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Sunday, October 8, 2023
Lightning Claimed the Life of Famed Fort Johnson Speed Skater
By Bob Cudmore
Speed skating champion Ted Ellenwood, Jr., 27, died instantly on June 11, 1946 when struck by lightning while golfing.
A friend, Lee DeGroff, was ten feet away but not injured. The golf course then was called the Antlers, today it’s called Rolling Hills.
Ellenwood had skated for the Fort Johnson Athletic Association, which produced other top speed skaters including George Hare, Hank Flesch, Don Talmadge and Gene Gage.
Born in Dunkirk, N.Y., in 1919, Ellenwood and his family moved to Fort Johnson when he was five. He started skating at age ten.
He won the Eastern States Speed Skating Championship in Fort Johnson in 1941. He tied for third place at the North American races in Schenectady. He won the 220 and 440 yard races at the National Championships in LaCrosse, Wisconsin, just before entering the U.S. Navy in 1942.
Ellenwood served as a machinist’s mate in the war aboard the destroyer U.S.S. Cotton which took part in numerous actions in the South Pacific.
He, his wife Lucia (from Portland, Maine) and their five month old son Ted III had returned to the local area to settle down by purchasing a gas station in Fort Johnson.
Ellenwood never qualified for the U.S. Olympic speed skating teams because he was better at American style skating as opposed to European style used in the Olympics. American skaters raced in a group while European skaters went in pairs and a time clock was used.
George Hare of Fort Johnson was very good at European style racing and was on the U.S. Olympic team in 1939. Hare competed in events in the United States as an Olympian but there were no Olympic games in 1940 and 1944 because of the war.
Ellenwood was an inspiration to fellow speed skater Gene Gage and once gave him a fine pair of skates that Gage used in racing competitions until he was in his mid-30s.
Among Fort Johnson skating coaches in the 1930s and early 1940s were Leroy Eckerson and W.C. Snyder.
A top skater after the war for the Fort Johnson club was Raymond Knapik who won a gold medal in the 220-yard sprint at the national championships in Alpena, Michigan in 1948. Knapik, who grew up in Amsterdam, also skated at Hasenfuss Field in that city.
Amsterdam native and longtime Californian Fred Wojcicki and LaVerne Colts managed the Fort Johnson skating rink in the winters of 1949 and 1950. Wojcicki was president of the Northeastern Skating Association.
Describing himself as one of the “run of the mill” skaters in Fort Johnson, the late Dave Noyes said he picked up a few medals along the way. He kept skating until knee and hip replacement surgeries in 2000.
Noyes worked at Johns Manville Corporation as a research engineer at their world headquarters in Denver.
Dave was the second of four brothers. His brother Dan drowned in the Mohawk River in 1947; his brother Randy died in an accident while serving the U.S. Air Force.
Dave Noyes said when he was a child, adults in the village provided children lifetime values by deed and example and maintained an active community.
Noyes, who lived his last years in Colorado, recalled commercial institutions in Fort Johnson such as Whalen’s grocery, Huen’s gas station, Sweet’s furniture and Tollner’s ice cream.
The village of Fort Johnson is scheduled to formally dissolve on the last day of this year, becoming a hamlet in the town of Amsterdam. The town will become responsible for public works in Fort Johnson. Residents voted 90 to 23 to dissolve the village in a referendum late last year.
Episode 495-David Brooks with an insightful look at the 115th New York Volunteer Regiment in the Civil War. The regiment was composed of men from Montgomery, Fulton, Saratoga and Hamilton Counties. Commanded by Simeon Sammons the troops went to war from Fonda. Brooks is a member of the board of the Fulton County Historical Society.
Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Sunday, October 8, 2023
51 degrees in The City of Amsterdam at 5:18AM
Five years after Schoharie limo crash, questions remain
The third-floor courtroom of the Schoharie County Courthouse erupted on May 17. Some gasped. Others scuffled to hug the person…
Renowned economist to discuss economic injustice at Union College
A renowned economist is set to give a lecture on the history of economic injustice Monday at Union College. Trevon…
New York allows permit to open bars at 8 a.m. for Buffalo Bills’ Sunday game
Gov. Kathy Hochul last week ordered the state Liquor Authority to extend a deadline to allow quick approval of one-day…
Leader Herald Make Us A Part Of Your Day
https://www.leaderherald.com/
By Bob CudmoreSunday, October 8, 2023
Lightning Claimed the Life of Famed Fort Johnson Speed Skater
By Bob Cudmore
Speed skating champion Ted Ellenwood, Jr., 27, died instantly on June 11, 1946 when struck by lightning while golfing.
A friend, Lee DeGroff, was ten feet away but not injured. The golf course then was called the Antlers, today it’s called Rolling Hills.
Ellenwood had skated for the Fort Johnson Athletic Association, which produced other top speed skaters including George Hare, Hank Flesch, Don Talmadge and Gene Gage.
Born in Dunkirk, N.Y., in 1919, Ellenwood and his family moved to Fort Johnson when he was five. He started skating at age ten.
He won the Eastern States Speed Skating Championship in Fort Johnson in 1941. He tied for third place at the North American races in Schenectady. He won the 220 and 440 yard races at the National Championships in LaCrosse, Wisconsin, just before entering the U.S. Navy in 1942.
Ellenwood served as a machinist’s mate in the war aboard the destroyer U.S.S. Cotton which took part in numerous actions in the South Pacific.
He, his wife Lucia (from Portland, Maine) and their five month old son Ted III had returned to the local area to settle down by purchasing a gas station in Fort Johnson.
Ellenwood never qualified for the U.S. Olympic speed skating teams because he was better at American style skating as opposed to European style used in the Olympics. American skaters raced in a group while European skaters went in pairs and a time clock was used.
George Hare of Fort Johnson was very good at European style racing and was on the U.S. Olympic team in 1939. Hare competed in events in the United States as an Olympian but there were no Olympic games in 1940 and 1944 because of the war.
Ellenwood was an inspiration to fellow speed skater Gene Gage and once gave him a fine pair of skates that Gage used in racing competitions until he was in his mid-30s.
Among Fort Johnson skating coaches in the 1930s and early 1940s were Leroy Eckerson and W.C. Snyder.
A top skater after the war for the Fort Johnson club was Raymond Knapik who won a gold medal in the 220-yard sprint at the national championships in Alpena, Michigan in 1948. Knapik, who grew up in Amsterdam, also skated at Hasenfuss Field in that city.
Amsterdam native and longtime Californian Fred Wojcicki and LaVerne Colts managed the Fort Johnson skating rink in the winters of 1949 and 1950. Wojcicki was president of the Northeastern Skating Association.
Describing himself as one of the “run of the mill” skaters in Fort Johnson, the late Dave Noyes said he picked up a few medals along the way. He kept skating until knee and hip replacement surgeries in 2000.
Noyes worked at Johns Manville Corporation as a research engineer at their world headquarters in Denver.
Dave was the second of four brothers. His brother Dan drowned in the Mohawk River in 1947; his brother Randy died in an accident while serving the U.S. Air Force.
Dave Noyes said when he was a child, adults in the village provided children lifetime values by deed and example and maintained an active community.
Noyes, who lived his last years in Colorado, recalled commercial institutions in Fort Johnson such as Whalen’s grocery, Huen’s gas station, Sweet’s furniture and Tollner’s ice cream.
The village of Fort Johnson is scheduled to formally dissolve on the last day of this year, becoming a hamlet in the town of Amsterdam. The town will become responsible for public works in Fort Johnson. Residents voted 90 to 23 to dissolve the village in a referendum late last year.
Episode 495-David Brooks with an insightful look at the 115th New York Volunteer Regiment in the Civil War. The regiment was composed of men from Montgomery, Fulton, Saratoga and Hamilton Counties. Commanded by Simeon Sammons the troops went to war from Fonda. Brooks is a member of the board of the Fulton County Historical Society.
Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Sunday, October 8, 2023
51 degrees in The City of Amsterdam at 5:18AM
Five years after Schoharie limo crash, questions remain
The third-floor courtroom of the Schoharie County Courthouse erupted on May 17. Some gasped. Others scuffled to hug the person…
Renowned economist to discuss economic injustice at Union College
A renowned economist is set to give a lecture on the history of economic injustice Monday at Union College. Trevon…
New York allows permit to open bars at 8 a.m. for Buffalo Bills’ Sunday game
Gov. Kathy Hochul last week ordered the state Liquor Authority to extend a deadline to allow quick approval of one-day…
Leader Herald Make Us A Part Of Your Day
https://www.leaderherald.com/