The Historians

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New Year's Day
A chance of showers before 1pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 47. Chance of precipitation is 40%.

Jacob Snell: a big man at turn of the century

GOP politician occupied many positions by Bob Cudmore

Jacob Snell was a large man.  Snell also loomed large in politics in Montgomery County and New York State in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  When he died, newspapers called him “one of the best known Republicans in the state.”

Boss Snell’s girth made him an easy target for political cartoonists.  A New York Journal cartoon in 1901 showed a seated Snell with a diamond stickpin on his tie.  The caption said: “Jacob Snell, whose diamond looks him square in the face.”

Snell’s name came up in an email from Peter Betz, professor emeritus at Fulton-Montgomery Community College, who thought that Snell might have been the political operative indirectly attacked by a Democratic newspaper in Amsterdam in 1889 that was the subject of a previous column.  A perusal of a scrapbook at the Montgomery County Department of History and Archives and conversation with Fonda village historian Volkert Veeder led to some fascinating information but no confirmation of the connection to the 1889 Amsterdam article. 

According to newspaper obituaries, Jacob Snell was born in Stone Arabia in the Town of Palatine in 1847.and lived on a farm with his parents until about 1870 when he moved to Fonda.  While in Palatine, he was elected supervisor and town clerk running as a Republican in a Democratic town.  Two of his ancestors—an earlier Jacob and an Alexander Snell—had been elected county sheriff.  Jacob Snell ran for sheriff in 1884 and lost but was elected in 1886, serving three years.  He also served as chair of the Republican county committee, was a state committeeman and president of the village of Fonda.

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

In 1904, Governor Benjamin Odell named Snell the warden of the Napanoch reformatory in Ulster County.  Snell had wanted the post of warden at Dannemora prison but didn’t get the job.

At the age of 58, Snell died at the reformatory on December 22nd, 1905.

“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 oft repeated story that when Snell died, the door of the room where he perished had to be enlarged to get his body out.

          Amsterdam’s Democratic paper, the Morning Sentinel, came to Republican Snell’s defense on the subject of his size.  The Little Falls Times reported that Snell weighed 500 pounds and that 12 men were needed to carry his casket.   The Sentinel scoffed at the Times report, saying Snell did not even weigh 400 pounds and that “six small men”: had no trouble handling the casket. 

At the funeral in Fonda, Rev. Washington Frothingham 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.  He had married Nancy Nellis of Palatine in 1867 and they had two sons and three daughters.

          The Canajoharie Courier editorialized that Boss Snell was “unceasing and unrelenting” on behalf of the Republican Party: “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.”

Buddy Levy

Friday, December 30, 2022

Episode 455-Buddy Levy author of Empire of Ice and Stone: The Disastrous and Heroic (1913) Voyage of the Karluk.  Levy, who lives in Idaho, is a go-to author for Arctic history.

Just six weeks after the Karluk departed, giant ice floes closed in around her. As the ship became icebound, Stefansson disembarked with five companions and struck out on what he claimed was a 10-day caribou hunting trip. Most on board would never see him again.

Saturday, December 31, 2022-Charles Gehring’s life work has been to translate Old Dutch language documents from the 17th century New Netherland colony in New York, New Jersey and Delaware.  Gehring is Director of the New Netherland Research Center at the New York State Education Department in Albany.

2023 

Sunday, January 1

Christmas column 2

   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.

Mohawk Valley Weather, Thursday, December 29, 2022

Mostly cloudy, then gradually becoming sunny, with a high near 43. Light and variable wind.
Tonight
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 32. Calm wind becoming southwest around 5 mph.
Friday
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 46. Calm wind.
Saturday
A chance of rain after 1pm. Cloudy, with a high near 45. Light east wind. Chance of precipitation is 40%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.
New Year's Day
A chance of showers before 1pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 47. Chance of precipitation is 40%.
 
Mohawk Valley News Headlines, Thursday, December 29, 2022
Daily Gazette
Paper-Paper, On-line and e-edition
When Credibility Matters
 
Schenectady City Council settles century-old deed mix-up
SCHENECTADY — A project to convert the former Elmer Avenue Elementary School into affordable senior housing is moving forward after…
 
https://dailygazette.com/
 
RecorderNews
 
Common Council to consider selling 20 city-owned properties to developer at special meeting
 
AMSTERDAM — Twenty city-owned properties could soon be sold to a developer for $5,000 each. But, that deal would require the buyer to secure $50,000 performance bonds for each parcel that Amsterdam would use to demolish the...
 
https://www.recordernews.com/

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The HistoriansBy Bob Cudmore