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Nature

Coldengham: The Colden Family Seat in Orange County

April 16, 2013 by A. J. Schenkman 3 Comments

Colden_Mansion_Ruins-Daniel CaseJust about any morning, cars as well as trucks race back and forth through the intersection of Stone Castle Road and Route 17K in the Town of Montgomery. Many of these commuters, shoppers, or moms driving their children to school are oblivious to the ruins that stand right off to the side, in a wood lot, of the rather busy part of this Orange County road.

Only while stopping along the road, some years ago, I happened upon the remains of what seemed to have once been a beautiful mansion. A blue New York State Education Department sign alerts people that this skeleton, almost lost in the woods, was the site of “the Colden Mansion built of stone in 1767 by Cadwallader Colden, Jr.” How many families, like the Coldens, can boast about having Royal Surveyors, Lieutenant Governors, Acting Governors of New York, noted scientists, and even one of the first female botanists in the Americas among them? [Read more…] about Coldengham: The Colden Family Seat in Orange County

Filed Under: History, Nature Tagged With: Adirondacks, Architecture, Historic Preservation, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Historical Society, Orange County, Political History, Science History

Albany Institute Event Featuring Hudson Valley Hops

April 9, 2013 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

Albany BrewerThe Albany Institute of History & Art will be hosting its second event featuring Hudson Valley Hops on Saturday, April 20, 2013 from 4-7pm.

The event will be a celebration of the history of brewing in Albany and today’s craft beer industry in and around the Hudson Valley. Guests can sample the finest local craft beers, engage with experts in the field, enjoy an assortment of food and tour the museum galleries. [Read more…] about Albany Institute Event Featuring Hudson Valley Hops

Filed Under: Events, Nature Tagged With: Agricultural History, Albany, Albany Institute For History and Art, Culinary History, Hudson River, Industrial History

Eliakim Briggs: Horse Power Inventor

April 1, 2013 by Lawrence P. Gooley Leave a Comment

Briggs' 1834 horse treadmill BRIn the 1830s, hundreds of inventors around the world focused on attempts at automating farm equipment. Reducing the drudgery, difficulty, and danger of farm jobs were the primary goals, accompanied by the potential of providing great wealth for the successful inventor. Among the North Country men tinkering with technology was Eliakim Briggs of Fort Covington in northern Franklin County.

Functional, power-driven machinery was the desired result of his work, but while some tried to harness steam, Briggs turned right to the source for providing horsepower: the horse. [Read more…] about Eliakim Briggs: Horse Power Inventor

Filed Under: Adirondacks & NNY, History, Nature Tagged With: Abolition, Adirondacks, Agricultural History, Franklin County, Genealogy, Industrial History, Natural History, Underground Railroad

A Short History of Manhattan’s Water Supply

March 13, 2013 by Jaya Saxena 2 Comments

Section of water pipe, ca. 1804. Wood. New-York Historical Society, Gift of Stoughton and Stoughton, 1953.308SMany New Yorkers say the reason you can’t get a good bagel anywhere else is because of New York City’s tap water, and indeed, we have some of the best in the country.

But that wasn’t always the case. Early 18th century inhabitants rarely had clean drinking water (in fact, beer was a more trusted drink than water), but that all changed in 1799 with the founding of the Manhattan Water Company and pipes like this. [Read more…] about A Short History of Manhattan’s Water Supply

Filed Under: History, Nature Tagged With: Environmental History, Manhattan, New York City

Newburgh: Cradle of the American Lawn Mower Industry

March 5, 2013 by Miguel Hernandez 21 Comments

mower ad Abraham Levitt, the man who arguably built more suburban homes in the United States than anyone else in the years following World War II once said that: “No single feature of a suburban residential community contributes as much to the charm and beauty of the individual home and the locality as well-kept lawns”

The ubiquitous American suburban lawn in America began 100 years before in 1841 when a 25 year old resident of Newburg New York named Andrew Jackson Downing published a landscape-gardening book entitled, “Treatise on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening.”

It counseled readers to improve themselves by improving their front yards and could well be the impetus of the self-help book craze of the later third of the 20th century. He believed that the perfect front yard had to have a large area of “grass mown into a softness like velvet.” [Read more…] about Newburgh: Cradle of the American Lawn Mower Industry

Filed Under: Nature Tagged With: Cultural History, Gardens - Landscape Architecture, Industrial History, Newburgh, Orange County

Palisades Region’s River Parks Master Plan Meeting

March 4, 2013 by Editorial Staff Leave a Comment

South_end_of_Rockland_Lake_c19090The NYS Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation (OPRHP) Palisades Region and the Palisades Interstate Park Commission (PIPC) will hold a public hearing regarding the preparation of a Draft Master Plan and Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for Rockland Lake, Hook Mountain, Nyack Beach, and Haverstraw Beach State Parks (The Park Complex). OPRHP and PIPC encourage the public to participate in the planning efforts for The Park Complex and welcome all comments related to the DRAFT MASTER PLAN and Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS). [Read more…] about Palisades Region’s River Parks Master Plan Meeting

Filed Under: Events, Nature Tagged With: Historic Preservation, Hudson River, Palisades Interstate Park Commission, Palisades Parks Conservancy, Public History, Rockland County

Local History: North Country Survival Stories

February 19, 2013 by Lawrence P. Gooley 1 Comment

Headline Cow drags womanNo bones were broken. It’s a statement of relief that frequently appears in accident reports, emphasizing the fact that perhaps bones should have been broken, but due to amazing luck or some other reason, the victim survived perilous circumstances to emerge relatively unscathed. Stories of that type appear occasionally, and they’re always interesting.

It’s remarkable that in July 1895, three North Country survival stories appeared on a single newspaper page. Forget broken bones—it’s amazing that any of the victims lived to see another day. Yet among the three, there was only one broken bone. [Read more…] about Local History: North Country Survival Stories

Filed Under: Adirondacks & NNY, History, Nature Tagged With: Adirondacks

Fort Ticonderoga’s Garden and Landscape Symposium

February 1, 2013 by Editorial Staff 2 Comments

nardozzi-0016aThe King’s Garden at Fort Ticonderoga is presenting its second Garden and Landscape Symposium: “Enhancing Life through Gardening” on Saturday, April 13. The day-long symposium, geared for both beginning and experienced gardeners, provides insights from garden experts who live and garden in upstate New York and Vermont. This springtime event takes place in the Deborah Clarke Mars Education Center and is open by pre-registration only.

The walled King’s Garden was originally designed in 1921 by leading landscape architect Marian Coffin. The formal elements – a reflecting pool, manicured lawn and hedges, and brick walls and walkways – are softened by a profusion of annuals and perennials, carefully arranged by color and form. Heirloom flowers and modern cultivars are used to recreate the historic planting scheme. [Read more…] about Fort Ticonderoga’s Garden and Landscape Symposium

Filed Under: Events, Nature Tagged With: Conferences, Essex County, Fort Ticonderoga, Gardens - Landscape Architecture

Connecting History And Public Policy

January 3, 2013 by Bruce Dearstyne 1 Comment

Four recent developments remind us of the opportunities to tie history to other initiatives here in New York. Doing that successfully will continue to require leadership, persistence, and imagination.

*New York pride…and history? The New York State Economic Development Corporation is running ads in business journals to attract businesses to the state. The ads link to the Development Corporation’s Web Site. The ads say, among other things: [Read more…] about Connecting History And Public Policy

Filed Under: Nature Tagged With: Andrew Cuomo, Baseball Hall of Fame, Bruce Dearstyne, Disaster Management, Economic Development, Erie Canal, Historic Preservation, Hudson River, Hurricane Sandy, Natural History, Public History

The Real Lake Placid: Alligators in Mirror Lake?

December 11, 2012 by Lawrence P. Gooley 2 Comments

In 1999, Fox 2000 Pictures released the film Lake Placid. Despite the title, the story takes place on fictional Black Lake in Maine. The folks at Fox apparently figured the name of an internationally renowned Olympic site in New York might attract more attention than Black Lake, which was, after all, placid, just like the title said. Except for those times when a giant killer crocodile was thrashing on the surface, gulping down humans for lunch. [Read more…] about The Real Lake Placid: Alligators in Mirror Lake?

Filed Under: History, Adirondacks & NNY, Arts, Nature Tagged With: Adirondacks, Cultural History, Environmental History, Essex County, film, Film History, Lake Placid, Natural History

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