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Thanks to an extremely generous and anonymous $1000 donation, The Historians Podcast fund drive has now raised $2610 toward our $7000 goal for 2023. Thank you very much. We still have a long way to go. Please help us provide more history programing on Fort Ticonderoga, Old Fort Johnson, songs of the American Revolution by Cosby Gibson and Tom Staudle, the Wild West and much more. Please donate online at The Historians Podcast, organized by Bob Cudmore or send a check made out to Bob Cudmore to 125 Horstman Drive, Scotia, NY 12302. Thank you again-every contribution is appreciated.
Puerto Rican immigrant marks milestone birthday
By Bob Cudmore
One of the first Latino immigrants to Amsterdam recently celebrated his 100th birthday.
City Mayor Michael Cinquanti said in a Facebook post that Aldelmo (Al) Camacho’s family including grandson Rob Camacho held the celebration at the Century Club.
Cinquanti wrote, “(Al) and his beloved wife Tina have contributed so much to our community since settling here in 1951 and to be on hand to see him share this incredible milestone with his loving family and friends was indeed a privilege.”
Aldelmo Camacho grew up on a farm near Yauco, a small city in south Puerto Rico. The youngest of ten children, he joined the Army in 1942 and served as a medical surgery technician.
After the war, he attended business college where he met his future wife, Ernestina (Tina) Perez. In 1948, they married and the family grew with the birth of two daughters.
Aldelmo said in a 2004 interview that two of his brothers had moved to America and settled in Amsterdam, attracted by newspaper ads from the carpet industry.
In 1950, Aldelmo left his family and arrived in Amsterdam on a Sunday in June. He had his first job the next day, making pocketbooks for Central Leather.
“When I came here, you could have a job, quit the job and get another job in that same building with another company,” Aldelmo said. “If you didn’t have a job here it was because you didn’t want to work.”
Aldelmo stayed in Amsterdam four months but returned to Yauco because he missed his family. There was no work in Puerto Rico so Aldelmo headed north again. This time he ran a milling machine at Collette’s, preparing rubber for tennis and beach balls.
Within a few months, Tina and the children moved to Amsterdam and Tina began work at Amsterdam Glove. Their first home was in the former Amsterdam Hotel on Main Street. Apartments followed and then their own houses on Academy Street and Bunn Street.
Tomorrow, Monday, June 5, 2023-Story behind the story-early Latino immigrant Aldlmo Canacho(Podcast about 5 Minutes)
There were only a few Latinos in Amsterdam in the early 1950s. “When we came in it was just Puerto Ricans and Cubans,” Aldelmo said. Today, Amsterdam’s many Latinos also have roots in Columbia, Costa Rica, Mexico and other countries.
In 1953, the Camachos were instrumental in forming the Spanish American Club, which closed in 2004.
Tina held jobs at Chalmer’s Button Shop, Hanover Dress, Martin Jay Dress and Mohawk Dress. She also earned her high school diploma and attended Fulton-Montgomery Community College.
“We made an honest dollar every place we went,” Tina said. “We started at 75 cents an hour and then it went up to a dollar an hour. We lived on that.”
Aldelmo worked several years at the Naval Depot in Scotia and then was a dress cutter at Hanover’s. Hanover’s closed its Amsterdam plant in 1972 and wanted Aldelmo to relocate to Vermont. Instead, the Camachos returned to Puerto Rico.
“We went back and I got a job in San Juan cutting dresses,” Aldelmo said. “But I was in San Juan and (Tina) was in Yauco, a hundred miles apart and we stayed just seven weeks. When we left Puerto Rico it was one way of living. When we went back it was too different. It was a different country for us.”
Back in Amsterdam, Aldelmo secured jobs at Coleco, then Gem Urethane, Bojud Knitting and General Electric before his retirement.
“This town (Amsterdam) came to be more important than the town where I was born,” said Aldelmo, who has a reputation for his skill at dominoes. “This town for me is like my hometown. It’s where I’ve raised my family.”
June on The Historians with Writer, Radio, Internet, NewsPaper Man Bob Cudmore
Friday, June 9, 2023 –Episode 478-Scott Haefner of Old Fort Johnson historic site explains how this formerly fortified home of British Indian agent Sir William Johnson was preserved by a grass roots organization, the Montgomery County Historical Society.
Old Mount Johnson
An original mini documentary directed, produced, filmed & edited by Aaron Smith. It explores the history of William Johnson and Old Fort Johnson located in Upstate New York. Starring: Rachel Bliven - Museum Director Scott Haefner - Site Manager
Curator Matthew Keagle discusses Fort Ticonderoga historic site this season. Visitors will experience 1760 at the fort and see how British soldiers and American provincials ensure military dominance on Lake Champlain and deep into the heart of French Canada.
Sign-up for the Cudmore email "Blast" (into your email box each Saturday)
Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Sunday, June 4, 2023
46 degrees in The City of Amsterdam at 6:16AM
Leader Herald Make Us A Part Of Your Day
https://www.leaderherald.com/
By Bob CudmoreThanks to an extremely generous and anonymous $1000 donation, The Historians Podcast fund drive has now raised $2610 toward our $7000 goal for 2023. Thank you very much. We still have a long way to go. Please help us provide more history programing on Fort Ticonderoga, Old Fort Johnson, songs of the American Revolution by Cosby Gibson and Tom Staudle, the Wild West and much more. Please donate online at The Historians Podcast, organized by Bob Cudmore or send a check made out to Bob Cudmore to 125 Horstman Drive, Scotia, NY 12302. Thank you again-every contribution is appreciated.
Puerto Rican immigrant marks milestone birthday
By Bob Cudmore
One of the first Latino immigrants to Amsterdam recently celebrated his 100th birthday.
City Mayor Michael Cinquanti said in a Facebook post that Aldelmo (Al) Camacho’s family including grandson Rob Camacho held the celebration at the Century Club.
Cinquanti wrote, “(Al) and his beloved wife Tina have contributed so much to our community since settling here in 1951 and to be on hand to see him share this incredible milestone with his loving family and friends was indeed a privilege.”
Aldelmo Camacho grew up on a farm near Yauco, a small city in south Puerto Rico. The youngest of ten children, he joined the Army in 1942 and served as a medical surgery technician.
After the war, he attended business college where he met his future wife, Ernestina (Tina) Perez. In 1948, they married and the family grew with the birth of two daughters.
Aldelmo said in a 2004 interview that two of his brothers had moved to America and settled in Amsterdam, attracted by newspaper ads from the carpet industry.
In 1950, Aldelmo left his family and arrived in Amsterdam on a Sunday in June. He had his first job the next day, making pocketbooks for Central Leather.
“When I came here, you could have a job, quit the job and get another job in that same building with another company,” Aldelmo said. “If you didn’t have a job here it was because you didn’t want to work.”
Aldelmo stayed in Amsterdam four months but returned to Yauco because he missed his family. There was no work in Puerto Rico so Aldelmo headed north again. This time he ran a milling machine at Collette’s, preparing rubber for tennis and beach balls.
Within a few months, Tina and the children moved to Amsterdam and Tina began work at Amsterdam Glove. Their first home was in the former Amsterdam Hotel on Main Street. Apartments followed and then their own houses on Academy Street and Bunn Street.
Tomorrow, Monday, June 5, 2023-Story behind the story-early Latino immigrant Aldlmo Canacho(Podcast about 5 Minutes)
There were only a few Latinos in Amsterdam in the early 1950s. “When we came in it was just Puerto Ricans and Cubans,” Aldelmo said. Today, Amsterdam’s many Latinos also have roots in Columbia, Costa Rica, Mexico and other countries.
In 1953, the Camachos were instrumental in forming the Spanish American Club, which closed in 2004.
Tina held jobs at Chalmer’s Button Shop, Hanover Dress, Martin Jay Dress and Mohawk Dress. She also earned her high school diploma and attended Fulton-Montgomery Community College.
“We made an honest dollar every place we went,” Tina said. “We started at 75 cents an hour and then it went up to a dollar an hour. We lived on that.”
Aldelmo worked several years at the Naval Depot in Scotia and then was a dress cutter at Hanover’s. Hanover’s closed its Amsterdam plant in 1972 and wanted Aldelmo to relocate to Vermont. Instead, the Camachos returned to Puerto Rico.
“We went back and I got a job in San Juan cutting dresses,” Aldelmo said. “But I was in San Juan and (Tina) was in Yauco, a hundred miles apart and we stayed just seven weeks. When we left Puerto Rico it was one way of living. When we went back it was too different. It was a different country for us.”
Back in Amsterdam, Aldelmo secured jobs at Coleco, then Gem Urethane, Bojud Knitting and General Electric before his retirement.
“This town (Amsterdam) came to be more important than the town where I was born,” said Aldelmo, who has a reputation for his skill at dominoes. “This town for me is like my hometown. It’s where I’ve raised my family.”
June on The Historians with Writer, Radio, Internet, NewsPaper Man Bob Cudmore
Friday, June 9, 2023 –Episode 478-Scott Haefner of Old Fort Johnson historic site explains how this formerly fortified home of British Indian agent Sir William Johnson was preserved by a grass roots organization, the Montgomery County Historical Society.
Old Mount Johnson
An original mini documentary directed, produced, filmed & edited by Aaron Smith. It explores the history of William Johnson and Old Fort Johnson located in Upstate New York. Starring: Rachel Bliven - Museum Director Scott Haefner - Site Manager
Curator Matthew Keagle discusses Fort Ticonderoga historic site this season. Visitors will experience 1760 at the fort and see how British soldiers and American provincials ensure military dominance on Lake Champlain and deep into the heart of French Canada.
Sign-up for the Cudmore email "Blast" (into your email box each Saturday)
Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Sunday, June 4, 2023
46 degrees in The City of Amsterdam at 6:16AM
Leader Herald Make Us A Part Of Your Day
https://www.leaderherald.com/