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Jacob Snell loved an election

By Bob Cudmore

   Jacob Snell was “unceasing and unrelenting” on behalf of the Republican Party.  The Canajoharie Courier wrote, “A campaign once begun was waged until the polls were closed on Election Day, so in case of a narrow defeat he never felt the chagrin that he had not made his best and most ardent fight.”

   Snell was born in Stone Arabia in the Town of Palatine in 1847 and lived on a farm with his parents.  While in Palatine, he was elected supervisor and town clerk, running as a Republican in a Democratic town.

   Snell married Nancy Nellis of Palatine in 1867 and they had two sons and three daughters.

   A popular and powerful leader, the Amsterdam Recorder reported “prolonged cheering and hand-clapping” when “Uncle Jake” entered a 1903 Republican county convention.

   Boss Snell’s large girth made him a target for political cartoonists.  The New York Journal in 1901 showed a seated Snell with a diamond stickpin on his tie, which was lying atop his stomach. 

   The caption said, “Jacob Snell, whose diamond looks him square in the face.”

   About 1870 he moved to Fonda.  Two of his ancestors—an earlier Jacob and Alexander Snell—had been elected Montgomery County sheriff.  Jacob Snell ran for sheriff in 1884 and lost.  He was elected two years later, serving three years as sheriff.  He became chairman of the Republican county committee, was a state committeeman and president of the village of Fonda.

   Snell owned a company that did roadwork and he was president of Mohawk Valley Broom of Fonda.  He owned a downtown Fonda hotel, later known as the Hotel Roy.  He was president of the County Agricultural Society, which stages the Fonda Fair, for two years.  He was superintendent of a section of the Erie Canal for a time. 

   Although both were Republicans, Snell and Gloversville Congressman and glove industry mogul Lucius Littauer were at odds over the years.  Snell had threatened to run against Littauer for Congress in 1902 but dropped out of the race, reportedly to improve his chances of getting an appointment to be a prison warden.

   It took a while but Snell got what he wanted.  He sought the job of warden at Clinton Correctional Facility, also known as Dannemora state prison in northern New York.  Snell didn’t get the job. 

   Finally, in 1904 Governor Benjamin Odell named Snell the warden of the four-year-old Napanoch Reformatory in Ulster County. 

   Snell died at the reformatory on December 22nd, 1905 at age 58.  “An abdominal abscess and acute kidney disease, surgical treatment of which was not practicable because of his immense girth, were the primary causes of his death,” wrote the Schenectady Union.

   There is an often repeated story that when Snell died, the door of the room where he perished at the reformatory had to be enlarged to get his body out.

   The Little Falls Times reported that Snell weighed 500 pounds and that twelve men were needed to carry his casket.

   Amsterdam’s Democratic paper, the Morning Sentinel, actually came to Republican Snell’s defense on the subject of his size.  The Sentinel scoffed at the Little Falls Times report, saying Snell did not even weigh 400 pounds and that “six small men” had no trouble handling the casket. 

   When he died, newspapers called him “one of the best known Republicans in the state.”

   At the funeral in Fonda, popular Reverend Washington Frothingham, a Mohawk Valley historian, paid tribute to Snell’s Revolutionary War ancestors, saying seven of them had given their lives for their country. 

   After the funeral, Snell’s body was taken by train for burial in the Canajoharie Falls Cemetery. 

Jim Kaplan on Revolutionary War General Horatio Gates.  American commander in the key victory over the British in the Battle of Saratoga, Gates’ reputation suffered at the end of the war.  He later moved to New York City and helped elect Thomas Jefferson as President in 1800.

Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Sunday, November 12, 2023

34 degrees in The City of Amsterdam at 6:10AM 

Cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 43. Light and variable wind.
Tonight
Mostly clear, with a low around 21. Calm wind.
Monday
A slight chance of showers after 3pm. Increasing clouds, with a high near 45. Calm wind becoming southeast 5 to 7 mph in the morning. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Quiet and tranquil but cool weather expected through
Monday morning with high pressure remaining in control. An upper-
level disturbance will bring some rain and snow showers Monday
afternoon into Tuesday, especially for areas along and north of I-
90, but then tranquil weather returns for Wednesday and Thursday. A
warming trend is expected for the second half of the week into next
weekend, with temperatures riding to above normal levels.
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The HistoriansBy Bob Cudmore