in the fire. Oct 25 =09 Senator William H. Seward speaks at Rochester, declares the slavery issue a "irrepressible conflict". =20 Oct 27 =09 Theodore Roosevelt is born in New York City. December=09 The first trains run over the newly completed railroad between New York City and Boston in 7 hours and 7 minutes. Trains are ferried over the Thames and Connecticut rivers. Dec 25 =09 =46uture governor John Alden Dix is born in Glens Falls. City Construction begins on St. Patrick's Cathedral. ** Brooklyn's St. =46rancis College is founded. ** High Bridge, over the Harlem River, loses its charter as a toll bridge. ** The collection of Luman Reed is given to the New-York Historical Society. ** Edward R. Squibb starts a pharmaceutical firm in Brooklyn. ** Matthew Brady opens studios here and in Washington, D. C. ** Mrs. Marshall O. Roberts starts a Ladies' Christian Association prayer group, considered the first U. S. Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA). ** =20 The first Steel-nibbed pens go on sale. State Thurlow Weed prot=E9g=E9 Edwin D. Morgan is elected governor. ** =20 Methodist Episcopal pastor Bishop Benjamin Titus Roberts is ousted by the Genesee Conference at Perry. ** The legislature hires a physician for the state's Indians at $300 a year. ** C. Weickmann establishes the Catholic journal <italic>Aurora</italic> in Buffalo. =20 ** Former Buchanan ally John W. Forney attacks him in a bitter speech in Tarrytown. ** William J. Stillman's painting <italic>ThePhilosophers' Camp in the Adirondacks</italic>. ** =20 The New York Central adds sleeping cars to its trains. ** The New York Central and Erie railroads end their rate war, temporarily. **=20 <italic>Fisk's Family Journal</italic> begins publication, in Troy. Albany This year canal boats deliver 267,406,411 feet of boards, 11,949,700 feet of timber and 67,505 tons of barrel staves, mostly from the northern part of the state. ** The city contains 48 churches. =20 ** The Wash House (Laundry and Cannery) of the Shaker colony at Watervliet is built. 1859 Apr 4 =09 Bryant's Minstrels begins performing Daniel D. Emmett's <italic>Dixie Land</italic>, in New York City's Mechanics Hall. May 12 =09 Susan B. Anthony presides over the Ninth National Women's Rights Convention in New York City, links the slavery cause with that of women's rights. Jun 30 =09 =46rench aerialist Fran=E7ois Gravelet (Blondin),performing before a crowd of 25,000, crosses Niagara Falls on a tight rope. He then crosses again on stilts, blindfolded, pushing a wheelbarrow and carrying a man on his back. August =09 New York City's Infirmary for Women and Children, needing more space, moves from Bleecker Street to Second Avenue. Aug 12 =09 =46. H. Conway's play<italic> Pike's Peak or, The Search for Riches</italic>, opens at New York City's Old Bowery Theater. Nov 28 =09 Washington Irving, 76, dies at Sunnyside, North Tarrytown. Dec 17 =09 George C. Boniface plays John Brown at New York City's Old Bowery Theater in <italic>The Insurrection, or, Kansas and Harpers =46erry</italic>. =20 City Leonard Jerome moves back from Paris. ** Music publisher John Andrews is bought out by Henry De Marsan. ** The approximate date outlaw Henry McCarty (William H. Bonney, Kid Antrim, Billy the Kid) is born. ** Manhattan restauranteur John Taylor buys the Oaks, the Queens mansion belonging to the Lawrence family. In partnership with John Henderson he turns the estate into a horticultural business. The area will become Oakland Gardens. ** Widow Anna Behr Uhl, publisher of the <italic>New Yorker Staats-Zeitung</italic>, marries her assistant Oswald Ottendorfer. ** Former mayor Fernando Wood, now described as a Mozart Democrat, defeatsfellow former mayor and Tammany Democrat William C. Havemeyer, and Republican George Opdyke, to become mayor from 1860-1862. ** Brooklyn bans steam locomotives along Atlantic Avenue by this date. The Long Island Railroad (LIRR) moves its western terminus to Long Island City. ** Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art opens and collector Thomas Jefferson Bryan houses his art collection there. State Governor Edwin D. Morgan is elected for a second term. ** A special burial ground for French and Germans is established in Buffalo. ** The collapsed Charlotte grain elevator is rebuilt. ** =20 California promoter Sam Brannan founds a resort there he calls Calistoga, a word play on "the Saratoga of California". ** During a celebration in Albion a bridge over the Erie Canal collapses. Fifteen of the crowd on the span drown. ** Future Army captain and author Willard Glazier enters the State Normal College at Albany. ** The American Line of steamboats is split in two, with one line continuing between Lewiston, New York, and Kingston, Ontario, and the other partly operating on the St. Lawrence River. ** The New York Central replaces its wood-burning engines with coal burners and puts smoking cars on its trains. Rochester The Main Street bridge gets a pavement of Medina sandstone. ** The city's Liberty Pole, weakened by severe winds, is demolished. 1860 =46eb 27 =09 Lincoln makes his Cooper Union speech in New York City, speaking on slavery and the Constitution's framers. March =09 U. S. Army headquarters in New York orders three columns to operate independently in the Kiowa-Comanche country during the summer: one from =46ort Riley, Kansas; one from Fort Kearny, Nebraska; and a third from New Mexico. Mar 19 =09 Elizabeth Cady Stanton addresses a joint session of the state's legislature on the subject of women's suffrage. Apr 23 =09 The Democratic National Convention meets at Charleston, South Carolina. Among those in attendance is New York State railroad executive Dean Richmond. May 9 =09 The Constitutional Union Party meets in Baltimore, nominating Tennessee's John Bell and Massachusetts' Edward Everett. Dean Richmond attends. Jun 9 =09 <italic>Malaeska: The Indian Wife of the White Hunter</italic>, goes on sale in New York City, the first of Irwin P. Beadle's Dime Novel Series, and the first of the genre, written by Mrs. Ann Sophia Stevens. Jul 1 =09 Inventor Charles Goodyear, 59, dies in New York City. August =09 William Tecumseh Sherman, now a superintendent and professor of engineering at the Louisiana Seminary of Learning and Military Academy, travels to Lancaster, Ohio, Washington, and New York to purchase supplies and 200 muskets for student drills at the school. Aug 4 =09 =46inancier Harrison Durand, brother of lawyer John Ewing Durand, is born in Rochester. Sep 5 =09 Enrico Farini walks across Niagara Falls on a tightrope above the cataract, with a washing machine, does his laundry. Sep 7 =09 Painter Grandma Moses (Anna Mary Robertson Moses) is born in Greenwich, New York. Oct 11 =09 A parade held in New York City for the Prince of Wales draws 200,000 people. Oct 12 =09 A ball is given at the Academy of Music for the Prince of Wales. Part of the temporary dance floor collapses. Oct 13 =09 The Prince of Wales is photographed by Matthew Brady. Nov 7 =09 The William T. Coleman Line's ship <italic>Racer</italic> is launched, to be used for the New York-San Francisco trade. Nov 12 =09 The New York stock market experiences heavy trading and a sharp price drop. Dec 18 =09 Composer Edward Alexander MacDowell is born in New York City. City Matthew Brady opens his National Portrait Gallery on Broadway and Tenth Street. ** James Wrigley begins publishing music on Chatham Street (Park Row). ** A tenement fire on Elm Street kills twenty people. New laws will be soon passed requiring fire escapes. ** The Connecticut-built clipper ship<italic>Andrew Jackson </italic>breaks 1858's New York to San Francisco record, making the trip in 89 days and 4 hours. State The foreign-born population passes 1,000,000 - 498,000 of them Irish and 256,000 German. ** The New York State court of appeals, deliberating in the Lemmon slave case, rules that the state determines the status of all persons in its jurisdiction and can declare blacks to be free men. ** Angelica is made a half-shire town. ** R. P. Smith of Syracuse publishes J. H. French's <italic>Gazetteer of the State f New York</italic>. ** Jonathan Goble, a naval marine on Perry's 1852-1854 voyage to Japan, returns there as the first Baptist missionary. ** Albany's population reaches 62,000. ** The New York Central adds restaurant (dining) cars to its trains. Rochester The Rochester Historical Society is founded. ** The first Italian immigrant arrives in the city, an unnamed laborer. ** Area congressmen advocate ending the trade reciprocity treaty with Canada. =20 ** The city's second Liberty Pole is erected. ** Sixty trains a day leave the city.</smaller></fontfamily> David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor </excerpt><<<<<<<< From [log in to unmask] Tue May 13 16:51:42 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from eagle1.eaglenet.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id QAA10349; Tue, 13 May 1997 16:51:11 -0400 Received: from eagle1 by eagle1.eaglenet.com (NX5.67f2/NX3.0M) id AA05347; Tue, 13 May 97 16:52:24 -0400 Date: Tue, 13 May 1997 16:52:22 -0400 (EDT) From: Phlete Teachout <[log in to unmask]> X-Sender: fteachou@eagle1 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: Question In-Reply-To: <v03007800af9cfe49f66f@[207.50.130.95]> Message-Id: <Pine.NXT.3.95.970513164826.5155A-100000@eagle1> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 458 On Mon, 12 May 1997, David Minor wrote: > Pat, > > At his point most back issues are not generally available but I will add > you to the list for future issues. David, With the exception of the 1760s, I believe I have all the timeline messages. Do you need copies? Regards, - fleet - P. R. "Fleet" Teachout [log in to unmask] http://www.eaglenet.com/fteachou/ From [log in to unmask] Wed May 14 19:42:04 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from pimaia2w.prodigy.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id TAA13252; Wed, 14 May 1997 19:42:03 -0400 Received: from mime3.prodigy.com (mime3.prodigy.com [192.168.253.27]) by pimaia2w.prodigy.com (8.6.10/8.6.9) with ESMTP id LAA36536 for <[log in to unmask]>; Wed, 14 May 1997 11:41:08 -0400 Received: (from root@localhost) by mime3.prodigy.com (8.6.10/8.6.9) id LAA40198 for [log in to unmask]; Wed, 14 May 1997 11:37:30 -0400 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> X-Mailer: Prodigy Internet GW(v0.9beta) - ae01dm04sc03 From: [log in to unmask] ( BERTRAND K MACPHERSON) Date: Wed, 14 May 1997 11:37:30, -0500 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: David Minor content-length: 485 By all means keep sending material from David Minor. He has done a marvelous job for all of us. I have saved all of his lists and I stay on this list chiefly because of material like his. I am interested mainly on the history of western New York, particularly Genesee County where my ancestors went before the War of 1812. New York's involvement in that fracas would be an interesting project for a historian on this list. Sincerely, Bertrand Macpherson, [log in to unmask] From [log in to unmask] Wed May 14 21:40:50 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from emout09.mail.aol.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id VAA14309; Wed, 14 May 1997 21:40:49 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: (from root@localhost) by emout09.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id VAA14784; Wed, 14 May 1997 21:41:52 -0400 (EDT) Date: Wed, 14 May 1997 21:41:52 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] (davidminor) cc: [log in to unmask] Subject: NYNY content-length: 143 Hi David, I second the motion. Your postings should be somewhere that we can all reread them. I really enjoy reading the postings. Les Buell From [log in to unmask] Thu May 15 08:54:46 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from emout11.mail.aol.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id IAA15609; Thu, 15 May 1997 08:54:45 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: (from root@localhost) by emout11.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id IAA13189 for [log in to unmask]; Thu, 15 May 1997 08:55:49 -0400 (EDT) Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 08:55:49 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Job Posting P/T Archivist NYC content-length: 420 Architectural history firm seeks archivist to work with architectural drawings, photographs - cataloguing, developing databases, some conservation; 10-15 hours a week, $15/hour. Sunny, messy office - bring your dog. Write or e-mail only, please, and be sure to include your _specific_ computer skills and length in NYC, to: Christopher Gray Office for Metropolitan History 246 West 80th Street New York City 10024 From [log in to unmask] Thu May 15 10:22:52 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from MAIL.NYSED.GOV by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id KAA16368; Thu, 15 May 1997 10:22:51 -0400 Received: from DOMAIN1-Message_Server by MAIL.NYSED.GOV with Novell_GroupWise; Thu, 15 May 1997 10:24:44 -0400 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> X-Mailer: Novell GroupWise 4.1 Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 10:23:26 -0400 From: William Evans <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Getting Previous Postings Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline content-length: 388 All previous postings to NYHIST-L are available by a fairly simple method. They are arranged by year and month - not by subject. Address: [log in to unmask] Message: get nyhist-l log<last two digts of year and two digest format for month> Thus if you wanted the February 1996 postings to NYHIST-L you would issue the command get nyhist-l log9602 Bill Evans for NYHIST-L From [log in to unmask] Thu May 15 22:47:57 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from emout02.mail.aol.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id WAA18430; Thu, 15 May 1997 22:47:56 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: (from root@localhost) by emout02.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id WAA11848 for [log in to unmask]; Thu, 15 May 1997 22:48:59 -0400 (EDT) Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 22:48:59 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] cc: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: Civil War Surgeon content-length: 541 Some questions to ask yourself about your Civil War medical ancestor. 1. What state did he serve from. 2. What unit did he serve with. If you have the answers to these questions, check with the state and National Archives for information that maybe of assistance. You might also try writing to: The Society of Civil War Surgeons Inc. Peter J. D'Onofrio, President' 243 Bristol Drive S.W. Reynoldsburg, Ohio 43068-9653 If you can give me a bit more information about your ancestor, I may be able to give you more assistance. Les Buell From [log in to unmask] Fri May 16 16:10:31 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from emout05.mail.aol.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id QAA20592; Fri, 16 May 1997 16:10:30 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: (from root@localhost) by emout05.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id QAA23144 for [log in to unmask]; Fri, 16 May 1997 16:11:36 -0400 (EDT) Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:11:36 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: NYNY content-length: 422 In a message dated 97-05-15 10:08:29 EDT, you write: << I second the motion. Your postings should be somewhere that we can all reread them. I really enjoy reading the postings. Les Buell >> As a transplanted NewYorker add my vote to having the list posted 'somewhere'. I made the unforgivable error in deleting the earlier lists and now would very much like to be able to retrieve them. Chuck V. [log in to unmask] From [log in to unmask] Sat May 17 13:13:16 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id NAA24239; Sat, 17 May 1997 13:13:15 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.68] (dialup58.roc-tc1.eznet.net [207.50.130.68]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id MAA26995 for <[log in to unmask]>; Sat, 17 May 1997 12:51:30 -0400 Message-Id: <v03007803afa398a9a358@[207.50.130.45]> In-Reply-To: <Pine.NXT.3.95.970513164826.5155A-100000@eagle1> References: <v03007800af9cfe49f66f@[207.50.130.95]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 12:20:28 -0500 To: [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: Question content-length: 898 Fleet, I have them all, thanks, and have been sending out individual copies to people when time has allowed. There's a good possibility I may have a home for them on someone else's server quite soon. Then you can pick up the 1760s. Do you have the ones previous to those? Stay tuned, and thanks for the offer. David >On Mon, 12 May 1997, David Minor wrote: > >> Pat, >> >> At his point most back issues are not generally available but I will add >> you to the list for future issues. > > >David, With the exception of the 1760s, I believe I have all the timeline >messages. Do you need copies? > >Regards, > - fleet - > P. R. "Fleet" Teachout > [log in to unmask] > http://www.eaglenet.com/fteachou/ > David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Tue May 20 00:31:39 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id AAA27188; Tue, 20 May 1997 00:31:38 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.30] (dialup20.roc-tc1.eznet.net [207.50.130.30]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id AAA07524; Tue, 20 May 1997 00:03:50 -0400 Message-Id: <v03007800afa6dc6147c9@[207.50.130.13]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Date: Tue, 20 May 1997 00:01:11 -0500 To: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: NYNY 1861-1864 Cc: [log in to unmask] content-length: 16784 <bold><fontfamily><param>Geneva</param>1861</fontfamily></bold><fontfamily><= param>Geneva</param> Jan 5 =09 The merchant ship <italic>Star of the West</italic> departs from New York City with troops and supplies for Fort Sumter. Jan 6 =09 New York City mayor Fernando Wood proposes that the city should declare itself free and neutral if the Union should dissolve. Jan 12 =09 The <italic>Star of the West</italic> returns to New York. ** =20 Pro-Union sympathizers break up an abolitionist meeting in Rochester. Jan 18 =09 Vassar Female College is founded in Poughkeepsie. Inventor and artist Samuel Finley Breese Morse is one of the founders. =46ebruary=09 Lincoln passes through Westfield, stops to see Grace Bedell, the little girl who suggested last year that he grow a beard, advice he has taken. Apr 15 =09 John F. Rand of Batavia is the first to volunteer for the Union Army. Apr 25 =09 Elizabeth Blackwell assembles 92 New York City society women at the Infirmiry for Women and Children, to organize a meeting of prospective nurses, to become the Women's Central Association for Relief. June<bold> =09 </bold>Henry Adams serves as foreign correspondent for <italic>The New York Times.</italic> ** George Armstrong Custer graduates last in his class at West Point. Jun 6 =09 The second <italic>Maid of the Mist</italic> runs into the Niagara rapids to avoid creditors. July =09 The first recorded test drilling for petroleum in New York State is performed in the town of Rushford. This test and another later in the year in Olean yield nothing. October =09 Union staff officer Patrick Henry O'Rorke, an assistant engineer at the Washington defenses, is transferred to the South Carolian coast. Oct 4 =09 Painter-sculptor Frederick Remington is born in Canton, New York. ** Baptist clergyman and theologian Walter Rauschenbusch is born in Rochester. Oct 24 =09 The first transcontinental telegraph is completed by Western Union, linking New York and San Francisco. Nov 16 =09 The Christian Commission, to aid soldiers, is founded in New York City. Dec 30 =09 New York City banks suspend specie payment - no redemption of paper money for coinage. City Republican George Opdyke defeats Mozart Democrat and former mayor =46ernando Wood and Tammany Democrat C. Godfrey Gunther to become mayor, from 1862-1864. ** Griffith Thomas' Mortimer Building is built at 22nd Street and Broadway. ** The Freedman's Relief association is founded to assist recently-freed slaves, with chapters in Boston, New York and Philadelphia. State The Lake Ontario steamboats <italic>Northerner</italic> and <italic>New York</italic> are put into Atlantic coastal service. ** Philip Church, first judge of Allegany County, dies and is buried in Angelica's Until the Dawn cemetery. ** Olean's first oil refinery is built. ** French vintner Charles D. Champlin founds the Pleasant Valley Wine Company near Hammondsport, the first winery in the area. ** Oswego State College is founded. ** Businessman Ezra Cornell of Westchester Landing is elected to the state legislature. ** Batavia clubwoman Kate Fisher (McCool) is born in Ontario, Canada. ** William Almon Wheeler of Malone is elected to the U. S. House of Representatives. ** Patrick Henry O'Rorke graduates at the top of his class, in the year's second class. Rochester H. A. Palmer builds a private market on Front Street, through to Mill Street, completing the line of buildings on the Street. ** The University of Rochester moves to property on the former Azariah Boody farm. ** Lawyer-anthropologist Lewis Henry Morgan is elected to the state assembly. ** The city annexes more land for Mt. Hope Cemetery, increasing the its own area to 8.04 square miles. <bold>1862</bold> January =09 Henry Adams resigns as foreign correspondent of <italic>The New York Times.</italic> ** The average gold price of the greenback dollar is 98 cents. Jan 24 =09 Novelist Edith Newbold Jones (Wharton) is born in New York City. Jan 30 =09 Engineer John Ericsson's ironclad, the <italic>USS Monitor, </italic>is launched at Greenport, Long Island. =46eb 9 =09 Iranian expert Abraham Valentine Williams Jackson is born in New York City. =46eb 19 =09 =46inal outfitting on the <italic>USS Monitor</italic> is completed. =46eb 20 =09 The <italic>USS Monitor</italic> is handed over to the U. S. Navy. =20 ** Portland, Maine, slave trader Nathaniel Gordon is hanged fpr piracy in New York City's Tombs Prison, after an appeal to Lincoln is turned down - the last white executed for the crime. Mar 6 =09 The <italic>USS Monitor</italic> sails out of New York City. May 15 =09 Union Grounds, the first fenced-in baseball park, opens in Brooklyn. May 21 =09 Minstrel show pioneer Edwin Pearce Christy, mentally deranged, commits suicide by throwing himself from a window in his New York City house. Jun 16 =09 Adah Isaacs Menken opens in <italic>Mazeppa</italic> at New York City's New Bowery Theater. Jun 23 =09 Lincoln leaves for New York State to confer with the retired Winfield Scott. Jun 25 =09 Lincoln returns to Washington. Jul 9 =09 Union staff officer Patrick Henry O'Rorke marries his childhood sweetheart Clara Wadsworth Bishop, in Rochester's St. Bridget Church. Jul 22 =09 The Prairie Motor departs Nebraska City for a trip to Denver, Colorado. It breaks down several miles out of town, requiring inventor Joseph Brown to return to New York for a spare part. Jul 24 =09 =46ormer president Martin Van Buren dies at Lindenwald, in Kinderhook. Aug 16 =09 Joseph Brown wires Nebraska City from New York, informing his engineers that wartime demands on factories will delay the manufacture of the needed spare part. Aug 18 =09 The Miltary Committee of Monroe County announces the formation of a new infantry regiment, 1,000 men strong, toward a planned U. S. draft of 1,500 men from the county.=20 Aug 19 =09 Monroe County Board of Supervisors announces a bonus of $100 to enlistees, bringing the total of enlistment bounty money up to $252.=20 Aug 20 =09 Horace Greeley, in the <italic>New York Tribune</italic>, demands that Lincoln to free the slaves. Aug 22 =09 The Monroe County Military Committee appoints their own Louis Ernst, a local hardware store owner, as lieutenant-colonel. Aug 26 =09 The first company of the Rochester Regiment, out of Brockport, goes into camp at Camp Fitz John Porter, on the banks of the Genesee River in Rochester. Aug 29 =09 A company of mostly German immigrants arrives at Camp Fitz John Porter. Sep 1 =09 The enlargement of the Erie Canal, to carry 270-ton boats, is completed. Cost - $31,000,000. Sep 3 =09 All ten companies of Rochester's regiment have arrived in camp. Sep 5 The Rochester regiment learns it's been designated the 140th NY Regiment. Sep 7 =09 Approximately 15,000 civilians make a Sunday visit to Camp Fitz John Porter. Sep 8 =09 The 140th NY Regiment elects Patrick Henry O'Rorke as its colonel. Nov 11 =09 The city of Rochester bans many public amusements, including any form of gambling, including shuffle board, card playing, billiards and bowling, where money or liquor can be won. Even kite flying and swimming in the canal are outlawed between 6 AM and 8 PM.=20 Nov 28 =09 Editor Horace Greeley dies in Pleasantville. Dec 18 =09 The New York Society for the Relief of the Ruptured and Crippled organizes the first orthopedic hospital in the U. S. City The former Customs House Building on Wall Street becomes the U. S. Subtreasury Building. ** Construction begins on the South Cliff Battery defenses on Staten Island. ** Republican John Opdyke is inaugurated as mayor. ** A message is received from Captain Semmes of the Confederate raider <italic>Alabama</italic> that he will raid the city. His plans never come off. ** Quakers found the =46riends Employment Society, to train young women to work in hospitals and other jobs. ** The New York <italic>Tribune</italic> fires managing editor Charles Anderson Dana, for his pro Civil War views. =20 ** The first open-hearth steel furnace is installed in New York City. ** The first children's clinic is established at the University of the City of New York. ** Baseball pitcher Jim Creighton, of the Brooklyn Excelsiors, ruptures his spleen while playing, and dies in his home. State The Atlantic and Great Western Railroad (later the Western New York and Pennsylvania branch of the Erie Railroad) reaches the Bucktooth (Salamanca) area. ** Brigadier General John Henry Martindale returns to Batavia to recuperate from typhoid fever contracted in the Peninsula Campaign. He's given a large public reception. ** =20 Calvert Vaux's Ashcroft in Geneva is completed. ** Governor Charles Evans Hughes is born in Glens Falls. Rochester The city relinquishes the part of Mt. Hope Cemetery it annexed last year, dropping the total square milage back to 7.95. <bold>1863</bold> January The greenback dollar averages 69 cents on the New York market. =46eb 10 =09 P. T. Barnum midget star Charles S. Stratton (General Tom Thumb) is married to midget Lavinia Warren in a very public New York City ceremony. Mar 21 =09 Elderly Union major general Edwin Vote Sumner dies in Syracuse. May 1 =09 The New York Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled Children, opens in New York City. Jun 3 =09 New York City mayor, Democrat Fernando Wood, calls a meeting at Cooper Union, to pray for peace. Jun 26 =09 U. S. rear admiral Andrew H. Foote dies in New York City. Jul 2 Patrick Henry O'Rorke is killed at Gettysburg while defending Little Round Top. Jul 4 =09 The Lake Ontario steamboat <italic>Ontario</italic> makes four excursions out of Charlotte. Jul 13 =09 =46our days of riots break out in New York City when 50,000 poor demonstrate against the conscription laws. ** Smaller draft riots break out in Boston, Massachusetts, Troy, New York, Portsmouth New Hampshire, Wooster, Ohio and Rutland, Vermont. Jul 15 =09 New York's draft riots begin to subside. A seven-year-old black boy is clubbed to death. Jul 16 =09 New York's remaining riots are put down by Federal troops on their way from Gettysburg. Over 100 buildings have been burned, hundreds are dead and over 70 blacks have been murdered and lynched. Jul 20 =09 New York City merchants plan aid for black victims of the rioting. Aug 3 =09 Governor Horatio Seymour asks Lincoln to suspend the draft in the state. Aug 11 =09 Lincoln writes to Governor Seymour, defending his draft policy. Aug 19 =09 The draft is resumed in New York City. September Russian fleets arrive in New York and San Francisco for visits. Oct 31 =09 New York senator William Gibbs McAdoo is born near Marietta, Georgia. Dec 7 =09 Jerome A. Clark, Jr., 18, nephew of General John Henry Martindale, enlists at Bergen. City Central Park is laid out. ** The collections of the American Museum are sold. ** Honoring the terms of a relative's bequest, builder Stuyvesant Rutherford changes his name to Rutherford Stuyvesant. ** The South Cliff Battery defenses on State Island are completed. ** Actor Edwin Booth becomes manager of the Winter Garden Theater. ** William Marcy Tweed becomes Street Commissioner. ** Merchant C. Godfrey Gunther, running on the Independent Democratic ticket, defeats Tammany Democrat Francis I. A. Boole and Republican Orison Blunt, to become mayor. ** The New York Stock and Exchange Board changes its name to the New York Stock Exchange. =20 ** Mailmen form the first union for Federal workers. ** =20 Novelist Herman Melville moves here from Massachusetts. ** Black songwriter Gussie Lord Davis is born. ** James A. Garfield and former mayor Fernando Wood are elected to the U. S. House of Representatives. ** Collis P. Huntington travels to New York City to try and raise funds for the Central Pacific. ** Cornelius Vanderbilt gains control of the New York and Harlem Railroad. ** =20 =46inancier and former congressman Russell Sage moves here from Washington, D. C. ** Charles Francis Gounod's <italic>Faust is</italic> produced in London, Dublin, and New York. State Horatio Seymour is elected governor for a second (non-consecutive) term. ** Efforts are begun to enlarge Bucktooth (Salamanca) from swampland. ** Mumford's Presbyterian "church of petrified wood", so called because of marking in the stone, is built. ** A Batavia msuic teacher by the name of Mrs. Bryan begins giving lessons in the building once used as the Holland Lsnd Office. ** Naturalist John Burroughs visits the Adirondacks. ** John Frederick Kinnsett paints <italic>View near Cozzens' Hotel from West Point</italic>. =20 ** Erie Canal tonnage reaches 118,609. ** Oliver Charlick is named president of the Long Island Railroad (LIRR). ** Governor William Sulzer is born in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Rochester Patrick Barry's streetcar company establishes its second line, along Mount Hope Avenue. ** Geologist Ferdinand Hayden is awarded an honorary A. M. degree by the University of Rochester. <bold>1864</bold> January =09 Sixty-one Confederate dollars are now worth the equivalent of one U. S. dollar in gold. Jan 3 =09 Irish-born New York City archbishop John Joseph Hughes dies at the age of 66. He will be succeeded by Albany bishop John McCloskey. Jan 13 =09 Songwriter Stephen Collins Foster, 37, dies in New York City's Bellevue Hospital, in poverty. =46eb 5 =09 Jerome A. Clark, Jr., nephew of General John Henry Martindale, joins the 8th New York Heavy Artillery at Fort Federal Hill in Maryland. Apr 14 =09 A Sanitary Commission Fair in New York City raises $2,000,000 in three weeks for the war effort. General McClellan's wife, insulted during a straw vote pitting Grant and her husband, soon moves to Europe. May 18 =09 The <italic>Journal of Commerce</italic> and the New York <italic>World</italic> publish untrue reports of a new troop call-up by Lincoln. The editors later claim to have been taken in by a fraud. June =09 Art collector Thomas Jefferson Bryan moves his collection to the New-York Historical Society. ** The French paddlewheeler <italic>Washington</italic> arrives in New York City to begin service between New York and the English Channel ports. Jun 23 Jerome A. Clark, Jr. is wounded in the left shoulder, at Petersburg, Virginia. Jun 24 =09 Jerome A. Clark, Jr. dies of peritonitis and hepatitus. Jul 17 Horace Greeley, with Lincoln's permission, meets at Niagara Falls with alleged peace Confederate commissioners. Aug 5 =09 The Wade-Davis Manifesto is published in the New York <italic>Tribune</italic>, attacking Lincoln for his reconstruction proposals. September Union general John Henry Martindale retires due to ill health, returns to Rochester. Oct 14 =09 New Orleans mayor Martin Behrman is born in New York City. Nov 2 =09 Rumors begin reaching New York City, warning of arson attempts on the city on Election Day. Nov 25 =09 Confederate spies set 19 separate fires in New York City, including many in hotels, in revenge for Union activities in the Shenandoah Valley. Very little real damage is done. City =46rederick A. Barnard becomes president of Columbia University. ** =20 Recent immigrant Samuel Gompers joins the cigar maker's union. ** =20 Brooklyn Stars baseball pitcher William Cummings throws the first recorded curve ball. State Churchville's Smith House hotel is built by Hanford Smith of New York City. ** Seth Green starts a commercial fish hatchery in Caledonia. ** The Seneca chief Copperhead dies in the Town of Caneadea, claiming to be 120 years old. ** An oil company is founded in the Town of Freedom. ** The S. Howes company is founded in Silver Creek to manufacture grain cleaning machinery. **=20 Watkins peach grower William Wickham, Jr. dies, at the age of 80. =20 ** Grapes are planted in the Portland area of Chautauqua County. =20 ** John C. Morrissey opens a race track at Saratoga. ** =20 Batavia's Dean Richmond, vice-president of the New York Central System railroads, is made president of the line. ** Cornelius Vanderbilt takes over the Hudson River Railroad. Elmira A camp for Confederate prisoners is set up. ** The city is incorporated. Rochester City Hospital opens. </fontfamily> David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Tue May 20 11:16:19 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from VAXC.HOFSTRA.EDU by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id LAA28436; Tue, 20 May 1997 11:16:18 -0400 Received: from vaxc.hofstra.edu by vaxc.hofstra.edu (PMDF V5.0-8 #15259) id <[log in to unmask]> for [log in to unmask]; Tue, 20 May 1997 11:17:13 -0400 (EDT) Date: Tue, 20 May 1997 11:17:13 -0400 (EDT) From: "NATALIE A. NAYLOR" <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: NYNY 1861-1864 To: [log in to unmask] Message-id: <[log in to unmask]> X-VMS-To: IN%"[log in to unmask]" X-VMS-Cc: NUCNZN MIME-version: 1.0 Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT content-length: 330 David Minor's chronological list has the Monitor built in "Greenport"; it was in Greenpoint -- then a section of the city of Brooklyn (not part of NYC until 1898); it was built at the Continental Iron Works and sailed out of NY Harbor. (Greenport was also a shipbuilding port but is on the north fork of eastern Long Island.) From [log in to unmask] Tue May 20 18:11:21 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from eagle1.eaglenet.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id SAA29300; Tue, 20 May 1997 18:11:20 -0400 Received: from eagle1 by eagle1.eaglenet.com (NX5.67f2/NX3.0M) id AA28651; Tue, 20 May 97 18:13:09 -0400 Date: Tue, 20 May 1997 18:13:09 -0400 (EDT) From: Phlete Teachout <[log in to unmask]> X-Sender: fteachou@eagle1 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: Question In-Reply-To: <v03007803afa398a9a358@[207.50.130.45]> Message-Id: <Pine.NXT.3.95.970520181038.27371D-100000@eagle1> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 691 On Sat, 17 May 1997, David Minor wrote: > I have them all, thanks, and have been sending out individual copies to > people when time has allowed. There's a good possibility I may have a home > for them on someone else's server quite soon. Then you can pick up the > 1760s. Wonderful! > Do you have the ones previous to those? Stay tuned, and thanks for the > offer. To the best of my knowledge, the 1760s are all that I am missing. I believe your series started at 1640. And you are most welcome! Regards, - fleet - P. R. "Fleet" Teachout [log in to unmask] http://www.eaglenet.com/fteachou/ From [log in to unmask] Wed May 21 14:46:42 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from scls1.suffolk.lib.ny.us by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id OAA01927; Wed, 21 May 1997 14:46:39 -0400 Received: from bookworm.suffolk.lib.ny.us (bookworm.suffolk.lib.ny.us [199.173.91.81]) by scls1.suffolk.lib.ny.us (8.6.12/8.6.6) with ESMTP id NAA02001 for <[log in to unmask]>; Wed, 21 May 1997 13:54:14 -0400 Received: from localhost by bookworm.suffolk.lib.ny.us (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id NAA03009; Wed, 21 May 1997 13:55:34 -0400 Date: Wed, 21 May 1997 13:55:33 -0400 (EDT) From: Burrows <[log in to unmask]> X-Sender: eburrows@bookworm To: [log in to unmask] Subject: D.T. Valentine Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.95.970521134911.1049A-100000@bookworm> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 323 I would be grateful for information on the life and/or work of David Thomas Valentine (1801-69), editor of the Manuals of the Corporation of the City of New York (1841-), aka "Valentine's Manual," as well as author of the History of the City of New York (1853). Ted Burrows Department of History Brooklyn College CUNY From [log in to unmask] Wed May 21 15:12:38 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from freenet.npiec.on.ca by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id PAA02030; Wed, 21 May 1997 15:12:37 -0400 Received: from localhost (pwarwick@localhost) by freenet.npiec.on.ca (8.8.5/8.8.5) with SMTP id PAA03137; Wed, 21 May 1997 15:09:01 -0400 (EST) Date: Wed, 21 May 1997 15:09:01 -0400 (EST) From: Peter Warwick <[log in to unmask]> To: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> cc: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: NYNY 1861-1864 In-Reply-To: <v03007800afa6dc6147c9@[207.50.130.13]> Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 521 Just a correction to this post. The Maid Of The Mist II was not taken through the Whirlpool Rapids to escape creditors. It was part of the condition of sale that the boat be taken down the St.Lawrence to tide water. That meant taking the rapids trip. The Captain of the Maid, incidentally, never went to sea again and died two years after the trip. Peter D.A. Warwick St.Catharines, Ontario, Canada Bike Through The Garden Of Canada [log in to unmask] writer/researcher URL: http://www.npiec.on.ca/~pwarwick/ From [log in to unmask] Thu May 22 13:01:55 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from emout15.mail.aol.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id NAA04394; Thu, 22 May 1997 13:01:54 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: (from root@localhost) by emout15.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id NAA28346; Thu, 22 May 1997 13:03:05 -0400 (EDT) Date: Thu, 22 May 1997 13:03:05 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: D.T. Valentine content-length: 661 Ted, You wrote: << I would be grateful for information on the life and/or work of David Thomas Valentine (1801-69), editor of the Manuals of the Corporation of the City of New York (1841-), aka "Valentine's Manual," as well as author of the History of the City of New York (1853). Ted Burrows Department of History Brooklyn College CUNY>> Have you by any chance tried the NY Genealogical & Biographical Society? Valentine's Manual takes up a nice amount of shelf space over there. Don't know if they have anything on DTV himself, but I find the NYGBS one of the finest resources we've got and a great first shot. All the best, Leslie Corn NYC Researcher From [log in to unmask] Thu May 22 20:59:19 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id UAA05752; Thu, 22 May 1997 20:59:14 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.81] (dialup07.roc-tc2.eznet.net [207.50.130.81]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id UAA22037 for <[log in to unmask]>; Thu, 22 May 1997 20:49:39 -0400 Message-Id: <v03007801afaaa84079a6@[207.50.130.81]> In-Reply-To: <Pine.SOL.3.95.970521134911.1049A-100000@bookworm> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Thu, 22 May 1997 20:51:02 -0500 To: [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: D.T. Valentine content-length: 567 Ted, David Minor See the brief article on Valentine in The ERncyclopedia of New York City, if you haven't done so already. > >I would be grateful for information on the life and/or work of David >Thomas Valentine (1801-69), editor of the Manuals of the Corporation of >the City of New York (1841-), aka "Valentine's Manual," as well as author >of the History of the City of New York (1853). > >Ted Burrows >Department of History >Brooklyn College CUNY David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Thu May 22 20:59:23 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id UAA05761; Thu, 22 May 1997 20:59:21 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.81] (dialup07.roc-tc2.eznet.net [207.50.130.81]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id UAA21317 for <[log in to unmask]>; Thu, 22 May 1997 20:41:21 -0400 Message-Id: <v03007800afaaa6700c6f@[207.50.130.29]> In-Reply-To: <[log in to unmask]> References: <v03007800afa6dc6147c9@[207.50.130.13]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Thu, 22 May 1997 20:42:42 -0500 To: [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: NYNY 1861-1864 content-length: 672 Correction noted and made. >Just a correction to this post. The Maid Of The Mist II was not taken >through the Whirlpool Rapids to escape creditors. It was part of the >condition of sale that the boat be taken down the St.Lawrence to tide >water. That meant taking the rapids trip. The Captain of the Maid, >incidentally, never went to sea again and died two years after the trip. > >Peter D.A. Warwick >St.Catharines, Ontario, Canada >Bike Through The Garden Of Canada >[log in to unmask] >writer/researcher >URL: http://www.npiec.on.ca/~pwarwick/ David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Fri May 23 08:30:34 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from pppmail.appliedtheory.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id IAA06369; Fri, 23 May 1997 08:30:29 -0400 Received: from behavior by pppmail.appliedtheory.com (8.6.12/3.1.090690-Applied Theory Communications) id IAA17916; Fri, 23 May 1997 08:35:13 -0400 Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 20:36:45 -0400 From: "Robert V. Shear" <[log in to unmask]> Reply-To: [log in to unmask] Organization: NY History Net (http://www.NYHistory.com) X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: The Harriet Tubman Home Page Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit content-length: 1039 Each year the Harriet Tubman Home in Auburn, NY celebrates the legacy of this famous 19th century hero on Memorial Day Weekend. Tonight's dinner is at 7:30 PM, and tickets may still be available. Tomorrow (Saturday) morning there will be a service at Tubman's grave at 10 AM, and a program at the Home following. Information about events at the Harriet Tubman Home, as well as her life, may be found at the new Harriet Tubman Home Page (http://www.NYHistory.com/harriettubman). This website is being demonstrated for the first time at this evening's dinner. Like the Gerrit Smith website (http://www.NYHistory.com/gerritsmith) it will ultimately be mirrored on a server under the control of the main sponsor. The Tubman site is through its initial development, and is ready for serious content expansion. Persons familiar with Tubman and Tubman-Related resources are encouraged to review the site, and to suggest any additional content or links. Comments to either myself or the Home are very much appreciated. Thanks. Bob Shear From [log in to unmask] Fri May 23 14:42:30 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from MAIL.NYSED.GOV by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id OAA07574; Fri, 23 May 1997 14:42:29 -0400 Received: from DOMAIN1-Message_Server by MAIL.NYSED.GOV with Novell_GroupWise; Fri, 23 May 1997 14:44:34 -0400 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> X-Mailer: Novell GroupWise 4.1 Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 14:43:37 -0400 From: Phil Lord <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: "Jackson Whites" Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline content-length: 284 A question has arisen about the attribution of this term to an isolated group of people who lived in the Ramapo Valley area after the Revolution. If anyone has citations to historical research on the subject, please pass them along. Philip Lord, Jr. NYS Museum [log in to unmask] From [log in to unmask] Sun May 25 16:16:32 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from pppmail.appliedtheory.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id QAA10993; Sun, 25 May 1997 16:16:30 -0400 Received: from behavior by pppmail.appliedtheory.com (8.6.12/3.1.090690-Applied Theory Communications) id QAA09528; Sun, 25 May 1997 16:21:15 -0400 Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> Date: Mon, 26 May 1997 04:22:53 -0400 From: "Robert V. Shear" <[log in to unmask]> Reply-To: [log in to unmask] Organization: NY History Net (http://www.NYHistory.com) X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.0 (Win95; I) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Additions to NY History Net Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit content-length: 501 Additional content and links have been added to the NY History Net website: Featured Sites: MAY: The Harriet Tubman Home Page (described in previous message) JUNE: Conference on NYS History Lake Ontario Archives Conference NY Government Sites: NYS Department of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation A new site with a regional map linked to lists (as yet incomplete) of state historic sites. Also a one-page description of the Historic Preservation Program. Bob Shear From [log in to unmask] Sun May 25 20:43:22 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from emout11.mail.aol.com by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id UAA11358; Sun, 25 May 1997 20:43:21 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] Received: (from root@localhost) by emout11.mail.aol.com (8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0) id UAA21142; Sun, 25 May 1997 20:44:36 -0400 (EDT) Date: Sun, 25 May 1997 20:44:36 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] cc: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] Subject: Dansville Seminary content-length: 894 Here is some material for you relative to the Seminary. Please let me know what you find. I am interested in one of the graduates of the Seminary, Phebe Oliver, graduated 1862. Thanks Les Buell e-mail [log in to unmask] "In 1848, Williams C. Rogers moved a store building from Beachvill to the present grounds of the Academy, and established therein a select high school with one department. This was a priveate enterprise, and was supported by tuition fees, under the supervision of Mr. Rogers. Rev.J Strough was thr first principal. The present fine building was completed in 1852, by subscriptions and contributions, and January 28, 1853 the Rogersville Union Seminary was chartered by the Regents of the State University, who appointed........" This is from, "History of Steuben County, New York," by Prof. W.W. Clayton, 1879. I can scan the pages if you wish and send you copies. Les From [log in to unmask] Mon May 26 11:24:50 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mail1.eznet.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id LAA12246; Mon, 26 May 1997 11:24:46 -0400 Received: from [207.50.130.132] (dialup58.roc-tc2.eznet.net [207.50.130.132]) by mail1.eznet.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id LAA08352; Mon, 26 May 1997 11:10:34 -0400 Message-Id: <v03007800afaf64c4a7ba@[207.50.130.25]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Date: Mon, 26 May 1997 11:10:15 -0500 To: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] From: David Minor <[log in to unmask]> Subject: NYNY 1865-1868 content-length: 12845 <fontfamily><param>Geneva</param>Are list members and other readers sharp or what? Barbara Fisher writes, "Horace Greely...he dies on Nov 28...in 1862 and is reincarnated...on July 17, 1864 at Niagara Falls!!!! Did I miss something?" Not much, but I did. I bumped poor old Horace off a decade too early. He died November 28, 1872. As to Natalie Naylor's post on the Monitor, she's obviously correct, the ship was built in Brooklyn. Now, on to... =20 1865 January =09 The U. S. greenback dollar is now worth only 46=A2 in gold in the New York markets. Jan 1 =09 Theologian-historian Philip Schaff dies in New York City at the age of 74. Mar 17 =09 Rochester's Genesee River floods, washing away part of the Erie Canal's banks and flooding downtown's Crossroads area. Apr 1 =09 Naturalist Louis Agassiz sails from New York City on an expedition to South America. Apr 24 =09 The assassinated Abraham Lincoln lies in state in New York's City Hall. Apr 25 =09 Lincoln's funeral procession leaves New York City, heads for Albany. Apr 27 =09 Lincoln's funeral train makes stops at Rochester and Buffalo. Jun 5 =09 Geneva diarist Josephine Matilda deZeng, 42, dies. July =09 Admiral Porter admits to the New York <italic>Herald</italic> that the U. S. Merchant Marine has all but disappeared. Aug 14 =09 Tony Pastor's Opera House<bold> </bold>(variety hall) opens in New York City. Nov 1 =09 New York State robber Wash Loomis (of the Loomis Gang) is beaten to death by vigilantes. Nov 18 =09 Mark Twain has his first story, <italic>The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County</italic>, published in the <italic>New York Sunday Press</italic>.=20 City Benjamin Altman opens a dry goods store. ** The German-American School buildings on East 52nd Street is built. ** A 4,000-man volunteer fire fighting force is replaced with steam pumpers and 583 paid firemen. ** Tammany Democrat John T. Hoffman defeats Republican Marshall O. Roberts, Mozart Democrat John Hecker and Independent Democrat and incumbent C. Godfrey Gunther, to become mayor, serving 1866-1868. ** German lawyer Henry Morganthau emigrates here. ** Edwin Lawrence Godkin begins publishing <italic>The Nation</italic>. ** Mary Mapes Dodge's <italic>Hans Brinker</italic> is published. ** The <italic>Complete Works</italic> of John Joseph Hughes, first Roman Catholic archbishop of New York, is published. ** Irish playwright Dion Boucicault's <italic>Rip Van Winkle</italic>. premieres here. State Cornell University is founded at Ithaca by Ezra Cornell and Andrew White. ** The federal government spends $25,000 to extend the Lake Ontario piers at Charlotte. ** Judge Benjamin Chamberlain donates $50,000 to build a dormitory for the Randolph Academy and =46emale Seminary, on the condition the name be changed to the Chamberlain Institute and that the trustees be chosen from the Erie Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. ** Two petroleum test holes are drilled in the Town of Freedom, providing a short-lived source of oil. ** Job Moses brings in a producing commercial oil well southwest of Olean, the first such well in the state. ** Lima journalist Henry Jarvis Raymond is elected to Congress. ** A combination herb storage building and milk house is built at the Shaker community in Watervliet. ** James Wright paints horse breeder William Rysdyk and his stallion Hambletonian. Lithographers Currier and Ives, and H. C. Eno will ctreate prints from the painting. Rochester Osmer Hulbert opens his Oyster Bay restaurant at Front and Main. **=20 The Rochester and Brighton Railway Company builds a horse-car line out Monroe Avenue to Goodman Street. ** Citizens begin agitating for a railroad line to the Pennsylvania coal fields. 1866 Jan 2 =09 Writing for a New York City magazine, Elizabeth Cady Stanton alerts women that the language of the propsed Fourteenth Amendment, refering to male inhabitants and male citizens, threatens to disenfranchise women. Jan 29 =09 Eliphalet Nott, president of Schenectady's Union College dies at the age of 92. =46ebruary=09 David M. Smith, a telegrapher in the Ellenville D & H Canal office, fails to show up for work. He's never seen alive again. Mar 7 =09 After a Fenian mass meeting in New York City threatens an invasion of Canada, 10,000 militiamen are placed under arms. Apr 16 =09 New York passes the State Normal School Act<bold>. </bold>May 8 =09 Physician-educator Charles Dettie Aaron is born in Lockport. May 10 =09 The Woman's Rights Society, meeting in New YorkCity, changes its name to the American Equal Rights Association, with Lecretia Mott as its president. May 29 =09 U. S. general Winfield Scott dies at West Point at the age of 69. =20 May 31 =09 800 Fenians under John O'Neill cross into Canada at Buffalo. They take =46ort Erie, cut telegraph lines as well as the railroad, and advance. Jun 2 =09 O'Neill's Fenians defeat two Canadian armies, the first under Alfred Booker at Ridgeway, Ontario, the second under John Stoughton Dennis, back at Fort Erie. Ten Canadians are killed and 44 wounded in the two engagements. =20 Jun 3 =09 The Fenians return to New York State, escaping the main Canadian force under George Peacocke. Jul 4 =09 =46inancier John Jay, speaking in Paris, promises to build a National Institution and Gallery of Art in the U. S. It will be founded as New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1870. Aug 27 =09 New York Central System president Dean Richmond dies at the home of Samuel Tlden on New York City's Gramercy Park. Sep 12 =09 <italic>The Black Crook</italic>, the first appearence in North America of the Europe import, burlesque, opens at Niblo's Garden in New York City. Others will soon open in the next few weeks; some will be shut down for indecency. Sep 25 =09 Jerome Racetrack opens on Long Island. Dec 3 =09 Brockport and four other New York State towns are chosen as Normal Schools sites. City Wood's Minstrels disbands. ** The city's board of health is created. ** Cholera spreads to the U. S. from Russia and Europe, killing 50,000 this year, including 2,000 here. State Benjamin Titus Roberts arrives in North Chili, where he founds Chili Seminary (Roberts Wesleyan College) - the first Free Methodist educational institution in the U. S. He buys the local tavern and closes it. ** Bergen is damaged by a fire. ** Architect Claude Fayette Bragdon is born in Port Ontario. ** Promoter William West Durant begins construction on his first Adirondacks Great Camp, Camp Pine Knot. ** Allegany County gets its first horse car line, between Fredonia and Dnkirk. ** William McKinstry, editor of the Fredonia <italic>Censor</italic>, begins a movement to get one of the state's four normal schools for the town. ** Reverend Doctor Samuel D. Burchard becomes chancellor of Le Roy's Ingham University. ** Stanford Gifford paints <italic>Twilight on Hunter Mountain</italic>. ** Samuel Colman paints <italic>Storm King on the Hudson</italic>. ** The U. S. House of Representatives censures Democrat John W. Chanier for insult to the House. ** =20 Samuel J. Tilden becomes chairman of the State Democratic Committee. Rochester James Vick buys the driving park on the city's east side t operate a seed farm on the property, which will one day become Vick Park A and Vick Park B. ** The Vacuum Oil Company is founded.** The Henry R. Brewster home on Spring Street is conveyed to the William Burke family. 1867 Mar 21 =09 Brockport Collegiate Institute disbands and the Brockport Normal and Training School is created. Apr 16 =09 The New York State legislature establishes a free public school system for the state. Apr 7 =09 Brockport Normal and Training School opens. Apr 30 =09 Incorporation papers are signed for the village of Fairport. May 9 =09 Lucretia Mott convenes a two-day convention of the Equal Rights Association in New York City. May 14 =09 New York State enacts the first tenement house law. Jul 25 =09 A New York State constitutional convention continues to deny the vote to women. Aug 13 =09 Augustin Daly's melodrama <italic>Under the Gaslight</italic> opens in New York City.=20 October =09 Stage line owner John Butterfield suffers a stroke in New York City. Oct 3 =09 Sewing machine inventor Elias Howe, 48, dies in Brooklyn. Dec 2 =09 English novelist Charles Dickens gives his first reading in New York City, drawing huge crowds. Dec 19 =09 A train plunges off a bridge and burns at Angola, killing 44 people. City The Ninth Avenue elevated railroad line goes into service, the first in the U. S. ** A pedestrian overpass is built over Broadway, south of City Hall. ** Pomeroy Tucker's <italic>Origin, Rise and Progress of Mormonism</italic> is published. ** Paris, France, hosts a second International Exposition. The new lenses by Augustin Jean Fresnel are awarded a prize. A light tower containing the lenses is purchased by the U. S. for $30,000., as a beacon for the Atlantic Highlands of the Navesink, overlooking NewYork City harbor. State The State University of New York at Buffalo is founded. ** =20 Temperance leader Frances Willard brings her ailing father back to Churchville, where he dies. ** Binghamton is incorporated as a city. ** Montour fruit farmer George C. Wickham raises a $2600 crop, the largest income ever received by a single person for a fruit crop. ** Canandaigua brewers J. and A. McKechnie launch the 110-foot long sidewheeler <italic>Canandaigua</italic> on Lake Canandaigua as a passenger-freight service. Naples brothers Henry and Sales Standish launch the 120-foot steamer <italic>Ontario</italic> in competition. ** The New York State School for the Blind is established, in Batavia. ** The U. S. House of Representatives censures New York Independent John W. Hunter for insult to a representative. 1868 Mar 3 =09 P. T. Barnum's second museum burns in New York City. Apr 20 =09 Novelist Charles Dickens gives his farewell New York City reading at Steinway Hall. June =09 Cigar maker George Hull selects Iowa gypsum for the statue of a giant and ships it to Chicago. July =09 John Sturla becomes the first child born to Italian parents in Rochester. Jul 4 =09 The Democratic National Convention opens, in New York City. Jul 9 =09 The Democrats close their convention after nominating Horatio Seymour of New York, with Missouri's Francis P. Blair, Jr. as his running mate. Oct 7 =09 Cornell University is founded, in Ithaca. Andrew D. White is its first president. Oct 22 =09 The Corning Flint Glass Works begins operations in Corning. November=09 Hull's stone giant is transported by rail and wagon to Cardiff, New York, and buried on Stub Newell's farm. December=09 Western explorer Ferdinand Hayden, returned to New York City, writes up his explorations for 1868, including glowingly optimistic reports of the mineral and agricultural potential for the Colorado area. City The world's first elevated railroad goes into service in downtown Manhattan. ** T. Coman serves as acting mayor. ** Former District Attorney Abraham Oakey Hall, a Democrat, defeats Republican =46rederick A. Conking for the office of mayor's, serving 1869-1872. =20 ** Henry De Marsan's monthly two-penny New York City newspaper <italic>Henry De Marsan's Comic and Sentimental Singers' Journal </italic>begins publication. State Wells College is founded. ** William West Durant's Adirondacks Camp Pine Knot, is completed. ** Harmony Manufacturing Mill No. 3 (Mastodon) is built at Cohoes. ** The Genesee County Poor House in Bethany conatins 170 paupers. The average weekly expense is $1.32 per inmate. ** The New York State for the Blind opens in Batavia. ** Industrialist Frank J. Tone is born in Bergen. **=20 The first steamboat to use the canal, the <italic>Edward Backus</italic>, arrives in Rochester, carrying a load of coal from Ithaca. ** The U. S. House of Representatives censures Democrats E. D. Holbrook of Idaho and Fernando Wood of New York, for offensive utterance. ** Lake Ontario's American Line of steamboats sells out to Canada's Royal Mail Line. Rochester Domenico Sturla becomes the city's first Italian immigrant to apply for citizenship papers. ** The Enos Stone building is destroyed by fire and replaced by Cook's Opera House. ** High Street is renamed Caledonia Street.</fontfamily> David Minor Eagles Byte Historical Research Rochester, New York 716 264-0423 http://home.eznet.net/~dminor From [log in to unmask] Tue May 27 12:45:42 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from unix2.nysed.gov by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id MAA15666; Tue, 27 May 1997 12:45:41 -0400 Received: from test-1 by unix2.nysed.gov (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id MAA03025; Tue, 27 May 1997 12:46:56 -0400 Date: Tue, 27 May 1997 12:47:06 +0400 (EDT) From: Honor Conklin <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] cc: [log in to unmask] Subject: Jackson Whites X-Sender: [log in to unmask] Message-ID: <Pine.PCW.3.91.970527124119.10015A-100000@test-1> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 545 Two citations referring to Jackson Whites: Bedell, Cornelia F. Now and then and long ago in Rockland County, New York. New City, NY: Historical Society of Rockland County, 1968, pp. 167-169. Cohen, David Steven. The Ramapo Mountain People. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1974. Numerous pages. I haven't been following the thread so excuse the following definition but the term is a derogatory one, of controversial origin, to describe certain people, some say mixed race, in the Ramapo Mountains. Honor Conklin From [log in to unmask] Tue May 27 16:00:56 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mailsorter-2.alma.webtv.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id QAA16447; Tue, 27 May 1997 16:00:55 -0400 Received: from mailtod-103.bryant.webtv.net (mailtod-103.iap.bryant.webtv.net [207.79.35.83]) by mailsorter-2.alma.webtv.net (8.8.5/ms.graham.13may97) with ESMTP id NAA20441; Tue, 27 May 1997 13:02:12 -0700 (PDT) Received: (from production@localhost) by mailtod-103.bryant.webtv.net (8.7.5/8.7.3) id NAA07305; Tue, 27 May 1997 13:02:11 -0700 (PDT) Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> From: [log in to unmask] (Annette Harris) Date: Tue, 27 May 1997 16:02:11 -0400 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: WWII POW and DP camps Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7BIT MIME-Version: 1.0 (WebTV) content-length: 180 I am researching World War II Prisoner of War camps and Displaced Persons camps that were located in Wayne Co., NY. Anyone know where I might find any information? Annette Harris From [log in to unmask] Tue May 27 21:26:13 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from elmira.edu by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id VAA17428; Tue, 27 May 1997 21:26:13 -0400 Received: from UNKNOWN.stny.lrun.com (UNKNOWN.stny.lrun.com [204.210.131.14]) by mcgraw.elmira.edu (NTMail 3.02.13) with ESMTP id pa132615 for <[log in to unmask]>; Tue, 27 May 1997 21:30:19 -0400 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> X-Sender: [log in to unmask] X-Mailer: Windows Eudora Light Version 1.5.4 (32) Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Date: Tue, 27 May 1997 21:27:21 -0400 To: [log in to unmask] From: "Helen H. Kordela" <[log in to unmask]> Subject: ELMIRA CIVIL WAR PRISON CAMP ("HELMIRA") X-Info: Elmira College http://www.elmira.edu content-length: 356 I am very interested in any web sites about the Elmira, NY Civil War Prison Camp, sometimes known as Helmira. If you know of any could you please pass them on to me at: [log in to unmask] ? I am interested in any other web sites that deal specifically with Elmira history. Thank you for your assistance. Helen Kordela 4th Grade Teacher From [log in to unmask] Thu May 29 08:11:13 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from MAIL.NYSED.GOV by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id IAA21868; Thu, 29 May 1997 08:11:13 -0400 Received: from DOMAIN1-Message_Server by MAIL.NYSED.GOV with Novell_GroupWise; Thu, 29 May 1997 08:13:32 -0400 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> X-Mailer: Novell GroupWise 4.1 Date: Thu, 29 May 1997 08:11:47 -0400 From: James Folts <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: WWII POW and DP camps -Reply Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline content-length: 338 See George T. Mazuzan and Nancy Walker, "Restricted Areas: German Prisoner-of-War Camps in Western New York, 1944-1946," New York History, 59:1 (Jan. 1978), 54-72. The authors' main source of information was Record Group 389 (Records of the Office of the Provost Marshall General), National Archives. Jim Folts New York State Archives From [log in to unmask] Wed May 28 16:11:38 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from MAIL.NYSED.GOV by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id QAA19795; Wed, 28 May 1997 16:11:37 -0400 Received: from DOMAIN1-Message_Server by MAIL.NYSED.GOV with Novell_GroupWise; Wed, 28 May 1997 16:13:53 -0400 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> X-Mailer: Novell GroupWise 4.1 Date: Wed, 28 May 1997 16:12:11 -0400 From: Bob Arnold <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: WWII POW and DP camps -Reply Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline content-length: 167 Sorry. Not Wayne County. But Oswego had such camps and Barb Dix, the County Historian there, should be helpful. Reach her via the County Clerk's Office, 315/349-8385. From [log in to unmask] Thu May 29 12:58:46 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from MAIL.NYSED.GOV by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id MAA23281; Thu, 29 May 1997 12:58:46 -0400 Received: from DOMAIN1-Message_Server by MAIL.NYSED.GOV with Novell_GroupWise; Thu, 29 May 1997 13:01:04 -0400 Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> X-Mailer: Novell GroupWise 4.1 Date: Thu, 29 May 1997 12:59:32 -0400 From: David Palmquist <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] Subject: WWII POW and DP camps -Reply Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain Content-Disposition: inline content-length: 1483 Bob Arnold is right, the camp was in Oswego. For an unofficial (I can't vouch for his historical accuracy) account of Fort Oswego's history, including its role as a WWII camp, see the on-line account of a tour across the U.S., titled "Los Alamos to Boston (September 1994)" by Philip Greenspun, at http://www-swiss.ai.mit.edu/philg/summer94/los-alamos-to-boston.html His visit to Oswego is dated September 30, and is most of the way into the document. Regarding sources on Fort Oswego's WWII camp days, Greenspun writes, "Several excellent books have been written on the subject: Haven: The Unknown Story of 1000 WWII Refugees by Dr. Ruth Gruber, the former liaison between the refugees and the government, Token Refuge, by Sharon Lowenstein, and Don't Fence Me In, by Joseph Smart, the former commander of the camp." Greenspun provides links to information on obtaining the Gruber and Smart books, which he says are in print. The NYS Museum in Albany has an exhibit on the Holocaust, which includes information on the camp at Fort Oswego, photographs, news articles, and a section of the original chain link fence. David W. Palmquist NYS Museum 3096 Cultural Education Center Albany NY 12230 518-473-3131 [log in to unmask] >>> Annette Harris <[log in to unmask]> 05/27/97 04:02pm >>> I am researching World War II Prisoner of War camps and Displaced Persons camps that were located in Wayne Co., NY. Anyone know where I might find any information? Annette Harris From [log in to unmask] Thu May 29 16:37:57 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from rocky-gw.oswego.edu by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id QAA23801; Thu, 29 May 1997 16:37:51 -0400 Received: from localhost (vermue@localhost) by rocky-gw.oswego.edu (8.8.5/8.7.3) with SMTP id QAA29840 for <[log in to unmask]>; Thu, 29 May 1997 16:39:00 -0400 (EDT) X-Authentication-Warning: rocky-gw.oswego.edu: vermue owned process doing -bs Date: Thu, 29 May 1997 16:39:00 -0400 (EDT) From: Edward R Vermue <[log in to unmask]> Reply-To: Edward R Vermue <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: WWII POW and DP camps -Reply In-Reply-To: <[log in to unmask]> Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII content-length: 2459 The most famous WW II internment camp in Oswego County was not for German prisoners of war but for Jewish Refugees. From 1944-46 approximately 1000 refugees from Europe were "housed" at Fort Ontario in the city of Oswego, NY. Although these refugees were "rescued" and retrieved from liberated Europe at the expense of the American government, the "Safe Haven" operation also came into a lot of criticism for the fact that it was really only a token contribution towards the problem of caring for the displaced and persecuted of WW II. Intended to act as a model, the Oswego experiment was in fact the *only* camp for refugees on American soil. The refugees also faced considerable hostility from the State Dept. who battled against the admission of any Jews into the United States. While in the United States, the refugees faced restrictions on their rights and freedom of movement which many of them resented. Slowly, the barriers between the refugees and the community, and the refugees and the government melted, and the story did finally conclude happily for the refugees, most of whom stayed after all and became American citizens. A number of books, government documents, newspaper and magazine articles exist describing this episode in Oswego's history and a bibliography on the topic can be had through me at Penfield Library (see sig.file below). Safe Haven Inc., a registered charitable organization dedicated to telling the story of the refugees has a collection of camp records, memoirs, articles, photos, interviews, etc. which they currently house in the Special Collections storage area (unprocessed) of Penfield Library, SUNY at Oswego. Safe Haven Inc. has opened a small display in the city which operates one day a week in the summer, and they have a Web page at: http://www.syracuse.com/safehaven/ \ / \ / \ / \ / \_/ _________________________(_)_______ | /-------------------------\ | | | | | | | He doesn't own a T.V., | | Ed Vermue | | | OOO | Assistant Librarian | | and he reads Adbusters. | OOO | Penfield Library | | | OOO | SUNY at Oswego | | /// | O | Oswego, N.Y. | | ( .. ) | | | \______oOO__(_)___OOo_____/ | [log in to unmask] |_____________________________ooo_| http://www.oswego.edu/~vermue/ From [log in to unmask] Fri May 30 12:37:55 1997 Return-Path: <[log in to unmask]> Received: from mailsorter-1.alma.webtv.net by unix10 (SMI-8.6/SMI-SVR4) id MAA26167; Fri, 30 May 1997 12:37:54 -0400 Received: from mailtod-101.bryant.webtv.net (mailtod-101.iap.bryant.webtv.net [207.79.35.81]) by mailsorter-1.alma.webtv.net (8.8.5/ms.graham.13may97) with ESMTP id JAA15219; Fri, 30 May 1997 09:39:13 -0700 (PDT) Received: (from production@localhost) by mailtod-101.bryant.webtv.net (8.7.5/8.7.3) id JAA08680; Fri, 30 May 1997 09:39:13 -0700 (PDT) Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> From: [log in to unmask] (Annette Harris) Date: Fri, 30 May 1997 12:39:13 -0400 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: WWII POW and DP camps -Reply Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7BIT MIME-Version: 1.0 (WebTV) content-length: 250 Thank you for your message, however, I am interested in the sites in Wayne County. There were two POW camps and one DP camp that I know of within the County. I am familiar with the Oswego site having lived in Oswego for several years. Annette H.