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This church (the white one on the right side of the sign) is located on the SE corner of Platt and East State Street in the village of Albion, NY (approximately 35 miles west of Rochester, NY). "Free" Methodism originally referred to the church's stand against slavery (comments invited).
Tags:
free
methodist
church
albion
slavery
1859
Added: 11th September 2007
Views: 81
Rating: 
Posted By: sdado4 |

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It's hard to remember sometimes, that Technicolor was the name of a company, and not just an announcement at the beginning of an old movie that the film wasn't going to be in black and white.
Tags:
technicolor
Added: 17th September 2007
Views: 116
Rating: 
Posted By: prelingerfan |

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Utsayantha's Legend:
A strange legend hovers over the place. The grand old mountain and silvery lake bring to memory the sad tale of the death of an Indian maid. It was here, on a bright moon light night while the country was one vast wilderness, and the sturdy pioneer was struggling for existence that the terrible tragedy was enacted. The Indian maid was wooed and won by a white man. A babe was born to the strange couple. The chieftain of the tribe and the father of the maid, in mad fury, buried his tomahawk deep in the white man's brain; then, with babe in arms, he rowed to the center of the lake and plunged the child into a watery grave. The dusky maiden, with trembling steps, followed the footsteps of her son's destroyer. When at last the deed was accomplished, and all was still, she swung her birch canoe from the shore and rowed to the spot, then with hands uplifted in mad despair, she plunged beneath the rippling waves, the water covered her and she was seen no more alive. The chieftain in sad distress took his child from the lake; bore her to the top of the mountain, where, beneath a lonely mound, she reposes to this day.
The historic marker is located on Route 10 beside Utsayantha Lake, just north of the Village of Stamford, NY.
Tags:
Utsayantha
Legend
Stamford
Delaware
indian
Added: 8th October 2007
Views: 199
Rating: 
Posted By: Ohlhous |

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How rapid was the progress at NASA? We will put a man on the moon at the end of the same decade in which John Glenns orbital flight is reported to the world on a black and white newsreel.
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newsreel
John
Glenn
NASA
space
Added: 12th October 2007
Views: 74
Rating: 
Posted By: prelingerfan |

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In the time before television, radio and even movies, entertainment could be as simple as a few lines from a friend scribbled on a postcard in your mailbox. Many were like this one: A black and white photographic print that subsequently was colorized by a multi-step process in which the card was sent through a series of printers. Each pass applied one of the several colors that together resulted in the finished composite seen below. Because the persons creating and applying these colors had a poor - or even no knowledge of the original scenes at all - the colors represented aren't always reliable. Note for example the crudely drawn red candy-striping on the near awnings that are missing from those in the distance.
Tags:
postals
postcards
printing
albion
Added: 29th October 2007
Views: 162
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Posted By: USPSam |

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At the time of the Revolution, America inherited claims to vast tracts of western lands; but owning and keeping were two different things! Our young nation desperately needed to establish trade routes across the formidable Appalachian mountain chain. Other efforts failed, but here in New York State the Erie Canal succeeded, and perhaps the one most important reason for its success can be seen here. The noses refer to the two parts of the mountain that was cut in two by the Mohawk River's flow many thousands of years before the white man ever came to this continent. This site, which is just a few miles east of Canajoharie, was the only gap in the Appalachian chain through which a canal could be successfully constructed.
Tags:
Noses
Mohawk
Adrirondack
Erie
Canal
Added: 4th November 2007
Views: 174
Rating: 
Posted By: Lowbridge |

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Before there was refrigeration, salt was important for its food-preservation qualities. In America's early years, Syracuse in Central New York State - aka "Salt City" - was the nation's largest producer of salt. The postcard above shows rows of shallow evaporating pans. The sloped covers on the extreme left and right of this picture would be slid to cover the pans if it rained. See salt - very possibly from Syracuse - being used at the Fulton Fish Market in NYC in the mid-thirties at the 3:18 mark on Manhattan Waterfront. Also see the film White Wonder for an overview of the salt industry today (modern evaporating at 5:17).

(click image)
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Salt City and The Erie Canal
The original Erie Canal was deliberately routed to pass through what today is Syracuse, NY because of the large salt deposits that were already being harvested there by 1825 when the canal was completed. Syracuse's salt trade benefitted from the canal for two reasons: Low transportation costs, and the Erie made it more profitable for farmers all along the canal corridor to raise hogs than to grow wheat, which had been their principal crop before the canal was built. Pork required large amounts of salt for preservation. See video
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Tags:
salt
shed
evaporator
syracuse
1905
Added: 1st December 2007
Views: 323
Rating: 
Posted By: USPSam |

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New York
FRIENDS
MEETING HOUSE
Erected 1807 Near Site
Of Original Log Structure
1st Preacher - Ezekiel Tripp
Society Organized About 1790
State Education
Department 1932
The little village of Quaker Street, in the
Schenectady County town of Duanesburg, is in one of the oldest settlements in this part of New
York State. 200 years ago, in 1807, The Religious Society of Friends, whose members are commonly known as Quakers, built the current frame building to replace the previous building, a log structure.
The Quakers, after buying the land from the family of James
Duane, began building the meeting house in 1807, probably began using it in 1809, and finished the structure in 1813. It was a Quaker by the name of Job
Briggs who paid James C. Duane, son of James Duane, 32 pounds for the two acres of land that became the site of the current meeting house. The building cost
close to 550 pounds to build.
This well-preserved two story building has an attic and rests on a field stone foundation with no cellar. It was originally built with no porch and had a dividing-
folding partition, through the center of the building, which was raised and lowered by means of pulleys and ropes, because the men and women usually entered and
sat on opposite sides of the room. The partitions were removed in 1885. An adjoining carriage shed and burial ground are still on the property.
"The architecture tells you everything you need to know about the Quakers... It's white and gray, very simple and plain, with no embellishment or accoutrements, and
that speaks volumes about the Quaker faith. They believe in complete directness, honesty, plainness, with no guile or personality. You’re not supposed to draw
attention to yourself." - Art Willis - Quaker and Duanesburg Town Historian
In the photo at the top of the page the historic marker is seen back in place at the edge of Route 7 and in front of the meeting house, after receiving a fresh coat of paint. It had been down for some time after being knocked over by a snow plow last winter.
Other Historic Markers in New York State can be looked up by County Here
Tags:
Quaker
Street
Friends
Meeting
House
Duane
Duanesburg
Added: 8th December 2007
Views: 147
Rating: 
Posted By: Ohlhous |

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Historic New York
Mohawk Area
The Mohawk Valley was a principal pass to the interior between the
Adirondack Mountains and the Allegheny Plateau. Here dwelt the Mohawks,
one of the Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy who barred the white man's
advance westward. In the seventeenth century they were visited by French
Catholic missionaries from Canada, some of whom suffered martyrdom.
In 1712, with the aid of Queen Ann, An Anglican Chapel for the Mohawks
was erected at Fort Hunter.
Trade goods and furs were carried by river boats over the Mohawk
between Albany and the West. The same route was followed by military
expeditions during the French and Indian War.
From Fort Johnson, and after 1763 from Johnson Hall at Johnstown,
Sir William Johnson ably conducted Indian affairs for the British government.
During the Revolution, Tory and Indian raiders from Canada harassed the
Mohawk Valley settlements.
The completion of the Erie Canal in 1825 and the formation of the
New York Central Railroad in 1853 introduced an era of rapid settlement
and industrial growth. In the twentieth century improved highways follow
this historic route, long famed for its scenic beauty.
This historic marker is located at a New York State Thruway rest area two miles west of Fultonham, NY on I-90 westbound (42.942735, -74.397612)
Tags:
Mohawks
Iroquois
Queen
Ann
Fort
Hunter
Johnson
Johnstown
Erie
Canal
New
York
Central
Added: 18th December 2007
Views: 85
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Posted By: Ohlhous |

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Culvert Road, just east of Medina, NY is the only place where a road goes UNDER the Erie Canal. The black and white image (below) of this structure's reconstruction for the modern NYS Barge Canal (1905-1918) shows stones that had been marked and removed from the previous culvert (on the "enlarged" Erie: ca 1830-1862) for reinstallation after the wider Barge Canal was completed (the concrete wall in the black and white is the liner of the Barge Canal used to prevent leaks across this stretch).

(click image)
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Steam-powered Cranes
(This picture can be enlarged after you click on the thumbnail). Notice the "ice-tong" device used for gripping and lifting heavy stones into place. The shallow holes cut to receive those tongs can still be seen to this day. We wish this camera had captured more detail on the steam-powered cranes being used here, as they look very much like the wooden cranes powered by animals used a hundred years earlier at the deep cut on the original Erie Canal. Photo courtesy Town of Perinton historian. Learn more.
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Tags:
erie
canal
culvert
medina
Added: 29th December 2007
Views: 176
Rating: 
Posted By: Lowbridge |

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