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When I was young, we went to a candlelight service Christmas Eve at First Methodist Church on Division Street, torn down for urban renewal in 1973. I was always impressed that the choir marched in holding hymnbooks and candles while singing. No one ever tripped and started a fire.
She is now sending Christmas gifts
By Bob Cudmore
January 1, 2023
My grandmother, Margaret Cook, was a widow with three small children in Randall during World War I, supporting her family by feeding soldiers who guarded Lock 13 on the Barge Canal against German saboteurs.
One of the soldiers was Private William J. Allen of Fonda who told Saturday Globe newspaper, “(Margaret) has been cook for the boys at Yosts (across the river from Randall) since the war broke out and 14 of ‘her boys’ are in France and seven more are in training camps. She has mothered them all and the boys look to her for smiles and other necessities as well as for their meals.
“The boys in France who have boarded with her she does not forget but sends them cigarettes or money to buy them. She is now sending Christmas gifts.”
Were snowbanks bigger when we were younger? There could have been more snow. Other old timers have told me though that years ago the snow was plowed, but not removed.
During the 1940s, Amsterdam native Richard Ellers said the snow crunched underfoot, “That crunch is linked in my memory to walking to Christmas midnight Mass at St. Michael’s Church from our home, a flat on East Main Street downtown.”
In his upstairs flat, Ellers could hear a Salvation Army bell ringer on the street below, “There was only single pane glass on the windows. I also can still hear the clink-clink-clink of snow chains on cars driving below. Occasionally every third or fourth clink would be counter pointed with a double thunk, which was the sound of the ends of a broken chain slapping the underside of a fender.”
Shirley Spurles Baroody spent 11 years of her childhood at the Children’s Home, an orphanage at 81 Guy Park Avenue in Amsterdam. The home closed in 1957.
In December, the matrons at Children’s Home asked each child for a list of three gifts wanted for Christmas. Baroody remembered getting paper dolls and white socks. The women’s clubs of Amsterdam put on a Christmas party every year for the home.
Jacki Vogel’s parents, Alphonso and Catherine D'Alessandro, owned the Gift & Hobby Shop at Lark and East Main Street in Amsterdam, “I vividly remember Christmas Eves when others were gathering to celebrate the holiday. My dad would still be in the store, awaiting people coming to pick up their layaways. They always went the extra mile to try and locate a special toy that someone would want for a child.”
Amsterdam native Donald Isburgh recalled Christmas Eve services at St. Ann’s Episcopal Church on Division Street, “This was in the years before other local churches had their own Christmas Eve services, and the church was so crowded that the ushers had to set up extra chairs in the center aisle to accommodate everyone.”
When I was young, we went to a candlelight service Christmas Eve at First Methodist Church on Division Street, torn down for urban renewal in 1973. I was always impressed that the choir marched in holding hymnbooks and candles while singing. No one ever tripped and started a fire.
My family used a machine called the Recordio to make 78 rpm discs on Christmas to send to my Aunt Winnie and Uncle Al in Florida. Dinner was always turkey and always good and, after visiting Aunt Pansy, Uncle Percy and their three sons, we came back home and ate yet another meal with Aunts Gladys and Vera.
The Recordio made the move when our family relocated to Amsterdam’s Peter Lane in 1957. At some point, unfortunately, our machine was discarded along with our Recordio discs.
Monday, January 2, 2023-Story behind the story, Christmas memories column 2.
Tuesday, January 3, 2023 The winter of 1958
Wednesday, January 4, 2023-Dave Northrup is editor of Hugh Donlon’s “The Mohawk Valley.” Written during the 1930’s when he was a reporter and columnist for the Amsterdam Evening Recorder, “The Mohawk Valley” is Donlon’s history of his native region from the end of the ice age to 1940.
Thursday, January 5, 2023 The blizzard of 1888
Friday, January 6, 2023-Episode 456-The historic Fulton County courthouse, Ukrainians who settled in Amsterdam, Lafayette in Fort Hunter and other 2022 topics from Bob Cudmore’s Focus on History columns in the Daily Gazette and Amsterdam Recorder.
Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Sunday, January 1, 2022
Leader Herald
Make Us A Part Of Your Day
https://www.leaderherald.com/
By Bob CudmoreWhen I was young, we went to a candlelight service Christmas Eve at First Methodist Church on Division Street, torn down for urban renewal in 1973. I was always impressed that the choir marched in holding hymnbooks and candles while singing. No one ever tripped and started a fire.
She is now sending Christmas gifts
By Bob Cudmore
January 1, 2023
My grandmother, Margaret Cook, was a widow with three small children in Randall during World War I, supporting her family by feeding soldiers who guarded Lock 13 on the Barge Canal against German saboteurs.
One of the soldiers was Private William J. Allen of Fonda who told Saturday Globe newspaper, “(Margaret) has been cook for the boys at Yosts (across the river from Randall) since the war broke out and 14 of ‘her boys’ are in France and seven more are in training camps. She has mothered them all and the boys look to her for smiles and other necessities as well as for their meals.
“The boys in France who have boarded with her she does not forget but sends them cigarettes or money to buy them. She is now sending Christmas gifts.”
Were snowbanks bigger when we were younger? There could have been more snow. Other old timers have told me though that years ago the snow was plowed, but not removed.
During the 1940s, Amsterdam native Richard Ellers said the snow crunched underfoot, “That crunch is linked in my memory to walking to Christmas midnight Mass at St. Michael’s Church from our home, a flat on East Main Street downtown.”
In his upstairs flat, Ellers could hear a Salvation Army bell ringer on the street below, “There was only single pane glass on the windows. I also can still hear the clink-clink-clink of snow chains on cars driving below. Occasionally every third or fourth clink would be counter pointed with a double thunk, which was the sound of the ends of a broken chain slapping the underside of a fender.”
Shirley Spurles Baroody spent 11 years of her childhood at the Children’s Home, an orphanage at 81 Guy Park Avenue in Amsterdam. The home closed in 1957.
In December, the matrons at Children’s Home asked each child for a list of three gifts wanted for Christmas. Baroody remembered getting paper dolls and white socks. The women’s clubs of Amsterdam put on a Christmas party every year for the home.
Jacki Vogel’s parents, Alphonso and Catherine D'Alessandro, owned the Gift & Hobby Shop at Lark and East Main Street in Amsterdam, “I vividly remember Christmas Eves when others were gathering to celebrate the holiday. My dad would still be in the store, awaiting people coming to pick up their layaways. They always went the extra mile to try and locate a special toy that someone would want for a child.”
Amsterdam native Donald Isburgh recalled Christmas Eve services at St. Ann’s Episcopal Church on Division Street, “This was in the years before other local churches had their own Christmas Eve services, and the church was so crowded that the ushers had to set up extra chairs in the center aisle to accommodate everyone.”
When I was young, we went to a candlelight service Christmas Eve at First Methodist Church on Division Street, torn down for urban renewal in 1973. I was always impressed that the choir marched in holding hymnbooks and candles while singing. No one ever tripped and started a fire.
My family used a machine called the Recordio to make 78 rpm discs on Christmas to send to my Aunt Winnie and Uncle Al in Florida. Dinner was always turkey and always good and, after visiting Aunt Pansy, Uncle Percy and their three sons, we came back home and ate yet another meal with Aunts Gladys and Vera.
The Recordio made the move when our family relocated to Amsterdam’s Peter Lane in 1957. At some point, unfortunately, our machine was discarded along with our Recordio discs.
Monday, January 2, 2023-Story behind the story, Christmas memories column 2.
Tuesday, January 3, 2023 The winter of 1958
Wednesday, January 4, 2023-Dave Northrup is editor of Hugh Donlon’s “The Mohawk Valley.” Written during the 1930’s when he was a reporter and columnist for the Amsterdam Evening Recorder, “The Mohawk Valley” is Donlon’s history of his native region from the end of the ice age to 1940.
Thursday, January 5, 2023 The blizzard of 1888
Friday, January 6, 2023-Episode 456-The historic Fulton County courthouse, Ukrainians who settled in Amsterdam, Lafayette in Fort Hunter and other 2022 topics from Bob Cudmore’s Focus on History columns in the Daily Gazette and Amsterdam Recorder.
Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Sunday, January 1, 2022
Leader Herald
Make Us A Part Of Your Day
https://www.leaderherald.com/