Thursday, April 24, 2014

Looking Through Newspapers and Finding Family By Pat Kinsella Herdeg




I often use a terrific website for genealogy work. If you want to find out more about your New York state relatives, go to fultonhistory.com where one man has scanned in over 26,108,000 Old New York State Historical Newspaper Pages. Here are only a very few of the snippets I have tripped over:


Cortland Democrat, November 1898: “Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Burt entertained the eighth annual Borthwick reunion at their home, Tuesday Nov. 1. A very pleasant and enjoyable day was spent by 34 members of the family. Those present from out of town were …. Mrs. L. Baker  (Nancy Borthwick) and daughter Florence and son, Byron Baker and children of Center Lisle (Ethel, Adin, Ruth and Lillian).

Batavia Daily News, May 2nd, 1899: In one of the back pages, in amidst ads for Carter’s Little Liver Pills and ‘Wanted—100 Used Bicycles’ was this headline—‘Half a Tree Splintered’. The story followed: “West Bethany—A most thunder and rain storm passed over this place on Sunday morning, accompanied by the most blinding lightning and in some places with falls of hail stones nearly as large as hickory nuts. A large tree on William Carson’s farm was struck, half of it being torn into splinters. The rain, however, is most acceptable to farmers, doing much needed good to wheat.”


William and Jane Carson's farm


Batavia Times January 6th, 1910-- ‘Lloyd Taylor has gone to Albany to attend the New York Central Y.M.C.A. school of telegraph.’

Batavia Daily Times, July 14th, 1911—While most of the page is taken over by an advertisement for ‘Season’s End Sale’ for Oliver & Milne (women’s hosiery 19 cents and women’s summer coats reduced to $4.98), under Oakfield news comes this bit of information: ‘Miss Ethel Baker of Lisle, Broome County, a graduate of Cortland normal school, has been engaged as teacher of the seventh and eighth grades for next year.’ 

The Batavia Daily News, January 4th, 1914—To the left of a drawing of a battleship and the blackened headline of ‘English Vessel Sunk By Germans’ was a smaller headline about the Oakfield, NY Grange. ‘About 109 attended the grange meeting at Odd Fellows Hall of Saturday….Open installation of officers was conducted by Past Master Bryant W. Taylor….There were vocal selections by the Woodlawn quartet, Messrs. B.W., Leon, Floyd and Lloyd Taylor.

Batavia Daily News, September 1918— In ‘News This End of the State’:
Lockport has a case of Spanish influenza
Geneseo reports that war conditions have hit nurserymen very hard
Phelps women have forsaken tea parties to labor in the harvest fields
There are reported over 200 unlicensed dogs in good barking condition on Medina streets

‘Oakfield Thimble Party’
Presbyterians to Be Entertained By Mrs. Lloyd Taylor
Oakfield, Sept. 24—The Presbyterian aid society will be entertained at the thimble party and pipe-organ fund tea at Mrs. Lloyd Taylor’s on Thursday afternoon.

Exactly what WAS a ‘thimble party’? I am not sure, as I have read different ideas, but I think it was closest to this party from 1900 Lawrence Kansas:--“The girls would bring their needlework to the thimble parties. Embroidering, crocheting lace, hemstitching, and monogramming, were popular. This work would be put on tea napkins, towels, pillow cases and lunch cloths.”


Binghamton Press, December 20th, 1953:
Huge Headline across the entire page:
‘Knocked Down for $1000
Old Center Lisle School Sold at Auction;
Six Bucks for Bell’

‘Art Wilbur Buys School He Attended’

Auctioneer Clarence Gem pronounced the last rites yesterday afternoon at the 85-year-old Center Lisle School. “OK, I’ve got a clock over there and it runs. Who’ll give me two? Who’ll give me two? OK. I’ve got two and who’ll give me three?”

….Auctioneer Gem sold a stove, which smoked a little, for $20. He sold three school desks to Mrs. Lillian Howland for 90 cents. She runs the Center Lisle General Store and said she would try to sell, although to whom or for what purpose she did not know.


And, in the Geneva Daily Times, March 9th, 1944:
First Aid Essay Contest
Prizes Awarded Today in Local High School
Geneva High School’s First Prize awarded to Lucille Taylor. Her essay starts: ‘The value of first aid goes back as far as 1877, for that is when it began…..It was not used extensively in World War 1, but today, in this second World War, there is not a person in the United States that does not know some simple bit of it.’
Already dreaming of her career in nursing?



8 comments:

CB/Mom said...

Great Guns! There is no end to what you can find! Isn't this spot a GEM?
Thimble party? Never heard of it but what fun! Mom was always there at the forefront of church service. And I see Aunt Florence got in the picture at the grange! She was the pianist when Clara was elsewhere. This is a real trip back, Pat, thanks. Never knew what school Daddy went to to learn Morse code.

Kathryn said...

Awesome, Pat!
Thank you for the new website to haunt too.
I love history stuff!
Family history is the best!
Thanks for this blog site that is so fun to visit and enjoy.
I love you lots and lots!!

Evelyn Taylor said...

Another super resource, Pat. I enjoyed the articles and especially the picture of your mom. What a beautiful nurse!

Tim Kinsella said...

Pat, how long has it taken you to pour through all that material and how much more do you have to go through? Can you do any type of word search or do you have to review each page of material one at a time.
Very interesting articles.

Pat Herdeg said...

Thanks Mom and Evelyn!

I love finding these little nuggets of gold in our family history. Just yesterday found a news article that talks of my great great grandmother on Dad's side as a 'cancer doctor', something which is family lore but never proven.

And yes, I do love this picture of Mom!

Love,

Kathryn said...

Pat,
What a wonderful post!
Thank you for giving us all another source of information.
I really enjoyed the articles.
I wonder what my Grandmother did with those desks?

Your Mom must have been a wonderful nurse, she is so caring.

Thanks for all the work you do on this blog site.
I really appreciate it!

Lots of love!

Pat Herdeg said...

Kathryn and Tim,

Thank you!! Your comments were caught in the spam filter and I just saw them.

Tim--you can filter by name so if a name is NOT Taylor or Baker--like Herdeg--you can find lots right away. With Taylor and Baker, just throw in the town and hopefully you get lucky.

Kathryn, love the stories I find in these old newspapers so I put them up on this blog where others can read them also.

Love,

Judy said...

The articles were wonderful to read, thanks for sharing your internet expertise!! Love ya!