The Historians

WGY radio's 100th Anniversary


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Old Fort Johnson to hold Fall Harvest Festival on Saturday

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Bob Cudmore in The Gazette and Recorder this weekend

This Sunday, October 15, 2023-Focus on History-No ice cream for the Seabees on USS Amsterdam

Friday, October 13, 2023 An encore performance of Historians Podcast Episode 408, first aired on February 4, 2022-WGY radio’s 100th anniversary-featuring Kolin Hager, Martha Brooks, Howard Tupper, Earl Pudney, Don Tuttle, Elle Pankin, Diane Ward and Bob Cudmore.  WGY news anchor Mike Patrick describes podcasts he has recorded with many WGY veterans.  The station aired special programming on February 20, 2022, the actual 100th anniversary of WGY.

Saturday, October 14, 2023-From the archives- January 17, 2020-Episode 301-Caryl Hopson and Susan Perkins discuss their book “Murder and Mayhem in Herkimer County.”  One chapter describes the death of Grace Brown, one of the most famous cases in the country, inspiring Theodore Dreiser’s novel “An American Tragedy.”

Amsterdam’s most unforgettable day and other tales

By Bob Cudmore

   It has been good to see longtime readers while doing book signings for a collection of Focus on History columns, “Stories from the Mohawk Valley.”

   Sam Vomero has provided many insightful Amsterdam history leads, including memories of what Vomero calls Amsterdam’s most unforgettable day, July 20, 1942 when the New York Yankees and a huge carnival came to the city.

   The Yankees exhibition game against their farm team, the Rugmakers, on that date at Mohawk Mills Park, now Shuttleworth Park, is remembered by many. But Vomero said that on the same day, the James E. Strates Shows arrived in Amsterdam, traveling on its own train of 30 cars, including a private car used by Strates himself.  The carnival, sponsored by V.F.W. Post 55, set up at Karp’s Park on Upper Church Street and featured Adele Nelson’s “baseball playing elephants,” a trapeze artist and what was called “America’s best midway.”

   The Yankees arrived at 12:35 in the afternoon when the New York Central train the Empire State Express made a special stop, depositing Joe DiMaggio and his fellow Yankees into a sea of autograph-seeking fans. Police Chief Frank Kearns assigned a special detail of patrolmen to keep the crowd off the tracks.

A DAY IN THE LIFE

East End resident Emil Suda has a great interest in local history, for example providing a Mohawk Mills house magazine account of a day in the life of electrician George Rink, a typical worker in 1949.

   Rink was the subject of the cover story in an issue of Tomohawk, a magazine produced for factory employees. The piece is illustrated with pictures of George, his father, wife, children, fellow workers and teammates on the Mohawk Mills Association softball squad.  The article followed Rink from his home at 50 McCleary Avenue in Amsterdam to his job at Mohawk’s Upper Mill four blocks away. 

   Rink had met his wife Cecelia while stationed at the U.S. Army’s Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas where she was an office worker at a nearby air base. A first sergeant, he fought in France with a company whose job was to evacuate wounded soldiers.

   “George has five battle stars and a Bronze Star as souvenirs of this experience,” wrote the magazine author.

   One picture shows Rink, 5-year old Carolyn and 3-year old Donnie playing on the floor of their living room with the caption, “Like other young fathers who were separated from their families in the war, George spends lots of time with his children at home.”

LOST BLOCK AND LOST PARK

   Some people provided leads for new stories. Rosemary Forrest of Amsterdam remembers what she called “the lost block” on Guy Park Avenue at Market Street, a business and residential block that disappeared in the urban renewal era of the late 1960s and early 1970s.

   Dan Weaver, proprietor of the Book Hound store in downtown Amsterdam, has a detailed promotional booklet touting Okwari Park, proposed as a recreation area in the towns of Charleston and Root in the 1960s and 1970s.  The project never materialized and apparently led to the defeat of several county supervisors who supported the idea.

   Frequent contributor Norma-Jean Qualls has been told by a longtime resident that Cranesville was damaged in a tornado in the late 1940s.  So far no record of that earlier event has been found.  Cranesville was badly damaged by a tornado last month.

Hagaman Historical & Preservation Society Autumn Bazaar this Saturday
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Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Friday, October 13, 2023

43 degrees in The City of Amsterdam at 5:53AM 

Sunny, with a high near 62. Northwest wind 6 to 9 mph.
Tonight
Increasing clouds, with a low around 40. West wind around 6 mph.
Saturday
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 59. West wind 3 to 5 mph.
Sunday
Partly sunny, with a high near 58. North wind 5 to 10 mph.
 
Mohawk Valley News Headlines, Friday, October 13, 2023
 
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The HistoriansBy Bob Cudmore