Were you there …

Were you there …

. . . at the Post Card and Ephemera Show and Sale June 16? Great time, lots of happy card hunters, and congenial vendors – Martin Wadler (back in his old stomping grounds), Carol Golas, Nancy Foutz, John Hartner (soon to be the Undertaker in our upcoming Living History Tour of Margaretville Cemetery) and John Duda, who organized the event. Wray Rominger was there with books from Purple Mountain Press and a selection of cards from his own collection.

John Duda and customers

 The vendors gave informative presentations about various aspects of post card history and collecting. We hope to do this again next year! See more photos on the event listing on the Calendar. The exhibit “Private Message, Public View: Historic Postcards of Delaware County,” on loan from Delaware County Historical Association, will remain on display for the July 25 slide show of vintage images of Margaretville.

Lynda Stratton and others at the Postcard show.

Duke, the welcoming committee.

A shocking story from 1940!

In this season of thunderstorms, we pass along this story of two boys – and a couple of men – who survived a lightning strike in Arkville in 1940. Ed Stewart sent this clipping from the Catskill Mountain News of July 12 that year – his father was one of the boys struck:

“Robert Middaugh of Arkville and James Stewart of New York City who is visiting his grandmother, Mrs. O. A. Todd at Arkville, had a narrow escape from death by lightning last Friday afternoon. The lads sought shelter under a tree on the Arkville golf course during a thunder storm. Lightning struck the tree and both boys were rendered unconscious. One had his shirt torn to shreds and the other had his shoes torn off and both feet burned. They suffered other burns.

“Two men standing under the opposite side of the tree were shocked but suffered no serious results. They sought help at once for the boys, who were hurried to Margaretville hospital where they were treated for burns and shock. The side of the tree toward the boys was torn to shreds.”

James Stewart lived to tell this tale and many others. Relates Ed, “At 18 my father was a radio gunner in a dive bomber with the Marine Air Corps in the South Pacific during WWII. In December of 1977 he was shot in the line of duty as a NYC Detective. (He also) broke lots of bones as an adult…”

A search of the Catskill Mountain News indicates that Robert Middaugh went to paratrooper training camp in North Carolina in 1944. Does anyone know what became of him?

HSM is open Monday

HSM is open Monday

If you couldn’t come to our Open House last weekend, you have another chance to see The Great Outdoors and experience some of it with a stroll around the pond this coming Monday, May 28 from Noon to 3 p.m. See you there!

HSM OPEN HOUSE PHOTO GALLERY
Click for a larger view of each image…

Celebrate The Great Outdoors!

Celebrate The Great Outdoors!

Your presence is requested Saturday, May 19 from 3 to 6 p.m. at the Open House at our new home (778 Cemetery Rd., Margaretville). We’ll have food and door prizes, a wonderful raffle for an original painting by Michael Fauerbach, and an exhibit, “The Great Outdoors,” a tribute to the Catskill Mountain Chapter of the Izaak Walton League which built the hall in 1938.

Historic and contemporary photographs and some fascinating artifacts highlight the many recreational activities that have long been pursued in this area blessed by mountain, stream and the Catskill Forest Preserve: fishing, hunting, camping, skiing and hiking of course, but also swimming, boating, biking, skating, snowshoeing, tennis and team sports.

Guests at the many hotels and boarding houses in the area enjoyed lawn games and walks in the country, and even willingly participated in farm chores. Artists, including those at the Pakatakan Artists Colony in Arkville, have always been inspired to sketch and paint in the open air. Parks, playgrounds and ballfields have been the centers of their communities.

“The Great Outdoors” features an amazing pair of 7-foot-long wooden skis from the 1920s, a rope tow gripper and other memorabilia from the family-run Highmount Ski Center which closed in 1992. See antique fly rods and reels, and displays on baseball, Lake Switzerland and the Fleischmanns Tennis Tournament.

Spring party, 1961, at Highmount Ski Center

Profiles of people with local ties who figured prominently in outdoor sports will be shown, including A. J. McClane, fishing editor of Field and Stream; Niles Fairbairn, wildlife trainer for Disney, and Jay Kirke, major league baseball player in the 19-teens.

Stay tuned for announcements of future opportunities to view the exhibit and visit our wonderful grounds.

Many hands . . .

Many hands . . .

. . . make light work, and indeed it was true April 28 when several HSM board members and supporters showed up at our new hall to help reorganize and spruce the place up in preparation for our Open House May 19.

Earlier, Nick Verni had supplied the equipment, and his considerable know-how as a career painter, to coordinate the painting of the interior. Tom Rapin and Geoff Samuels volunteered to help, and in two days the hall was bright and new looking. George Hendricks came early on Saturday to turn on the water and heat.

Turning out for clean-up day to scour the kitchen, empty the garage, wash windows and do assorted other tasks were HSM Board members Diane Galusha, Lucci Kelly and Carolyn Konheim, along with Steve Miller, Brian Ketcham, Alix Travis, and Tina Greene and her daughters Anna and Mary. Jenny Liddle stopped by the discuss exhibit options. (Wait till you see the ingenious exhibition station Steve has devised!) The place is looking great, and we’re excited to show it off. Be there on May 19, 3 to 6!

Lucci Kelly and Caroyn Konheim sorting kitchenware

Steve Miller, Brian KetchamAlix Travis tackles the stove

Diner detective

Diner detective

Bowls Hotel, c. 1920s-30s, Postcard courtesy Roger Davis

Michael Engle, who maintains a site about classic diners at www.nydiners.com, wrote to ask if we knew of any photos of a diner that was incorporated into Bowl’s (Kelly’s) Hotel on Main Street in Margaretville. A bit of searching in the Catskill Mountain News and a phone call to long time resident Alton Weiss turned up an interesting bit of village business history (but so far no photos of the diner — have you seen one?).

Charles Bowl, who was born in England in 1874, came to American at the turn of the century and settled in Walton, where he married another Brit, Louise Fox. They came to Margaretville in the ‘teens and “purchased a lunch wagon” on Main Street. Business was good, so they “enlarged and enlarged it until it became necessary to purchase the adjoining Lockwood property and expand it all into a hotel.”

Charles “was the jolliest of hosts,” and, with Louise’s excellent cooking, the hotel became “one of the most popular places in the county.” 

Claude Kelly takes a drink from unidentified bartender in what may have been Kelly’s Hotel. Can you identify anyone else in this undated photo (courtesy Rudd Hubbell)?

Shortly before his death in 1941, Charles Bowl sold the hotel to Claude Kelly of Delhi. It continued to be known as Bowls for many years. On July 9, 1948, the CMN reported that “The dining room and the present diner will be united with a cashier stand at the junction entrance. Guests may enter the hotel under a modern marquee and make their way to either eating place.”

On October 8, 1948, the CMN hailed another step forward. “Margaretville’s new luxury diner opened last Friday at Bowl’s hotel. Gleaming modern stainless steel greets the eye at every turn. Nineteen roller bearing stools make the most comfortable seating before a long Formica counter top. With the very latest conduction cooking, a hamburger is turned out in three seconds; steaks two minutes. . . There is a 40-cubic foot refrigerator, electric table that keeps food hot without steam, electric breakfast display cases. . . There is nothing like it in the vicinity, the nearest ones being in Utica and Albany.” The story noted upcoming improvements to the hotel – a cocktail lounge with upholstered seats, indirect lighting, and backlit murals of local fishing and forest scenes.

Al Weiss, who came to town in 1949, remembers hearing the hotel referred to as “Ma Bowls’” place, and recalls eating there many times. The diner, he says, “was at the east end of the hotel structure with a gap of about three feet to the adjacent building, which housed the Fred Myers/Dewey Bell barber shop and bakery building. Later the diner part and ground floor of the hotel were revamped again, I think by Schoonmaker. I think the original diner was like a RR car shape, with the narrow ends toward the street and Binnekill stream.”

Al says a grease fire in the diner’s vent fan started a blaze in 1977 that consumed the hotel and neighboring structures. That fire led to the establishment of the MARK Project and its first community redevelopment project, Binnekill Square.

1977 blaze destroyed Bowls/Kellys/Schermerhorns Hotel, and adjoining businesses. Masonic Lodge at right was spared. Courtesy Howard Raab Aftermath of 1977 Margaretville fire. Space is now occupied by Binnekill Square.   Photo courtesy Rudd Hubbell