The Historians

Jack Kelly/The Historians/Saturday


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Bob Cudmore The Historians 500 episodes since the podcast started in 2014.  Please help us continue The Historians Podcast by making a donation.  Please contribute at https://gofund.me/777777e9  or send a check made out to Bob Cudmore, 125 Horstman Drive, Scotia, NY 12302. $5180.00 the goal $7000.00 over the next three weeks. Thanks

Bob Cudmore this weekend The Daily Gazette and Amsterdam Recorder The Historians on Sunday

https://www.dailygazette.com/

Focus on History-Some of Pearl Harbor attack’s local effects

Alton R. Swann, born in Schenectady, moved to Gloversville, went to high school and business school there and became an accountant at Schenectady General Electric.

   Drafted by the Army in May 1941, Swann was serving at Clark Air Base in the Philippines with the 803rd Engineer Battalion.

Bob Cudmore on "the radio" today at noon

WCSS Amsterdam 106.9FM and WKAJ St. Johnsville 97.9FM

Noon

Saturday, December 9, 2023-Episode 502-Jack Kelly is author of God Save Benedict Arnold. Arnold committed treason. Yet he was more than a turncoat—Kelly argues Arnold’s achievements during the early years of the Revolutionary War defined him as the most successful soldier of the era.

12:30

Saturday, December 9, 2023-Episode 357-Lawyer and historian Jim Kaplan looks at the lives of financier Bruce Wasserstein and his sister, playwright Wendy Wasserstein, key figures in the revival of New York City in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

Saturday, December 9, 2023

Bob Cudmores conversation with Steve Haggerty

Steve Haggerty is author of Norman Rockwell’s Models: In and Out of the Studio. In 1940, illustrator Norman Rockwell, his wife Mary and their three sons moved to West Arlington, Vermont. The artist discovered a treasure trove of models. Haggerty’s book‘details these models’ lives, friendships with the artist and experiences in his studio.

Amsterdam changes after Pearl Harbor attack

By Bob Cudmore

   The movie “South of Tahiti” playing at the Strand Theatre on East Main Street in Amsterdam was interrupted Sunday afternoon December 7, 1941 when the news broke that the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor.  Radio coverage was piped into the theater and dazed patrons left the building.

   The Amsterdam Clubs Association met later that day at St. Michael’s Club on Reid Street.  According to the late Robert Going’s book on World War II, “Where Do We Find Such Men,” attorney Frederick Partyka urged “member groups to be devoted to true Americanism.”

   George A. Tralka, 15, was at his family’s James Street home in Amsterdam when he heard about the attack on the radio.  Tralka at first thought Pearl Harbor was in Alaska.

   Tralka’s parents, Joseph and Martha, went ahead with their plans to go out that Sunday and to have George watch his younger sisters. 

   The next day as young Tralka delivered the Schenectady Gazette he heard President Roosevelt’s “day of infamy” speech on the radio when making his delivery to Reid Hill Pharmacy.

   “It was a solemn moment in the drug store,” Tralka wrote in his memoir, “Diary of a Replacement Soldier.”  Tralka survived the war and became a physician in the Washington, D.C. area.   

   An Amsterdam soldier died in the Japanese attack.  William E. Hasenfuss, Jr. came from a family of nine children who lived on Northampton Road.

   Hasenfuss had flown planes at an air field in Perth before enlisting in the Army in 1939.  He died at Hickam Air Field in Hawaii.  Japanese airplanes shot up the B-24 bomber Hasenfuss and his ground crew were working on.  Every member of the crew was hit.  News of Hasenfuss’s death reached Amsterdam December 10.

   His mother, Frieda, Amsterdam’s first World War II Gold Star Mother, christened the light cruiser U.S.S. Amsterdam on April 25, 1944 at Newport News, Virginia.

   “I was thinking of William when I smashed that bottle.” she said as the vessel slid into the James River.

   The Amsterdam was one of the ships in Tokyo Bay when the Japanese surrendered.  Serving onboard was Steve Fitz of Schenectady who became a popular radio talk show host back home.

   Two days after the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor the sports pages of the Amsterdam Recorder ran a column which wondered how long local basketball would last as the war went on.

   Bowling was still going strong in December 1941.  My uncle Percy Cudmore was leading the City League with a 192 bowling average. 

   Cudmore enlisted in the Army, overcoming initial objections to his age, he was 36, and blood pressure.  During his time overseas, he was able to visit family members then living in Pontypridd, Wales.  When he saw his Aunt Emma Copp Vodden, he said she looked like Cudmore’s mother Elizabeth who had died in 1934.  While visiting the Voddens he played ball with his cousin Ethel.

   Cudmore’s eldest son, Roger, said his father was in the artillery and blamed that for hearing problems later in life.  He fought in North Africa against German General Erwin Rommel’s forces and possibly in Italy.

   An Amsterdam newspaper article from 1943 quoted Corporal Cudmore expressing concern for a lackluster performance by his old bowling team.   The sports reporter wrote, “As for Cudmore himself, you can bet all the family heirlooms that he will be bowling as soon as he gets back to the good old USA.”

   Cudmore was back in Amsterdam in 1945.  He started bowling again, rolling a 269 single in November, near the date that he and school teacher Pansy Keller married.  She too was a good bowler.

Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Saturday, December 9, 2023

44 degrees in The City of Amsterdam at 6:14AM

Mostly cloudy, with a high near 46. East wind 5 to 7 mph.
Tonight
A chance of rain, mainly between 3am and 5am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 36. East wind around 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
Sunday
Rain, mainly after 7am. High near 52. East wind 6 to 9 mph becoming southwest in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New precipitation amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Monday
Snow, possibly mixed with rain before 4pm, then a slight chance of snow. High near 39. Windy, with a west wind 11 to 16 mph increasing to 21 to 26 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 40 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New precipitation amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch possible
Dry weather is expected today, with milder temperatures
and a partly to mostly cloudy sky. A strong storm system will bring
rain to the region on Sunday, although colder air quickly arriving
behind it will allow many areas to end as wet snow for Sunday night
into early Monday. Some of the rain will be locally heavy with the
potential for flooding and winds will be rather gusty, especially
behind the storm for Monday.
Mohawk Valley News from The Daily Gazette, The Recorder News, The Leader-Herald and Nippertown.
https://www.dailygazette.com/
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The HistoriansBy Bob Cudmore