Monthly Archives: May 2019

2019 is Crammed With Anniversaries

This year of 2019 turns out to be crammed with anniversaries!

*This year we Americans have three important quadricentennials (had to look that one up, and the spell check still doesn’t like it), all centered around Jamestown (founded 1607) in Virginia. This is the four-hundredth anniversary of the first elected representative assembly in America – the House of Burgesses, chosen by vote of the free men of Virginia, to make laws for the young colony.

*That same year saw the first labor strike in America, as Polish immigrants refused to work unless they were granted voting rights, which at first had been restricted to the English-born and their offspring. In three weeks the burgesses caved in, and the newly-enfranchised former Poles went back to work.

*The year 1619 also saw the first boatload of African slaves delivered for sale, starting English-speaking America down a centuries-long trail of crime and brutality.

*The first Steuben County Fair took place in Bath in 1819, making this the bicentennial year! Our fair has weathered world wars, the Civil War, the Spanish flu, the Great Depression, and numerous severe floods, and kept on going. Hooray!

*Over in Schuyler County, the village of Burdett got its start in the same year.

*Bath’s Library opened its doors in 1869 – this is its sesquicentennial year! The library’s first location was in the county courthouse. When it got a permanent home it was named the Davenport Library, after the donor.

*Also in Bath, St. Thomas Episcopal Church laid the cornerstone for the monumental Liberty Street edifice that we all know today. (It’s the oldest church building in the Village.) The Methodist church building was dedicated in Campbell, and First Baptist Church was organized in Addison. Corning Flint Glass Works was in its first full year in Corning.

*As far as centennials are concerned, Finger Lakes Tourism Alliance (originally the Finger Lakes Association) has been bringing visitors to our 14-county region since 1919. Also still with us is the American Legion, formed in Paris a hundred years ago.

*There are 20th anniversaries too! In 1999 Davenport Library celebrated its 130th birthday by moving to new facilities next door… helped out by schoolchildren and others passing books from the old place to the new. The NEW library was named Dormann, for the family that donated funds for construction. Gerald Ford and Walter Cronkite came for the opening festivities, as did Defense Secretary William Cohen. Every living President donated an autographed book.

*Lieutenant-Colonel Eileen Collins of Elmira became the first woman to command and pilot the Space Shuttle. As a teenager she had cadged flying lessons at the Harris Hill gliderport by voluntarily helping out with scut work around the hangar. She went on to Corning Community College, Syracuse University, a master’s degree, the Air Force, and the Astronaut’s Corps. In 1999 she became the highest-flying American woman ever.

*Steuben County Historical Society and Steuben County Historian moved into the old Davenport Library, then renamed Magee House after its 1831 builder.

*U.S. Representative Amo Houghton defied, disdained, or ignored his party by voting against the impeachment of Bill Clinton. The Republican-controlled senate agreed with Houghton, and Clinton stayed in the White House.

*Anyway, this year marks quite a few anniversaries. Find a few to celebrate!

“Stay in the Loop” at Yates County Arts Center

*A few weeks ago in this space we took a trip to Dansville ArtWorks, and today we’re stepping up to the Yates County Arts Center, in Penn Yan.

*We went in particular because our friend Jean Hubsch is exhibiting fine needlework along with Nancy LeVant (quilting) and Raphaela McCormack (3D paper and fiber art), in a show entitled “Stay in the Loop.”

*Well, I know a thing or two about art, but I also know what I like. And I LIKE Nancy LeVant’s “Snowy Egret” quilt, with the huge gold circle of the sun (moon?) backgrounding the almost life-size bird. It arrests you and delights you all at once.

*Her “Alaska” quilt is large enough to befit the state, with designs suggestive of Native designs, and blocks depicting the eagle, orca, bear, and moose – not to mention the salmon, the loon, and a landscape.

*“Autumn Leaves” builds very nicely on the classic maple leaf pattern, but my favorite quilt was actually graphic and geometric, rather than pictorial – “Feathered Star,” with a multipointed star inlaid within a larger star. The shading is what caught my attention, and made it my favorite. I’m not sure I can explain why but, as I said, I know what I like.

*Sticking with the bird theme (egret-eagle-loon), I was struly struck by two oversize color photos from Nancy Ridenour. “Great Egrets Mating Behavior at Rookery” captures three of the large white birds, one of them displaying with wings and throat, and no doubt vocalizing. (One of them is peeking in from the shrubbery, perhaps waiting for his chance to move in.) “Great Blue Heron Flying into Rookery” captures the majestic bird in flight, with wings wide, primaries spread, and legs trailing. It also brings out the bird’s many colors, which we usually miss in the field.

*On the painting side, Kathy Armstrong’s “Goose Parade” makes a funny barnyard scene. On the other hand in “Pines at Dawn” Karleen VanDeusen has captured with surprisingly few strokes the eerie beauty of first light in a pine forest, with wide-winged birds soaring above.

*As far as Jean’s embroidery is concerned, it’s always excellent work, which explains why she’s so highly regarded among needlework artists. The Hardanger-technique “Christmas House” has multiple levels. We view the house itself on a second surface, through a cutout in the first surface. And we view the interior of the house, including Christmas tree, through a window in the second surface.

*Brambles and Berries” (3D counted thread technique) pushes past traditional embroidery, with the brambles actually breaking free from the surface, casting shadows beneath.

*But perhaps the one I liked best is a quiet piece in stumpwork technique, with a plant aspiring high, carrying along its leaves and blossoms.

*I sometimes exhibited Hannelore Woolcott-Bailey’s work when I was director of Curtiss Museum, and I was delighted by her painting “Milkweed,” with seeds exploding from the pods, and monarchs beholding the swelling scene. It’s small, and it’s glorious.

*Hannelore also painted the more whimsical “Grandview, Keuka,” a wraparound view of the lake and the Bluff, speckled with sailboats, gulls, hayrolls, and a tractor.

*And, of course, the Art Center’s in an old bank (at 127 Main Street), and the door to the vault is a breathtaking example of industrial art all by itself. Really, take some time to grok its artistic and mechanical intricacies.

*”Stay in the Loop” is up until June 8. But there’s always stuff worth seeing, no matter what the date.

Use Our Local Airports!

Some years ago, when my father was in assisted living, I was in Rhode Island meeting with a banker about his affairs. Just in general conversation she told me that bank officials needed regularly to go to Ithaca, and what a pain it was to get there from the Syracuse airport. “Why don’t you fly to Elmira?” I asked. “From there it’s just a half-hour up the road.”

*“Elmira?”, she asked in reply. And now they always use Elmira.

*If you live here in our general Corning region, from time to time you might need to fly elsewhere. Elmira Corning Regional Airport is one of your options.

*United, Allegiant, and Delta all fly out of Elmira, to Dulles, Detroit, and Orlando, with about eight flights in and eight flights out on a typical day. Back in March we flew from Elmira to Detroit to Houston, and return. The airport’s very easy to get to, parking is simple, and you just stroll in from the lot with no confusion.

*On the down side… early morning flights often get delayed by ground fog, associated with the nearby Chemung River. AND, it’s a small airport. A few years ago, while we were grounded on the runway waiting for fog to lift, the pilot said, “I’d take you back to the terminal, but at this particular airport I don’t think you’d be having any more fun there than you are here.” No one objected.

*On the other hand, the place has been improved a good deal since then, and more improvements are under way. The terminal has a restaurant, which is more than some can say.

*Greater Binghamton Airport has several Delta flights to and from Detroit, scattered through the day. I’ve never visited the airport, so I can’t tell you anything first hand.

*A few weeks ago I had to fly to Rhode Island unexpectedly, and didn’t want to do it via Dulles, Detroit, or Orlando. I could get a flight from Rochester through Philadelphia, but my wife really hoped I could find something that wouldn’t require her driving home and then back alone. Since Elmira and Binghamton were out, it suddenly occurred to me: what about Ithaca?

*I’d flown THROUGH Ithaca airport, and while that wasn’t quite back in Glenn Curtiss days, it had been several decades. Ithaca, it turns out, flies Delta, United, and American, AND I could get to Providence by changing at Philadelphia… which, if not as good distance-wise as Newark or LaGuardia, is at least well in the realm of reasonableness. Newark is, in fact, another option from Ithaca, and so is good old Detroit.

*Plusses for Ithaca Tompkins Regional Airport: easy to get to, easy parking, decent terminal. On the MINUS side, right now they’re going through construction. The terminal’s a mess, and it’s noisy, and it’s COLD. The restaurant is the only business, and it’s closed, leaving only vending machines. On the other hand, even with all this it’s a nice friendly place, with helpful staff (both the airline folks and the TSA people).

*So, while in many cases you can get better prices… and, of course, many more choices of immediate destination… by going to Buffalo, Syracuse, or Rochester, don’t turn off our local airports. They may be more helpful and useful than you might have thought!

A Hundred Years of Tourism!

“Everybody burst out singing” when the Great War ended in 1918. But around Keuka Lake, 1919 brought BIG trouble.

*The Curtiss plant in Hammondsport, which had employed almost a thousand people, closed in December ’18 with the end of war orders, never to re-open.

*Farms that had mechanized during the war (to make up for the workers who went into uniform) suddenly had years of time payments ahead, even as prices for their produce collapsed.

*Then the soldiers came home, looking for jobs.

*And Prohibition came in. Wineries were shuttered, and buyers met the grape crop with tepid interest.

*On top of that, the old pattern of tourism was dead. Nineteenth-century families arrived by rail in Penn Yan, Watkins, or Hammondsport, then took a steamboat to a lakeside resort and stayed put for weeks, or even for the whole summer. Nowadays people had cars (and they loved them).

*Hammondsporters touted their village as an ideal place for small aviation firms, and two or three of them took the bait – Mercury Aircraft is still with us. Vineyardists boosted jam, jelly, juice, and table grapes.

*But forward thinkers also seized on a new type of tourism – what we call today the F.I.T., or Fully Independent Traveler – couples or families traveling by car, staying a night or two here and there, and making up their own itineraries.

*A 1919 meeting created the Finger Lakes Association (now Finger Lakes Tourism Alliance, and celebrating its centennial) to market the region. But F.L.A. and others recognized that one of the first things they needed to do was improve the roads. Many villages still had unpaved streets, while the rural roads were often like our Seasonal Use Highways, but not as professionally maintained.

*Fortunately the “Good Roads Movement” was an experienced and enthusiastic pressure group, in Albany and out. When the state decided it could afford to pave EITHER the West Lake Road OR the East Lake Road on Keuka, Governor Al Smith himself came to make the choice.

*East siders wined him and dined him at Keuka Hotel and sent him across the lake by speedboat, confident that they’d won the prize.

*West siders put up picnic tables outside the Gibson House, then had farmers drive their equipment up and down the dirt road, covering tables, picnics, governor and all with throat-choking dust.

*Guess which side got paved?

*Tourist cabins such as Rambler’s Rest in Painted Post appeared, and Tuskegee Guest House in Bath was a beacon for weary African American travelers. “Roadside Architecture,” such as the “showboat” restaurant at Rambler’s Rest and The Wigwams in Jasper enthralled families.

*Keuka Hotel reinvented itself for day use and short-term stays, with miniature golf, name bands on the weekends, and an emphasis on lunches. “Electric Park” near Penn Yan disappeared along with its parent trolley line, but a small amusement park (with a LONG slide into the Keuka Lake) flourished in Pulteney.

*Al Smith assigned Robert Moses to research and propose a modern state park system, and Moses decided that parks should be linked with major cities from which visitors could drive. He selected and acquired the site for Stony Brook Park; New York had acquired Watkins Glen Park in 1911, but now development accelerated.

*Winery tours came back after Prohibition ended in 1933, but glass tourism was a little haphazard (there was no glass museum). Agri-tourism would have been considered hilarious (farms were work, not fun), and since there was no forest to speak of, hunting was limited to pheasant, rabbit, and the like. Fishing was big, though, with the help of the fish hatchery in Bath. As people learned to swim (very rare in the 19th century), they started using the lakes differently, and handling boats more safely.

*And here we are – a hundred years later. Congratulations (and many thanks) to F.L.T.A., and here’s to another century of happy (Fully Independent!) Travelers!

Where Will YOU Be on Free Comic Book Day?

The first Saturday in March is Derby Day, down in Louisville, Kentucky. It’s also Free Comic Book Day at comic shops from coast to coast. And this year it’s ALSO May 4, making it Star Wars Day (“May the Fourth be with you!”) even unto galaxies far, far away, making this Saturday a Triple Crown all by itself!

*So, anyhow… Free Comic Book Day. You dont find newsstands very much any more, supermarkets and drug stores usually don’t carry comic books these days, and comic book shops are suffering like all other small businesses beneath the weight of Internet sales.

*But even before the Internet, shops and publishers were collaborating on Free Comic Book Day… a way to reward established readers and invite new ones… and also, in many cases, introduce new titles, characters, and lines.

*In most cases, it’s pretty simple. You walk into the shop, look around and pick up a few of the specially-marked free items. You might think about making a purchase or two. The comics are free to the customer, but they still cost the dealer a quarter apiece.

*In case you’d been wondering, comics are not all superheroes, and the superheroes themselves are not all Dark Knights and Grim Crusaders. So it’s safe to take the kids! Archie and his gang are still hanging out. Mickey and Donald, Pluto and Goofy are still all over the stands. There are also romance comics, war stories, non-fiction, science fiction, and more – just about every genre under the sun.

*Most stores also lay on refreshments or entertainment, and sometimes artists or writers are on hand to sign their work.

*So, where can you go in our coverage area?

*I expect to be at my favorite comic book store, Heroes Your Mom Threw Out, in Elmira Heights. Jared Aiossa is our host, and I’ve been shopping there ever since my sharp-eyed wife spotted his ad on the Smallville TV show, many years agone. Being as I’m a regular, Jared knows what new titles to steer me toward, and which ones I probably wouldn’t care for. He also does a lot to promote art in the community.

*Comics for Collectors is in the Collegetown section of Ithaca, bouyed no doubt by the large local university propulation. (For a long time Tim also had a branch, of honored memory, on Market Street in Corning.) His selection is always good, and he’s right off the Ithaca Commons, so there’s plenty more to explore and shop at.

*Pulp Nouveau is on Main Street in Canandaigua. It’s fun to just keep walking deeper into the store, away from the street. Main Street also has a needlework store, and plenty of other businesses, just in case some members of your family are disposed in other directions. Domestic harmony!

*Two Kings in Victor (“where everybody is treated like royalty!”) is a great small shop that recently celebrated its fifth anniversary, making it about the youngest store on our list (most of them are decades old). Independent comic creator Joe Pangrazio (Heroclix Team World Champion) will be joining them.

*I was at Collector’s Choice in Brockport last year a couple of weeks before Free Comic Book Day – boy! Was that store packed with boxes waiting to be unloaded! Collector’s Choice is also an excellent donation if you plan to arrive via the Erie Canal.

*I recently made plans to visit Center Field Cards and Comics in Endicott, but got sidetracked by an out-of-state funeral. It’s still on my list to visit, though!

*It’s always a good idea to double-check with each individual store just to make sure they’re participating, to find out their hours (which may be different on FCBD), and to see what special events they might have laid on. Maybe I’ll see you! Happy reading!